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Balenger raised a hand. "Guilty."

Conklin drew a water bottle from a slot on the side of his knapsack, untwisted the cap, and drank.

"I'll join you," Balenger said, taking a bottle from his knapsack. "To tell the truth, I wish I had some scotch in this."

"By popular demand, I don't touch the stuff anymore," Conklin said.

Cora offered a bag of granola. "Anybody want an hors d'oeuvre?"

Silhouetted by darkness, Rick and Vinnie each took a handful. Balenger heard the crunch of it in their mouths.

The professor swallowed more water, waited, and finally put away his bottle. "Okay, I'm ready."

"You're certain?"

"Absolutely."

"Take a little more time," Vinnie said. "I wonder what the rooms look like." He tested a door, pleased when it opened. As his lights pierced the gloom, he nodded. "This room's got a metal shutter, too."

Balenger walked cautiously over. Stale air drifted past him, carrying a bitter undercurrent. Their scanning lights revealed that the room had a standard layout: a closet on the right, a bathroom on the left, and a bedroom area beyond a short corridor.

Cora glanced into the bathroom. "A marble countertop. The dust makes it difficult to tell, but those fixtures look as if they're-"

"Gold-plated," Conklin said.

"Wow."

There were two small beds, each with four posts and a dusty, floral-patterned bedspread. A Victorian sofa, table, and bureau contrasted with a television set. Apart from cobwebs, grime, and peeling wallpaper, the room presumably remained as it had looked in 1971 or earlier.

Vinnie walked toward the television. "No color-adjustment knobs. It's an old black-and-white. The screen has rounded corners. And look at this phone. The old-fashioned rotary kind. I've seen them in movies, but despite all the buildings we've explored, I've never come across a dial phone until now. Imagine the eternity it took to make a call."

"That metal shutter." Rick pointed. "What's it covering? We're in the core of the building. There must be several rooms between here and the outside. There's no point in having a window. There's nothing to see."

"Actually," the professor said, "Carlisle put a window in every room. Each quadrant of the hotel has an air shaft. At one time, there were flower gardens, shrubs, and trees for guests to look down at. Some rooms next to the shafts even have doors leading onto balconies. The shafts end at the fifth level. The sixth level and the penthouse don't need them because, at the top of the pyramid, they have direct views of the outside."

"Until Carlisle installed the metal shutters," Cora said. "Was the old man so paranoid that he thought rioters would scale the air shafts?"

"The rampage. The fires. The gutted buildings. For him, it must have seemed like the end of the world." Vinnie looked at the professor. "Did he say anything about it in his diary?"

"No. The diary ends in 1968, the year he closed the hotel to guests."

"Three years before he died." Balenger looked around. "No explanation why he stopped writing it or why he closed the hotel?"

"None."

"Maybe life stopped being interesting," Cora said.

"Or maybe it was too interesting," Conklin said. "From the first World War to the Cuban missile crisis, from the Depression to the threat of nuclear annihilation, he'd seen the twentieth century get worse and worse."

"1968. What happened that year?" Balenger asked.

"The assassinations of Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy two months apart."

The group became silent.

"What's on the bed?" Balenger pointed.

"Where? I don't see anything."

"There."

Balenger's lights centered on the first bed and a flat object on the pillows.

A suitcase.

"Why would anybody leave a hotel and not take a suitcase?" Cora wondered.

"Maybe somebody couldn't pay the bill and snuck out. Let's see what's in it." Vinnie set down his flashlight and pressed two levers, one on each side of the suitcase's handle. "Locked."

Balenger unclipped his knife from his pocket. He opened it and pried at one of the locks.

"No," Rick insisted. "We look but don't touch."

"But we've been touching a lot of things."

"'Don't touch' means 'don't damage, don't disturb, don't alter.' This is the equivalent of an archaeological site. We don't change the past."

"But then you'll never know what's in the suitcase," Balenger said.

"I suppose there are worse things I won't ever be able to do."

"If I can open it without breaking it, do you have a problem?"

"Not at all. But I don't see how you can manage it."

Balenger pulled out his ballpoint pen. He unscrewed the top and removed the ink cartridge, along with the spring that controlled the tip's in-and-out movement. Humming to disguise his tension, he put the end of the spring into a keyhole in the suitcase. He pressed, twisted, and heard the latch pop free. He did the same to the other lock, although it took him a little longer.

"Handy skill," Rick said.

"Well, I once did a story about a master locksmith, a guy the police send for when they really need to open something and nobody else can do it. He showed me a few easy tricks."

"The next time I lock myself out of my car, I'll give you a call," Vinnie said.

"So who wants to do the honors?" Balenger asked. "Cora?"

She rubbed her arms. "I'll pass."

"Vinnie? How about you? You're the first one who tried to open it."

"Thanks," Vinnie said uneasily, "but since you got it open, you should do it."

"Okay, but remember, if this is a monumental discovery, it gets named after me." Balenger lifted the suitcase's lid.

As a bitter smell escaped from the interior, five helmet lights and flashlights blazed on the contents.

16

No one moved.

"I feel like I'm going to be sick," Cora said. "What am I looking at?"

The suitcase was filled with fur. A mummified torso and head. Paws. Hands.

"My God, is it human?" Vinnie asked. "A child wrapped in-"

"A monkey," Balenger said. "I think it's a monkey."

"Yeah, welcome to Wild Kingdom."

"Why would anybody… do you think somebody put it in there, locked the suitcase, and smothered it?" Rick said.

"Or maybe it was already dead," the professor suggested.

"And somebody was carrying it around for old times' sake?" Cora raised her hands. "This is one of the sickest things I've ever-"

"Maybe it was a pet and somebody tried to smuggle it into the hotel. But it suffocated before the owner could let it out."

"Sick," Cora said. "Sick, sick, sick. If it was such a prized pet, why didn't the owner take it out of here and bury it?"

"Perhaps the owner was overcome with grief," Balenger said.

"Then why lock the suitcase before leaving?"

"I'm afraid I don't have an explanation for that," Balenger said. "In my experience, all the human-interest articles I've written, people are more crazy than they're sane."

"Well, this is crazy, all right."

Balenger reached into the suitcase.

"You're going to touch it?" Vinnie said.

"I'm wearing gloves." Balenger nudged the carcass, which felt disturbingly light. The fur scratched along the bottom of the suitcase as he moved it. He found a rubber ball with flecks of red paint on it.

Noticing a flap on the inside of the suitcase's lid, he looked inside. "Here's an envelope."

The paper was yellow with age. He opened it and found a faded black-and-white photograph that showed a man and woman of around forty. They leaned against the railing of a boardwalk. It stretched to the right while the ocean extended behind them. Presumably, the boardwalk was Asbury Park's. Balenger thought he recognized the shape of the casino at the end. The man wore a short-sleeved white shirt, squinted from the sun, and looked to be in emotional pain. The woman wore a frilly dress and smiled desperately. Each wore a wedding ring. They had a monkey between them. It held a ball that looked like the one in the suitcase. It grinned and reached toward the camera as if the photographer were holding up a banana.