quality garbage disposal unit. She pulled open a drawer. There was silverware in it, neatly sorted, of
good quality. She opened a cupboard. There were assorted canned goods. She went to the freezer. It
was well stocked with frozen foods. She recognized the brand names: all top quality, the kind she
favored. All unused, with current "sell-by" dates. This could not be an accident. "The rent must be
astronomical," she breathed. "If all this is part of the furnishings."
Penn came back into the kitchen, shaking his head. "Those tools have not been used. It's as if the
owner set it up to please himself, then changed his mind. And those bikes—brand new, lightweight,
in perfect working order. Not cheap equipment. He couldn't have forgotten those."
"The kitchen is completely stocked," she said. "Food included. Even a furnished house does not
include that."
"With food?" He opened the refrigerator door. There was a jug of milk, a can of fruit juice, a head of
lettuce, packages of cheese, and assorted other items. "We could make sandwiches right here. This
has all the makings I like."
"Yes, and there's a loaf of bread in the breadbox," she agreed. "Fresh today, the kind we prefer. So
we know it isn't accidental. The owner must really want to rent this house."
"Maybe when the others turned it down, he decided to make it more appealing. But it's a nice enough
house regardless. Why would anybody turn it down, without even taking the free month?"
They kept coming back to that. She was as mystified as he. She went to the stairway to check the
bedrooms, while he went out the back door.
She paused at the base of the stairway. There was a small picture, or plaque, on the wall. On it was
inscribed a simple circle. Did it have a purpose? She would have to call it to Penn's attention. She
went on up the stairs.
She was hardly surprised to find the master bedroom set up, its bed neatly made, the top sheet turned
in the manner of a hotel room setup. She checked the closets: sure enough, there were suits in one,
dresses in the other. There was linen in the linen closet, and socks and underwear in drawers.
On an idle fancy, she took down a hanging dress and tried it on over her own. It fit her almost
perfectly. She tied the sash and buttoned the blouse, then tugged the hem straight. She walked to the
master bathroom and looked in its wall-sized mirror. Yes, were it not for the lumpiness caused by the
clothing beneath, this would be a perfectly useful and attractive dress. Certainly as good as the rack
items she normally bought.
She returned to the closet and looked below. There were shoes: men's under the suits, ladies' under
the dresses. Could they possibly fit? They looked as if they might. Yet shoe sizing was a personal
thing; every foot was different. A perfect fit was unlikely to be by chance.
This was getting scary. Coincidence could hardly account for it. Someone wanted the two of them
here. She was beginning to appreciate why the other prospects had been scared away. This was too
much like the spider inviting the fly into its parlor.
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