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CHAPTER EIGHT


Jennifer Feinberg opened the door of her apartment and put an automatic foot out to block the cat.

“You wouldn’t like it out there,” she said, swinging it closed and snicking home the multiple locks. “I wish I could stay home.”

She dumped her attaché case on the table, walked into the kitchen to put the water on for tea, and hit the play button on the answering machine.

“Jennifer, this is your mother—”

“Oh, puh-leez,” she groaned, fast-forwarding.

“Miss Feinberg, I have to speak with you. Could you—”

She hit the stop button with a small scream of fear, closing her eyes as the machine rattled on the sofa-side table. Control your breathing, she told herself. Her hands were still shaking as she punched the number the policeman had given her into the phone.

“Carmaggio,” a voice said.

“This is Feinberg,” she managed to say, looking around her apartment.

The heavy December rain was streaking down the windows, and she hadn’t had time to turn on the lights. She was sweating under her outdoor coat. The studio smelled of sachet and tea and, very faintly, of cat. It was home, but right then it felt very lonely.

“Yes, Ms. Feinberg?” Trained patience on the other end of the line.

“I’m, ah, sorry for calling you so late.” God, that’s inane. It was seven-thirty, and neither of them worked regular hours. “But the same man called me here at home.”

“What did he say?”

“The same thing, that he has to talk to me about Steven! Look, if he has my home number, he has my address. He knows where I live.”

“We’re pretty sure this isn’t the perpetrator in the Fischer case, Ms. Feinberg,” the detective said soothingly. “But it might be an important lead.”

“So find him!” she said, and hung up.

Thank God I’m leaving the country, she thought. Three years and she’d nearly forgotten the murder. Then someone had to start phoning and reminding her of it, God.

For a few minutes she slumped, then sighed and got up to take off her coat and pour milk in the cat’s bowl. She drew the curtains and turned on the CD player: La Traviata.

“I should put on an exercise tape,” she told herself.

She put her fingers on her stomach and looked at herself in the window. That’s not fat for a woman my age. Damn all models, anyway. They were mutants, and they unloaded a whole bargeload of guilt on normal people. She was only thirty-four.

The tea was soothing. She touched the answering machine again:

“Jennifer, this is your—”

A little of the hot liquid spilled on her fingers as she zipped past the second message from her mother. Still trying to set me up with accountants. Marrying her mother had been the only really big mistake of her father’s life. The next message was from the office—they must have sent it while she was in the middle of her commute. So much for office hours.

“This is Marlene, Jennifer.” The managing director’s executive assistant. She should be calling her Ms. Feinberg, but Jennifer didn’t like to make a fuss about it. “The boss wants the last stuff on IngolfTech ready by Friday morning.”

Oh, and why not forty days of rain while he’s at it? There went her evenings for the week.

“Jenny, it’s Louisa. Are we still on for lunch Wednesday?”

Do I really want to listen to my best friend’s man troubles? Then again, it would be a chance to complain about the sexist pig of a managing director, the crank calls, and the fact that she didn’t have any man problems right now.

“Okay, lunch with Louisa,” she mumbled to herself.

“Ms. Feinberg, you’re in danger and the police can’t—”

“SHUT UP!” she screamed. The cat took off across the apartment in a tawny blur, and she hit the answering machine hard enough to make her hand hurt. “Leave me alone!”

The trip to the Bahamas couldn’t come soon enough for her.

Her fingers shook as she punched the detective’s number again.


# # #


Government House in Nassau reminded Gwen a little of old buildings in out-of-the-way comers of the Domination: a large square building of pink-stuccoed stone, with a portico on the front supported by four tall pillars. Steps of black and white stone ran down between cast-iron lampstands, ending in a marble statue of Christopher Columbus. Palm and cypress trees gave inadequate shade, and police in white colonial-looking uniforms were directing a heavy foot-traffic of tourists, bureaucrats, and visitors. Gwen stood quietly, scanning the crowds with a steady back-and-forth motion that automatically eliminated those outside the search parameters.

“Ah,” she said. “There they are.” Upwind, and she could scent the metal and gun oil of the weapons under their coats. A tang of apprehension from the men, wary but determined. “Punctual.”

“What do they want, really?” Dolores asked nervously.

“What we’ve got, essentially,” Gwen replied.

Tom looked at his watch. “At least they didn’t keep insisting on having the meeting on American territory.”

Gwen nodded. “They’re hungry. If we give them some of what they want—and dangle the rest—they’ll jump through hoops. Just remember your briefings, and keep calm.”

