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“Whose fault is that? But we ought to be thankful he’s occupying himself.”

“And he’s not even coming down to dinner tonight?”

“He made a deal with Mrs. Meuth. There’s a TV movie he’s desperate to see. He promised to put the dishes in the dishwasher afterward.”

Mathieson turned up his shirt collar and wrapped the necktie around it. She put the eye-shadow brush down and turned to look at him. “You’ve got that all askew. Come over here and use the mirror.”

He had to get down on one knee behind her ottoman to see himself in the mirror. “Paying court to the queen,” he observed.

“Very gallant.”

He got the knot centered. Her face hovered discomfitingly near. She had gone bolt still.

“What’s the matter?”

“I’m jittery,” she said. “I keep feeling as if I’m on the verge of a crisis. Every little disturbance feels like a major calamity.”

He reached for her hand but she was turning away; she stood up and walked swiftly to the wardrobe. He got to his feet and watched her step into the dress. “Zip me up?”

He crossed the room and pulled the zipper up and dropped both hands on her shoulders. “How long are we going to go on being polite to each other in cool voices?”

She leaned back against him. “I wish I knew the answer to that. I’m just too neurotic to think.”

He slid his hands around her waist but she pushed them away. “Let’s go down to dinner. I’m famished.”

7

Mathieson dragged himself to the dinner table and tried to ignore what he was sure was Homer’s smirk. The chandelier threw a yellow glow along the immense dining table. Vasquez remarked, “I know. It feels rather like a set for a 1946 Warner Brothers film — something with Sydney Greenstreet.” Vasquez among his oddities had a penchant for old movies and an apparent total recall concerning their stories, casts, directors and writers.

Unceremoniously Mrs. Meuth laid their plates before them and retired. Something in the kitchen began to grind and clatter. Mathieson looked at the thick red steak, the buttered zucchini, the salad, the glass of ice water. He was not hungry.

“I know,” Homer said, “but eat it anyway. You need the protein.”

“Been running my tail off for a week, you’d think I’d be famished.”

“It doesn’t work that way unless you’re conditioned to it,” Vasquez told him. “Unaccustomed exercise mutes a sedentary man’s appetite. I’m not sure why.”

Homer said, “Go ahead, eat up. It won’t put weight on you — that’s diet margarine, not butter.”

Mrs. Meuth bustled in with a pitcher of iced tea. She slammed it on to the table and left, her feet falling like bowling pins. She was overweight but not a huge woman by any means; nevertheless everything she did seemed to require the accompaniment of loud noises.

Vasquez remarked, “These are surroundings to which one wouldn’t mind becoming accustomed.”

Jan said, “Is everything you touch this glamorous?”

“Hardly. Most often our work is sheer boredom. Homer can confirm that, I’m sure.”

Mathieson said, “Not excepting present company. It drives Homer up the wall, being coach and trainer to an inept middle-aged idiot.”

Homer squinted at him. “Do I look bored? This is the best vacation I’ve had in four years working for Vasquez Inc. A lot better than repossessing cars and skip-tracing.”

Jan said, “Is that your bread and butter?”

“Sometimes. Actually most of our work is company spying.”

“Industrial counterespionage,” Vasquez said. “I do spend a good part of my time training business executives in security techniques.”

Jan poured iced tea into the four glasses. When she set the pitcher down she said, “I’d like to call some friends.” She looked directly at Vasquez. “Would that be all right?”

“Certainly. But I’d prefer you didn’t call them from here. And it would be better if you didn’t tell them exactly where we are. Mr. Meuth will be driving into town in the morning — you and I could ride with him.”

“Thank you. I only want to find out if Roger and Amy are all right.”

“Any reason why they shouldn’t be, Mrs. Mathieson?”

She made a gesture and almost overturned the glass; she caught it in time. “I feel — stranded up here. I need some thread of contact with the world.”

“Perfectly understandable.” Vasquez’s glance lifted from the rescued iced tea to Jan’s face. “I’m sure you’re thoroughly annoyed with the obsessive lengths to which my paranoia has taken us. But in the interest of your safety I’ve tried to cut off every conceivable lead to your whereabouts. It’s unlikely that your friends would be under surveillance or that their telephones would be tapped. But possible. You understand?”

“I suppose so.”

Homer jabbed his fork toward Mathieson’s plate again. “Come on, you’re stalling.”

“They always told me it was healthy to eat slowly.”

“Sure it is.” Homer’s smile was belligerent. “Eat.”

Chapter Twelve

New York: 8 September

1

Ezio blew Cuban smoke toward the ceiling and beamed expansively when Frank walked into the office. “Man you were right, Frank, son of a bitch paid off.”

“You were mysterious as hell on the phone.”

“You want me to spell anything out on a Goddamned telephone?”

“Of course not. But you’re getting a little fancy with that million-seller hit record nonsense. What’s it supposed to mean? Since when am I in the record business?”

Ezio opened the drawer and pushed the rewind switch on the tape deck. “We’ve got Merle’s wife on tape. Is that a hit record, or isn’t it?”

Frank walked around the desk and looked down at the recorder. “You don’t say.”

“Here.” Ezio handed him the typescript from the desk. “I typed up a transcript while I was waiting for you.”

Frank glanced down the first page. “Who are these people?”

“The first voice is Merle’s wife. The one they call Jan. The second woman is Roger Gilfillan’s wife, name of Amy—”

“Roger Gilfillan the movie star?”

“You remember, he’s on that list of Merle’s friends.”

“Right, OK. So the ‘Roger’ here, that’s Gilfillan.”

“Just the three of them. There’s some damn interesting stuff. So anyhow I just identified the speakers with initials — J for Merle’s wife, A for Gilfillan’s wife, R for Gilfillan.”

“The tap is on Gilfillan’s phone, right?”

“We’ve had two shifts watching him come and go. He’s shooting a TV special on one of the lots in Burbank; he goes to work every morning at seven. The phone call came in two days ago, Saturday morning; he was home.”

He watched Frank page through the transcript. Frank said, “We’ll listen to it in a minute. What’s the bottom line here?”

“She tells them she’s with her husband and kid hiding out someplace down around San Diego. She’s not supposed to tell them where — she’s calling from a pay phone. You get the operator coming in a couple of times there, telling her to deposit more change. From the phone rates we worked it out it’s somewhere in San Diego county all right but we couldn’t pin it down too close, except its north or northeast of San Diego because the charges are a dime less than they’d be all the way to the city.”

“So?”

“At least we know they’re in Southern California, Frank. That’s a lot more than we knew before.”

“Only a few million people in that part of the country, Ezio. What’s this here about ‘turning Fred into Tarzan’?”