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At night I lay awake in my bed with the white eyelet ruffle, looking at the Dürer rabbit. It was bound to turn wrong. Joan Peeler was going to tell me it was just a mistake, that they'd changed their minds, they wanted a three-year-old. They'd decided to wait another couple of years. I worried about Claire's husband. I didn't want him to come home, take her away from me. I wanted it to always be like it was, the two of us in the living room eating pate de foie gras and strawberries for dinner and listening to Debussy records, talking about our lives. She wanted to know all about me, what I was like, who I was. I worried, there wasn't really much to tell. I had no preferences. I ate anything, wore anything, sat where you told me, slept where you said. I was infinitely adaptable. Claire wanted to know things like, did I like coconut soap or green apple? I didn't know. "No, you have to decide," she said.

So I became a user of green apple soap, of chamomile shampoo. I preferred to have the window open when I slept. I liked my meat rare. I had a favorite color, ultramarine blue, a favorite number, nine. But sometimes I suspected Claire was looking for more than there was to me.

"What was the best day of your life?" she asked me one afternoon as we lay on the free-form couch, her head on one armrest, mine on the other. Judy Garland sang on the stereo, "My Funny Valentine."

"Today," I said.

"No." She laughed, throwing her napkin at me. "From before."

I tried to remember, but it was like looking for buried coins in the sand. I kept turning things over, cutting myself on rusty cans, broken beer bottles hidden there, but eventually I found an old coin, brushed it off. I could read the date, the country of origin.

"It was when we were living in Amsterdam. A tall thin house by the canal. There was a steep twisted staircase, and I was always afraid of falling." Dark green canal water and rijsttafel. Water rats as big as opossums. The thick smell of hashish in the coffeehouses. My mother always stoned.

"I remember, it was a sunny day, and we ate sandwiches of raw hamburger and onions, standing up at a corner cafe, and my mother sang this cowboy song: 'Whoopee ti yi yo, git along little dogies.'" It was the only memory I had of Amsterdam being sunny.

Claire laughed, a sound like bells, drew her knees up to her chin and wrapped her arms around them, gazing at me in a way I could have bottled and stored like a great wine.

"We sat in the sun overlooking the canal, and she said, 'Look, Astrid, watch this.' And she waved at the people passing by on a glass sightseeing boat. And all the passengers waved back. They thought we were Dutch, see, welcoming them to our city. That was my best day." The sun and the herring gulls and all those people waving, thinking we were from there, that we belonged.

At the other end of the couch, Claire sighed, unfolding her legs, smiling nostalgically. She didn't see who I had been then, a thin, lonely child, warmed by the mistaken thought that I belonged. She saw only the childish fun.

"You've been everywhere, haven't you."    •

I had, but it hadn't done me much good.

THE DAY Ron was expected home from Nova Scotia, Claire threw out all the take-out packages, cleaned the kitchen, and did three loads of laundry. The house was fragrant with cooking and Emmylou Harris sang something about bandits in Mexico. Claire had rubber gloves on, she was pulling meat off a chicken that was still hot, wearing a red-and-white-checked apron and lipstick. "I'm making paella, what do you think of that?"

It made me anxious. I liked the way it was, we'd settled into a routine, and now it was being thrown off by the part I didn't yet know, the part that could change everything for me. Already I resented her husband, and I hadn't even met him. But I vacuumed the living room, helped her make their bed with fresh sheets printed with falling roses, red and white. "Red and white are the marriage colors," Claire explained.

She opened the French doors to the garden, blooming vibrantly in the April sun. Her hands lingered and smoothed the white quilt. I knew she wanted to be in this bed with him, making love with him. I secretly hoped he would miss his plane, get into an accident on the way to the airport. I was unnerved by her tremulous anticipation. She reminded me of a certain kind of rose she grew in the garden, called Pristine. It was white with a trace of pink around the outside, and when you picked it, the petals all fell off.

I didn't know why he had to come back now. I was having such a good time. I'd never been such a source of interest. I certainly didn't want to share this with some husband, some Ed on the couch. Even an Uncle Ray would upset the wonderful balance.

At about six, his car pulled up in the driveway, a small silver Alfa Romeo. He got out, slung a hanging bag over his shoulder, removed a duffel and an aluminum briefcase, the gray of his hair catching the late sun. I stood uneasily on the porch as she ran to him. They kissed, and I had to look away. Didn't she know how easily this could go bad, wasn't she afraid?

WE ATE PAELLA outside on the patio under a string of lights shaped like chili peppers, Emmylou singing in the background, the sweetheart of the rodeo. Mosquitoes whined. Claire lit citronella candles, and Ron told us about the assignment he 'd gone to Halifax to film, a story about a haunted bar. He was a segment producer on a show about the weird and occult. Evidently the ghost nearly smothered a customer to death last year in the men's room.

"It took us three hours to get him back in there. Even with the film crew, he almost chickened out. He knew it was going to try to finish him off."

"What would you have done if it had?" Claire asked.

Ron stretched his legs out on the bench in front of him, hands clasped behind his head. "I'd have sicced the Tidy Bowl man on it."

"Very funny." Her face was the shape of a perfect candy-box heart, but there was a haze of mistrust over her features.

"I could try Vanish."

As they joked, I tried to see what Claire found so great about him. He was attractive but not stunning — medium height, trim, small features, closely shaven. He brushed his steel-gray hair back without a part. He wore rimless glasses and his cheeks were rosy for a man's. Hazel eyes, hands smooth with trimmed nails, smooth wedding band. Everything about Ron was smooth, calm, underplayed. He told a story, but it didn't matter if we liked it or not, not like Barry, looking for applause. He didn't overwhelm you. He didn't seem to need anything.

She took his plate, scraped the scraps onto hers, stacked it underneath, reaching for mine. "If you don't watch out, you could be the one to vanish." She said it lightly, but the timing was off.

"The La Brea Vortex," he said.

The phone rang and Ron went through the open French doors to answer it. We saw him lie down on the white quilt, pick at his toenails as he talked. Claire stopped clearing the table, and her face blurred, resolved, blurred. She stood at the picnic table fiddling with the plates, with the scraps and silverware, trying to hear what he was saying.