She led her party down the stairs to the statue. The two American agents stood to meet her. Tom looked them over rapidly.

“Strongarm specialists,” he said subvocally. “Bad sign.”

“Not necessarily,” she replied. “They do have that little affray in the warehouse to worry about. It’s natural to take precautions.”

“John Andrews,” the human said, when they stood face to face. “For the United States government.”

“Gwendolyn Ingolfsson,” she replied. “For IngolfTech.” And the Domination of the Draka.

He had quite good control, for a human, Gwen decided. He probably used that smile as part of it, immobilizing the small muscles around the mouth and eyes. She took his scent: fear, slight but definite. Not directed at her, so much, as at . . . ah. He must he afraid of what he thinks I represent. Gwen was dressed to throw the two Americans off-balance; Italian white-cotton tropical dress with a narrow gold belt, high-strap sandals, sunglasses, a broad straw hat tied with a silken handkerchief dangling in one hand.

“Well, shall we do that lunch thing?” she asked.

Tom strangled a chuckle, and Alice didn’t bother. Andrews’s answering expression looked painted-on for an instant, then puzzled.

Good, Gwen thought. If the human didn’t know what was going on, he’d fall back on pre-scripted versions of what must be happening.

The entrance to Greycliff was bustling, well-dressed parties arriving under the pillars of the veranda. She’d chosen it with malice aforethought; it was just across West Hill Street from Government House, and she knew the two American agents would spot the plainclothesmen from the Nassau police hovering in the background. That would probably keep them from trying anything drastic; the great powers of this world were absurdly solicitous of the little fish, by the standards of the history she’d learned and lived. She smiled graciously as they went through the wrought-iron gate in the whitewashed stone wall.

“My associate, Thomas Cairstens,” she introduced. “My executive assistant, Alice Wayne; and Dolores Pastrana, personal secretary to the board.”

Handshakes all around, and what the computer probe she’d launched told her were the agent’s real names. Oddly incomplete files, but possibly the humans were keeping the important bits on hardcopy.

“Shall we go in?”

The maître d’hotel and his assistants were all attention; she and the rest of the IngolfTech staff from the Nassau headquarters were regulars, and exceedingly generous tippers, and she’d sent gifts around at Christmas and Easter. All part of the process.

Bright sunlight leaked through the louvered shutters; there was a pleasant hum of conversation and the scent of food. Gwen left the conversation to her humans for the first few minutes, judging and analyzing. Andrews was the dominant of the pair, that was plain. He was looking at her more frequently, puzzled, trying to sense the hierarchy of her group. Cairstens’s type he recognized. Respect, combined with underlying dislike, she decided. And he’s realizing I really am in charge. He’s surprised at that. She finished her soup and began demolishing the seventeen-ounce pepper steak that followed it; his eyes widened slightly as she ate, and at the side orders of pommes frites. Then flicked down to her body and back again. He was having a salad.

Right, he’s off-balance enough, she decided, sipping at her wine.

“Thank you for agreeing to this meeting,” she said. “I’m most anxious for a cooperative relationship with the American government.”

Andrews nodded tightly. “You’ll understand we’re a bit anxious,” he said. “With the current world situation . . .”

She smiled. “You can be fairly certain I’m not working for Jihad al-Moghrebi,” she pointed out gently. “And besides, isn’t that mostly the Europeans’ worry?”

Her human ancestors had mostly ground Islam out of existence, back in first century b.f.s. That it was allowed to flourish here was another sign of anarchic disorder. It was a wonder this bunch hadn’t wiped themselves out long ago.

“Damned little they’re doing about it, except turning back boatloads of refugees,” he said. “Shall I be frank?”

“By all means.” And I can believe just as much as I please, she added to herself.

“We don’t know who and what you are, and who you’re associated with,” he said. “We do know that you have valuable information which shouldn’t be allowed to fall into the wrong hands.”

Gwen chuckled, a flash of white teeth against the olive tan of her face. “Well, that’s all a matter of definition, now isn’t it?”

The Americans’ bodies tensed unconsciously, their pupils dilating. A fight-or-flight response; they expected bargaining.

“I’ll lay my cards on the table,” Gwen said. And you can believe as much as you please. “I’m not going to tell you my own identity. There are interests who’d be very glad to see me . . . out of the picture.”

A fractional nod from Andrews, a subliminal grunt from Debrowski. Ah. Interesting. That confirmed something they already thought they knew. I must look into that.

“However, you know my group has international participation.”

