Part 67 (1/2)

'h.e.l.l, no. I was faking o.r.g.a.s.m.'

'Both times, huh?'

'You betcha.' She drew close to me, put her hand on my chest. 'You'll stay over, won't you?'

'What would your sponsor say?'

'Probably that I might as well hang for a sheep as a lamb. Oh, s.h.i.+t, I almost forgot.'

'Where are you going?'

'Gotta make a phone call.'

'You're actually calling your sponsor?'

She shook her head. She'd put a robe on and now she was paging through a small address book. She dialed a number and said, 'Hi, this is Jan. You weren't sleeping, were you? Look, this is out of left field, but does the word Ricone mean anything to you?' She spelled it. 'I thought it might be a dirty word or something. Uh-huh.' Then she listened for a moment and said, 'No, nothing like that. I'm doing crossword puzzles in Sicilian, that's all. On nights when I can't sleep. Listen, you can only spend so much time reading the Big Book.'

She finished the conversation, hung up and said, 'Well, it was a thought. I figured if it was a dialect or an obscenity it might not be in the dictionary.'

'What obscenity did you think it might be? And when did the thought happen to cross your mind?'

'None of your business, wisea.s.s.'

'You're blus.h.i.+ng.'

'I know, I can feel it. That'll teach me to try to help a friend solve a murder.'

'No good deed goes unpunished.'

'That's what they say. Martin Albert Ricone and Charles Otis Jones? Are those the names he used?'

'Owen. Charles Owen Jones.'

'And you think it means something.'

'It has to mean something. Even if he's a lunatic, anything that elaborate would have to mean something.'

'Like Fort Wayne and Fort Smith?'

'Like that, maybe, but I think the names he used are more significant than that. Ricone's such an unusual name.'

'Maybe he started by writing Rico.'

'I thought of that. There are plenty of Ricos in the phone book. Or maybe he's from Puerto Rico.'

'Why not? Everybody else is. Maybe he's a Cagney fan.'

'Cagney?'