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Carol's eyes didn't waver. "I'm not Beth, darling. What do I care how many people you've killed?"

Her voice was a little defiant, as if she were reassuring herself as well as me. There was silence after she'd finished. Outside, we could hear the big trucks going past on the highway, heading west to Tucson, Arizona, and east to El Paso, Texas; but inside the motel room there was hardly any sound at all.

"I guess I'm being forward and unladylike," Carol went on at last. "But… well, it gets lonely. I wasn't really cut out to be a career girl, Matt. And I kept remembering a pretty nice guy who'd once held my hand and wiped my nose when I was in trouble, a guy who was now legally available. And then I went down to the bank one day and there he was. So I fell on his neck, like you say." She moved her shoulders, a little awkwardly for her. "What it amounts to, darling, is that you've had your month's free trial. Now you'd better start making up your mind as to whether you're keeping the merchandise or taking it back to the store. And in the meantime-" She stopped, and smiled at me, no longer awkward, and deliberately unfastened the robe and let it fall open. "In the meantime, you can practice making up your mind by telling me if I should put on some clothes so we can go out to eat. Or… or do you perhaps have some other ideas you'd care to put into effect before I get all done up again in girdle and stockings?"

Somehow we never did get around to dinner that evening. In the morning, we read in the newspaper that the fire-breathing UFO's had once more made hostile contact with earth, near a little Mexican fishing village named Puerto Peсasco, on the Gulf of California.

13

WE ENTERED Mexico by way of a town that was called Lukeville above the border and Sonoita-or Sonoyta-below. It was located on the section of the international boundary line between Arizona and Sonora that angles kind of northwestwards, eventually striking the Colorado River not too far above the point where it empties into the head of the gulf that the Mexicans like to call the Mar de Cortez, the Sea of Cortez: that desolate, rather narrow body of water almost a thousand miles long that's bounded on the east by the Mexican mainland and on the west by the Baja California peninsula, the long, dangling tail of the North American continent.

There wasn't a great deal of international traffic when we drove through the gate, so we were soon taking our turn at the desk inside the shabby little one-story customs-and-immigration building, watching one of the Mexican border officials making out our tourist permits. They have a dramatic, rapid-fire typewriter technique that's worth watching. Then we were on the road again, heading towards the village of Puerto Peflasco, some sixty miles away.

I heard Carol, beside me, give a funny, relieved little laugh as we left Sonoita behind and struck out across the cactus-studded desert at a legal one hundred kilometers per hour-sixty mph to you.

"What's funny?" I asked.

"Borders always scare me," she said. "I'm just a hick at heart. Mart?"

"Yes?"

"You're using me, aren't you?" She made a face. "No, don't make any sexy, double-meaning cracks, and don't tell me how you are just a poor little public-relations boy trying to get along in the big cold world. You've got some idea that I can be helpful to you down here in Mexico, don't you? Maybe you figure you'll attract less attention as a lady photographer's assistant, or something. Well, I just want you to know that I don't mind, so you can stop feeling guilty about it. Remember that I didn't have to invite you along just because you gave me a very broad hint."

I said, "Carol-" She went on unheeding, "In fact, I think it's kind of romantic and exciting, darling. Just let me know what you want me to do-in a way that won't compromise your precious security, of course!"

I glanced at her, sitting there with her nice blonde hair and neatly lipsticked mouth and fresh complexion, thinking it was kind of exciting and romantic to be associated, even unofficially, with a dangerous character like me. I started to speak and changed my mind. First of all, I was under orders not to confide in her, and secondly, when they get that notion, all the words in the world won't drive it out of them.

She was wearing a tan skirt and jacket, with a silk shirt or blouse in a lighter color I guess you'd call beige. The fashionably short skirt had big pleats front and rear, making it suitable for reasonably vigorous activity, and the sporty, bush-type jacket had all kinds of pockets-you hail expected a few cartridge loops, African style.

It was kind of a movie-safari outfit that went with her romantic notions, made more so by the little suede boots she was wearing. However, except for the thin shirt, it looked fairly durable, and professional photographers do tend to go in for individualistic costumes at times, so I didn't really hold it against her. If male camera artists could sport fancy hats and capes, it wasn't really a crime for a girl to show up on the job in a bush jacket, particularly if she looked good in it, which she did.

"Just one question," I said. "Exactly how did you happen to get saddled with this UFO photo-assignment, anyway?"

"Oh, that." She laughed. "There wasn't any 'happen' about it. I'm a determined, husband-hunting girl, darling, and I didn't really think you meant to come back to me, when you left so suddenly. So I was going after you. I asked myself why a crack U.S. undercover operative would be rushed to Mexico at just this time-"

"You're still a victim of my ex-wife's vivid imagination," I complained, going through the security motions. "The truth is, she just couldn't bear to admit we got divorced because we couldn't get along in bed." I saw that Carol was smiling, totally unconvinced, and I went on: "Anyway, I didn't tell you where I was going."

"No, but you didn't make any great effort to cover your tracks, did you? And Santa Fe is a small town, and I happen to know the girl in the travel agency, who sold you the tickets. And the big thing in Mexico right now is UFOs. I figured if I got a job covering the story, I'd probably run into you down there, somewhere…

In a way it explained one of the coincidences Mac had thought incriminating, but it didn't really prove anything. In fact, I tend to be rather suspicious of females who claim to find me irresistible. It happens in this business, but the record shows that most of the ladies involved have ulterior motives for flattering me thus-a disillusioning fact that does terrible things to my ego.

Any woman, therefore, who uses my personal magnetism-or my matrimonial desirability, for God's sake!-as an excuse for chasing me the length of Mexico, or even laying plans in that direction, will normally find her explanation received with a certain amount of cynicism. But here, for no very good reason, I found myself believing in what I was told-or not so much in the story, perhaps, as in the girl who was telling it. I had learned nothing that would convince Mac of her innocence, of course; but I'd never been sold on the idea of Carol Lujan as a desperate communist agent in the first place.

I guess I was concentrating more on my thinking than on my driving. At any rate, I almost ran us off the road when a horn blared, it seemed, just behind my left ear. I pulled aside and let a big black U.S.-made sedan shoot by: one of those mean-looking front-wheel-drive Oldsmobiles with concealed headlights. Detroit has got very bashful about its light-bulbs lately. They get some funny notions of propriety in that town. A few years ago, if I remember correctly, it was the tires and wheels that had to be decently covered, with modest little skirts that made it almost impossible to change a flat.

The car was driven by a dark-faced individual wearing khakis and an official-looking cap. I didn't know him, but the front-seat passenger was a well-dressed Mexican gentleman with a neat moustache that looked very familiar. I'd last seen it in a hotel room in Santa Fe. Apparently our friend Solana-Ruiz also read the morning papers-or maybe he had private sources of information. In any case, he apparently considered the Puerto Peflasco incident worthy of his personal attention. He had to be going there since the road went nowhere else.