forgot what I was looking for. I took a deep breath and threw the purse on the floor.
Tom Schulz said, “You want to talk about this accident?”
I gave him the briefest possible account of what had happened.
“You said Philip Miller was a friend of yours?”
“We’d gone to school together. C.U.”
We drove without speaking. Into the silence I said, “I was going out with Philip Miller.”
More silence. Then Schulz said, “What’s your ex-husband up to these days?”
I sniffed, looked out the window. “Last month he was bugging me, driving by a lot. Making hang-up calls, inventing legal problems. I was afraid he might get drunk, come over, and give me some trouble. That’s why I took this job. The Farquhars’ house has a lot of alarms.”
“Does he still see Arch?”
I nodded and looked at my nails. They looked very strange. I did not want to talk about this subject and said so.
“Just tell me this,” Schulz said as he looked over at me. “Did Korman know where you were going this morning?”
I couldn’t think. I said, “I don’t know. He wasn’t at the brunch, although I thought he might put in an appearance.”
Silence again filled the car. We passed the stone walls with the wood-carved sign, A SPEN M EADOW C OUNTRY C LUB . The phone wires would heat up quickly in the club area, because Philip Miller was, or had been, a resident.
The post-accident daze clung to me like a blanket. Scenes from the last hour intruded on my consciousness: the curves of the road, the feel of the accelerator beneath my foot.
Philip.
“I’m up here because some weird guy phoned,” Schulz was saying. With great effort I turned to listen. He mused silently for a moment before he said, “Call comes in and the guy gets out two sentences before he hangs up. He says, You gotta come help me, I live up by Aspen Meadow Country Club. You gotta come help me, my life’s in danger. Click.”
5.
I sighed. I said, “That’s just great. Did you get a number, anything?”
“Anytime you call 911, we’ve automatically got it. Problem is, the guy called from the clubhouse. It could be any number of extensions. They sent a car over, and nothing suspicious was going on. Anyway. I’m going there to check after I leave you off. Someone at home at this house where we’re going, by the way?”
“I don’t know. Probably.”
“You got a house key?”
I was so out of it I couldn’t remember. And then I remembered they were in the Thunderbird. I said, “No keys.”
“Guess it’s good I turned up, huh?”
I didn’t answer. In the distance the golf course was a pastiche of soaked green and ice white. The snow was melting quickly, and golf carts were starting their buglike crawl up the paved path.
For some reason, this struck me as insanity. How could people play golf today? How could they just go on?
I moaned. Schulz reached over, lifted my left hand from my lap, and held it. He said, “Need me to pull over?”
I nodded and he did. I opened the door and was sick.
When I had wiped my mouth with tissues he discreetly handed over, I said, “I’m sorry. I’m so embarrassed.”
“Don’t worry about it. Let’s just get you to this place.”
I closed my eyes and mumbled the directions to Sam Snead Lane, a dead end. When I felt a little better I looked out again at the greens, but then changed my mind. Better just to focus on the inside of the car for a while.
“I wonder if they asked these guys if they could use their names,” said Schulz. I ventured a glance out. Schulz wrinkled his nose as he started down Arnold Palmer Avenue. I told him in a voice that still did not sound like mine that it had been the developer’s idea to make up for the loss of a second eighteen holes by naming the streets after famous golfers. Schulz shook his head. “No second golf course, but a dry sailing club. Houses here look like boats. Great big yachts tied up on the grass.”
I looked out at the pale gray and tan mini-mansions