“ Right now I don’t know.”

“ Where are you?”

“ Jail, but you probably know that.”

“ What Jail?”

“ Long Beach City Jail.”

“ Long Beach? Where? In California? In America?

“ I am going crazy.” Jim got off the bench, started to pace the cell.

“ If you talk out loud, you just make that man curious. And even though this is only a dream, I don’t think I like him.”

“ This is no dream.” And to underscore his thought, he knocked on his cast again.

“ It can’t be real.” Donna thought.

“ It is for me.” Jim couldn’t put his finger on it, but the fact that she was in the same boat as him, sort of made the situation easier to take.

“ Then where does that leave me?” Donna thought. There was anxiety in her thought-voice. She seemed young.

“ I don’t know, where are you?”

“ New Zealand.”

“ You’re kidding?” Jim was stunned.

“ No.”

“ Let me think this through.”

“ Does that mean you’re going to send me away again?”

“ I don’t know. When I push your thoughts out of my head, is that when you go away?”

“ I think so.”

“ Where do you go?”

“ I don’t know. It’s dark. I don’t like it.”

“ Okay, I won’t force you away, but you have to let me think.” He sat back down.

“ I won’t think a word.”

Jim fought the panic threatening to rise. Somehow he was receiving a woman’s thoughts from halfway around the world. Unless, of course, it was some kind of an elaborate hoax, but that didn’t make sense. Who would do such a thing? Who could do such a thing?

He got up, started pacing again, five steps across the cell, five back. It was some kind of telepathy, he reasoned. It couldn’t be anything else. Somehow he was tuned into this woman’s mind. He remembered hearing a story, when he was a kid, about a woman who spoke Chinese under hypnosis. She was supposedly picking up the thoughts of a peasant woman in China. Everybody thought she was faking. She probably was. But this, this was real. He was hearing another person’s thoughts like they were his own. It was frightening and fascinating and it was something he had to keep to himself. One word of something like this and it was the nuthouse for Jim Monday.

And it would also be the nuthouse if he went around saying his wife’s lover was trying to kill him. He was sure of what he had seen in Kohler’s eyes, but it was possible for the doctor to hate him and not want him dead. He made a giant leap based on nothing more than his own feelings for the man. Maybe Kohler was innocent.

Even the rifle shot through the back window of the police car could be explained. Plenty of people hate the police. It could have been a drug dealer or someone high on drugs, who saw a squad car and took a shot at it for kicks, or maybe Washington or Walker had enemies, maybe somebody they once arrested. The rifle shot couldn’t have been for him. He was being paranoid.

But paranoid or not, David was dead and he was in jail, charged with assault and battery. How stupid, letting his emotions control him like that. Kohler was probably going to sue and he would have to pay, whatever the amount. The last thing he wanted to do was to go into court against Julia’s lover. No matter how much he despised the man, he still loved her. If they wanted more money because he attacked the son of a bitch, he would just pay it.

“ That’s dumb,” Donna thought.

“ It’s how I feel. If she wants money, she can have it. I can make more.”

“ I don’t know much about your situation, but from what I just picked up, it looks to me like your wife and her lover are playing you for a fool.”

“ That may be, but I just want it over. I want to get on with my life.”

“ Jim Monday.”

Jim started at the sound of his name, looked up and saw a uniformed officer and a young man in his late twenties or early thirties, dressed in an expensive suit, caring a black leather briefcase that matched his shoes.

“ I’m Monday,” Jim said.

“ I’m your attorney,” the man said as the officer was unlocking the cage. “We need to talk.” There was something about him Jim didn’t like.

“ My lawyer was killed about eight hours ago.”

“ All I know is that our firm got a call about you, then I was told to come down here and bail you out.”

“ Who hired you?”

“ I don’t know, but when old Mr. Cobb tells me to jump, I jump.”

“ What about the assault and battery business?”

“ Dr. Kohler isn’t interested in pressing charges, but there’s a small matter of getting the city to go along. You did assault a respected member of the community in front of dozens of witnesses, including, may I add, two police officers. If the city wants to go to the wall on this, we could have problems.”

“ So where do we go from here?”

“ It’ll take them about an hour to process your bail, meanwhile I’d like to talk to you, in private,” he said, indicating the man on the other bench with his eyes. “The city of Long Beach has been kind enough to furnish us a private room.”

“ Okay, let’s go.” Jim left the cell, following the uniformed officer and the young attorney out of the lock up area, through another set of doors, up a flight of stairs and down a well lit corridor.

“ You can talk in here.” The officer stopped before an oak door. He poked his head into the room, then added, “Wait a sec.” He went inside, came back with a chair, set in next to the door. “I’ll be right here if you need me.”

The young lawyer motioned with an arm extended, Sir Galahad style, for Jim to enter. He did and the attorney followed, closing the door after himself.

“ It’s not much,” the lawyer said.

Jim nodded.

The room was furnished with a folding table in the center, the kind usually found in campaign headquarters or at rummage sales. Around the table were three chairs, government chairs, bureaucratic chairs, one on the side closest to the door, facing the window and two opposite, facing the door. The lawyer laid his briefcase on the table.

“ Looks like one of those interrogation rooms you see on TV,” Jim said.

“ Not quite, but close. They use these for what we’re doing, attorney and client chats.”

“ And interrogation,” Jim said.

“ Maybe.” The lawyer held out his right hand. “My name is Jeff Turnbull. I’m going to try and get you out of this mess.”

Jim shook Turnbull’s right hand with his left, while holding up his right, letting the lawyer see the cast.

“ Police do that?” Turnbull asked.

“ I deserved it.”

“ Let me be the judge of that.” Turnbull took the chair closest to the door. Jim sat, facing the door, with his back to the window. “I have here,” Turnbull went on, opening his briefcase, “a legal pad and a pencil.” He lay a yellow legal sized tablet in front of Jim, handed him a pencil.

“ What am I supposed to do with this.

“ I’d like you to make a quick outline of what happened on Second Street this morning and the events that led

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