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    This wouldn't do. He was going to have to get himself in motion; he couldn't spend the rest of his life living off this girl's ingenuity. "Let's get out of here."

    "Where to?"

    He was trying to think but it was no good. The heaps of food with which he'd filled himself had replenished most of what he'd lost on the river, but it didn't make him any more alert and wide-eyed. Seasickness took a lot out of you.

    "I need sleep before I can start making plans. Let's check out those hotel rooms of yours."

    "Right," Vangie said. Leaving the table, they threaded a path through the crowd and emerged onto the street.

    It was dark. A cold breeze swept past them, stirring tendrils of fog. Gaslights were encircled by vague misty halos and the people who went by were sinister moving shadows. Gabe shivered. "Which way?"

    "We'll try up here first."

    The climb made New York's Washington Heights seem like a molehill by comparison. What idiot had decided to put a would-be city on the side of a cliff? Out here in the West they just didn't know how to do anything right.

    "Where are you from anyway?"

    "You mean where was I born?" Vangie asked. "On Mission Street in a second-story flat across the street from the church."

    "Mission Street where?"

    She looked at him as they crossed an intersection. "What do you mean where? Right down there." She pointed down the hill behind them.

    "You mean you were born in San Francisco?"

    "Of course."

    He did some rapid arithmetic. Well, it was possible after all. The gold had been discovered in 1848; they must have started building this excuse for a city right after that. That was twenty-six years ago.

    "It isn't there any more," she said.

    He was beginning to puff from the climb. "What isn't?"

    "The place where I was born. It burned down in the fire of fifty-four."

    Which narrowed things down to a six-year span. So she wasn't younger than twenty, and she wasn't older than twenty-six. Gabe began to feel fiendishly clever.

    But she shattered this feeling. "I'm twenty-four, if that's what you're trying to figure out."

    "Did I ask?" he demanded. "Did I?"

    "How old are you?"

    "What difference does that make?"

    "Well, I just asked. You don't have to throw a fit." She stopped so abruptly that he banged into her. He looked up at a bulky five-story building. Vangie said, "Let's try this one."

    Gabe headed for the porticoed door, but Vangie dragged him back by the sleeve. "Not that way. Come on."

    Around the side of the building. Past dark windows and a rubbish pile. Finally she turned and pulled open a door that Gabe wouldn't have seen in the dark alley.

    A dimly lit corridor. Kitchen smells, the sound of rattling utensils in a dishpan. Vangie led him stealthily past the kitchen door and up a rickety flight of backstairs, keeping her weight on the inner edge of the treads and motioning to Gabe to do the same.

    She preceded him up the stairs and stopped at a door on the landing. "I'll check first," she whispered. "They may have rented it to somebody else."

    He waited, holding the stairway door ajar and watching her tiptoe down the carpeted hall to a door. She slipped the key into the lock. He heard the faint click of the latch and then Vangie disappeared inside.

    Almost instantly she flew out into the corridor, followed by an irate shriek. She rushed back down the corridor and fled past him. Gabe pulled the stairway door shut.

    He didn't catch up until they had reached the alley. Vangie gave him an embittered look. "You wouldn't believe what that woman was wearing to bed. All right, the next one's just a block over. Come on."

    Gabe stood at the head of the backstairs, very winded and very tired. He hoped desperately that this one would be all right because it was at the top of a six-story hotel and he just didn't have the strength to go on climbing hills and stairs for the rest of the night.

    But there was a scream and his face fell.

    Then he recognized the voice. It was Vangie screaming this time.

    Gabe rushed across the corridor and collided with Vangie as she came pell-mell out of the room, skirts flying and followed by a long-armed miner in long Johns.

    The miner was leering at the fleeing girl and didn't seem to see Gabe. There was only a split second while the miner roared past him, but Gabe used it to whip the knuckle duster out of his pocket and apply it to the rear of the miner's head.

    He fell down and began to curl up like a strip of frying bacon.

    Gabe took Vangie's arm and hustled her down the stairs. On the street she stopped to get her breath; she tipped her head back to look at him. "My goodness. You're faster than the telegraph."

    "Well, you know back East in New York, where…"

    "Where men are men. Yes, I know."

    "Yeah. Well. Your luck seems to be about as good as mine. Maybe we ought to go pay the twenty-five cents to see Ittzy."

    "Well there's still one hotel left. This way."

    He followed her to the curb and they set foot in the street, about to cross it. But a sudden clamor of bells clanged nearby.

    The street instantly cleared of people. Vangie dashed for the nearest doorway while Gabe, still in the middle of the street, looked around, baffled. The bells were getting louder.

    "Gabe!" Vangie yelled, from the protection of the doorway. "Run for it!"

    He was about to, even though he still didn't know why, when another voice from another direction called in accents of surprise and joy, "Why, Gabe! How are you? It's been years!"

    Vangie shouted, "Gabe… come on!"

    He looked back and forth in confusion. The bells jangled and clanged. Vangie stood in her doorway with one hand extended, beseeching him. From the other way-across the street-a willowy young man, rather overdressed, came strolling forward out of the fog with smile and hand both outstretched.

    "Well, I'll be damned," Gabe said. "Francis Calhoun."

    Francis Calhoun approached, smiling, saying something else that was lost in the racket of the bells. From the other side, Vangie came rushing back out to yank Gabe to safety. And all at once something came around the corner, big, loud and fast. It tore hell for leather in their direction.

    A fire engine. The biggest, fastest, reddest horse-drawn fire engine in the entire world-bell clanging, white horses raging, wheels clattering, the whole mess hurtling their way like a falling roof. Gabe stood there in the middle of the street, Francis Calhoun on one side of him and Vangie on the other, and like an avalanche at Grand Canyon the fire engine roared on by.

    The wind of its passage all but knocked Gabe to the ground. He yelled something, but even he himself couldn't hear what it was. Then the thing was past and careening on down the hill, gathering its noise around itself like coattails.

    Gabe blinked. He looked around in the dust cloud the thing had left in its wake, and damn if Vangie wasn't still there. Damn if Francis Calhoun wasn't still there. Gabe looked down at himself; damn if he wasn't still there.

    "Oh, my goodness," Vangie said faintly.

    Francis, dusty but unruffled, continued to wear his welcoming smile as he said, "How are you, old cock?"