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A third pair of headlamps switched on, back at the construction site, and the vehicle started coming down the street. Halfway to Leo’s, it swung sharply to the curb and its lights were switched off.

Someone had stopped to make a call, perhaps, or check directions, or simply to park closer to a house. I rolled down my window to catch the sound of a car door slamming as someone got out. I heard nothing. I waited in the dark, watching the rearview mirror for five minutes, maybe ten. No door slammed. No headlamps came back on.

I started my engine and pulled out. Turning right at the corner, I saw the headlamps start up behind me. It didn’t have to mean anything.

I pulled onto the bright carnival that was Thompson Avenue, and for a moment, there were all kinds of headlamps behind me, slow-cruising gents checking out the meat winking through the snow. I turned off onto the side street, then onto my street. Getting out, I looked back. A car had pulled off onto the side street that led to mine and stopped. Men used that stub of a street sometimes, with the less demanding of the girls that worked the curbs.

Invariably, though, the johns cut their headlamps. Not so the car that had pulled off Thompson. Its headlamps remained on.

I stepped into the cold that was the turret, but I didn’t turn on any lights. I found my way up the wrought-iron stairs and turned past the kitchen to the slit window that most directly faced the street. The headlamps were moving toward the turret. The snow was too thick to see what kind of car it was.

It stopped in front of the turret. Its lights went out. I swore at myself for not turning on the outside light. It would have helped me see.

Nothing happened for two or three minutes. Then the car door opened and was shut quickly. I couldn’t make out anything in the brief flash of the car’s inside light.

I waited at the top of the second-floor landing.

Someone started beating on my door.

Seven

The figure stood in the dark, outside my door.

“Jenny Galecki,” I said.

“Jennifer Gale, underappreciated media personality,” she corrected, raising her chin, sniffing, a parody of arrogant celebrity.

We stood as awkward as kids fixed up for a prom until I found the wit to say, “You followed me from Leo’s block?”

Dark haired, slim everywhere except a bit north of her waist, she was every bit as beautiful as I remembered.

“Leo lives there?” she asked, seemingly surprised. With Jenny, things were often seemingly; usually she knew way more than she let on. Then, “You’re going out again?”

“Again?” I asked, dumb as a brick.

“You didn’t turn on any lights when you got home, and you’re wearing your blazer and your peacoat. So, are you going out again?”

“You’ve never been to my turret in the cold months. In winter, I wear two coats indoors, especially in March.”

“You never got heat?”

“There’s a small space heater, but bigger things are in store. I’m embracing my future.”

She laughed, perhaps at the ice that was breaking. “Lester Lance Leamington? He advertises on Channel 8.” It had been her station, until she moved out to San Francisco several months before.

Thinking, as I’d been, at glacial speed, I suddenly became aware we were still in my open doorway. “Let’s go out for dinner. We’ll ask each other inconvenient questions.”

“Where?”

“Someplace with heat,” I said smoothly.

She drove us in her Prius, because as she put it, she’d already been in my Jeep. She’d also been upstairs, in the turret. We’d used the fireplace on the second floor, after an especially chilling day in the heat of summer. I think we both thought we might go higher, to the third floor, where there was another fireplace. And a bed. Instead she’d left for San Francisco.

She drove to a barbecue joint just inside the Chicago line. It had black walls and a skull-and-bones painted on its door. Proper gourmet dining was at last coming to the city.

“This place is dark and looks to have many small rooms,” I observed aloud, as we stepped into the foyer. Jennifer Gale, former features reporter for Channel 8, attracted attention wherever she went.

“I like it because it’s dark and has many small rooms.” She smiled. We were definitely thawing.

The waitress parked us in a booth at the back of a particularly dark room. We ordered Cokes and pulled pork from a waitress who didn’t give Jenny a second glance.

“So, what brings you back to Rivertown, other than the chance to bump into me?” I asked.

“I’ve been back for two weeks.”

Trying to hide surprise, curiosity, and more than a little disappointment, I said, “That explains why I haven’t called.”

“Huh?” she said, and we both laughed.

“Are you permanently back?”

“I’m not sure.” She turned to look away, across the room. I recognized the gesture. It wasn’t that she and I had lied to each other in the past. It was more that sometimes we’d worked too hard at avoiding truths.

“Why are you staking out that new house that’s going up?”

“Interesting, such a house in such a town.”

“Enough to return from San Francisco to check out?”

She smiled, said nothing. She wasn’t going to tell me a thing.

“Who’s building it?” I asked.

“I’ve been seeing your Jeep on that block quite a bit lately.”

“Around one particular house, and yet you didn’t think to find out who lives there?”

She laughed. “Maybe I did find out it was Leo’s, though it doesn’t appear that he’s around.”

“He’s away. I’m looking after things,” I said.

“Doing a most thorough job of it, too. Tonight, you stopped outside his bungalow, turned off your lights, and just sat, looking after things.”

“You could have come up and said hello.”

“That’s what I’m doing now.” She smiled. It was a wonderful smile, articulated by slight lines around her mouth that were hidden by makeup for television. She reached across the table to touch my wrist. It was like fire. “Just like old times?”

“Comfortable, for sure.” Except it wasn’t. Leo Brumsky was missing from the same block that had drawn Jenny back to Rivertown, and until I knew what he was up to, and she was up to, I couldn’t say much at all.

Our pulled pork sandwiches came. “Saved by pork,” she said.

“I’ve always wondered what ‘pulled’ means,” I said, playing along. “I keep envisioning a frantic tug-of-war between a butcher and a screaming pig, with the butcher always winning. Then the image gets too gruesome to think about further, and I let it go.”

“Same old Dek,” she said.

She talked a careful little about San Francisco and the vagaries of network news reporting. We agreed they were like the vagaries that seemed to afflict everything, except the opinions of addle-headed experts. Nobody honest knew anything about the future, not anymore.

The waitress took away our plates, and Jenny asked, “Why didn’t you call after you got back from Indiana?”

“Actually, I did,” I said. “I just clicked off before sending the call through.”

“I wouldn’t have pressed,” she said.

We’d both been hunting the same woman. She could have been talking about that. Or she might have been referring to my relationship with Amanda, my ex-wife.

“The papers said you pushed to get transferred,” I said, not ready to press, either.

“It seemed an opportune move. Fewer features, more investigative reporting.” She said it with a smile, but there might have been a bit of hurt behind her eyes. My not calling wasn’t the major reason she went to San Francisco, but it still made me an ass.

“Remember the night we lit my fireplace?”

“We took a warming romantic possibility and invited in our ghosts to cool things down.”

“Your husband, my ex-wife, and us. It was crowded.”