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She pulled her head back just a little and looked at me. “What of it?”

“I have been considering leaving this city.”

“Oh,” she said, very carefully.

“If I do, will you come with me?”

She frowned. “I’m not sure. I’ll have to think about it. Everything I’ve been working for-”

“I know. You don’t have to decide now, just think about it.”

“All right.”

“If you decide to stay, I might not be able to leave.”

“Is it so important that you do?”

“I don’t know. It might be.”

“Why?”

I shook my head and we listened to the music. Susan never presses me about things; that is one thing I like about her. After a while I said, “You never press me about things; that is one thing I like about you.”

“Mmmm. What’s another.”

“Your body.”

“You’re batting a thousand so far, cutie pie. What else?”

“How shy and hesitant you are about discussing your own merits.”

She laughed that wonderful laugh. “I was wondering when you were going to get to that.”

Outside, the sky wheeled above us, and the full moon sank in the west.

I guess I’ll never make a detective.

I have this whole pile of information from the newspaper, and I couldn’t find what I wanted. Why? Because I was looking the wrong way. I was trying to find something that said, “Laura Kellem committed this murder,” knowing, really, that even had she signed her work the signature wouldn’t have made it into the paper. If, instead, I’d looked at it the other way around, I would have seen it at once.

And if I’d known what was going on, I could have been more circumspect, and then-but what’s the point? I might as well record it as it happened, and save the reflections, if any, for later.

I came downstairs today after my shower and found Jim staring out the remains of the one window that both faced front and wasn’t boarded up. I said, “Are they still out there?”

“I’m not sure,” he said. “But they have been here, off and on, every day for the last week.”

“So they probably aren’t neglecting us at night, either.”

He nodded and turned to face me; or, rather, the wall over my right shoulder.

I went up to the window, looked out, and swore under my breath so I wouldn’t upset Jim. “What are they after? Is it those two assholes I killed?”

“Maybe,” said Jim. “They frown on other people killing drug dealers; I imagine they think it presumptuous.”

“Narrow of them.” I continued to stare out the window, trying to see if anyone was out there. At last I gave up and stared morosely at the hearth. “I suppose starting a fire is right out,” I said.

“Do you think it’s Laura Kellem?” he said.

I didn’t answer; I just didn’t know any more. And I didn’t know if the police had the house under constant surveillance, or just periodic drive-bys.

I put my horrible coat on. Jim said, “Where are you going?”

“I want to see how our police force is spending my tax dollars.”

“You don’t pay taxes.”

“I’ll see you later.”

He licked his lips. Why would a ghost lick his lips? “Be careful,” he said.

“Yes.”

I left the way I was getting used to leaving-carefully, over roofs, and with darkness all around me. Having got that far, I checked out the area and found them very quickly, half a block down the street: Two gentlemen sitting in a running car drinking coffee while passing a pair of binoculars back and forth. Just like in the movies. Did the Lakota police have the manpower to spare for twenty-four-hour surveillance like this? Apparently, unless I just happened to catch them. Or maybe Mel Gibson had said, “Look, Captain, I just know that place is it. Let me check it out.” And Robert Duvall had said, “We can’t spare you. How are you coming on the Johnson embezzlement case?” And Mel had said, “Captain, I’ve got three weeks of vacation built up, and I’m taking them right now.” Then a quick cut to exterior house, background, car parked down the block, foreground, two men in car-

No, not very likely. Sorry, Mel.

They knew I was about, and they knew I frequented the house, and they were watching for me. Why?

I looked around a little more, but they seemed to be the only ones. The thought came that I could do for them both right then, but, to put it mildly, it would not have helped the situation.

Then another thought came to me, and, after some reflection, I could see no problem with it. I positioned myself behind a tree, cloaked in the night, and I waited. The moon, waning from the full, rose in the heavens.

After a time, I knew that one of the policemen was sleeping, and the other, the passenger, was staring straight ahead. I walked up to the car and tapped on the window. The driver was of middle years, perhaps forty or forty-five, and had a flat face of the type that makes one think he was dropped on it as a child. He didn’t look anything like Mel Gibson. The passenger looked like Robert Duvall. He stared at me without expression and without blinking, and rolled down the window.

I said, “Why are you here?”

“Orders,” he said. Ask a stupid question…

I said, “For whom are you watching?”

“Homicide suspect,” he said. His voice was wheezy. He probably smoked too much; the noxious odor of secondhand smoke wafted from the car along with warm air from the heater.

“Does this homicide suspect have a name?”

“John Agyar, alias Jack Agyar, alias Yanosh Agyar.”

Now was not the time to attempt to get into the Guinness Book for endurance cursing, nor was it the time to correct his pronunciation of my name. I said, “How do you know he lives there?”

Robert Duvall’s face contorted just a bit because I had made him think; he probably had to put together things he had been directly told with things he’d happened to hear. He said, “A neighbor identified the sketch, and his em oh matches two homicides that happened there.”

I didn’t know what an “em oh” was, but I got the idea. I said, “Give me the sketch.”

He did. His companion, the driver who didn’t resemble Mel Gibson, started snoring. I looked at the sketch; this one was considerably better. It mentioned the coat again, and also included the pendant, damn it.

“Here, put this back.”

He did so.

I said, “Are you sure the drug dealers were killed by Agyar?”

He said, “Yes.”

“Why?”

“Same kind of killing as the other two, and maybe three more.”

“All right-wait. Other two? ”

“Yes.”

Literal son of a bitch. “What others? Name them.”

“Kowalczek and Swaggart, maybe the Tailors, and maybe a pimp named Alvin Jorgenson, alias Charlie George.”

“Say those names again.”

“Kowalczek, Swaggart, Tailor, Tailor, and Jorgenson.”

Ah ha.

I said, “Who was Kowalczek?”

“Theresa Kowalczek, female Caucasian, aged twenty-four.”

“How did she die?”

“Her throat was ripped out.”

“That was never in the papers,” I said. He didn’t say anything, and I realized I hadn’t asked a question. “Why wasn’t that in the papers?”

“It was hushed up.”

“By whom?”

“Baldy.”

“Baldy?”

“Yes.”

“Who is Baldy?”

“Theodore Baldwin.”

I clucked my tongue and tried again. “Who is Theodore Baldwin?”

“The mayor of Lakota.”

The mayor?

“What does the mayor have to do with this?”

“His son was engaged to Terri Kowalczek.”

Oh, Kellem, good work. “What is known about the killing?”

“Some sort of love triangle. This Agyar was involved with one or the other of them, either Kowalczek or Baldwin, we don’t know which.”

Probably pretty accurate, if one were to substitute Kellem for Agyar. “Hasn’t someone-umm. What is Baldwin’s first name?”

“Brian.”

“Hasn’t someone asked Brian Baldwin?”

“He isn’t saying anything, and he’s been sick.”

“Sick how?”