girl to me. The deal you’ve laid out is good. I don’t hate you enough to risk the deal.”

  “Here’s what I’d be risking, Bry. Not just all the money I’ll ever need. If some child-welfare bitch gets a chance to ask Piggy how does her mommy take care of her, Piggy won’t lie. She’ll fumble out the truth in her own stupid way, and those bitches won’t think what I did with her was as much fun as I thought it was.”

  He dared not ask for details of the cruelties that she had visited upon their daughter. For the first time, Brian realized that, if he were privy to all the facts, he might be driven to kill this woman. An hour ago, he would have thought that he didn’t have the capacity for homicide. Now he was not so sure of that.

  “So how do we do this?” he asked.

  “You and Miss Amy come to us in baby steps. You don’t know the last step, the address, until right before we meet.”

  “And each step of the way, I figure we’re being watched.”

  She said, “What would really upset my horny rich fella is if you show up with a crew from some tabloid-TV show. He’s not a celebrity, but he’s a name a lot of people know. He’s got the reputation those sickos love to chew up and vomit out coast to coast. First step is, you go to Santa Barbara tonight.”

  “Think about it one more time,” Brian said. “I have everything to lose and nothing to gain by trying to take you down. You have every reason to trust me.”

  “Every reason? Is that right? Like I trusted you to knock me up with a fine little pink baby, and what you gave me was a freak and ten years of my life ruined. There’s nobody I’ve got less reason to trust, Bry.”

  Her position was irrational, but that didn’t surprise him. Any attempt to reason with her about this would be as great a folly as commanding the sea to stop breaking on the shore.

  “I have to talk this over with Amy,” he said. “I can’t decide for her.”

  “Oh, I’m sure she’ll do it. She’s so dog nuts. Tell her there’s a funky little dog here named Piggy, needs to be rescued. But better e-mail me within an hour.”

  “An hour isn’t enough.”

  She said, “I’ve worked this out with Mr. Deep Pockets, but he could turn skittish on me.”

  Vanessa hung up.

  Brian turned to Amy.

  “The way you look,” she said.

  A cold sweat greased the back of his neck. He figured the blood had drained out of his face because his lips felt half numb.

  “Like Death,” Amy said, “like Death looking for someone to cut down and take away.”

  Chapter

  40

  Harrow says, “Cool as ice.”

  Getting off the kitchen stool from which she had made the call, sitting across from him at the table, she says, “Brian always was easy.”

  “Dry ice.”

  As the moon draws ocean tides, so she seems to bend the light of the candles to her by a gravity of her own.

  “How much did you prep for that?” he asks.

  “No prep. Just played off him.”

  “Not off him. Played him.”

  She smiles. “Like a piccolo.”

  “He should know you by now.”

  “I wasn’t this much me, back then.”

  “You were never less.”

  “Was I never a child?”

  “Were you?”

  She does not answer.

  “Where did you learn?”

  “You mean, to lie like that?”

  “You make lying poetry.”

  “Started learning from Mama’s tit.”

  “You’ve never told me about your mother.”

  “She’s dead.”

  “That’s it?”

  “What else could there be?”

  He watches her sip red wine. It looks black on her lips, and then she licks it away.

  They are in a new place in their relationship. Anticipation of what is coming gives them a greater sense of shared destiny.

  Harrow feels that he can ask questions that were previously off limits. He senses, however, that he cannot yet ask her why she has kept Piggy all these years or why she had a child when she believes, as certainly she does, that nothing matters but the self, the moment, and the thrill.

  “What about your old man?”

  “He was a liar’s liar.”

  “What did he do?” Harrow asks.

  “Nothing he didn’t want to.”

  “My kind of guy.”

  “He taught history.”

  “History is lies?”

  “The way he taught it.”

  “Does he still teach?”

  “He’s dead.”

  “They both died young.”

  “Yes.”

  Harrow takes a shallow sip of his wine. He never drinks to excess in her company.

  “Amazing to hear you talk so much on the phone.”

  “With anyone, a lot of talk always means it’s lies.”

  She is implying that she doesn’t lie to Harrow.

  He says, “I’m remembering two months ago—Karen and Ron.”

  “What a fun couple.”

  They had been twentysomethings, adventurers, backpackers, hiking the coast.

  “You were a chatterbox with them,” he says.

  A guidebook led Karen and Ron to this remote, picturesque cove. They had walnut walking sticks, expensive gear, fresh good looks, and a love of nature.

  She says, “Women come on cool to me.”

  “Because their men come on hot.”

  Moongirl had done more than open the floodgates of charm. She had posed as a discreet lesbian, and had subtly but repeatedly hit on Karen.

  “Poor girl was so flustered.”

