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“Is that okay with you, Meg?”

“Is what okay?” I asked, turning reluctantly to see what Chris wanted. Didn’t anyone else care about poor Spike?

“Can you rehearse the combat demonstration with Michael now?”

“Now? With Michael?” I said, my eyes still drawn to Salome’s cage.

“Yeah, he’s good enough with a sword to take my place.”

“What happened to you?”

I emerged from my obsession with rescuing Spike long enough to notice that Chris was sporting a large bandage on his right hand.

“Didn’t you hear a word I was saying? That evil little mutt of yours tried to take my hand off when—”

“Evil little mutt!” I exclaimed. “How can you call him that, after what happened to the poor little thing?”

“What do you mean, after what happened to him?” Chris said. “You mean the fact that I single-handedly rescued him from the tiger or the fact that he’s sitting in Maggie’s van right now, stuffing himself with ground sirloin?”

“Salome didn’t eat him?”

“He’s fine,” Chris said. “I, on the other hand, was rather badly bitten, and probably won’t be able to work for a couple of weeks, which means tonight’s show is off unless someone can take my place. Which Michael has agreed to do, provided we can get in some rehearsal time.”

“No problem,” I said. “Just tell me when and where. You can’t imagine how grateful I am.”

“I have a very good imagination,” Chris said, waggling his eyebrows. “Any chance you’d be grateful enough to—”

“To rehearse your stage combat demonstration, yes,” Michael interrupted. “Half an hour from now in the Shangri-La Room.”

Chris laughed, and strode off to find Harry.

“So Spike is safe,” Michael said. “Shall I assume, from the touching concern you just showed for his welfare, that I can tell my mom we’ll be happy to adopt Spike, now that she’s found out she’s allergic?”

“No, but just because I don’t want to adopt him doesn’t mean I don’t care about his welfare. Here, Dad,” I said, handing my father the truncated leash. “Go stick this back in Salome’s teeth. Just in case she has charmed any fans into thinking tigers make nifty house pets.”

“Good thinking,” Dad said, and trotted over to Salome’s cage.

“Dad, I was kidding,” I began, but he was already out of earshot. “Of course, I can’t believe I just blew the chance to weasel out of doing another stage performance,” I said, turning to Michael.

“What? You’d rather act with Chris than with me?”

“I’d rather not act at all, thank you,” I said. “I get stage fright.”

“You’ll get over it.”

“I don’t plan to do enough acting to get over it,” I said.

“Not even to solve my contract problems? While your dad was bandaging your arm, I got another call from my agent. Also your agent, if you’re interested.”

“Why would I need an agent?”

“Apparently all this weekend’s publicity has convinced the network to renew. And our agent thinks once they see the footage of your sword fight, they’ll probably want to arrange a guest appearance on the show.”

“Me?” I squeaked. “On the show?”

“Only if they agree to meet all our contract demands,” Michael said. “Which will include a schedule that doesn’t interfere with my teaching responsibilities.”

“Is that possible?”

“Dead easy,” said a voice at my elbow. I turned to see Nate, looking up owlishly from the yellow legal pad on which he was scribbling words and whole chorus lines of stick figures. “I can probably have scripts for the whole season done by the end of next week without the QB’s interference, and odds are we can get signoff pretty quickly and come up with an efficient shooting schedule. Is your dad around? I need some names.”

“Over there,” I said, pointing to where Dad was standing with the business end of his stethoscope pressed against Salome’s tawny flank. Mother was circulating through the crowd with the jar in which Brad had been collecting donations for Salome’s upkeep, and from the looks of it she would soon need a second jar.

“Walker’s staying with the show,” Michael said, as Nate wandered off in search of Dad. “With the QB gone, they need as many of the old cast as possible. And Maggie’s coming back—Nate’s still figuring out how. She’ll insist on a tight shooting schedule. She doesn’t want to spend any more time than necessary away from her animals.”

I spotted Maggie nearby, talking to Brad.

“And we have a very good benefit program,” I heard her say.

“Maggie’s hiring Brad?” I murmured to Michael.

“To keep Salome happy,” Michael said. “Or didn’t you hear—Maggie’s buying Salome. Oh, and apparently she’s convinced the animal control folks to do something about the monkeys and parrots.”

He pointed to where the head of the Amazon security guard and the hotel’s acting manager were talking, apparently simultaneously, to one of the animal control officers. The officer was writing something in a notebook. A citation, I suspected, as he tore off a page and handed it to the Amazon, who looked at it and stopped talking.

I moved a little closer so I could hear.

“And as for you,” the officer said, turning to the hotel manager, “you should have called us Friday, as soon as you knew you had a problem.”

“Go ahead,” the manager said. “Fine me, throw me in jail—I don’t care. Just get those things out of my lobby, will you?”

“We’re working on it,” the officer said, and began writing again.

“I want you to arrest them!” someone shouted nearby.

We turned to see the man from the health department talking to a uniformed officer.

“I understand, sir,” the officer said. “But unless you can give us a better description—there must be fifty people here wearing space suits and carrying ray guns.”

“You haven’t heard the last of this!” the health department man shouted, storming off into the crowd.

“Where’s Foley?” someone said behind me.

I turned to answer, and then realized that a passing cop was speaking into his radio.

“Roger,” he said. “Tell Foley we secured the suspect’s car. Had all his stuff in it—looks like he was about to make a run for it.”

“Well, that answers another of my questions,” I said, as the cop strolled out of earshot.

“And what was that?” Michael asked.

“How Steele knew to come after me in the hotel when everyone else had evacuated,” I said. “I bet he wasn’t coming after me at all—he was coming to pick up his stuff from the booth.”

“I’m sure Foley’s happy you prevented his escape,” Michael said.

“Yes, I’m sure everyone’s happy,” I said.

“Almost everyone,” Michael said, pointing back toward the hotel entrance. The police were bringing Alaric Steele outside, and a police cruiser, lights flashing, was slowly making its way through the crowd surrounding the hotel’s front door.

“There goes Ichabod Dilley,” Michael said.

“No,” I said. “There goes Alaric Steele. It turns out Ichabod Dilley died a long time ago after all.”

I moved a little closer, so I could see his face, but the public mask was back on. Steele might look down on actors, but he had a little talent in that direction himself. He moved a little slowly—probably still groggy from the tranquilizer dart—but he stood with his head high, his back straight, and an expression of noble, resigned suffering on his face. He towered over the two uniformed officers on either side, looking like a patient Gulliver among the Lilliputians—couldn’t Loudoun County find any reasonably large officers to escort him?

Ichabod Dilley the younger hovered behind his uncle—trying to be helpful, apparently, or at least feeling he ought to show a little family solidarity. Though from the way he shrank when Steele glanced his way, I suspected his loyalty hadn’t met with the grateful response he probably expected. Steele merely pretended to ignore him.