
He put down his sandwich as an unpleasant thought occurred to him. How did he know that this was
Satur-day at all? As far as he could tell, it could be any day of the week. What had yesterday been?
Wednesday. He was surprised that he knew. But he could clearly remember yesterday's work. He had
done a series of photographs of that Beecham girl who had the cute rump which Graham Textiles wanted
to grace their underwear ads in all the trade journals. It had been a long session, and despite Janet
Beecham's cute rump, she was a witless girl who seemed to do half of everything wrong. Today, then,
was Thursday, the end of the month with no pic-ture session scheduled. Larry had been assigned the last
bits of design, and Pete had decided to take the day off to work at the cabin.
He took a few more bites of the sandwich now that he seemed to be getting on top of things. By the
time he had finished, however, he could still not remember anything more than the day of the week. He
rinsed the dishes under the hot water and stacked them to dry.
As he turned away from the sink, he saw the day-date calendar next to the message board on the
wall.
The calendar said: Monday, August 10, 1970.
He stood there for a long while, looking at the date, not comprehending at all. How could it possibly
be two weeks later than he thought? He would have been missed in all that time. They would have come
looking for him. Della would have been hysterical, even though her mask of cool self-assurance seldom
cracked. Then there must be something wrong with the calendar.
As confident as he pretended to be, the fear remained, burgeoning inside him. Suddenly, the entire
kitchen seemed alien, as if he were in someone else's house and not his own. The quiet of the rooms was
deeper than it should have been. His skin goose-pimpled, and he had to laugh aloud to break the
paralysis that had overtaken him.
He turned to the message board, and he stopped laugh-ing. Across the top of the board was written:
“Della, Chief Langstrom called with news. Give him a ring when you come in. Cheer up, huh?” The
message had not been written by Della or anyone else he knew, though it was a distinctively feminine
hand.
This time when he went through the house, he noticed the changes. His clothes had been shoved
back in the wardrobe; a strange woman's clothes were there instead. In the bathroom, there was a
second set of makeup uten-sils complete with a new tin of powder and brushes. There was a third
toothbrush.
He felt weak, ill. And he did not know exactly why.
Downstairs again, he looked up the number of the po-lice station and dialed it. When a healthy
baritone voice answered, he asked for Langstrom and was told the boss would be back in an hour. Just
as he dropped the phone into its cradle, the back door opened. Della stood there, her mouth open, her
eyes wide with surprise.
She was a beautiful woman in the prime of her loveli-ness, just turned twenty-three. Her black hair
was worn long and framed a face that was freckled and pug-nosed. Large green eyes and a generous
mouth finished the smooth and masterful canvas. Her breasts were high and full, her waist narrow, her
legs almost too long. She wore a light summer dress which accentuated all these perfect lines. He could
not help but feel a moment of pride, even in circumstances such as these, and he wondered if her pride
matched his.
“You,” she said. Her voice was hoarse, cast at him like an incantation.
“Me,” he said.
Her face paled.
“Della, are you all right?”
“You're alive.” It was said quietly, gently.
“Looks that way,” he said, grinning.
She ran across the kitchen, her sandals clacking on the tiles, and she was in his arms. But not for
comfort, not to be kissed. She pummeled him, striking his shoulders with her small, fisted hands. Her face
was furiously red and contorted, her lips strained back from white, even teeth.
“What the hell!” he shouted, trying to fend her off and not managing it very well.