  “But flattered,” Harrow says. “She didn’t go that way, but she was flattered you wanted her—and relieved you didn’t want Ron. You disarmed her.”

  “We were best pals, me and Karen.”

  The couple had asked if they could camp the night on the beach, and the four of them had enjoyed a surfside picnic by lantern light.

  Karen and Ron didn’t notice that their dessert wine and that of their hosts were poured from different bottles.

  Later, excruciating pain had awakened them to the indifferent stars, the icy moon, the siren of silver light, and their hostess’s eyes as green as an arctic sea.

  “Ron was boring,” she says.

  “He broke so fast.”

  Harrow participates in such ceremonies only when she asks him to assist her. Just watching, he always has more than enough to keep him entertained and occupied.

  She says, “Karen was interesting.”

  “Quite a marshmallow roast,” Harrow agrees.

  In his mind’s eye, he sees Moongirl on that night, like an Aztec goddess accepting sacrifices made unto her.

  “Karen wouldn’t give up hope,” she says.

  “Well, at the end.”

  “It was a long way to the end.”

  Moongirl drinks wine without caution. She has no fear of Harrow. Besides, even when she’s inebriated, her senses are sharp and her reflexes uncannily quick, as he has seen.

  “Why do they hope?” she asks.

  “Not all of them do.”

  “The ones that do hope—why?”

  “They have nothing else.”

  “But hope is a lie,” she says.

  When she looks at the candles, the flames leap in the red-tinted votive glasses, and she smiles.

  He has seen her do this before, and he has asked her how she commands the flames, but she never answers.

  Raising her eyes from the candles to Harrow, she says, “Hope is a lie to yourself.”

  “Most people survive by self-deceit.”

  “They have nothing.”

  “Everyone has nothing.”

  “Oh, we have something. We have them.”

  She regards the candles again, smiles, and ribbons of flame twist, unravel, then ravel back closer to their wicks.

  Harrow thinks she does
it with a trick of breathing, but he has never seen her nostrils flare or her lips part to betray her.

  “One thing is not a lie,” he says. “Power.”

  “Brian is lying to himself right now,” she says.

  “I’m sure he is. The world always brings you kindling when you need it.”

  Chapter

  41

  While driving, Billy Pilgrim put on a soft-brimmed, green-felt Tyrolean hat with a small red-and-gold feather in the band, and he inserted a false gold cap over his two upper central incisors.

  When he had found the address he wanted and had parked at the curb, he slipped on a pair of horn-rimmed spectacles with thick lenses of plain glass.

  Now that most cell phones were also cameras, you never knew when some meddlesome passerby might take a snapshot of you just prior to or immediately subsequent to a criminal act. Digital technology had contributed to a loss of privacy that he found appalling.

  Billy did not consider himself a master of disguise, but he understood the basics of obscuration and camouflage. Only a simple costume was required to foil facial identification from a photograph. A soft-brimmed and somewhat fanciful hat and dark-rimmed glasses went a long way toward changing the look of the face. The gold dental cap gave him a slightly bucktoothed aspect, which made his face seem rounder than it was.

  When he got out of the Land Rover, he locked the door. This was a fine neighborhood, but he believed in taking every precaution when he had a dead body under a blanket in his vehicle.

  The middle-class to upper-middle homes were in good repair. The landscaping appeared to be well maintained, and landscape lighting set an artful and welcoming mood, with path lamps flanking walkways.

  Although the evening was still early and the autumn air warm, no children played in the front yards or bicycled in the street. With predatory pedophiles more numerous by the year and organizing on the Internet to share hunting tips and abduction techniques, parents kept their kids on a short leash during the day and indoors after dusk.

  Billy was not a pedophile, but he was grateful to them. Although some biddy might be videotaping him from a window, suspecting him of trolling for toddlers, there weren’t half a dozen high-energy kids clustered around him, full of curiosity, asking what was with his hat, was he a mountain climber, did he lose his real front teeth in a climbing accident—which is how it sometimes had been as little as eight or ten years ago.

  A guy of about sixty answered the doorbell. He had a face that reminded Billy of certain birds of prey, and he looked as if he had just eaten a couple of live mice that were annoying him by writhing in his stomach instead of being dead.

  “Mr. Shumpeter?”

  “I don’t need any more insurance.”

  “I’m Dwayne Hoover,” Billy Pilgrim said. “I called you earlier today about the Cadillac.”

  “You looked like cold-call insurance.”

  “No, sir. My business is organ brokering. One of my businesses.”

  “You’re here about my ad for the car.”

  “Yes, sir. I called you earlier today. Dwayne Hoover.”

  “Come on in.”

