You were a nurse."
"But so few of the soldiers had babies in the hospitals."
"I did."
She hit me with the pillow and spilled the whiskey and soda.
"I'll order you another," she said. "I'm sorry I spilled it."
"There wasn't much left.
Come on over to the bed."
"No.
I have to try and make this room look like something."
"Like what?"
"Like our home."
"Hang out the Allied flags."
"Oh shut up."
"Say it again."
"Shut up."
"You say it so cautiously," I said. "As though you didn't want to offend any one."
"I don't."
"Then come over to the bed."
"All right." She came and sat on the bed. "I know I'm no fun for you, darling.
I'm like a big flour-barrel."
"No you're not.
You're beautiful and you're sweet."
"I'm just something very ungainly that you've married."
"No you're not.
You're more beautiful all the time."
"But I will be thin again, darling."
"You're thin now."
"You've been drinking."
"Just whiskey and soda."
"There's another one coming," she said. "And then should we order dinner up here?"
"That will be good."
"Then we won't go out, will we?
We'll just stay in to-night."
"And play," I said.
"I'll drink some wine," Catherine said. "It won't hurt me.
Maybe we can get some of our old white capri."
"I know we can," I said. "They'll have Italian wines at a hotel this size."
The waiter knocked at the door.
He brought the whiskey in a glass with ice and beside the glass on a tray a small bottle of soda.
"Thank you," I said. "Put it down there.
Will you please have dinner for two brought up here and two bottles of dry white capri in ice."
"Do you wish to commence your dinner with soup?"
"Do you want soup, Cat?"
"Please."
"Bring soup for one."
"Thank you, sir."
He went out and shut the door.
I went back to the papers and the war in the papers and poured the soda slowly over the ice into the whiskey.
I would have to tell them not to put ice in the whiskey.
Let them bring the ice separately.