delivered a lecture on her job, her duty, that was as bad as a beating, while she stood there flushing with shame.

Rod didn't cut himself or anyone else any slack, as he always pointed out at the end of the lecture.

The three kids slid quietly into their chairs while Rod ate and read. Ryan got his Wheaties, Jill her Frosted Flakes, and Rod Junior his breakfast identical in every way to his father's except for the coffee. All three kids got orange juice and milk, by Rod's orders.

But this morning, Ryan and Jill seemed fidgety. All three ate in silence until Rod finally put down the paper, but the two youngest were obviously waiting for the few seconds when Rod would give them his attention before he went off to work.

Suddenly, it occurred to her what they might want to ask him about. Oh no-they aren't going to ask him about the boxes in the office, are they? I should have warned them-

But it was too late now.

'Uh-Dad?' Ryan said hesitantly. 'Dad, is there something in your office? Something bad?'

For a moment, Toni would have sworn that Rod was startled. But the next minute, she thought she must have been seeing things. He wore the same bored, impatient look he always wore when he had to deal with Ryan or Jill. 'No,' he said shortly. 'There is nothing in my office, bad or otherwise. What makes you say something that stupid?'

Ryan winced, but continued bravely on. 'It's just that- Jill and me-'

'Jill and I,' Toni corrected, automatically. Ryan gave her an 'Oh, Mom!' look, but corrected himself.

'Jill and I, we've been getting nightmares. About something in your office, something awful-'

She suppressed a wince, knowing what was going to happen. When the kids said or did something out-of- time, it always came back to her. And as expected, Rod rounded on Toni, frowning. 'What the hell have you been telling these kids?' he asked, accusingly.

She shook her head, helplessly, and spread her hands placatingly. 'Nothing,' she protested weakly. 'Nothing at all! I don't-'

'Then you've been letting them watch too damn many horror movies on cable,' he interrupted irritably. 'Stephen King, Dracula, aliens; Christ Almighty, no wonder the kids are having nightmares! Every time I turn on the TV, there's a bucket of blood spilling across the screen. Don't you ever check to see what they're watching? What kind of a mother are you, anyway?'

It was no use to protest that the kids only watched what he approved, that he himself was the one who selected the programs. He'd simply accuse her of letting them watch things behind his back, and she had no way to prove that she wasn't doing anything of the kind.

'That's it' he said, slamming his hand down on the tabletop, making them all jump. 'No more cable TV unless I'm here to supervise what you're watching.'

Jill opened her mouth to protest, but fortunately Toni managed to silence her with a look. Poor Jill; no more afterschool Nickelodeon.

'What are we allowed-' Ryan began timidly.

Rod hit his head with the heel of his hand. 'Do I have to tell you kids everything? You can go outside and play, dammit! You kids spend too much time in front of that thing, anyway. You can play Nintendo if it's bad. You can even watch a movie from your special cabinet.' His voice became heavy with irony. 'You might even actually read a book/or fun. I know that may sound impossible, but people do read for fun. But no matter what, no more cable TV unless I'm here to supervise!'

Toni carefully refrained from pointing out that there were horror books, too. And it was hardly fair to take that tone with Ryan, who, if not a bookworm, was certainly a good reader. She just bowed her head submissively, and murmured something conciliatory.

Rod Junior kept right on with his breakfast, ignoring the whole thing. Rod finally turned to him after a moment and asked, 'And what about you, son? Any stupid nightmares?'

Rod looked up, first at her, then at his younger siblings, and shook his head. 'Nightmares are for babies,' he said contemptuously, polishing off the last of his eggs.

Rod gave her a there, you see! kind of triumphant glance, as if that had proved something. Presumably that she should have somehow trained the younger kids out of nightmares by now, weaned them away from bad dreams as if she were toilet-training them.

All it proves is that Rod is his father's child.

And that Rod Junior knew how to say the things that his father wanted to hear. Young Rod was Rod's unconcealed favorite. He succeeded at the things Rod Senior thought were important; he had learned how to parrot every opinion his father had, whether he understood it or not. But most of all, it proved that he hadn't a gram of imagination.

Of course he doesn 't have nightmares. He doesn't have enough imagination to produce them. But she could hardly say that to Rod, who spoiled the boy something awful. Or even if she did-imagination wasn't the kind of thing that Rod valued. 'Guts,' 'smarts,' 'brains,' 'gumption,'-all those mattered. Not sensitivity or imagination.

She wondered what that little 'I don't believe in nightmares' remark was going to earn Rod Junior this time. Every time he came up with some comment that showed how much like his father he was, he generally got a reward by the end of the day. Probably the CD player he'd been wanting. Not that the other two had any real use for a CD player, but Rod Junior's room was stuffed full of the toys and treats his father brought him every time he said something his father considered clever. Or, in other words, proved himself to be a copy of Rod. It happened at least once a week, and it wasn't fair to the other two.

She sighed, though strictly internally. But life isn't fair. They're just learning that a little early. I think it's time to change the subject before he starts in on Ryan and Jill

'Rod, I hate to bother you'-she always began her requests with that phrase-'but the dryer is getting unreliable. I'd really like to call a repairman to come and look at-'

'Is it still running?' he asked, folding his paper neatly. Next he would get up, put on his suit jacket and tuck the paper in the inside pocket, then head for the office.

She made a little grimace of doubt. 'Well, yes, it is, but-'

'Is it making any noises?' he continued, standing up, his own face reflecting his impatience.

Again she hesitated. 'Well, no, but-last night, I thought I smelled-'

'You didn't smell anything,' he said, interrupting impatiently. 'You imagined it. I was right here last night, and I didn't smell anything. If I didn't smell anything, then neither did you. Or if you did, it was probably just some lint overheating. Clean the lint-catcher once in a while. I'll look at it later.'

'Yes, Rod,' she sighed, as he shrugged on his coat and headed out the door. A moment later, he pulled his car out of the garage, down the driveway, and was gone. She began picking up the breakfast dishes and setting them into the dishwasher. School had only been out for about a week, but already the kids had established their summer routines. Jill wandered back down the hall to her room; Rod Junior went out to ride his bike. Ryan stayed with her to help. She smiled at him, and hugged him comfortingly. He still looked disturbed and unhappy, and not just from his father's unkind words.

But her mind was on other things now. It's a good thing I turned off the dryer last night when I thought I smelled something burning, and remembered to unplug it first thing this morning, she thought, closing the dishwasher and starting it. With an electric dryer, you can't always be sure it's off unless you unplug it. I guess I'll just have to dry clothes on the line outside until he gets around to looking at it. I wish he'd let me call a repairman. . . .

Actually, she wished he'd let her buy a new dryer. One with some of those special settings for delicate things like Rod's silk shirts, and a door rack for the kids' sneakers. There was always enough money for new suits, but never anything for a new dryer. Probably because he didn't have anything to do with the dryer-

'Mommy!'

She jumped, as if shocked. The shriek was Jill's and it was full of terror. 'Mommy! Fire!'

Her heart bounded into her throat; she came out of her trance of shock, dropped the butter-dish she'd been holding, and ran for the utility room. But Ryan streaked past her and into the hall, something large and red in his hands.

The fire extinguisher from the kitchen, under the sink- he'd been closest to it-

The smoke alarm went off, shrilling in her ears, galvanizing her with fear, as Jill broke into a wail of her

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