made with fresh horseradish. I like hot stuff.'

She frequently said things like that. Not suggestive things, exactly, and not double entendres, exactly, but comments that made you wonder what she intended. I had the impression that she was continually challenging men, and if an eager stud wanted to think she was coming on to him and responded, she wouldn't be offended. But I doubted if it ever went beyond high-intensity flirting. She had it made as mistress of Casa Blanco, and I hoped she was shrewd enough to know it.

We raised glasses to each other and sipped.

She said, 'Through the lips and past the gums; look out, stomach, here it comes.'

She actually said that; I am not making it up. I am merely the scribe.

Suddenly I became aware of activity in the Olym-pic-size swimming pool behind me and turned to look. A young woman in a sleek black maillot was doing laps, brown arms flashing overhead, long legs moving from the hips in a perfect flutter kick.

I watched, fascinated, as she swam the length of the pool, made a racing turn, and started back. There was very little splash and her speed was impressive.

'Who on earth is that?' I asked.

'My sister,' Laverne said. 'Margaret Trumble. You can call her Meg if you like, but don't call her Maggie or she's liable to break your arm. She's very strong.'

'I can see that,' I said. 'What a porpoise!'

'And she jogs, lifts weights, skis, climbs mountains, and does t'ai chi. She's staying with us until she decides what to do.'

I looked at her and blinked. 'About what?'

'Right now she teaches aerobics in King of Prussia. That's in Pennsylvania.'

'I know,' I said. 'I once met the queen of Prussia.'

Laverne looked at me suspiciously, but continued. 'Anyway, Meg is thinking of moving to Florida. She thinks there are enough richniks here so she could do well as a personal trainer. You know: go to people's homes, teach them how to exercise, put them on diets, plan individual workout programs for them. Meg says all the big movie and TV stars have private trainers, and so do business bigshots. She thinks she could get plenty of clients just in Palm Beach.'

'She probably could,' I said, watching Ms. Trum-ble zip back and forth through the greenish water. 'She seems like a very disciplined, determined young lady.'

'Not so young,' Laverne said. 'She's three years older than I am.'

'It's still young to me,' I said. 'But I was born old. Anyway, it must be fun having your sister here for company.'

'Yeah,' she said and took a gulp of her drink.

Suddenly she whisked away her straw hat and tossed it onto the grass. She shook her head a few times so her long blond hair swung free. It was not chemically brazen but softly tinted with reddish accents. I thought it quite attractive.

Her body, barely restrained by that minuscule bikini, was something else. It would be ungentle-manly to call it vulgar, but there was something fulsome about her flesh. There was just so much of it. It was undeniably sunned to an apricot tan, and certainly well-proportioned, but the very lavishness was daunting: whipped cream on chocolate mousse.

'Listen, Archy,' she said, closing her eyes against the sun's glare. 'Do you think you'll get Peaches back?'

'I'm certainly going to try. Could you show me the ransom note you received?'

'Harry's got it. He keeps it in the office safe. In the stockroom.'

That was probably accurate since I happened to know she had worked for a year as receptionist in Harry Willigan's office. Then, discovering the boss's son was happily married, had children, and lived in Denver, she had done the next best thing: she had married the boss.

'All right,' I said, 'I'll see him later. How much are the catnappers asking?'

She opened her eyes and stared at me. 'Fifty thousand,' she said softly.

'Gol-Zee/ That's a lot of money for a cat.'

'Harry will pay it if he has to,' she said. 'Sometimes I think he loves that stupid animal more than he does me.'

'I doubt that,' I said, but I wasn't certain. 'When did Peaches disappear?'

'Last Wednesday. Harry was at work, I was at the beauty parlor, and Ruby Jackson-she's our housekeeper and cook-had the day off. So only Leon and Julie Blessington were here. She's the maid.'

'Where was your sister?'

'Gone to town to look for a place to live. She wants her own apartment. Anyway, it was around one o'clock in the afternoon when Leon and Julie realized Peaches was gone. They searched all over but couldn't find her.'

'Maybe she just wandered off or went hunting mice and lizards.'

Laverne shook her head. 'Peaches is a house cat. We never let her out, because she's been declawed and can't defend herself. Sometimes she went into the screened patio to get some fresh air or sleep on the tiles, but she never went outside. The back patio door is always kept closed.'

'Locked?'

'No. But at night the door from the hallway to the patio is locked, bolted, and chained. So if anyone got into the patio at night, what could they steal- aluminum furniture?'

'But during the day, if Peaches was on the patio and no one was around, any wiseguy could nip in, stuff her in a burlap sack, and lug her away?'

'That's about it. Harry is fit to be tied. He screamed like a maniac at Leon and Julie, but it

really wasn't their fault. They couldn't watch the damned cat every minute. Whoever thought she'd be kidnapped?'

'Catnapped,' I said. 'Leon and Julie are sure the outside door to the patio was closed?'

'They swear it was.'

'No holes in the screening where Peaches might have slipped through?'

'Nope. Go look for yourself.'

'I'll take your word for it. When did the ransom note arrive?'

'Thursday morning. Leon found it under the front door.'

'I'll see it at Harry's office, but can you tell me what it said?'

She picked up her straw hat from the grass, clapped it on her head, tilted it far down in front to shade her eyes. She squirmed to find a more comfortable position in her canvas sling. I wished she hadn't done that. She took a deep breath and stretched, arching her back. I wished she hadn't done that.

'The note said they had taken Peaches and would return her in good health for fifty thousand dollars. If we went to the cops, they'd know about it and we'd never see Peaches alive again.'

'Did they say how the payment was to be made?'

'No, they said we'd be hearing from them again.'

'You keep using the plural. Did the note say we have the cat and you'd be hearing from them?'

'That's what it said.'

'Uh-huh. Was the note in an envelope?'

'Yes. A plain white envelope.'

'Was it typed or handwritten?'

'I thought it was typed, but Harry said it had been done on a word processor.'

'That's interesting. Is Peaches on a special diet?'

'She eats people-type food, like sauteed chicken livers and poached salmon. Things like that.'

'Lucky Peaches,' I said. 'Well, I can't think of any more questions to ask.'

'What will you do now, Archy?'

'Probably go to Harry's office and get a look at the ransom note. It may have-'

I stopped speaking and rose to my feet as I became aware that Margaret Trumble was approaching from the pool, drying her hair with a towel. There wasn't much to dry. Her hair was fairer than her sister's, almost silver, and cut quite short. In fact, she had a 'Florida flattop,' clipped almost to the scalp at the sides and back, with the top looking like a truncated whiskbroom.

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