had tried the horn. It didn’t work. I got out and shouted, adding the damned horn to my list of negotiable items to bring up to Arnie. Arnie had almost as much to answer for as General Franco.

“Anybody here?” I called.

Tommy the mongrel came loping out from behind the station, stopped, sat down, and looked at me. A few paces behind him came Dot himself, hands plunged in his overalls, pipe in the corner of his mouth, lost in thought.

“What can I do you … it’s you, the fella who left with the midget,” he said.

“It’s me,” I acknowledged. “How about some gas? I’ll make a deal. This tie for three gallons.”

Dot walked up to look at the tie. The dog moved to his side and joined him.

“What’s the ADA for?” he asked.

“Association of Defenders of America,” I answered proudly.

“Two gallons,” he said. “On account of I was in the service with Sergeant Alvin York, the number one defender of America ever lived.”

“I remember you mentioning it,” I said as he moved to the pump. “What you do with my old wreck?”

Dot chuckled shyly and nodded toward the rear of the station.

“Fixing her up back there. Welding the transmission back, a few hoses and such, and she’ll be-”

“Good as new,” I finished.

“Nope, never that, but worth a couple of hundred and probably in better shape than what you’re driving here.”

I bought a Whiz bar and bottle of Pepsi, for which I paid precious cash, bid Dot and Tommy farewell, and went on about my business.

Plaza Del Lago glittered green in the dusk when I came over that last hill and into the dry valley. I didn’t stop or even slow down at Cal’s General Store. I didn’t need information and couldn’t pay for services. Besides, I knew where I was going even if I wasn’t sure what I could find there.

The porches of the two hotels were empty. People were inside eating their dinner and drinking Poodle Springs water. I went on to the Grayson house and parked just about where I had the last time.

Next to the house sat the Packard. The sun was almost gone for the day, and somewhere out in the desert an animal went crazy yelping. I looked once at the Joshua, walked up to the door, and knocked.

The door opened, and I gave my best Sunday-go-to-hell grin at the moustached man in front of me, who put his hand to his bushy hair, looked as if he had been caught with his hand where it shouldn’t have been, and said, “Mr. Peters.”

“I thought my name was Pevsner,” I said to Dr. Winning, giving him time to grab an idea or two.”

“I’m truly sorry about that,” he said, sounding more than truly sorry. “As soon as you left, I did some checking. Your story was absolutely true. I’ll have someone drop your clothes and your gun at your office.”

“Can I come in, or do you just want to close the door and pretend I never came?”

He hesitated for an instant and then stepped back to let me pass.

“The Graysons have been under a great deal of stress with this,” he said. “I’ve been trying to help with Mrs. Grayson.”

“Who is it?” came Delores Grayson’s voice as she stepped into the hall. She was wearing a pair of white slacks and a white sweater and looked as if she had just stepped out of an ad for Woodbury soap. “You?”

“I seem to be welcome wherever I go,” I said, stepping forward before someone shoved me out of the door.

“The state police are looking for you,” she said nervously.

“You mean you didn’t tell them I didn’t kill Grayson?” I asked.

“I will,” she said. “But I’ve been so …”

I shook my head no and closed one eye to show how lame her tale was and moved past her into the living room.

“Take your time and think up a story,” I said. “I’ve got all night. Why not practice by telling me how the Packard got back.”

Winning answered without missing a beat.

“Jeffrey Ressner called Delores and told her where it was. I stopped for it in Los Angeles and drove it back. Actually, it’s rather fortunate that you came by. Maybe you can give me a lift back to town.”

“Maybe,” I said, sitting in a hardback chair. “Where’s the grieving widow?”

Delores stepped forward and bit her lower lip.

“Mother is resting in the other room. This has all been-”

“A bag of Poodle piss,” I finished for her. “Oh mom,” I shouted, “could you paddle out here for a second or two?”

“Is someone there?” came the Billie Burke voice I recognized from the phone.

“It’s me, Thor,” I said. “I common to fix things all up you bet.”

She was shorter than her daughter, maybe fifty, with gray-brown hair and wearing a sensible black widow’s suit. She was a good-looking woman with the kind of blow-away charm that powerful men sometimes like to protect.

“I don’t really understand,” she said, turning to Doc Winning and Delores for an explanation.

“To tell the truth, Mrs. Grayson, I don’t really understand it all myself,” I said. “Delores, you think you can brew some of that delicious coffee of yours?”

“There’s coffee on the stove right now,” she said, glaring at me. “I think you should leave, or we’ll be forced to call the police. You’re disturbing my mother.”

“I don’t think I’m doing much for your peace of mind either,” I went on.

“You’re enjoying this scene, aren’t you, Mr. Peters?” Winning said, moving to sit across from me while Mrs. Grayson fluttered to a place next to him.

“Yes,” I admitted. “Once a year or so I get a moment like this and I like to roll it around on my tongue like the good brandy I can’t afford.”

“Are you hinting at something?” Delores said.

“A cup of fine coffee. Take your time. You won’t miss anything. I’ve got a ghost story to start, and then we can all take turns finishing it.”

She looked at Winning, who nodded at her, and she hurried off to the back of the house.

“Mister Thor,” Jeanette Grayson began.

“His name is Peters, Jeanette,” Winning corrected.

She recognized my name and shut up. We sat looking at each other for two or three minutes till Delores came in and handed me a cup of coffee.

“I put in two spoons of sugar and some cream,” she said.

“You have a good memory,” I said, sipping the coffee.

“Mr. Peters, you are annoying.” She folded her arms and sat.

“It took me some time to figure the whole thing out,” I began between sips. “I probably still have some of it wrong, but I think it makes sense.”

“Go on,” said Winning.

“First, I should tell you that Ressner has been caught.”

That got them. They looked at one another, and Winning held up a calming hand.

“That’s good,” he said. “I hope he hasn’t been hurt.”

“He’s fine. Just about now he’s probably telling his tale to two Los Angeles Homicide cops with a lot of muscle and very little sympathy.”

“My father should have a lawyer,” Delores Ressner shouted, getting up and going to the phone.

“That’s a good idea,” I said. “I’ve got a good one named Marty Leib. He’s a bit expensive, but we won’t spare the dollars where Dad is concerned, will we?”

“Mr. Peters,” piped up Mrs. Grayson. “This sarcasm is uncalled for.”

“Let me tell it and any of you chime in to correct me,” I began. Delores put the phone down and listened.

“Somewhere during the last four years while Jeffrey Ressner was going his mad merry way in the Winning Institute, one of you, probably Doc Winning, got the idea of using Ressner to make a few million dollars,” I began.

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