“Mueller. And Singh. Not a recommendation, considering their records.”

“The good doctors aren’t in a political mode anymore,” she said.

Quite true. They were her serfs, her slaves, albeit favored ones.

“And in any case, this goes well beyond them. We—my group and I—have decided to tap the world of . . . nonconventional science. Outside the orthodox hierarchies, with their fixed ideas of what’s possible and what isn’t. There’s an enormous amount of dross, but every now and then there’s a pearl . . . and the pearls have been going to waste for want of a systematic search. With modern information-processing methods and some imagination, such a search is possible.”

Andrews ate a forkful of his salad. “Which leaves the question of motivations. Secret international associations interested in cutting-edge technologies, with members associated with dubious regimes and groups”—he glanced aside at Cairstens, who smiled back toothily—“or with no visible pasts at all, well . . .”

Gwen finished her steak. Ah, just right. Very faint touch of garlic, and slightly bloody in the middle. She remembered crouching over an elk in a winter storm . . . was it only three years ago, on her personal worldline? Cutting away at the flesh with her obsidian knife, breaking joints with a swift blow of her fist. The hot salt taste of the blood, and strength flowing back into her shivering body as the calories translated into warmth. It had taken her four days to strip the carcass bare; the wolves had shown up on the second, and provided her with a couple of warm furs. This was just as challenging, in its way.

“Our objectives are simple,” she said. “Money, a great deal of money, and the power that goes with it.” She held up a hand. “Nothing illegitimate. You’ll have checked out our contacts with American businesses.”

“Yes.” Andrews nodded. “You seem to be concentrating on those.”

“It’s the only game in town,” she replied. “Europe’s too tightly tied up by established players, and besides, it’s too close to the Middle East, and these days . . .” She shrugged. “Asia is xenophobic, and China is stirring that pot too enthusiastically. There are mutual interests.”

Andrews moved in smoothly. “Mutual interests require mutual benefits,” he said.

“Why, hasn’t the United States benefited from IngolfTech’s cooperative ventures?” she asked mildly, raising her eyebrows. She also raised a hand, and began to tick off points. “There’s the ultradense memory chip we did with Texas Instruments, there’s the oil-eating bacteria we’re bringing forward with Exxon—if your FDA ever gets off its fat arse—there’s the holographic projector . . .”

“Granted. However.”

Gwen nodded. Your governmentmore particularly your agency within that governmentwould like some things it could control personally.

It was startling how similar drakensis and human were, in some respects. Factionalism, for instance.

“I understand completely. On the other hand, a cooperative attitude on the part of your government would help immensely; particularly since IngolfTech is planning to move more and more onshore.”

She leaned back, nibbling on a pastry, and made a small gesture with her free hand. Tom put his attaché case on the table and snapped it open. With an understated flourish he produced a neatly bound folder.

“A token of our sincerity,” she said. “Take a look.”

Andrews did, with Debrowski leaning over his shoulder. After a moment he grunted, a sound that almost turned into a squeal.

“Is this serious?” he asked.

“Entirely. You’ll find complete drawings and process data in the disks enclosed at the back. The hardcopy is an outline of the product and its applications.”

“But nobody’s been able to get a superconductor to operate at room temperature—”

“—and this operates up to the ferromagnetic transition temperatures at several hundred degrees, yes. Take a look at the energy densities, by the way.”

Primitive stuff, invented about the time she was born, or a little earlier. Still, it would give this world some things it sadly lacked: a moderately efficient way to store electrical energy, for starters.

“For instance, besides transmission lines, you could use this to power electric vehicles with ranges of thousands of miles, and recharge times measured in seconds or minutes. The increased energy efficiencies would make the U.S. completely independent of imported oil. Superconductors could be used as replacements for capacitors, for applications needing surge power.”

The agents twitched again, imperceptibly. Surge output was useful for many things; most importantly, lasers and other beam weapons.

Andrews was breathing hard as he read. Gwen amused herself with a daydream of exactly how she’d take him when the time came for the masks to come off. I’ll let him run, she thought. The scent of his terror would be intoxicating. Then leap on him. He’d take a moment to realize just how helpless he was in her hands. Then—

All five of the humans and some of the ones at the nearer tables were reacting to her; her own three knew exactly what was happening to them, which made it harder for them to resist. She clamped down on the secretions. Tsk. Keep your mind on business. Besides which, it would be a shame to mark this dress.

Andrews looked up, his face damp with sweat; the lust was there, but directed at the folder in front of him—at the conscious level, at least.

