me,â Lucas said. He started unhitching the trailer. âHowâre the legs?â
âItch like hell,â Clay said.
âGot a coat hanger to scratch with?â
âYeah, but thereâs always a spot that you canât reach.â Clayâs wife came out on the porch, pulling on a quilted jacket. She hurried across the yard.
âLet me get the door,â she said. She pulled open a lower-level door on the barn, which led into what at the turn of the century would have been a milking chamber, but was now a garage. She turned on lights and Lucas got in the truck and backed the boat into the barn.
âStop,â she yelled when the boat was far enough back. He stopped, and they unhitched the trailer and dropped it. The interior of the barn, years past the last bovine occupant, still smelled slightly of hay and what might have been manure; a thoroughly pleasant smell. Clayâs wife closed the door and came out to stand by Lucas, and they both looked up at the sky.
âPretty night,â she said. She was a small, slender woman with dark hair and a square face. She and Lucas had always liked each other, and if things had been different, if the Clays hadnât been quite so happy with each other . . . She smelled good, like some kind of faintly perfumed soap.
âPretty night,â he repeated.
âThanks for helping out with the boat,â she said quietly.
âThanks for bringing it,â Clay called from the porch.
âYup.â Lucas got back in the truck. âTalk to ya.â
At ten minutes after eleven oâclock, he rolled up his driveway, punched the garage-door opener, and eased the Tahoe in next to the Porsche. A new car, the Porsche; about time.
Clean, mellow, starting to fade, the memory of Verna Clayâs scent still on his mind, he dropped into bed. He was asleep in five minutes, a small easy smile on his face.
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HE GOT THREE hours and forty-five minutes of sleep. The phone rang, the unlisted line. Groggy, he pushed himself up in bed, picked it up.
âYeah?â
Swanson, one of the old-time guys: âGoddamnit, youâre home. You know who Alieâe Maison is, the famous model?â
âYeah?â
âSomebody strangled her in a rich ladyâs house. We need some political shit over here: This is gonna be a screamer.â
3
SATURDAY. THE FIRST day of the Alieâe Maison case.
The morning was cold, even for mid-November. The lake, a hundred miles north, would have frozen over for sure, Lucas thought. He stood at a gas pump, trickling fifteen gallons of premium into the tank of the Porsche. Two blocks out of his driveway, running for the Alieâe Maison scene, he remembered about the gasâhe didnât have any. Now, at the least convenient moment, heâd had to stop.
He yawned, and peered around. The gas station attendant sat in an armored-glass booth, punching with his thumbs at a Game Boy, like a figure in an Edward Hopper tableau. Lucas didnât register Hopper; instead, he wondered idly why gas pumps no longer dinged. They used to ding with every gallon or so, he thought, and now they just rattled off yellow electronic digits, gallons and dollars, silent as the night.
Another car, a small Lincoln, the one that shared its frame with a JaguarâLucas knew about the Jaguar, but could never remember the Lincolnâs nameâpulled into the second set of gas pumps. Lucas yawned again and watched as a woman got out.
And stopped yawning. Something familiar about her, from a long time ago. He couldnât see her face, and it wasnât her face that sparked the memoryâit was the way she moved, something about the movement and the stature and the hair.
Her face was turned away from him as she opened the gas flap on the car, unscrewed the cap, and maneuvered the nozzle into the mouth of the tank. She was wearing a suit and dark low heels and a dark blouse. She turned toward him to drag