“Or dead,” added Dave cheerfully.

“Good-night, men.” I followed Ruth back into the hall and she closed their door.

“Phil just got home,” Ruth said. “Can you keep it friendly tonight, for me?”

“Friendly,” I said. “For you.”

“Go sit down. I’ll get something for your head.”

Phil was probably on his fourth or fifth bowl of Wheaties when I joined him. He was looking down at the L.A. Times. He had prepared a bowl for me. I poured milk and took a spoonful.

“A guy got killed in Mirador,” I said, looking at Phil.

He didn’t look up, but said, “Claude Street, antique dealer. Another painting. Odd bullet like the one in Adam Place. State troopers want us to keep an eye on you. They don’t think it’s a coincidence that you found two bodies in two days under very similar circumstances.”

Ruth came back in with a washcloth. She looked at both of us to be sure that the only violence in the room was being done to flakes of wheat.

I kept eating while Ruth worked on my head. Around a mouthful of cereal I said, “Killer may be a guy named Gregory Novak.”

Phil pushed his bowl away, put down his paper, shook his head and looked at me.

“You got that from some poor half-wit named Sawyer. There isn’t any Gregory Novak in Mirador. Seidman checked phone books for most of California. We’ve even checked the Armed Forces lists. We found two Gregory Novaks. One is blind, eighty-two, and crazy. But he has one arrest. A year ago for smoking cow shit.”

“That’s stupid, but is it a crime?” I asked.

Phil didn’t bother to answer.

“He lives in Bakersfield. The other one is a petty officer on a destroyer somewhere in the Pacific.”

“How’s that feel?” Ruth queried.

My head felt wet and the bowl of water was pale red from my dried blood. It was my turn to push a bowl away. I got up and gave Ruth a quick kiss on the cheek.

“When-?” I began.

“Tomorrow,” she said. “The next day. As soon as they can get me in. I’ll let you know. I’ll be all right.”

“I’m sorry I couldn’t get here. Hey, how about I pick up the kids, all three of them, after school on Wednesday?”

“You’re not taking Lucy anywhere,” Phil growled.

“I’ll watch her.”

My eyes met Phil’s and I could see the accusation. He sat there, creeping fast toward sixty, with three kids, a sick wife, and a mortgage. He looked at me with a history of half a century of my screwing up.

“Trust me,” I said.

“I do,” said Ruth, touching my arm. “You come and get them after school Wednesday.”

Phil opened his mouth to say something but changed his mind. I finished my Wheaties and got up.

“I’ll let myself out,” I said. “Thanks.”

Ruth sat where I had been. I touched her shoulder and headed for the living room. Two actors on the radio were talking tough about a woman named Hershvogel. Since the actors were whispering and my brother wasn’t, I heard Phil, in the kitchen, say, “… because he’s about as responsible as a brain-damaged oyster.”

I looked at my parents’ photograph on the radio. I had the feeling they agreed with Phil.

The price of gas, tire rationing, and the black-out kept the streets reasonably clear at night, but it still took me almost an hour to get to Beverly Hills and Barry Zeman’s house on Lomitas. It was almost ten and I needed a shave and some clean underwear. I tidied my wind-breaker, jauntily zipped it half way up and rang the bell.

The double Amazon woman I’d seen the last time I’d been there answered the door. She was about forty, a six-foot-tall left tackle with short yellow-white hair and very serious brown eyes. She wore a white uniform and a little white hat.

“Someone sick?” I asked.

“I’m not a nurse,” she answered. “You have business here?”

“I’d like to see Dali or his wife,” I said, knowing that I had no chance of bulling past her.

“They are not available,” she said, her arms folded over her more than ample breasts.

“Tell them Toby Peters is here with another murder to report,” I said with as pleasant a smile as I could put on my grizzly face.

“I don’t care if you’re President Franklin D. Gimp,” she said. “The Dalis are not available.”

“How about Zeman?”

“Not home, leave.”

“You have a way with words, Miss …?”

“Get the hell out of here,” she said, starting to close the door.

“Miss Get-the-hell-out-of-here,” I answered, putting my foot in the door. “I’ve had one shit of a day.”

She kicked at my shoe, which was what I wanted. Instead of resisting I pulled my foot back, braced myself, and pushed against the door, which shot back and hit Miss Get-the-hell-out-of-here flat in the chest. She staggered and I stepped in, kicking the door shut behind me.

I didn’t like the look on her face as she pulled herself together. My.38 was in my hand now.

“Let’s be friends,” I suggested.

She took a step toward me.

“I’m holding a gun,” I said, pointing to the gun.

This made no impression on her. She was about a foot from my face and towering over me. I could either kill her or have the crap kicked out of me by a woman of no mean proportions.

“Odelle,” came a voice from my right as the woman grabbed my wrist. It hurt like hell.

“I’m just going to kill him a little,” Odelle said, breathing a combination of garlic and Sen-Sen in my face.

“Odelle,” Dali repeated. “Death offends and frightens me. It is not inspiring. No one, with the possible exception of one’s father, should ever die. Do you agree, Mr. Toby?”

“Completely,” I said, trying to pry Odelle’s hand from my wrist. My hand was numb and the gun was about to fall out of fingers quickly losing their feeling.

Odelle released my hand. I fumbled the.38 back into my holster and turned to Dali, who was posed on the staircase in a crimson velvet cape with a leopard-skin collar.

“Odelle,” he said, pointing at the woman, “is a model.”

“Great,” I said.

“There,” said Dali, pointing toward the living room. I looked where he was pointing and saw a canvas on an easel in the middle of the room. Painted on the canvas was a melting clock. Behind the clock was a naked woman whose back was turned. The woman’s shoulder was made of stone and little pieces were cracking off and tumbling toward the ground like tears of flesh. The woman, even from behind, looked nothing like Odelle.

“She pose for the clock?” I asked.

“Odelle is all women,” he said, stepping into the living room to admire his work. I followed him, Odelle uncomfortably close behind. I’d seen a clock like the one in the painting, in Place’s place and Street’s antique shop, but this clock was as runny as a Wilbur Bud candy on an August afternoon.

“Beautiful,” I said with my best touch of sarcasm.

“I could not paint the clock until there were no clocks,” he said, turning toward me and opening his eyes wide. “If you bring the clocks back, I will be unable to paint them. I do not paint from life. Life has no meaning.”

“Then why do you have little Odelle pose for you?”

“Odelle, I told you, is not a single woman. She is an abstraction. All women. The clocks are singular.”

“Makes sense to me,” I said.

The wavy hands of the clock in the painting said it was three-thirty. Since the clock was melting, the bottom of the clock was visible and I could see something written in gold letters in a language that looked like …

“Russian,” said Odelle in my ear.

Her voice was filled with awe.

“You were looking at the words on the clock,” she went on. “They’re Russian.”

“My paintings?” Dali asked.

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