'We want to look at the kitchen,' Nina said. 'We're studying crimes and the effects on kitchens.'

April giggled, which was all she seemed to be able to do when she was too close to Matt. Did Gretchen act that dopey around him? She hoped not.

'You can look through the window from the outside of the house,' Matt answered, wearing a look of amused confusion. 'But stay away from the tenants. By the way, Gretchen, you don't wear contacts.'

'Busted,' April said. 'What tipped you off?'

Gretchen wished April would go back to giggling. So what if he caught her lying? Gretchen leveled Matt with a steely glare just in case he thought his approval mattered to her.

'A true contact wearer,' he said, 'holds a contact like this.' He pressed his fingers together. 'We don't cup them in our palms. And the terminology isn't 'plunk' it in. It's

'pop' it in. They don't jump out of our eyes, either.' He grinned. 'But I still like you, even if you aren't one of us.'

'I'm a contact wearer,' April giggled.

Gretchen marched behind him toward the house with Nina and April taking up the rear and, oh no, all the dogs.

'Potty stop,' Nina said when Gretchen scowled at her. 'As good a place as any.' Nina glanced at the trash in the weedy yard. 'I won't have to clean up any doggie do. It'll blend right in.' Nimrod and Tutu trotted with Nina. Enrico ran alongside his new owner, with his lip pulled up on one side to show his back teeth. He had a nasty gleam in his beady little eyes.

Matt shook a thumb over his right shoulder and addressed one of the officers. 'They want to look in the window. Let them.'

He entered the house with Brandon. A band of police officers maintained a circle around the motley bunch of tenants. The cops remained a respectable distance away, trying to appear casual and unconcerned. But they kept a sharp eye out.

Judging by the group's state of undress, no one was carrying a weapon. The most that could happen would be that one could run away. 'Who owns the house?' Gretchen asked them when she was close enough. She kept her voice low.

'We don't have anything to say,' said one with a shaved head. 'We want an attorney.'

'Have you been arrested?'

'No. But we aren't talking to any cops.'

'Do I look like a police officer?' Gretchen said, suspecting that the bald one was the homeowner. She pointed at Nina and April. 'Do they look like cops?'

'She's right,' another one chortled. 'What kind of cops would have dogs like that?'

Good reasoning. This one, at least, wasn't all drugged out. Up close, Gretchen could tell that they were all men, even the shirt person. 'I'm a friend of Ryan's,' she said.

'I'm trying to help him.'

'You're too late, he's totally whacked out. We should have thrown him out as soon as we found out he was doing drugs again,' Baldy said. 'We knew he was messing up. Now look what's happened, man.'

'Nina and April, why don't you check out the kitchen?'

Gretchen said. Her eyes scanned the group, then she asked,

'Which window is the kitchen?' No one answered, but a few eyes shifted to a window. 'Try that one there.' She pointed. The two women hustled over to the house. They grabbed the bottom of the windowsill and tipped up onto their toes to peer in. 'It's too high,' April announced. 'I can't see in.'

'Boost Nina up,' Gretchen called before scooting to the opposite side of the huddle. She didn't want to see what was going to happen next. Right before she turned her back, she saw April plant her solid legs and lace her fingers together.

'Hold the dogs,' Nina said behind her.

'How can I hold them and boost you?'

'How can I go up with them? Put the leashes around your wrist, like that. Ready?'

'Ryan was doing drugs,' Gretchen said to the tenants, a statement rather than a question. 'But you still wanted to help him?'

'He dried out while he was here,' one with dreadlocks said. 'No alcohol, no drugs, but he slipped back. We hoped it was temporary.'

'Don't talk to her,' Shirt Guy said.

'She's a friend of Ryan's. How's he doing anyway?'

'He's alive,' Gretchen said. 'But barely. And he's hallucinating.'

'He was doing good, and then all of a sudden, he was all screwed up. Nobody could talk to him. Everything that came out of his mouth was total garbage.'

Gretchen tapped a piece of paper trash on the ground with her foot, thinking. 'He talked about a goddess.'

'We got that shtick, too. He claimed some fairy chick visited his bedroom at night.'

'We never saw her.'

'That's cuz she didn't exist.'

'Duh.'

'He said she flew in the window.'

'He said a lot of dumb things. When was the last time you saw a fairy flying?'

'When was the last time you saw a fairy standing around?'

Gretchen heard a commotion behind her, then a shriek, then a thud. She tried to block it out. 'Bad news, man,'

Shirt Man said, referring to Ryan. Or so Gretchen thought. Shirt Man was facing the kitchen investigators. She hoped the comment wasn't about Nina and April.

'Watch where you're falling,' April wailed. 'You could have killed Enrico.'

'You dropped me,' Nina screamed.

'I released you. There's a difference.'

'Can you intervene for us?' the bald one asked Gretchen.

'We really are running a rehab program.'

Gretchen believed him. He and the other occupants were as much on the fringes of society as the homeless people she knew. But druggies? When she looked into their eyes, they were clean and bright, without the hopeless, empty gaze associated with drug addicts. They didn't have that hunted, haunted fear she'd seen in Ryan's eyes or the wasted away, thin bodies.

Nina stomped past carrying Tutu. April heaved off from the side of the house and made for the car with the other two miniature dogs.

'We're going to the hospital to see how Ryan's doing,'

Gretchen said to the bald one.

'Say hi. We hope he makes it.'

Gretchen hustled after April. She peeked in the entrance to the house as she passed but didn't see the two detectives. Why was she even checking? She didn't care. Nope. Not one teeny, tiny bit.

33

'Ryan did it,' April insisted, pounding a plump fist on the dashboard to stress her point. 'He killed his mother. I don't care about wallpaper. We're getting too wrapped up in kitchens. Forget the room box. He's the one.'

'His kitchen was the most disgusting thing I've ever seen,' Nina said, darting through traffic. She had recovered quickly from her graceless fall. 'Crud everywhere. Men shouldn't be allowed to live in large groups. They're pigs. I can't even imagine how awful the bathroom would be.'

She shivered for effect.

'All I saw was your rear end,' April said. 'And then that lizard darted across the wall right next to us. He

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