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Hollywood seemed planets away.

Once the study of a Cotswolds manor house, the entire room had been donated years ago — before I’d arrived as an intern — transported across the Atlantic and reconstructed under the financial guidance of an Anglophile patron who felt doctors need to relax in high style. A patron who’d never spent time with a Western Peds doctor.

I strode across the room and tried the connecting door to the library. Open.

The windowless room was pitch-dark and I turned on the lights. Most of the shelves were empty; a few bore thin stacks of mismatched journals. Careless piles of books sat on the floor. The rear wall was bare.

The computer I’d used to run Medline searches was nowhere in sight. Neither was the golden-oak card catalogue with its hand-lettered parchment labels. The only furniture was a gray metal table. Taped to the top was a piece of paper. An inter-hospital memo, dated three months ago.

TO: Professional Staff

FROM: G. H. Plumb, MBA, DBA, Chief Executive Officer

SUBJECT: Library Restructure

In accordance with repeated requests by the Professional Staff and a subsequent confirmatory decision by the Research Committee, the Board of Directors in General Assembly, and the Finance Subcommittee of the Executive Board, the Medical Library reference index will be converted to a fully computerized system utilizing Orion and Melvyl-type standard library data search programs. The contract for this conversion has been put out to competitive bid and, after careful deliberation and cost/benefit computation, has been awarded to BIO-DAT, Inc., of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, a concern specializing in medical and scientific research probe systems and health-care workstation integration. BIO-DAT officials have informed us that the entire process should take approximately three weeks, once they are in full receipt of all relevant data. Accordingly, the library’s current card files will be shipped to BIO-DAT headquarters in Pittsburgh for the duration of the conversion process, and returned to Los Angeles for purposes of storage and archival activity, once the conversion has been terminated. Your cooperation and forbearance during the conversion period is solicited.

Three weeks had stretched to three months.

I ran my finger along the metal table and ended up with a dust-blackened tip.

Turning off the light, I left the room.

Sunset Boulevard was a bouillabaisse of rage and squalor mixed with immigrant hope and livened by the spice of easy felony.

I drove past the flesh clubs, the new-music caverns, titanic show-biz billboards, and the anorexically oriented boutiques of the Strip, crossed Doheny and slipped into the dollar-shrines of Beverly Hills. Passing my turnoff at Beverly Glen, I headed for a place where serious research could always be done. The place where Chip Jones had done his.

The Biomed library was filled with the inquisitive and the obligated. Sitting at one of the monitors was someone I recognized.

Gamine face, intense eyes, dangling earrings, and a double pierce on the right ear. The tawny bob had grown out to a shoulder-length wedge. A line of white collar showed over a navy-blue crewneck.

When had I last seen her? Three years or so. Making her twenty.

I wondered if she’d gotten her Ph.D. yet.

She was tapping the keys rapidly, bringing data to the screen. As I neared I saw that the text was in German. The word neuropeptide kept popping out.

“Hi, Jennifer.”

She spun around. “Alex!” Big smile. She gave me a kiss on the cheek and got off her stool.

“Is it Dr. Leavitt yet?” I said.

“This June,” she said. “Wrapping up my dissertation.”

“Congratulations. Neuroanatomy?”

“Neurochemistry — much more practical, right?”

“Still planning on going to med school?”

“Next fall. Stanford.”

“Psychiatry?”

“I don’t know,” she said. “Maybe something a bit more... concrete. No offense. I’m going to take my time and see what appeals to me.”

“Well, there’s certainly no hurry — what are you, twelve years old?”

“Twenty! I’ll be twenty-one next month.”

“A veritable crone.”

“Weren’t you young, too, when you finished?”

“Not that young. I was shaving.”

She laughed again. “It’s great to see you. Hear from Jamey at all?”

“I got a postcard at Christmas. From New Hampshire. He’s renting a farm there. Writing poetry.”

“Is he... all right?”

“He’s better. There was no return address on the card and he wasn’t listed. So I called the psychiatrist who treated him up in Carmel and she said he’d been maintaining pretty well on medication. Apparently he’s got someone to take care of him. One of the nurses who worked with him up there.”

“Well, that’s good,” she said. “Poor guy. He had so much going for and against him.”

“Good way to put it. Have you had any contact with the other people in the group?”

The group. Project 160. As in IQ. Accelerated academics for kids with genius intellects. A grand experiment; one of its members ended up accused of serial murder. I’d gotten involved, taken a joyride into hatred and corruption...

“... is at Harvard Law and working for a judge, Felicia’s studying math at Columbia, and David dropped out of U. of Chicago med school after one semester and became a commodities trader. In the pits. He always was kind of an eighties guy. Anyway, the project’s defunct — Dr. Flowers didn’t renew the grant.”

“Health problems?”

“That was part of it. And of course the publicity about Jamey didn’t help. She moved to Hawaii. I think she wanted to minimize her stress — because of the M.S.”

Catching up with the past for the second time today, I realized how many loose ends I’d let dangle.

“So,” she said, “what brings you here?”

“Looking up some case material.”

“Anything interesting?”

“Munchausen syndrome by proxy. Familiar with it?”

“I’ve heard of Munchausen — people abusing their bodies to fake disease, right? But what’s the proxy part?”

“People faking disease in their children.”

“Well, that’s certainly hideous. What kinds of illnesses?”

“Almost anything. The most common symptoms are breathing problems, bleeding disorders, fevers, infections, pseudoseizures.”

“By proxy,” she said. “The word is unnerving — so calculated, like some sort of business deal. Are you actually working with a family like that?”

“I’m evaluating a family to see if that’s what’s going on. It’s still in the differential diagnosis stage. I have some preliminary references, thought I’d review the literature.”

She smiled. “Card-file, or have you become computer-friendly?”

“Computer. If the screen talks English.”

“Do you have a faculty account for SAP?”

“No. What’s that?”

“ ‘Search and Print.’ New system. Journals on file — complete texts scanned and entered. You can actually call up entire articles and have them printed. Faculty only, if you’re willing to pay. My chairman got me a temporary lectureship and an account of my own. He expects me to publish my results and put his name on it. Unfortunately, foreign journals haven’t been entered into the system yet, so I’ve got to locate those the old-fashioned way.”

She pointed to the screen. “The master tongue. Don’t you just love these sixty-letter words and umlauts? The grammar’s nuts, but my mother helps me with the tough passages.”