  Billy followed Shumpeter into a living room that dazzled with too many floral patterns and fringed pillows.

  “You sell a used car to a dealer, they give you piss for it.”

  “I’m offering cash, Mr. Shumpeter.”

  “Then they turn around and sell it for a blood price.”

  “Sometimes, you’ve got to cut out the middleman,” Billy agreed.

  “Like I said on the phone, it was my wife’s car. She died. Been a widower four months.”

  “I’m sorry for your loss, Mr. Shumpeter.”

  “The loss was my first wife. Pauline was my second. Nine years. Left me with all this damn frilly furniture.”

  “I’m not in the market for furniture, I’m afraid.”

  Shumpeter seemed to be alone, but Billy couldn’t be certain.

  “She had to have a Cadillac. Wouldn’t let me rest till she got one, then she dies before it’s a year old.”

  “That’s so sad,” Billy said.

  “So I’m hit with big depreciation, and it’s hardly been used. Let’s be clear right up front—I’m not going to be bargained down.”

  “I thought your advertised price was reasonable, Mr. Shumpeter.”

  “Then come take a look at it.”

  Happily, Shumpeter didn’t lead him outside to the driveway, but through the living room, the dining room, and the kitchen, giving Billy a better sense of whether anyone else might be on the premises.

  The dining room bloomed with rose, peony, and wisteria patterns: upholstery, tablecloth, wallpaper.

  “What’s the story with the hat?” Shumpeter asked.

  “Tyrolean,” Billy said.

  “I was a Shriner for years, but a Shriner doesn’t wear his fez except at club functions.”

  “I’m on my way to a club meeting from here,” Billy said.

  “Never heard of the Tyroleans.”

  “We’re relatively new. We’re a social club, but we want to make a difference, too. We’re going to find a cure for prostate cancer.”

  “Tofu,” said Shumpeter. “Eat tofu three times a week, you’ll never get prostate cancer.”

  “The guys will be sorry to hear that. We’ll have to find another disease. Sir, I gotta say this is a lovely home. Fantastic kitchen.”

  “I’m selling the place. It was too big for the two of us, but she just had to have it, now it’s damned sure too big for just me.”

  “And it must be hard, alone with all the memories.”

  “Not going to use a damn real-estate agent, either. They take six percent, and all you get for it is bullshit.”

  Billy followed Shumpeter through a laundry room—where the widower snared a set of keys from a pegboard—and then into the garage. A new Mercedes stood beside the year-old Cadillac.

  Registering Billy’s surprise, Shumpeter said, “There was life insurance. The damn IRS doesn’t get a cut of life insurance.”

  Nodding his head at the Cadillac, Billy said, “It looks sweet.”

  “Full disclosure. She died in it. Massive stroke, gone in two minutes.”

  “That doesn’t spook me, Mr. Shumpeter.”

  “She didn’t lose control of her bowels or bladder, nothing like that, so it’s not a reason to bargain.”

  “I don’t want to bargain. Not me. This is just what I’m looking for.”

  Shumpeter smiled, and his face didn’t crack. “Organ broker, you said, Mr. Hoover. Is that like pianos, organs?”

  “No, sir. It’s like kidneys, livers, lungs.”

  “Oh. You’re a doctor.”

  “No, just a middleman. But in our aging population, it’s a fast-growing business. You yourself are going to need a heart.”

  Shumpeter’s eyes widened. “On what evidence did you come up with that diagnosis?” He thumped his chest. “I’m sixty, but I’ve been a vegetarian for forty years, zero animal fat in the diet, rock-bottom cholesterol.”

  “Well, being an organ broker, I can tell you with authority, statistics show that vegetarians commit suicide at a higher rate than meat eaters.”

  Shumpeter glowered. “I read that, too, and they say we’re more often victims of homicide than meat eaters. That’s bullshit. It’s the meat industry buying phony research, nothing but propaganda.” He fisted his hands and puffed out his chest to proclaim his fitness. “When that Cadillac is ready for the junk pile, I’ll still be pleasing the ladies.”

  “I don’t know about that,” Billy said, “but I’m sure this would have pleased your wife.” He drew the pistol with the sound suppressor and shot Shumpeter through the heart.

  He dragged the corpse around to the front of the Mercedes, where it couldn’t be seen from the street, picked up the car keys that had fallen from the dead man’s hand to the floor, and opened the garage door.

  After he backed the Cadillac down the driveway and parked it at th
e curb, he drove the Land Rover into the garage. He closed the big door in case a pedophile wandered by and saw what he was doing.

  He opened the four doors of the Land Rover to vent the initial explosion.

  The only thing that he took from the Rover was the white plastic trash bag. It contained everything Vernon Lesley had gathered at the woman’s bungalow