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    "Tell me."

    "There is no way on earth I can lose this case. It'd be nice if I could use this stuff in court, but I won't have to. Once we scare the shit out of the secondary parties, Stewart's going to be hung out to dry, and so is Milton." Her eyes changed. "Did Laurie Hatch arrange to get you these papers?"

    "No. She did not."

    Ashleigh leaned back in her chair. “I was about to come home empty-handed. My boss would have been patronizing and sympathetic. My colleagues would have disguised their glee at how badly I fucked up, and I'd be handling dipshit cases for the next two years. Now my boss is going to pin a gold medal on my chest, and the other assistant D.A.s are going to have to pretend they're overjoyed."

    "You'll be able to explain . . . ?"

    "How I got this material? Enter our old friend, the anonymous informant."

    Ashleigh talked about her case until the room-service waiter showed up, and when he had uncorked the wine bottle and departed, she bit into her sandwich like a stevedore. "God, the way everything happened, it's like it was all set up in advance."

    “I know what you mean," I said.

    "And I have to say, Ned, when you're in that mood you were in Friday night, you're God's gift to women."

    I slumped in my chair, and her face turned red. "Let's go down to the business center and copy this stuff."

 •75

 •When Ashleigh and I came back to her room, we looked at each other and undressed without saying a word. Later on, Ashleigh told me about her childhood in Lexington, Kentucky, and her marriage to Michael Ashton, who on their honeymoon had seduced the cocktail hostess at their hotel. I told her some things about Star, Phil and Laura Grant, and what I had done since leaving Naperville.

    "Why did you leave Middlemount?"

    “I couldn't handle the math and science courses."

    "Wasn't it harder to learn programming than freshman calculus, or whatever it was?"

    "Yeah," I said. "Come to think of it."

    "Do you like your job?"

    “It's the best job I ever had," I said. "Every time I get my paycheck, I'm astonished."

    “Is money important to you?"

    "No," I said. "That's why I'm astonished."

    "Do you have close friends?"

    "Medium close," I said. "Also semiclose, semidistant, and completely distant, except for insincere camaraderie. We're guys, we like it that way."

    "How about girlfriends?"

    "Off and on," I said.

    "What about Laurie Hatch?"

    "What about her?"

    "You're enormously attracted to Laurie. And vice versa."

    "There is some truth in that," I said.

    "What are you going to do about it?"

    "What do you think I should do?"

    Ashleigh gripped my arm and shook it like a sapling. "Why are you asking me? If I had Laurie on the witness stand, I'd feel like I was questioning the Sphinx. But considering the way you feel about her, you should give yourself a break. I can't believe I'm saying this."

    "You don't like her," I said. "Or you don't trust her."

    The ends of her mouth curled up. "Have you slept with her yet?"

    I wondered if I could get away with refusing to answer on the grounds of self-incrimination. I did not want to lie to Ashleigh, and she would have seen through any attempt to evade the question. By the time I had worked this out, the answer was already obvious. "Yes," I said.

    “I knew it!"

    "Then why did you ask?"

    “I knew it was going to happen, I just didn't know howsoon. Why do you think she let you do that? Laurie Hatch isn't some bimbo on the make, she's. . . . Let's forget about Laurie Hatch. I want to concentrate on Ned Dunstan for a while."

 •76

 •I woke up about 1:30a.m., too late to visit Toby Kraft or look at the houses on Buxton Place. I felt my way around the room-service cart and took a shower. After I got dressed, I sat next to Ashleigh and stroked her back until she woke up.

    "Who was that masked man?" she said. "Call me tomorrow morning, okay?"

    I left the satchel in her room. It was safer than the Brazen Head, and the records of Stewart Hatch's peccadillos had to be stashed somewhere until Robert collected them. The ideal hiding place suggested itself as I watched the panel above the elevator door count down to L.

    A solitary car moved past the front of Merchants Park. I stepped down into the empty avenue and saw a red glow above the townhousesalong Ferryman's Road. When I got near the center of the park, I caught the unmistakable odor of smoke.

    At Chester Street, I looked north. Arcs of water turned from silver to red as they fell glittering onto a burning building. A small crowd stood behind a rank of fire engines. Then I realized that the fire was in the same block as Helen Janette's rooming house, and I sprinted toward it.

    Flames poured through the front windows on both floors of the rooming house. A column of charcoal-colored smoke billowed from the roof. Helen Janette hugged her pink bathrobe over her chest, and Mr. Tite's fedora-topped head jutted behind her like an Easter Island statue. Beneath the cuffs of his pajamas, his bare feet glared angry white.

    Miss Redman and Miss Challis had claimed the arms of an enchanted young firefighter. Roxy and Moonbeam wore gleaming satin slips no different from their party attire, and, like Frank Tite, were barefoot, but seemed to be having a much better time. Policemen and firefighters moved through the fire engines and squad cars. A clutch of onlookers, many of them in bathrobes, occupied the middle of the street.

    A sheet of flame burst upward and tinted the smoke blood-red. The roof fell in with a barely audible crash. I had never before seen a serious fire, never heard how a fire celebrates destruction in a rushing, inhuman voice. Helen Janette screamed, "That's him! He burned down my house!"

    Frank Tite plodded toward me, wincing. Roxy and Moonbeam fluttered forward. Two men in bathrobes appeared on either side of me. One of them twisted my arm behind my back.

    “If you don't let go of my arm, I'll take your head off your shoulders."

    Helen Janette screeched, “It was him!"

    The man holding my arm was about forty pounds overweight. Prominent keloids dotted his face, and sweat cascaded from his every pore.

    “I apologize to you," I said. “I got mad, so I said something stupid. How well do you get on with Helen Janette?"

    He let go of my arm. "Mrs. Janette would sooner lick spit off the sidewalk than give me the time of day."

    Mr. Tite minced up. "Get hold of him again."

    "You hold him. I got no reason to believe your girlfriend or you either, Frank."

    Followed by a bearlike man withcaptain stenciled in yellow across the front of his rubber coat, Helen Janette bustled beside Mr. Tite. "That's him. I want him put in jail."

    The men around me retreated.

    "Sir, what do you have to say?"

    “I was walking back to my place from Merchants Hotel," I said. "When I noticed the flames I ran up, hoping it wasn't Mrs. Janette's house."

    "He's lying," said Helen Janette.

    "Do you really think I'd burn down your house because you kicked me out?"