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"Hello, darling," she said. "I don't think much of it, either. That face, I mean."

I turned slowly. She was there, all right. The last time I'd seen her, I'd hauled her out of the truck cab looking like a broken and tattered doll that might have cost somebody a lot of money once but wasn't worth much now. You don't ride a half-ton truck down a steep hillside and bump up against a couple of pine stumps without a little damage. Also keep in mind she'd been no vision of immaculate loveliness at the start of the plunge.

I'd left her, I recalled, so I could attend to some business at the rear of the wrecked pickup; then I'd come back and dragged her away… But there was no hint of that in the appearance of the woman who faced me now. She'd had her hair re-done in the loose, fluffy way I remembered, and she was wearing a startling, short, cocktail dress of some velvety material that looked blacker than black. The startling thing about the dress was that it not only had no sleeves, it had no back, either. In front, covered to the throat, she looked almost demure; behind, bare to the waist, she was practically naked.

"That," I said, "is one hell of a garment to spring on the fine old cowtown of Alamogordo."

She smiled. "I know, darling. According to Helm, my taste in clothes is lousy. My pants are too tight, and my dresses are too bare. What are you celebrating, the end of the world? If so, may I join you?"

"Be my guest." I made room for her beside me and got her a drink. Then I frowned belatedly. "My God, is it tonight? I'd forgotten."

She tasted her whiskey and nodded. "At two o'clock. Oh-two-hundred, according to the Army's silly way of telling time. Why they want to shoot it off in the middle of the night, I don't know. But then, I don't know why they do anything they do, including asking questions." She hesitated. "Matt?"

"Yes?"

"What do you think?"

"About what?"

Her eyes narrowed. "Don't be stupid. You know what I mean. Naldi wasn't crazy, and he wasn't faking. We both saw him. Maybe he was wrong, but… maybe he wasn't. Anyway, he believed it." There was a little silence; then she said, "Matt, I'm kind of scared. Let's get out of here. If it should come, crazy as it sounds, I don't want to be in a bar."

"What's better than a bar?" I asked. "I mean, what's the choice?"

"You're being very obtuse, darling. I don't usually have to spell it out for a man. The choice, naturally, is your motel room or mine."

I glanced at her quickly, but she was busy producing a cigarette, tapping it, and leaning forward so I could light it-which I did.

"Matt?"

"Yes?"

"Even if it doesn't happen, we won't know, will we? I mean, it's been a week. He said that might be long enough, remember?"

"Yes," I said. "I remember. Maybe we're safe, this time."

"Maybe." She glanced at me. "Well, we wouldn't be much of a loss, would we? Either of us? I saw you, you know."

"Saw me?"

"Yes, I was pretty badly shaken up, really, and everything was kind of hazy; but I came to for a little when you left me there by the truck and went back to… Was it Injection A or B, darling?"

I said, "B, naturally. The one that leaves no traces. Orders were to make it look like an accident. Your friend Mr. Gunther was pretty mashed up back there. That aluminum canopy wasn't nearly as strong as the steel cab that protected us. But I had to make sure. Fortunately, my suitcase was handy, with the kit."

She said, "You're a horrible person."

"Sure," I said. "A motel room was mentioned. Let's not get too far off the subject."

"Don't rush me, darling," she said. "You're a dreadful cold-blooded, ruthless person, but I had to find you tonight. Do you understand? You're the only person I'd care to be with tonight, whatever happens."

"Sure," I said. "I don't think much of you, either, glamor girl You're unreliable and treacherous and arrogant and selfish. If you happen to think a man's done you a bad turn, you can't even be trusted tied hand and foot. You're mean and vengeful, and the only reason I love you is that I can't hurt you, and even if I do you've had it coming for years. Besides, I know you'll always get back at me somehow."

She was smiling happily at the end of this recital. "But you do love me, don't you?"

"Hell," I said. "You know I do. I-"

Somebody was tapping me on the shoulder. It was the young lieutenant. "Pardon me, sir," he said politely. "You're wanted on the telephone. You were being paged in the dining room. I thought I'd better tell you."

I sighed. "Sure. It might be some important officer wanting to know the exact number of stones in that damn church tower."

But it wasn't. It was Mac, calling from Washington. "Deckhoff," he said, "Stanislaus Deckhoff, unlikely though the name may sound."

"Well, it doesn't really matter now," I said. I'd asked him to run a make on Wegmann, giving him what I knew.

"The agency responsible for the file wants to know if the card should be removed to inactive."

"I'd say so," I said, "but you'd better warn them they'll never get a firm post-mortem identification. Wegmann-Deckhoff and some other guys and a church and some other buildings are scattered all over the side of a mountain. But, yes, I guess it's safe to call him inactive."

"How is the local situation?" he asked.

"Tapering off," I said.

"If I clear you with the authorities, is there any reason you can't start for Washington at once?"

"Yes, sir," I said. "One. She's waiting in the bar."

He was human after all. He said, "Very well, make it tomorrow morning."

I went back to Gail. In the morning, the world was still there, unchanged. Well, almost unchanged.