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“What’s that smell?” asked Dooley, sniffing the air. “Is that… barbecue?”

“Weed,” said Brutus. “Charlie doesn’t seem impressed with the attempt made on his life.”

“Or maybe this is his way of trying to deal with the shock,” I suggested.

Just then, Charlie shouted, “I’m coming, bitches!” and bombed into the pool, much to the amusement of the nubile girls, who quickly surrounded him like a personal harem.

“Yeah, he’s clearly having a hard time coping,” Brutus said. “We better spread out, you guys. Try to talk to some cats—and maybe even dogs.” A look of distaste came over him as he uttered these words. Dooley and I shared the look. No cat enjoys the prospect of having to deal with the canine species. Then again, if we were to help Odelia we needed to overcome our prejudices, cat up and ferret out information where it could be found. Even if it meant having to talk to Dieber’s pack of Chihuahuas or whatever foul species he favored.

So while Brutus headed towards the house, Dooley and I decided to check out the rest of the garden. And we hadn’t moved ten feet when suddenly we saw a familiar face.

“Isn’t that…” Dooley began.

“Clarice!” I yelled. “Yoo-hoo! Clarice!”

The feral cat was lounging on a lounge, casually licking her paws, and surveying the world with those dark eyes of hers.

“Clarice!” Dooley cried when we’d reached her. “You’re alive!”

She gave him a disdainful look, her upper lip curling into a snarl. “Of course I’m alive. Why wouldn’t I be alive?”

“Diego told us you were dead. He said that he ‘took care of you.’”

Her snarl tightened. “That nasty piece of work tell you that? And you believed him?”

“Well—I didn’t,” I told her. “I didn’t believe a word he said.”

Dooley stared at me. “You didn’t believe him?”

“Are you kidding me? I knew he was yanking our chain. Who can take out Clarice? No one! And definitely not some hustler like Diego.”

“I believed him,” said Dooley. “I thought he’d killed you, Clarice. I’m glad he didn’t.”

“I’m very hard to kill,” said Clarice, and I actually believed her.

I was so glad to see her I wanted to hug her, but of course I didn’t. Hugging Clarice is one of those things you do at your own peril.

Dooley obviously liked to live dangerously, for he actually moved in for a hug. When she held up a vicious claw and produced a loud hissing sound, he quickly backed off, but didn’t lose the wide grin that had appeared on his mug the moment we caught sight of her.

“You look good,” I told the formerly feral cat. And she did. Usually Clarice looks like she’s just been in a fight, with pieces of her mottled red fur missing and scratches across her scrawny face. One ear was still lopsided, and it was obvious someone had taken a bite out of the other one at some point. But she looked well-fed and well-tempered, her fur shiny and healthy, her cheeks full and her whiskers polished to a shine.

“Yeah, I’m one of the Dieber Babes now,” she said casually, as if this was the most normal thing in the world.

We both goggled at her. “Dieber Babes?” I repeated finally.

“What’s a Dieber Babe?” asked Dooley.

“Fancats,” she said. “Dieber likes cats—in fact he adores them. Collects them en masse. Calls them his Dieber Babes.”

“But how—when—why?” I asked, not quite coherently. I simply couldn’t imagine Clarice allowing herself to be domesticated. In fact it upset my worldview so thoroughly I suddenly felt as if I’d landed in an alternate reality. Like Neo discovering the Matrix.

Clarice shrugged. “I was hanging out at the Lodge, like I usually do, when Dieber showed up with his entourage. He needed a weekend to decompress after playing a grueling show, and decided the Lodge was the place to do it. His entourage left, and he stayed behind all by himself. And that’s when we struck up a firm friendship. I would keep him company as he contemplated fate and his place in the world, and he would feed me the best damn cat food I’ve ever tasted in my entire life. Actual raw steak, the most delicious fish filets you can imagine, prime ribs…” Her eyes softened. “I think for the first time in my life I was in love.”

“With the prime ribs?” asked Dooley.

“With a human, doofus. The guy has a way with cats. Never thought I’d ever feel that way about any human again but Charlie managed the impossible. When his retreat was over, he told me he wanted to adopt me, and I decided to let him.”

“But I thought you loved your life!” I said. “Roaming around—listening to no one. Carving your own path…”

“Yeah, that all sounds great until you’ve actually lived it. Trust me, it’s not much fun having to scrounge around for food all day long. Much easier to have some dude like Dieber provide it for you.” She darted a quick look at me. “I get you now, Max. I mean, I know I’ve made fun of you in the past. Calling you a pansy-assed namby-pamby yellow-belly sissy, but I can see the allure of living with a human who truly cares about you. It’s a pretty sweet deal.”

“A Dieber Babe,” I repeated. “I just—”

“What?” she asked, her eyes suddenly flashing darkly. “You gonna judge me? Huh?”

I quickly held up a peaceable paw. “Oh, no. Of course not. No judgments, Clarice. Uh-uh. I think you look great. Doesn’t she look great, Dooley?”

“You look amazing,” Dooley said.

Clarice smiled—the first time I’d ever seen her smile. “Thanks. I feel great. In fact I haven’t felt this great in ages.”

“Do you… still catch mice though, and enjoy the occasional rat?” I inquired.

She laughed. “Sure. When you’ve got your own private chef all you want to do is gobble up a few stinking rats.”

“You’ve got your own private chef?” asked Dooley, eyes wide.

“Nothing but the best is good enough for Dieber’s Babes,” she said with a grin.

I had to hand it to her. She’d struck gold. And I was happy for her. I really was. Then again… Did she still have what it took to get rid of a certain nasty feline intruder?

“We were actually looking for you, Clarice,” I said, deciding to get down to brass tacks. “Diego has been pestering us again, and I was wondering—”

“Well, talk of the devil,” Clarice said, darting a pointed look behind us.

Even before I’d turned around, Diego’s silky voice already rang out. “Well, who do we have here? Looks like the gang’s back together again. Clarice—always a pleasure.”

“The pleasure is all yours,” she said with a menacing glance at the new arrival.

When I finally laid my eyes on Diego, I saw he wasn’t alone. “Harriet!” I cried. “What are you doing here?”

“Oh, Max. Try to keep up,” said the pretty Persian with a flash of annoyance in her green eyes. “Diego and I were invited to join Dieber’s party. The real question is: what are you doing here?”

“Odelia brought us here,” I said, raising my chin in a gesture of defiance.

“Not one of those silly murder investigations again,” she said with a roll of her eyes. “When is Odelia finally going to see that cats aren’t outfitted to play amateur sleuth?”

Her words were so outrageous I had a hard time coming up with a response.

“I thought you liked sleuthing, Harriet,” said Dooley, giving her a somber look.

“Oh, I liked it well enough when it was all fun and games, but now it’s turned into something much more sinister and I, for one, want nothing more to do with the dreadful business.” She brushed a whisker. “All that death and decay. It’s so depressing.” She batted her eyes at Diego. “Brutus is very much into all of that stuff. Good thing you’re not, Diego.”

Diego visibly shivered. “You’re absolutely right, babe. One shouldn’t get too mixed up in the affairs of men. Let them deal with their homicidal maniacal tendencies all by themselves. Us cats should rise above that terrible habit of slaying one’s brethren.”