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"You? But why not-"

"Tut, Director. I assume you would rather keep this thing as quiet as possible? With your daughter involved, you must consider the effect of such publicity."

"I don't trust you, Hocking."

"Then come with me, Director. Yes, that's splendid! We'll go together."

22

… TO ONE WH0 HAD endured the artificial interiors of Gotham and had left his footprints in the rock-strewn red dust of Mars, the sparkling white mansion with its three-story white columns and its red brick wall joining the white gravel drive across a lawn of smooth-shaved green grass looked to Spence inexpressibly old, almost medieval. Holyoke Haven, only shouting distance from the sea, had not changed at all in three hundred years. Once the home of a wealthy owner of sailing ships, it now sheltered, as a safe harborage, the troubled souls who roamed its corridors and muttered along its hedgerows.

Spence was surprised there was no fence. "They don't need one," explained Ari. "The patients here are very well looked after. Each one has an attendant with them virtually every minute of the day. They are very exclusive; they don't take violent or dangerous patients."

He would have been further surprised to learn that those stately walls housed the relatives of fine old families, kings of commerce, and politicians-weird sisters whose presence in public would have proven embarrassing and perhaps unsafe.

They walked quietly down cool hallways after registering at a small antique desk with a kindly elderly lady who wore a large purple orchid pinned neatly to her pink uniform. "Your mother will be so glad to see you, Ari. And your gentlemen friends, too." The old woman sent them off with a light flutter of her hands, as if to cookies and milk in the parlor.

Spence found the juxtaposition of the grand manner of the place against the grim insanity of its patients a little hard to bear. He was haunted by the feeling that he had been and, for all he knew still was, very close to taking up permanent residence in such a place. Still, it was far from the snake pits of fifty or a hundred years ago. With a morbid interest he found himself reconnoitering the asylum with the air of a value-conscious consumer and feeling a little like a potential lodger on a rental tour.

Then they were standing before a wooden door and Ari was knocking gently. The door opened and a round smiling face peeked out. "Ari! How good to see you!" The nurse glanced beyond her to the two young men. "You've come to see your mother, of course."

"Of course. Belinda, I'd like you to meet my friends." She introduced Spence and Adjani and said, "Is Mother up to a visit?"

"She's been asking about you today." The nurse opened the door wider and ushered them in. Her eyes round with animated disbelief, she said, "And here you are! I never would have believed it. She said you'd come-and here you are!"

"Thank you, Belinda. You may leave us. I'll call you when we're finished."

"I was just about to take her for a walk on the lawn. Perhaps you would like to do that with her."

"Yes. We'll chat first and then a walk would be just the thing. Thank you."

The attendant clearly wanted to linger nearby, but Ari adroitly pushed her out of the room and closed the door so they would have privacy.

"Mother?" Ari crept close to the old red chair. The woman sitting in it had not so much as glanced at them all the time they had stood at the door. Now she turned toward them for the first time.

Spence recognized the mother of his sweetheart; they were as alike as mother and daughter could be, as close as look-alike sisters. The woman was trim and youthful, though her hair had faded to a darker blonde and tiny lines creased the corners of her eyes and mouth. Her eyes were just as blue as Ari's but they were different: wary, furtive, somehow sly. This is what shocked him: They were the eyes of a wild and hunted creature.

"Ari! You've come! Oh, at last you've come. Did you get my letter?"

The woman reached out her hands and Ari stepped in and hugged her mother. It could have been a normal homecoming. Spence turned away and looked out the wide open French doors onto the placid lawn outside.

"I didn't get your letter, Mother. Did you write me a letter?",. "I did." She shook her head fiercely, and then looked puzzled. "At least, I think I did. Didn't I?"

"It doesn't matter; I'm here now. What did you want to tell me?"

"Tell you?"

"What did you want to tell me in your letter?" Ari spoke to the woman in calm, patient tones as if she were a child, a shy, apprehensive child. Spence began to feel that their trip had been for nothing. He could not imagine they would get any useful information.

"How nice you look, darling. How pretty you are. I'm going to make you a beautiful new dress. You'd like that?"

"Of course, I'd love it. What did you want to tell me in the letter?"

"About the Dream Thief, Ari."

At this Spence faced around at once; maybe they would discover something after all.

"What about the Dream Thief, Mother?"

Adjani, who had been hanging back, came to stand beside Spence between the woman and the French doors.

"Who are these men? Do they work for him?" She shuddered as she said the word. Clearly, she referred to the Dream Thief. "No, they're friends of mine. But they want to know about the Dream Thief. They want to know about him so they can stop him. You would like that, wouldn't you, Mother?"

"No one can stop him!" cried the woman. "It's too late! Too late! He is too powerful! He was here, you know. He came to see me." She suddenly adopted a sly, conspiratorial tone.

"He was here? Dream Thief?"

"Yes. He came to see me and he said he would come back." "What did he wish to see you about?" "To give me a present. A beautiful little present."

"Where is the present? I don't see it." Ari looked around the room.

"He will bring it when he comes back. He said he would. I must wait and do as he says."

"When was the Dream Thief here, Mrs. Zanderson?" asked Spence.

"I don't know you, young man," the woman replied as if Spence were a stranger who had accosted her on the street.

"This is Spencer Reston, Mother. My friend, remember? And this is Adjani. He's my friend, too. They've come to see you to ask you some questions."

The woman looked at them closely as if she wanted to remember them in order to describe them later. "I'm glad to know YOU, gentlemen." She offered her hand. Both men took it in turn.

"How nice to meet you, Mrs. Zanderson," said Adjani. There was not the slightest trace of condescension in his manner. "Could you tell us about the Dream Thief? I'd very much like to know."

Slowly she came to herself, as out of a daydream. "Oh," she sighed softly, "have I been carrying on again?"

"No, Mother," replied Ari. Her mother reached up and patted her hand absently.

"I hope I haven't embarassed you in front of your friends." She smiled ruefully.

"Nonsense," said Spence. "We'd like to help you if we can."

"I wish I could believe that; I'd very much like to be helped."

"Suppose you just tell us what you know about the Dream Thief." Adjani spoke normally, but he seemed to radiate a warmth and, Spence thought, a love which drew the woman out and settled her mind. He had never witnessed anything like it; Adjani's influence was magical.

"It was many years ago now." The bright blue eyes held a faraway look as memory came flooding back across the years. "I was a little girl. My father was a professor; very stern, very upright he was. There was just me and my mother. I used to play outside every day with the children. We lived way up in the mountains, maybe seventy-five miles from the city, in a tiny village called Rangpo.