The Third Twin Page 0,25

the rapist. Lisa still needed a true friend, someone whose main concern was for her.

"I'll call you," Jeannie said to her.

Lisa hugged Jeannie. "I can't thank you enough for staying with me," she said.

Mish held out her hand and said: "Good to meet you."

Jeannie shook hands. "Good luck," she said. "I hope you catch him."

"So do I," said Mish.

Chapter 6

STEVE PARKED IN THE LARGE STUDENT PARKING LOT IN THE southwest corner of the hundred-acre Jones Falls campus. It was a few minutes before ten o'clock, and the campus was thronged with students in light summer clothes on their way to the first lecture of the day. As he walked across the campus he looked out for the tennis player. The chances of seeing her were slender, he knew, but he could not help staring at every tall dark-haired woman to see if she had a nose ring.

The Ruth W. Acorn Psychology Building was a modern four-story structure in the same red brick as the older, more traditional college buildings. He gave his name in the lobby and was directed to the laboratory.

In the next three hours he underwent more tests than he could have imagined possible. He was weighed, measured, and fingerprinted. Scientists, technicians, and students photographed his ears, tested the strength of his grip, and assessed his startle reflex by showing him pictures of burn victims and mutilated bodies. He answered questions about his leisure-time interests, his religious beliefs, his girlfriends, and his job aspirations. He had to state if he could repair a doorbell, whether he considered himself well groomed, would he spank his children, and did certain music make him think of pictures or changing color patterns. But no one fold him why he had been selected for the study.

He was not the only subject. Also around the lab were two little girls and a middle-aged man wearing cowboy boots, blue jeans, and a western shirt. At midday they all gathered in a lounge with couches and a TV, and had pizza and Cokes for lunch. It was then Steve realized there were in fact two middle-aged men in cowboy boots: they were twins, dressed the same.

He introduced himself and learned that the cowboys were Benny and Arnold and the little girls were Sue and Elizabeth. "Do you guys always dress the same?" Steve asked the men as they ate.

They looked at each other, then Benny said: "Don't know. We just met."

"You're twins, and you just met?"

"When we were babies we were both adopted - by different families."

"And you accidentally dressed the same?" "Looks like it, don't it?"

Arnold added: "And we're both carpenters, and we both smoke Camel Lights, and we both have two kids, a boy and a girl."

Benny said: "Both girls are called Caroline, but my boy is John and his is Richard."

Arnold said: "I wanted to call my boy John, but my wife insisted on Richard."

"Wow," Steve said. "But you can't have inherited a taste for Camel Lights."

"Who knows?"

One of the little girls, Elizabeth, said to Steve: "Where's your twin?"

"I don't have one," he replied. "Is that what they study here, twins?"

"Yes." Proudly she added: "Sue and me are dizygotic."

Steve raised his eyebrows. She looked about eleven. "I'm not sure I know that word," he said gravely. "What does it mean?"

"We're not identical. We're fraternal twins. That's why we don't look the same." She pointed at Benny and Arnold. "They're monozygotic. They have the same DNA. That's why they're so alike."

"You seem to know a lot about it," Steve said. "I'm impressed."

"We've been here before," she said.

The door opened behind Steve, and Elizabeth looked up and said: "Hello, Doctor Ferrami."

Steve turned and saw the tennis player.

Her muscular body was hidden beneath a knee-length white laboratory coat, but she moved like an athlete as she walked into the room. She still had the air of focused concentration that had been so impressive on the tennis court. He stared at her, hardly able to believe his luck.

She said hello to the little girls and introduced herself to the others. When she shook Steve's hand she did a double take. "So you're Steve Logan!" she said.

"You play a great game of tennis," he said.

"I lost, though." She sat down. Her thick, dark hair swung loosely around her shoulders, and Steve noticed, in the unforgiving light of the laboratory, that she had one or two gray hairs. Instead of the silver ring she had a plain gold stud in her nostril. She was wearing makeup today, and

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