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“On the Web, one article Wilma pulled up said the unrecovered huacas from the museum had probably been sold to illegal collectors.” Her green eyes narrowed. “Think about it. If a person had an illegal collection of stolen goods, and then someone stole from him, would he report the theft?”

Joe smiled.

“And now,” she said, “with this information, what will Harper do?”

The tomcat shrugged. “Report it to customs or whatever federal agency deals with this stuff.” He laid his ears back uncertainly, but then he smiled. “Will the feds contact Interpol? Talk about heavy.”

But Dulcie looked uncertain.

“What?” he said, frowning.

“The feds can have Cage,” she said. “Let him burn. But his sister…If he did have a stash of gold, and it was in the house while Lilly was living there, won’t they arrest her, too?”

“So?”

“So, if she didn’t know, and they send her to prison, that would be too bad. She’s just a lonely old woman.”

Joe just looked at her. Here was his beautiful tabby lady, with her delicate peach-tinted ears and her huge emerald eyes, the most perfect cat in the world, feeling sorry for some second-rate, bad-tempered, and probably lying human.

“Dulcie, if Lilly Jones knew there were millions in stolen gold hidden in her own house-if that’s what this turns out to be-and she didn’t call the police, if she knew why Cage kidnapped Wilma and she didn’t tell Harper, if Lilly Jones just sat on her hands, then why would you feel sorry for her?”

“But what,” Dulcie said in a small voice, “if she didn’t know?”

Watching his lovely lady agonizing over that stupid woman, Joe Grey picked up the leather cord in his teeth and trotted across the roofs, the gold devil dangling and thumping against his gray-and-white chest.

Where a cluster of chimneys and air vents rose close together, in a little cleft between two steep peaks, several layers of shingles met at odd angles. There, Joe pawed back the shingles, dropped the little gold devil on its leather cord safely beneath them, and watched the asphalt squares flop back over it.

Patting at the shingles, making sure nothing could be seen, he turned back to Dulcie. “How about Jolly’s alley? I’m starved.” And the cats raced away toward Jolly’s, heading for a midmorning snack-leaving that one small fragment of a vast and ancient culture where not even a seagull or roof rat was likely to find it.

For nearly a week, the cats thought about the little gold man hidden among the shingles. Several times a day Joe or Dulcie trotted across the roofs to that aerial hiding place, making sure the treasure was safe; and all week their minds were full of questions yet to be answered. But not until the following Friday, when their human friends gathered at Clyde’s for dinner, did they learn more.

The occasion was Mandell Bennett’s release from San Francisco General and his arrival in the village to stay with Wilma for a short recuperation. Wilma wouldn’t hear of his staying alone in his apartment with only a handful of coworkers coming in to tend to his needs, though they would have been more than adequate. “What if Jones breaks out again and comes after you? Better to have someone else in the house until you’re better. This time, I promise, Mandell, I’m ready-and the department is only blocks away, they can be here in seconds.”

She had made up the guest room for Mandell, had all his favorite foods on hand, had arranged for a visiting nurse to come in to help him with bathing and changing bandages; and in anticipation of Mandell’s arrival, she and Clyde had planned a party.

37

O nly now, in the early evening, had the accumulated July heat managed to penetrate to Clyde Damen’s patio; in this sheltered oasis, the high, plastered walls hoarded well the cooler night air. It seemed to Joe that the heat spell would never end; he felt as if the whole world was being smothered by a giant, sweaty hand. Pacing the top of the six-foot wall above the unlit barbecue, he watched Clyde hosing down the brick paving and the plaster benches. Only the outdoor cushions, piled on the porch, had escaped the soaking onslaught of the spray. As Clyde adjusted the hose to a gentler pressure and began watering the flowers in their raised planters, the tomcat sniffed with appreciation the cool, damp breath rising up to him.

“Game for a little shower?” Clyde said, flicking the spray in Joe’s direction.

“You want a set of claws in your backside? Only some idiot dog would want to play in the hose.” But immediately he was sorry he’d said that. Old Rube had loved the water, had loved to bite and leap at the hose. Together, Joe and Clyde glanced across the garden to Rube’s grave, and exchanged a hurting look. The big retriever had been put down just two months ago, and both man and cat still felt incomplete; they missed painfully the black Lab who had for so many years been a member of the family; every memory of Rube was distressing. But it was hard not to think of him, hard not to stir their memories.

Rube’s greatest passion had been to swim in the ocean, shouldering through the surf as strong and agile as a seal. Now, Joe’s remark had left Clyde so distressed that he turned off the hose, came over to the wall, and stood silently stroking Joe.

“I’m sorry,” Joe said.

“I know.” Clyde rubbed behind his ears. Joe could smell Clyde’s aftershave over the nose-tickling aroma of cold charcoal from the big barbecue; it was too hot this evening to build a fire for burgers or steaks or ribs, though a crowd would soon descend.

A cold supper waited in the kitchen, cold cracked crab, cold boiled shrimp, and an assortment of George Jolly’s succulent salads. Charlie and Wilma, as two of the guests of honor, had not been allowed to contribute a delicious casserole or salad as they usually did. Ryan, who would rather build houses than cook, was bringing the beer.

Clyde dried off the chairs and benches with a towel, and tossed the cushions back onto them. He had stepped into the house to bring out the big iced tubs of shrimp and crab when the doorbell rang and the unlocked front door opened; Joe could see in through the kitchen window and straight through to the living room where folks were crowding in, Dallas and Ryan and her sister Hanni, Max and Charlie, and behind them other cars were pulling up.

Everyone but Hanni was dressed in old worn jeans and cool cotton shirts; Ryan’s beautiful and flamboyant sister wore a low-cut black T-shirt and a long, flowered skirt, expensive sandals, and dangling silver earrings. No one ever said the two sisters were alike. Except in their lively attitude, Joe thought, admiring both women. The tomcat was amused that he had begun to notice people’s clothes in addition to people’s attitudes; that was Dulcie’s influence. It was true, though, that what people wore told a lot about them. Cats didn’t have that problem. Only the condition of one’s fur mattered, and that was more for the feel of it; scruffy fur was irritating and distracting.

Ryan wore ancient jeans, sandals, and a nice red T-shirt that set off her short, dark hair, her green Irish eyes and warm complexion. Wilma came in behind her, wearing red, too, Dulcie perched on her shoulder, the other guest of honor following.

Mandell Bennett was using a walker. He looked happy indeed to be out of the hospital, out of intensive care. His short dark hair was freshly trimmed, his print sport shirt still lined with creases from the store. He was laughing, his dark Cherokee eyes filled with pleasure. As people crowded through to the big kitchen, a tall thin man with carrot red hair came in behind Bennett. Mike Flannery was Ryan and Hanni’s father, and Chief U.S. Probation Officer in San Francisco. He was Bennett’s boss, and Wilma had worked for him before she retired. He had picked Bennett up at the hospital to drive him down from the city, a good excuse to get away for a few days and to see his family.