“I thought you were mostly in biotechnology,” he said shakily.

“Yes, but this is rather more immediate. With that data you could begin large-scale production immediately. At that secret little black-program place you have out in the California desert, for instance.”

Debrowski looked up at her sharply. “You know about that?”

“What a lynx you are, Mr. Debrowski,” Gwen said dryly. “Nothing gets past you.”

Gwen smiled back with bland amiability at his frown, dabbing whipped cream on a kiwi tart and eating it. The smooth-bland-buttery combination of flavors made her close her eyes for a moment of pure pleasure. To complement it she kicked off one of her sandals under the protecting cover of the tablecloth and slid the foot between Dolores’s knees. They opened immediately, though the Colombian’s face remained a study in concentration as she bent over the notebook computer beside her plate. Gwen stroked the velvety softness of the other’s inner thighs while she turned her face to the Americans. It must be terrible to be a human, sense-blind to three quarters of existence, noticing nothing.

“And the quid pro quo?” Andrews asked.

“Simply . . . protection. Let it be known in the appropriate circles that IngolfTech stands well with the government.”

“And in return, we get a monopoly?”

Gwen laughed. “I have no intention of selling you the cow,” she said. “We will let you milk it, but the beast itself stays beyond your reach.”

Andrews looked down again at the folder with its laser-printed text and colored graphs. “This sort of thing can’t fall into the wrong hands,” he said.

“Exactly,” Gwen said. “If IngolfTech released that, the whole world would be in an uproar.”

And looking into things it shouldn’t and asking questions I can’t answer.

“But you can handle it. We’ll certain direct anything else of that nature to you; all we want is to be able to commercialize the more . . . conventional innovations that are our stock in trade. We’re talking really considerable sums, here, in the immediate to medium term. Billions, enough to make Microsoft look like a mom-and-pop store, as you Yanks say.”

Andrews closed the folder, fingers unconsciously caressing it. “We’ll certainly be in touch, Ms. Ingolfsson,” he said, grinning.

“By all means.” She returned his handshake, squeezing just enough to startle him a little.

Tom chuckled and poured another mineral water over the crushed ice and lime in his glass as the Americans left. Their walk quickened as they left Greycliff, turning almost into a trot as they reached the street outside. Gwen raised her own glass in a toast; she smiled over the rim at Dolores with affectionate cruelty.

“Nothing gets by them, eh?” she said.

The Colombian began to laugh, then caught her breath and bent her head and bit her linen napkin. Tom and Alice looked over suddenly, blinked, then burst into chuckles themselves. The Draka gave a final tweak with her prehensile toes and withdrew the foot, wiping it on the inside of the other’s skirt.

“I should think they’ll be in touch,” Tom said. “Show those goons a weapon, and they get one on the cat couldn’t scratch.”

He winked at Dolores, and the woman gave a breathless sigh and dabbed at her forehead. The waiters brought the dessert tray around again, noticing nothing of the byplay.

Blind, Gwen thought. Humans were absolutely blind, as well as scent-deaf. It made them endlessly amusing. This Andrews, for instance, had a diverting sense of his own importance. It would be entertaining, when he realized he was a toy, a plaything.

“Still, it’s best we get some other influential contacts in that direction,” Gwen said thoughtfully. “Tom, Alice—after we’ve celebrated for the rest of the afternoon, I want you to firm things up with that communications mogul you’ve been cultivating. I’d like to have that solid before the bankers arrive, and we’ve only got three months.”

Tom nodded, blotting his lips. “Shall we?” he said, rising.

“By all means.”


# # #


“So, you haven’t heard back from David yet?” Jennifer Feinberg dumped NutraSweet into the coffee. The radicchio salad looked particularly disgusting today, but that was what the diet said she could have. She speared a forkful moodily and munched. I want corned beef on rye, with mustard, pickle on the side, order of french fries, and a nice gooey pastry to follow. Fat chance. Chez Laurence wouldn’t have anything so plebeian as corned beef on the menu; their French pastries were divine, though . . . The little restaurant had a friendly bustle at lunch hour, the more so as the day outside was sleet and ghastliness. Some of the sleet had gotten inside her rubbers.

“David? He said he needed more space.”

“If he had any more space, he’d need a spacesuit,” Louisa Englestein said.

“Forget David. David is history.”

“Your personal history, you should forgive me, is getting to be like the history of Canada—boring.”

“You’d rather my life was like the history of say, Poland?” She swallowed the radicchio leaf. “Besides, who’s got time for a life?”

