STORMY WEATHER By CARL HIAASEN

Thrilled by his own daring, Max combed the place for signs of his wife. Hanging in a closet was the outfit she’d worn on the day he was kidnapped. Since the rental car had been looted of their belongings, Max reasoned that Bonnie must now be wearing somebody else’s clothes, or her folks had wired some cash-or perhaps Augustine had bought her an expensive new wardrobe. Wasn’t that what wife-stealers did?

Max Lamb forced himself to enter the guest room. He purposely avoided the wall of skulls, but shuddered anyway under the dissipated stares. He was pleased to find the bed linens rumpled exclusively on the left side- Bonnie’s favorite. A depression in the lone pillow seemed, upon inspection, to match the shape of a young woman’s head. The bed showed no manifest evidence of male visitation.

An oak dresser yielded an assortment of female / clothing, from bras to blue jeans, in an intriguing range of sizes. Relics of Augustine’s ex-girlfriends, Max assumed. One of them must have stood six feet two, judging by the Amazonian cut of her black exercise leggings. Max located several petite items that would have fit his wife, including a pair of powder-blue sweat socks in a tidy mound on the hardwood floor. His outlook improved; at least she was wearing borrowed clothes.

He steeled himself for the next survey: Augustine’s room.

The man’s bed looked like a grenade had been set off under the sheets. Max Lamb thought: He’s either having fantastic sex or horrible nightmares. The disarray made it impossible to determine if two persons had shared the mattress; the cast of A Chorus Line could have slept there, for all Max could tell.

Uncertainty nibbled at his ego. He got an idea- distasteful but effective. He bent over Augustine’s bed and put his nose to the linens^ whiffing for a trace of Bonnie’s perfume. Uncharacteristically, Max Lamb couldn’t recall the brand name of the fragrance, but he’d never forget its orchard scent.

He sniffed in imaginary grids, starting at the headboard and working his way down the mattress. An explosive sneeze announced his findings: Paco Rabanne for men. Max recognized the scent because he wore it himself (in spite of a near-incapacitating allergy) every Monday, for the sixth-floor meetings at Rodale.

Paco and laundry bleach, that’s all Max detected on Augustine’s sheets.

One more place to check: the wastebasket in the bathroom. Grimly Max pawed through the litter: no used condoms, thank God.

Later, stretched out on Augustine’s sofa, Max realized ‘ that Bonnie’s faithfulness, or possible lack thereof, wasn’t the most pressing issue. It was her sanity. Somehow they’d snowed her, those madmen. Like some weird cult-one eats road pizza, the other fo’ndles human skulls.

How could such a bright girl let herself be brainwashed by such freaks!

Max Lamb decided on a bold move. He composed a script for himself and rehearsed it for an hour before picking up the phone. Then he dialed the apartment in New York and left the message for his wandering wife. The ultimatum.

Afterwards Max called back to hear how it sounded on the answering machine. His voice was so steely that he scarcely recognized himself.

Excellent, he thought. Just what Bonnie needs to hear.

If only she calls.

Avila’s wife snidely announced that his expensive san-teria goats were in the custody of Animal Control. One had been captured grazing along the shoulder of the Don Shula Expressway, while the other had turned up at a car wash, butting its horns through the grillwork of a leased Jaguar sedan. Avila’s wife said it made the Channel 7 news.

“So? What do you want me to do?” Avila demanded.

“Oh, forget about! Three hundred dollars, chew jess forget about!”

“You want me to steal the goats back? OK, tonight I’ll drive to the animal shelter and break down the fence and kidnap the damn things. That make you happy? While I’m there I’ll grab you some kittens and puppies, too. Maybe a big fat guinea pig for your mother, no?”

“I hate chew! I hate chew!”

Avila shook his head. “Here we go again.”

“Chew and Chango, your faggot orichal”

“Louder,” Avila said. “Maybe you can wake some of your dead relatives in Havana.”

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