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to Mrs. Sanchez’s back porch to confirm for her that she was visible, which I did every morning. Through the screen door, I saw her sitting at the kitchen table.

      I knocked, and she said, “Can you hear me?”

      “Yes, ma’am,” I said. “I hear you just fine.”

      “Who do you hear?”

      “You. Rosalia Sanchez.”

      “Come in then, Odd Thomas,” she said.

      Her kitchen smelled like chiles and corn flour, fried eggs and jack cheese. I’m a terrific short-order cook, but Rosalia Sanchez is a natural-born chef.

      Everything in her kitchen is old and well worn but scrupulously clean. Antiques are more valuable when time and wear have laid a warm patina on them. Mrs. Sanchez’s kitchen is as beautiful as the finest antique, with the priceless patina of a life’s work and of cooking done with pleasure and with love.

      I sat across the table from her.

      Her hands were clasped tightly around a coffee mug to keep them from shaking. “You’re late this morning, Odd Thomas.”

      Invariably she uses both names. I sometimes suspect she thinks Odd is not a name but a royal title, like Prince or Duke, and that protocol absolutely requires that it be used by commoners when they address me.

      Perhaps she thinks that I am the son of a deposed king, reduced to tattered circumstances but nonetheless deserving of respect.

      I said, “Late, yes, I’m sorry. It’s been a strange morning.”

      She doesn’t know about my special relationship with the deceased. She’s got enough problems without having to worry about dead people making pilgrimages to her garage.

      “Can you see what I’m wearing?” she asked worriedly.

      “Pale yellow slacks. A dark yellow and brown blouse.”

      She turned sly. “Do you like the butterfly barrette in my hair, Odd Thomas?”

      “There’s no barrette. You’re holding your hair back with a yellow ribbon. It looks nice that way.”

      As a young woman, Rosalia Sanchez must have been remarkably beautiful. At sixty-three, having added a few pounds, having acquired the seams and crinkles of seasoning experience, she possessed the deeper beauty of the beatified: the sweet humility and the tenderness that time can teach, the appealing glow of care and character that, in their last years on this earth, no doubt marked the faces of those who were later canonized as saints.

      “When you didn’t come at the usual time,” she said, “I thought you’d been here but couldn’t see me. And I thought I couldn’t see you anymore, either, that when I became invisible to you, you also became invisible to me.”

      “Just late,” I assured her.

      “It would be terrible to be invisible.”

      “Yeah, but I wouldn’t have to shave as often.”

      When discussing invisibility, Mrs. Sanchez refused to be amused. Her saintly face found a frown of disapproval.

      “When I’ve worried about becoming invisible, I’ve always thought I’d be able to see other people, they just wouldn’t be able to see or hear me.”

      “In those old Invisible Man movies,” I said, “you could see his breath when he went out in really cold weather.”

      “But if other people become invisible to me when I’m invisible to them,” she continued, “then it’s like I’m the last person in the world, all of it empty except for me wandering around alone.”

      She shuddered. Clasped in her hands, the coffee mug knocked against the table.

      When Mrs. Sanchez talks about invisibility, she’s talking about death, but I’m not sure she realizes this.

      If the true first year of the new millennium, 2001, had not been good for the world in general, it had been bleak for Rosalia Sanchez in particular, beginning with the loss of her husband, Herman, on a night in April. She had gone to sleep next to the man whom she had loved for more than forty years—and awakened beside a cold cadaver. For Herman, death had come as gently as it ever does, in sleep, but for Rosalia, the shock of waking with the dead had been traumatic.

      Later that year, still mourning her husband, she had not gone with her three sisters and their families on a long-planned vacation to New England. On the morning of September 11, she awakened to the news that their return flight out of Boston had been hijacked and used as a guided missile in one of the most infamous acts in history.

      Although Rosalia had wanted children, God had given her none. Herman, her sisters, her nieces, her nephews had been the center of her life. She lost them all while sleeping.

      Sometime between that September and that Christmas, Rosalia had gone a little crazy with grief. Quietly crazy, because she had lived her entire life quietly and knew no other way to be.

      In her gentle madness, she would not acknowledge that they were dead. They had merely become invisible to her. Nature in a quirky mood had resorted to a rare phenomenon that might at any moment be reversed, like a magnetic field, making all her lost loved ones visible to her again.

      The details of all the disappearances of ships and planes in the Bermuda Triangle were known to Rosalia Sanchez. She’d read every book that she could find on the subject.

      She knew about the inexplicable, apparently overnight vanishment of hundreds of thousands of Mayans from the cities of Copan, Piedras Negras, and Palenque in A.D. 610.

      If you allowed Rosalia to bend your ear, she would nearly break it off in an earnest discussion of historical disappearances. For instance, I know more than I care to know and immeasurably more than I need to know about the evaporation, to a man, of a division of three thousand Chinese soldiers near Nanking, in 1939.

      “Well,” I said, “at least you’re visible this morning. You’ve got another whole day of visibility to look forward to, and that’s a blessing.”

      Rosalia’s biggest fear is that on the same day when her loved ones are made visible again, she herself will vanish.

      Though she longs for their return, she dreads the consequences.

      She crossed herself, looked around her homey kitchen, and at last smiled. “I could bake something.”

      “You could bake anything,” I said.

      “What would you like me to bake for you, Odd Thomas?”

      “Surprise me.” I consulted my watch. “I better get to work.”

      She accompanied me to the door and gave me a good-bye hug. “You are a good boy, Odd Thomas.”

      “You remind me of my Granny Sugars,” I said, “except you don’t play poker, drink whiskey, or drive fast cars.”

      “That’s sweet,” she said. “You know, I thought the world and all of Pearl Sugars. She was so feminine but also ...”

      “Kick-ass,” I suggested.

      “Exactly. At the church’s strawberry festival one year, there was this rowdy man, mean on drugs or drink. Pearl put him down with just two punches.”

      “She had a terrific left hook.”

      “Of course, first she kicked him in that special tender place. But I think she could have handled him with the punches alone. I’ve sometimes wished I could be more like her.”

      From Mrs. Sanchez’s house, I walked the six blocks to the Pico Mundo Grille, which is in the heart of downtown Pico Mundo.

      Every minute that it advanced from sunrise, the morning became hotter. The gods of the Mojave don’t know the meaning of the word moderation.

      Long morning shadows grew shorter before my eyes,

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