Louisa did, but then Louisa worked as an assistant curator at the Metropolitan Museum, when she wasn’t reading manuscripts for a genre publisher. Both jobs together didn’t pay half what Jennifer made, but they didn’t amount to an eighty-five-hour week together, either. And they didn’t leave her feeling like a beaten dishrag at the end of that week.

“The only date I’ve got is with the police,” she said, looking at her fork. I’m hungry, but I don’t want to put that leaf into my face.

“Police?”

“That slimy whoever-it-is keeps phoning me. I’m talking to the detective again, in case it really is connected with poor Stephen . . . well, you know.”

“What’s really bothering you?” Louisa said, patting her hand.

Jennifer looked up. “It’s this IngolfTech thing,” she said. “I don’t know, something doesn’t look right.”

“A try for a phony flotation?”

“No, the cash flow’s there, the product’s there. It just doesn’t smell right, somehow. Thirty-year-old women from nowhere don’t turn up in the Bahamas, pull off an eight-million-dollar salvage operation—pirate treasure, no less!—and then start successful companies buying and selling patents and licenses. And make a fortune in less than three years. Not in the real world.”

“You’re going to give a negative report?”

“Not on your life. Not without some facts to back up the gut feeling.” She sighed. “Now, tell me about the weekend.”

Louisa rolled her eyes. “You’re not going to believe what happened,” she began.

Jennifer settled in to listen. For once, her friend’s love-life wasn’t completely enthralling. There was something rotten in the state of IngolfTech underneath the shiny figures; all her experience said so.


# # #


“God . . . damn . . . it . . . all,” Carmaggio said quietly, crumpling the fax and starting to throw it into his office wastepaper basket.

After a moment’s thought he tore it up instead, stepping out and down the corridor to the men’s room. He tossed the fragments into one of the toilets, paused, then unzipped his fly.

Nice and confidential, and I can show the spooks what I think of them, he thought as he returned to the office.

“What’s the news?” Jesus asked.

“You remember Andrews and Debrowski?”

“The two who leaned on Chen?”

The Puerto Rican’s narrow dark face flushed slightly. Henry knew exactly how he felt. It was a shitty thing to do, first—no better than blackmail—but that wasn’t all. They’d all done some questionable things now and then; you couldn’t always operate by the rulebook. It was a matter of turf, as well. Bad enough to have the Feds muscling in on a case you were running; at least the FBI were real cops, and they could be useful for some things. A gang of spooks—who weren’t officially supposed to operate on American soil anyway—was another matter entirely. Particularly when their objective seemed to be to stroke the perp, not catch her.

“A little bird from the Feds tells me they got sent to the Bahamas. To visit one Gwendolyn Ingolfsson, head of IngolfTech.”

“Mierda.”

“Yeah. You know how much chance we’ve got of pulling in someone who’s become a pet of the Powers That Be.”

Jesus hesitated for an instant. “We could leak it.”

“Damn, that’s tempting.”

He toyed with the notion for a moment. Headlines, embarrassments, maybe the Blackmail Twins thrown to the wolves as scapegoats—anyone who relied on their bosses for backup had better keep a jar of Vaseline handy.

“Nope. Not enough evidence. Hell, no evidence. It’d be our word against theirs—and they lie better than we do. Pity about that. I’d love to do it.”

Jesus sighed. “And here I was looking forward to interviews. Maybe a book deal, sí? How I tracked down space aliens and humongous baboons.”

Carmaggio snorted. “I’d feel better if we could find the Phone Bandit,” he said. “The bastard knows things he shouldn’t.”

“He’s no friend of the cutting lady,” Jesus pointed out. “Not from what he’s been saying.”

“He’s a goddamn ghost, is what he is. And he’s bugging people over at Primary Belway Securities again, too.”

Jesus grinned. “That nice lady stockbroker—”

“Analyst.”

“—analyst been calling you up to complain again?”

“Yeah, and there’s nothing I can do. We can’t trace the calls, and the case doesn’t exist anymore. Goddamn all hackers, anyway. They can always use the computers better than we can. I don’t see how the phone companies make any money at all with these little fuckers hacking into their billing programs and whatnot.”

“Why don’t you hand her over to the receptionists?” Jesus asked. “The captain, he’s not going to be happy if he finds out you’re still talking to people about the case.”

“Ah, she’s not so bad. And she does have a legitimate beef. Nothing the captain can do if I want to talk to someone on my own time and ticket. It’s a free country.”


