'Exactly. He's got a soft spot for runners, but don't make it hard for him to believe in you.' She pulled the car to the curb.

They got out and walked up the steps. The door opened again, and Jane nodded to the woman in the doorway, studying her without seeming to. She had a very pretty face, but her only expression was watchfulness. Now that the woman was comfortable with Jane she stared once into Christine's eyes, then devoted all of her attention to scanning the street, the park, and the other houses before she locked and bolted the door. 'Go in.'

Jane took Christine into Shattuck's office. He was working on another piece of paper like the one Jane had seen before. This time, because she was standing, she could see that the type in the center of its filigreed pattern said CERTIFICATE OF LIVE BIRTH.

Shattuck looked up. 'You're Christine Monahan.'

'Yes, sir.' The sir was a surprise to Jane, but said in Christine's small voice it seemed not to be ironic.

'Is that your given name?'

'Yes, it is. Christine Ellen Monahan.'

'And your actual birth date is...?'

'August 24.'

'How old?'

'I'm twenty.'

He wrote down the information, and said, 'It's good to make these things a little bit off, so nobody notices you have the same birthday as the missing Christine Monahan, or takes your picture and shows it to someone in the right high school class. Can you live with being twenty-one?'

'Yes, sir. Being older might help get people over the fact that I'm pregnant.'

'And when would you like your birthday?'

'Uh, I don't care. How about April first?'

'April Fool's Day. Is that a joke?'

'No, sir. I just thought I'd be sure to remember it if it was the first of the month, and my baby should be born in September, so I wanted to save that part of the year for him or her.'

He nodded. 'Good thinking. Kids like to feel special, and people are born every day of the year.' He gave her a half-smile that Jane interpreted as reassuring. 'You'd be surprised at how many of them are born right here.'

'Yes, sir.'

'All right,' he said. 'Now I'm going to take your picture. There will have to be several shots that look like they were taken at different times. They'll look like you, but don't expect them to be flattering. Try to look attractive—no deer in the headlights or anything—but don't try too hard. No real photograph on a driver's license is pretty. There are a few that are all right on passports, because people get to pick, so we'll take more time with those.'

He took her across the room to a plain wall that looked a bit whiter than the others. 'Put your toes on the yellow tape.' He moved a lamp on a stand to a spot where there was a blue tape strip, then took a digital camera out of a drawer and began to take pictures. He would snap one, then look at the display on the camera, and do it again. Finally he said, 'That's good. Okay. New outfit. Francine?'

The woman opened the door and leaned in. 'What?'

'Have you got anything different that she can wear as a top?'

'How about a sweater, like it's winter?'

'Great. Maybe after that a jacket, like for a suit.'

'I'll be right back.' She disappeared.

Shattuck sat at his table and began to make marks on a certificate, as though his drawing were automatic. 'You might want to fool around with your hair, too. Anything that doesn't look like all the pictures were taken on the same day.'

Jane opened her purse, took out a brush, and brushed out Christine's hair, then pulled it into a ponytail and held it with an elastic band. She produced a pair of earrings, and handed them to her. 'Put on these earrings, and some eyeliner.'

When they were finished with the photographs, Shattuck set his camera beside his computer and said, 'Okay, ladies. Give me three hours, and I'll have the first set ready. The other set will be in your mailbox within six or seven weeks.'

Francine said, 'Come this way.' She led them out of the room into the hallway and then to a large red sitting room with overstuffed Victorian furniture and a grand piano. She said, 'I'm sure you're exhausted. I remember what this was like. Those two couches on that side of the room are the most comfortable for sleeping.'

But Christine had stopped near the door. She was staring at the wall, where the paintings were hung five high. They were all nudes—standing in a bath, sitting in a garden, reclining on a couch. Christine said, 'That's you on this couch,' and pointed. She looked at Francine again. 'They're all you.' Then she looked flustered, as though she had no idea of the appropriate thing to say. 'You're beautiful.'

'Thanks.'

'He painted them?'

Francine nodded. 'Of course.'

'He's so good. He should...' She had hit the barrier. There was no way to finish the sentence, so she didn't.

'He does,' said Francine. 'Get some sleep. Before daylight comes, you have to be gone.' She turned off the lamp near the door, walked out, and closed the door, so the room was nearly dark.

Christine said, 'I'm sorry. I should have kept my mouth shut.'

'It's all right,' said Jane. 'This time, anyway. She seems to be benevolent. But Stewart is an artist. He couldn't do what he does without talent, but he also has training. It's what got him in trouble.'

'Trouble? You mean he's already in trouble?'

'He was studying in Europe. He was nearly broke, and got desperate. He got involved with a gallery owner who sold things to col-lectors—mostly visiting Americans—who thought they knew more than they did. He hired Stewart to paint copies.'

'Of paintings?'

'Yes. He told me he started with a few small Dutch paintings that weren't terribly well known. The owner presented them as seventeenth-century copies by apprentices in the studios of the masters. They did so well that the owner started thinking bigger. In those days there was still a lot of talk about art that the Nazis had taken to Germany during the war and the Russians had taken to Russia afterward. The Russians had some in the Hermitage Museum—mostly French Impressionists—but they never would release a list of what they had. What that did was help create a market for paintings that looked exactly like Renoirs or Cezannes but didn't have any provenance. The gallery owner sold them to specially selected customers as what they would have had to be—stolen paintings that had probably belonged to murder victims. That way no buyer would hang them in public or have them appraised. It worked until one of the buyers died, and his granddaughter found a Monet hanging in a closet. After a quick look at the buyer's canceled checks, the police visited the gallery. Stewart had to leave the country quickly.'

'It makes me sad,' said Christine.

'Take a closer look at Francine, and at those paintings you found on the wall. Life is good to Stewart.' She lay down on one of the couches. 'And I'm tired.' She arranged herself so she would be comfortable and closed her eyes. After a few minutes she pretended to sleep. Soon she heard Christine's breathing slow and deepen. While Christine slept, Jane lay with her eyes closed, thinking about a few men she had met at other times who might be looking at their computer screens tonight and learning that they could make a hundred thousand dollars just for finding a pregnant twenty-year-old.

5

'Wake up.'

Jane sat up, and saw Francine standing in the doorway of the Victorian sitting room. When she moved, Jane followed her down the hallway.

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