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Emma lights up. "So you were right—she killed her husband!"

"Very possible. But I still don't have enough to say so."

"Oh, come on. Obviously she had a motive."

"No, Emma, she had a cock in her mouth. That's not necessarily the same thing. Cleo isn't the type to murder for love; Cleo has a career to manage."

A peppermint candy has glommed to one of my dental crowns, impeding speech. Observing my not-so-suave attempts to dislodge it, Emma stifles a laugh.

I hear myself saying, "This is no good. We can't possibly be friends."

"You're right."

"The planks of this relationship are animus, mistrust and a mutual lack of respect."

"As it should be," Emma says playfully.

Enough of this, I'm thinking.

"How many Valiums have you gobbled today?" I ask.

She is floored.

"You took one before you came to lunch, right?"

"No ... yeah, I had to," Emma stammers. "How'd you know?"

I reach across the table and grasp one of her hands. It's impossible to say which of us is more startled.

"You listen," I tell her, "I'm not worth it, and the job's not worth it. We get back to the office, you go straight to the ladies' room and flush mummy's little helpers down the toilet. A drug situation is unacceptable."

"You don't understand, Jack. You can't possibly."

"Take off your shoes. That's an order."

"I will not."

"Emma, I'm counting to three."

"Are you nuts?"

Next thing I know, I'm kneeling under the table and in each hand is one of Emma's taupe pumps. Her bare feet are drawn protectively under her chair, toes curling, but I can see how she's repainted the nails: miniature black-and-white checkerboards!

I pop out grinning from beneath the tablecloth.

"You're going to be fine!" I exclaim.

And Emma slugs me ferociously in the nose.

Emma asked me to steer clear of the newsroom until the bleeding stopped and the swelling went down. So now I'm at home, avoiding the mirror and noodling on my laptop. I see by the pop-up calendar that I've got eight days in which to avoid dying like Oscar Wilde, penniless and scandalized at age forty-six. Someday I must thank Anne for the warning. My forty-seventh birthday is a week from tomorrow. I have $514 in the bank and a nose the size of an eggplant.

My mother will phone on my birthday, but she'll keep it short. She is fed up with being interrogated about my father, but I can't stop thinking about what she sprung on me the last time—that she'd learned of his death "a long time ago" from a newspaper obituary.

Because nothing turned up in the data search I ran at the newsroom, I'm left to rely on my telephone skills and the kindness of strangers. First, I make a list of cities where my mother has lived in the forty-three years since Jack Sr. walked out. In order: Clearwater, Orlando (where I attended high school), Jacksonville (where my mother met my stepfather), Atlanta, Dallas, Tallahassee and, now, Naples. Unless my mother is fudging about the time frame, my old man's death occurred at least two decades ago. That automatically knocks out the last three cities. Twenty years ago, my mother and stepfather were living in Atlanta, so that's where I begin—with a call to the morgue of the Journal-Constitution.

As soon as I identify myself as a brethren journalist, I'm transferred to an efficient-sounding librarian with a honey-buttered Georgia accent. She puts me on hold while she manually searches the paper's old, alphabetized clip files, the stories that predated electronic storage. As I'm waiting, my palms moisten and my heart drums against my sternum and—for one fleeting lucid moment—I consider hanging up. Whether my father croaked at thirty-five or ninety-five shouldn't matter to me; I don't even remember the guy. We had nothing in common except for the name and the blood; any other attachment is illusory, coiled like a blind worm in my imagination.

Yet I don't hang up. When the librarian comes back on the line, she apologetically reports that she cannot find a published obituary for anyone named Jack Tagger, nor any news stories relating to the death of such a person. "It's always possible it was misfiled. I could crosscheck the daily obit pages on microfilm," she offers. "Can you guess at the year?"

"Till the cows come home," I say. "Thanks for trying."

I get the same discouraging results from the Florida Times-Unionin Jacksonville, the Orlando Sentineland the Clearwater Sun.No obits, blotter items, no stories, no Jack Tagger in the clips. I wonder if I've overestimated my mother's integrity. Suppose she invented the bit about seeing my old man's obit in a paper. Suppose she contrived to send me off on some winding, futile quest, just to get me off her back.

If so, I went for the bait like a starved carp. Two hours working the phone and zip to show for it. Serves me right.

I dial her number and Dave, my stepfather, picks up. We engage in innocuous chitchat about the tragic state of his golf game until he gets sidetracked, as he often does, on the subject of Tiger Woods. While acknowledging the young man's phenomenal talent, my stepfather fears that Tiger Woods is inspiring thousands upon thousands of minority youngsters to take up golf, and that some of these youngsters will one day gain entry to my stepfather's beloved country club and commence whupping some white Protestant ass.

"I've got nothing against blacks," Dave is saying, "but, Jack, look around. They've already got basketball, they've got football, they've got track. Can't they leave us something?Just one damn sport we can win at? Don't read me wrong—"

"Never," I say. Arguing would be futile; Dave is old and dim and stubborn.

"—don't read me wrong, Jack, but what can they possibly enjoy about golf? For Christ's sake, you don't even get to runanywhere. It's all walking or riding around in electric carts in the hot sun—can that be fun for them?"

"Is Mom home?" I ask.

"Jack, you know I'm not prejudiced—"

Perish the thought.

"—and, as you're aware, me and your mother give generously to their college fund, that Negro College Fund. We never miss the Lou Rawls telethon."

"Dave?"

"But what concerns me about this Tiger Woods—and God knows he's a gifted athlete—but what troubles me, Jack, is the message that's being sent out to the young people, that golf is all of sudden a game for, you know ... the masses."

"Dave, is my mother home?"

"She went to the grocery."

"Can I ask you something?"

"Sure, Jack."

"Not to change the subject."

"That's quite okay."

"She ever talk about my old man?"

"Hmmm."

"Because she told me he died," I say. "She said she read about it in some newspaper a long time ago. You wouldn't happen to remember when that was?"

Silence on the other end; rare silence, in Dave's case.

"Even a ballpark guess would be helpful," I say. "I'm just curious, Dave. You can understand."

"Certainly. Him being your natural father and all. It's just ... "

"What?"

He manufactures a cough. I wish I could say I felt lousy for putting him on the spot, but I don't. Dave sold Amway for a living so it's just about impossible to throw him off stride.

"When your mother and me got married," he says, "we made a pact between ourselves. An unwritten contract, if you will."

"Go on."

"We agreed not to talk about our past ... what's the word—involvements. Not ever. That includes ex-boyfriends, ex-husbands, ex-girlfriends, ex-wives ... ex-anybodys. We felt it was water under the bridge that ought to stay over the darn."

"I see."

"We weren't exactly kids when we met, your mom and me. We'd both been around the block a few times. Chased a few rainbows."

"Of course, Dave."