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She drove home and parked in front of her building. She was getting to feel like she was running a gauntlet in getting from her car to her apartment door, and she was tired of living like this. She hurried to the door, flew up the stairs and opened her apartment door. She flipped on the lights. She expected to feel safe, but didn’t. She felt scared.

She stood in the hallway and listened for any sound-creaking, breathing, anything. This is silly, get a grip, she told herself. It was a small apartment with very few places to hide. In fact, under her bed and in her closet were it. She quickly checked both places, feeling foolish when she finished. What if she’d found someone? She didn’t have a weapon. This was really stupid. She walked back into the living room and was about to turn on the television when she saw a form in the draperies behind her living room chair. Her heart jumped in her chest. She was almost paralyzed in place.

As casually as she could, she moved to the hall and into the kitchen to look for a weapon. What kind of weapon? Her mind raced, trying to think. A knife. Maybe, but how would she fare in a knife fight with some intruder? She could run but would she make it before he caught her? The best course of action would be to call for help. But her cell phone was in the bedroom, and whoever it was would hear her talking. She could grab the cell phone and lock herself in the bathroom. And then what-hope help arrived before he broke down the door? She heard a rustle and creaking of the floor. No time.

She spotted her cast-iron skillet sitting on the stove, picked it up and stepped out into the hallway. She edged forward until she was almost to the living room. Maybe she could catch the intruder by surprise and knock him out. She raised it over her head as she saw a shadow cast by her lamp. One more second. Now she swung the pan, but at the last moment swerved and hit the wall with a crash, accompanied by a piercing scream.

“Mrs. Odell, what are you doing in my apartment? Do you know I could have knocked your skull in?”

Mrs. Odell, dressed in a pink chenille robe, was holding her chest and breathing hard. Diane led her to the sofa.

“Are you all right? What are you doing in here?”

“Looking.” She wheezed. “Looking for the cat.”

“Mrs. Odell.” She was interrupted by a pounding on the door.

“That’d be Marvin.” She was still breathing hard.

Diane went to the door. A man, possibly in his seventies, a little shorter than Diane, was standing at the door with a concerned look on his horselike face.

“Veda, Veda, was that you? Are you OK? What did you do to Veda?”

“I almost knocked her out with an iron skillet. Mr. Odell, I don’t have a cat, I’ve never had a cat here, the landlady doesn’t allow cats.”

“Veda was sure you did.”

“What? She knocked her out with a frying pan?” A voice from the hallway said. The other tenants along with the landlady were murmuring outside her door.

“Is something wrong?” asked the landlady. “Oh, dear.”

“Mrs. Odell was hiding behind the draperies in my apartment. I almost crowned her with a skillet until I saw who it was,” explained Diane. The last thing she wanted was the neighbors to believe she was beating up little old ladies.

The landlady entered with a justifiably contrite look on her face. “Oh, dear,” she clucked at Veda Odell.

“How did you get in?” asked Diane.

Veda cast her husband a guilty glance. “We, uh, well, we just borrowed. .”

“My key?” said the landlady. “Did you take my key?”

“We borrowed it. Marvin has been having fits with his allergies.”

The landlady looked miserable.

“Well, you can’t go stealing keys and poking around in people’s rooms. Dr. Fallon was attacked in the parking lot the other night. How do you think she felt seeing someone hiding behind her curtains?”

“That was the only place I could hide. She was coming in the door and I was scared to move.”

“Marvin, take Veda across the hall-and give me my key.” The landlady held out her hand, and Veda dropped the key in it.

Marvin and Veda Odell left, and the other tenants went back to their apartments. There was only Diane and the landlady. Diane gave her the kind of look she did when Ariel got into something she shouldn’t have.

“Oh, dear. You know, don’t you?”

“I saw the tail the other night.”

“She’s such a nice cat, and good company. I was hoping. . I guess I’ll have to get rid of her.”

“Maybe you can find the Odells another apartment over a funeral home,” said Diane.

“They are such a strange couple, aren’t they? They love planning their funerals. Can you imagine? That’s such an odd thing to have as a hobby. Two of them. How do you suppose they found each other in the first place?”

“They probably met at a funeral,” said Diane.

The landlady shrugged. “You’re probably right.”

Diane sat on her sofa, suddenly very tired.

“You know they had children,” the landlady said. “Seven of them. They all died. Veda showed me pictures of their funerals. Kind of makes your skin crawl, doesn’t it?” With that, the landlady went back to her apartment.

Yes, thought Diane, it does make my skin crawl. She locked her door, put a chair under the knob, and dragged herself into the bedroom. Before she got in bed she took a pain pill to ease her throbbing back. As she climbed in bed she noticed the light blinking on her answering machine. Frank, she thought, and reached for the playback button.

Chapter 37

The message was from Gregory, asking her to call, he had some news. She looked at the clock. Much too early in England to call now, but in a few hours. . As she was setting her alarm to wake her up in five hours, the phone rang. She snatched it up.

“Diane,” said Gregory. “I figured you’d wait until some decent hour to return my call, so I thought I’d call you back.”

“Do you ever get any sleep?” she asked.

“I don’t need much, really. Four hours a night and I’m fit for the day. I have some news, mostly good. If not good, at least informative.”

“I could use some good news.”

“The good news is that Ivan Santos and his people are still in Puerto Barquis. No evidence that any have sneaked out of the country or into the U.S. Bad news is they are mounting a successful coup.”

“I’m sorry to hear that. The population’s been through a lot.”

“I’m afraid they are in for more of the same.”

“I hate saying I’m relieved he’s not here.”

“I know. I have some more news too. I’ve been checking around, and found out that someone in your State Department was discussing the events of last year at a small private party a few weeks ago. I don’t think he meant harm, but I chastised him just the same. God knows they’ve been giving me a hard time. One of the people at the party was from Rosewood.”

“Really? Who?”

“Gordon Atwell. Do you know him?”

“I do indeed. He’s on my board of directors and one of the people siding with Mark Grayson. He also holds the mortgage on the museum-or, rather, his bank does.”

“Then maybe this news will help.”

“It will.”

“How is everything else?”

“Are you sure you want to know?”

“Something’s happened, I can hear it in your voice. Tell me about it.”

“It’s a long story. Will you be able to get your four hours’ sleep?”

“Fire away.”

Diane told him the entire story, ending with Mrs. Odell behind her drapes. That part left him laughing.

“I shouldn’t laugh. I’m sorry, but the image of this woman dressed in-what did you say, pink chenille? — hiding behind your draperies. . not to mention you about to club her with a cast-iron skillet, of all things. Is it an antique?”