
“It’s two in the morning,” I pointed out.
“That lets out a lot of things, doesn’t it?”
“Right. We’ve hopped our last bar. We’ve seen our last play, and our last clean movie. What’s left?”
“Looking in jewelry store windows.”
“Seriously? Your last night on Earth?”
She considered, then answered. “Yes.”
By damn, she meant it. I couldn’t think of anything duller. “Westwood or Beverly Hills ?”
“Both.”
“Now, look—”
“Beverly Hills, then.”
* * *
We drove through another spatter of rain and hail—a capsule tempest. We parked half a block from the Tiffany salesroom.
The sidewalk was one continuous puddle. Second-hand rain dripped on us from various levels of the buildings overhead. Leslie said, “This is great. There must be half a dozen jewelry stores in walking distance.”
“I was thinking of driving.”
“No no no, you don’t have the proper attitude. One must window shop on foot. It’s in the rules.”
“But the rain!”
“You won’t die of pneumonia. You won’t have time,” she said, too grimly.
Tiffany’s had a small branch office in Beverly Hills, but they didn’t put expensive things in the windows at night. There were a few fascinating toys, that was all.
We turned up Rodeo Drive—and struck it rich. Tibor showed an infinite selection of rings, ornate and modern, large and small, in all kinds of precious and semiprecious stones. Across the street, Van Cleef Arpels showed brooches, men’s wristwatches of elegant design, bracelets with tiny watches in them, and one window that was all diamonds.
“Oh, lovely,” Leslie breathed, caught by the flashing diamonds. “What they must look like in daylight!… Wups—”
“No, that’s a good thought. Imagine them at dawn, flaming with nova light, while the windows shatter to let raw daylight in. Want one? The necklace?”
