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Pat? Ah! Yup! You know her as Margot Patricia Newcomb. From secretary and press agent she has become a close friend. Some time after your, let's say, departure, there were those who declared that on August 3 the two of you dined with Peter Lawford that evening, while others claim that you ordered food at home. What is it, an interrogation? No, forgive me. I'm trying to reconstruct the time span which, depending on who told it, has taken on different facets. In English it would be defined that period: - "It's about as mysterious as the liquidity of water." What does water have to do with it? In theory, it has something to do with it: someone claimed that there was no water in your room for you to swallow the pills. But then a glass was found under your bed. It may have slipped out of your hands, or they may have put it on afterwards. However, on the morning of the fourth, you strangely woke up early, after having slept badly. Eunice Murray, your housekeeper (the one you fired), later recalled that I was particularly irritable, also because Patricia slept until noon. Maybe you gave her one of your sedatives? Actually it is possible, but I don't remember it. Also according to Mrs Murray, at lunchtime, Patricia joined you in the pool, the one you described to me, shaped like a bean. Under the trees. It was August, it must have been very hot. It seems you also had a fight. You were very nervous. Saturday? The four? Possible. On Saturday 4th August it seems you have made and received many phone calls. I don't remember anything! Let's see if we can clarify: On August 4th she called your ex-husband Arthur Miller, then around 6.30 pm friend the masseur Ralph Roberts. Ralph, yes. But I didn't talk to him. I think he replied Ralph Greenson. I wasn't well and he told him I was out. Maybe you really were out. to buy that famous Nembutal pack? Yet? I certainly hadn't gone out. You've seen Greenson 28 times in your last month of life. He was called by you twice between August 4th and 5th. Why hide it? I went to analysis three to five times a week; since the early 1950s, I regularly took anti-anxiety drugs and sleeping pills. I have been hospitalized several times. Someone has heard me say that I am "an esteemed member of Borderline Anonymous". Going back to number four, the last person who saw you was Patricia Newcomb, who, as we said, described you very upset. We have ascertained the phone call from Joe di Maggio junior, while Isadore Miller, Arthur's father, was unable to speak to you. Later she also called you Peter Lawford. I do not remember. Who knows why I feel like a pain in my chest. My left side also hurts. You're awakening bad feelings in me. You don't remember, but this phone call is attested by Lawford himself, who told reporter Earl Wilson of the New York Post about it a long time later.