# # #


“We haven’t been able to trace the calls,” he said, stirring his coffee. “I’d write it off as a crank, except that he does seem to have some information.” Broad spatulate hands spread. “That’s about all I can say.”

The detective looked a lot like a bear. A teddy bear, Jennifer thought. If you could imagine a middle-aged blue-collar Italian teddy bear, that was. She’d always imagined detectives as more . . . dashing, somehow. Detective Lieutenant Henry Carmaggio looked like a plumber in a suit, a rather wrinkled suit at that.

He looks like he expects me to make a scene, Jennifer thought. Which was something she never did, unless it was necessary and justified.

“Thank you,” she said. “Anyway. It’s satisfying just to talk to someone—in person, I mean. I get all these calls from this lunatic, and then I phone the police and get the runaround.”

The detective shrugged. Behind his thick shoulders the window of the little Italian restaurant was fogged with condensation; it was a cold afternoon, freezing rain and slush. Smells of garlic and spices came from the kitchens, wafts that sent saliva spurting into the back of her mouth in a way that no radicchio leaf on earth could do.

“Ms. Feinberg—”

“Jennifer, please.”

“Jennifer. One of the many lousy things about my job is the limited number of ways I can help people. People come to the police when something bad has happened to them; and they want us to, hell, put it right. Usually we can’t.”

“Is that official?” she asked.

Carmaggio laughed, and mimed taking something off his head. “No. Strictly no. My official NYPD invisible detective’s hat is now off. Matter of fact, I’ve already clocked out for the day. We’re not this reassuring, officially—what with the budget squeeze, it’s hard enough to account for our phone bills, much less coffee.”

Jennifer chuckled. “It’s not that I’m really worried, Detective—”

“Henry.”

“—Henry. It’s just, you know, you can feel sort of vulnerable thinking there’s someone out there. Especially after what happened with poor Stephen.”

Carmaggio sighed. “I know. From my point of view, it’s frustrating as hell.” He smiled. “Maybe we ought to remember what my grandmother Lucrezia always said.”

“What was that?”

“That you get maybe three big breaks in a whole life—but you can eat pasta three times a day.” Grinning: “A cousin of mine runs this place, too.”

“I shouldn’t . . .”

“Hiya, Henry. Who’s the girl?” A waitress bustled up with a plate of bruschetta.

Goil. She actually said “goil,” Jennifer thought, slightly bemused. Even for a middle-aged, thick-armed lady of Neapolitan descent with a mustache, wasn’t that a bit Old New York?

“That, Lorenza, is not a girl. It’s a lady.”

“I shouldn’t . . .” she repeated, and took a piece.

Tomato, cheese and oregano exploded across her tongue, along with the crusty bread and smooth olive oil. “Oh, well. Who wants to try getting home at seven, anyway. Dutch treat.”

Henry nodded. “Sure, no problem.”

She took another bite. “This is good.”

“The thought of this place kept me alive in the Parrot’s Beak,” he said. “It’s kept me overweight ever since I got back to the World.”

Jennifer paused. “You were in Cambodia?” she said.

“Yeah?”

A slight silence fell. Carmaggio hunched a shoulder—slightly defensive even now, she thought. Probably has visions of me with long straight hair, granny glasses and a sign about LBJ.

“My brother Maurice was there,” she said. His face changed, remembering the picture on her desk. “In the Fifth Cavalry.”


# # #


Jennifer belched gently as she snapped home the multiple locks on the inside of her apartment door. “What a nice guy,” she mused, as the cat rubbed against her ankles.

It had been a long time since she ate that much at one sitting. Amazing. I pig out on lasagna and crank calls don’t worry me anymore. You heard about great ethnic eateries at moderate prices, but she’d never actually found many. Mind you, the crowd on the Street tended to apply the Universal Dollar Yardstick to restaurants as well. And Henry was a nice guy. No getting bent out of shape about her picking up half the bill . . . well, it was scarcely a date, but still. He’d even asked if she wanted her phone number back now that the calls from whoever-it-was had stopped; which was a gentleman’s way to find out if she wanted to hear from him again. Old-fashioned, but nice.

Mother would have a cow if she knew. Italian, and a cop. “Mother, I just had dinner with him, we didn’t elope to the Poconos.”

Maybe she’d go out with him again. He had a sense of humor, and conversation from something outside the incestuous world she worked in. It beat listening to David talk about his therapist and how he was dealing with his Inner Child. What the Inner Child needed was a good spanking, and anyway she preferred to talk to adults.

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Framed