wasn't young, but she was beautiful. Her white silk suit made Elizabeth realize that the blue shorts she was wearing were faded and the dye on her polo shirt had run around the pocket. She had thought Leila looked so pretty when they started out, but next to this woman Leila seemed overdressed and shabby.

'Listen,' the woman said, 'if you want to leave your picture you can. You try barging in here again and I'll have you arrested.'

Leila thrust out the paper in her hand. 'You owe me one hundred dollars and I'm not leaving without it.'

The woman took the paper, read it and began to laugh so hard she had to lean against the door. 'You really are dumb! Those jokers pull that stuff on all you hicks. Where'd he pick you up? In the bus terminal? Did you end up in the sack with him?'

'No, I did not.' Leila grabbed the paper, tore it up and ground the pieces under her heel. 'Come on, Sparrow. That guy made a fool of me, but we don't have to give this bitch a good laugh about it.'

Elizabeth could see that Leila was so upset she was about to cry and didn't want the woman to see it. She shook Leila's arm off her shoulder and stood in front of the woman. 'I think you're mean,' she said. 'That man acted nice, and if he made my sister work for nothing you should feel sorry about it, not make fun of us.' She spun around and tugged Leila's hands. 'Let's go.'

They started for the elevator, and the woman called after them, 'Come on back, you two.' They ignored her. Then she yelled, 'I said come back!'

Two minutes later they were in her private office.

'You've got possibilities,' the woman told Leila. 'But those clothes… You don't know a thing about makeup; you'll need a good haircut; you'll need composites. Did you pose in the raw for that creep?'

'Yes.'

'Terrific. If you're any good, I'll submit you for an Ivory Soap commercial, and right then is when your picture will show up in a girlie magazine. He didn't take any movies of you, did he?'

'No. At least, I don't think so.'

'That's something. From now on, I do the booking for you.'

They left in a daze. Leila had a list of appointments at a beauty salon for the next day. Then she would meet the woman from the model agency at the photographer's. 'Call me Min,' the woman had said. 'And don't worry about clothes. I'll bring everything you need.'

Elizabeth was so happy her feet could hardly touch the ground, but Leila was very quiet. They walked down Madison Avenue. Well-dressed people hurried by; the sun was shining brightly; hot dog carts and pretzel stands seemed to be on every corner; buses and cars honked at each other; nearly everyone ignored the red lights and sauntered through the heavy traffic. Elizabeth had a wonderful sense of being home. 'I like it here,' she said.

'So do I, Sparrow. And you saved the day for me. I swear, I don't know who's taking care of who. And Min is good people. But, Sparrow, there's something I've found out from that stinking father of mine, and from Mama's lousy boyfriends, and now from that bastard yesterday.

'Sparrow-I'm never going to trust a man again.'

Two

Elizabeth opened her eyes. The car was sliding noiselessly past Pebble Beach Lodge, along the tree-lined road where glimpses of estate homes could be seen through hedges of bougainvillea and azaleas. It slowed down as it rounded a bend and the tree that gave Cypress Point Spa its name came into view.

Disoriented for a moment, she brushed the hair back from her forehead and looked around. Alvirah Meehan was beside her, a blissful smile on her face. 'You must be worn out, poor thing,' Alvirah said. 'You've been asleep practically since we left the airport.' She shook her head as she gazed out the window. 'Now, this is really something!' The car passed through the ornate iron gates and wound its way up toward the main house, a rambling three-story ivory stucco mansion with pale blue shutters. Several swimming pools were dotted through the grounds near the clusters of bungalows. At the north end of the property there was a patio, with umbrella tables scattered around both sides of the Olympic-size pool. Identical adobe buildings were on either side of the pool. 'These are the men's and women's spas,' Elizabeth explained.

The clinic, a smaller edition of the main house, was at its right. A series of paths lined by high flowering hedges led to individual doorways. The treatment rooms were entered through these doors, and treatments were spaced far enough apart so that guests avoided encountering each other.

Then, as the limousine followed the curve of the driveway, Elizabeth gasped and leaned forward. Between the main house and the clinic, but placed well behind them, a huge new structure had come into view, its black marble exterior, accentuated by massive columns, making it loom like an ominous volcano about to erupt. Or like a mausoleum, Elizabeth thought.

'What's that?' Alvirah Meehan asked.

'It's a replica of a Roman bath. They had just broken ground for it when I was here two years ago. Jason, is it open yet?'

'Not finished, Miss Lange. The construction just goes on and on.'

Leila had openly mocked the plans for the bathhouse. 'Another of Helmut's grand schemes for separating Min from her money,' she said. 'He won't be happy until Min is officially declared a shopping-bag lady.'

* * *

The car stopped at the steps of the main house. Jason leaped out and rushed to open the door. Alvirah Meehan struggled back into her shoes and, stooping awkwardly, hoisted herself from the seat. 'It's like sitting on the floor,' she commented. 'Oh, look, here comes Mrs. von Schreiber. I know her from her pictures. Or should I call her Baroness?'

Elizabeth did not answer. She stretched out her arms as Min descended the steps from the veranda, her gait rapid but stately. Leila had always compared Min in motion to the Q.E. 2 steaming into harbor. Min was wearing a deceptively simple Adolfo print. Her luxurious dark hair was piled on her head in a swirling French knot. She pounced on Elizabeth and hugged her fiercely. 'You're much too thin,' she hissed. 'In a swimsuit I bet you look scrawny.' Another bear hug and Min turned her attention to Alvirah. 'Mrs. Meehan. 'The world's luckiest woman.' We are enchanted to have you!' She eyed Alvirah up and down. 'In two weeks, the world will think you were born with a forty-million-dollar spoon in your mouth.'

Alvirah Meehan beamed. 'That's the way I feel right now.'

' Elizabeth, you go up to the office. Helmut is waiting to see you. I'll escort Mrs, Meehan to her bungalow, then join you.'

Obediently Elizabeth went into the main house and walked through the cool marble-floored foyer, past the salon, the music room, the formal dining rooms and up the sweeping staircase that led to the private rooms. Min and her husband shared a suite of offices that overlooked the front and both sides of the property. From there Min could observe the movements of guests and staff as they went back and forth between the areas of activity. At

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