“I’ll soon be silent.”
 
 “You’d be the last name in these pages of the dead?”
 
 “Yep,” said Constance.
 
 I went to turn the heat up and shivered.
 
 “What an awful thing to do.”
 
 “Awful.”
 
 “Telephone books,” I murmured. “Maggie says I cry at them, but it all depends on what telephone books, when.”
 
 “All depends. Now …”
 
 From her purse she pulled out a second small black book.
 
 “Open that.”
 
 I opened it and read, “Constance Rattigan” and her address on the beach, and turned to the first page. It was all As.
 
 “Abrams, Alexander, Alsop, Allen.”
 
 I went on.
 
 “Baldwin, Bradley, Benson, Burton, Buss …”
 
 And felt a coldness take my fingers.
 
 “These are all friends of yours? I know those names.”
 
 “And …?”
 
 “Not all, but most of them, buried out at Forest Lawn. But dug up tonight. A graveyard book,” I said.
 
 “And worse than the one from 1900.”
 
 “Why?”
 
 “I gave this one away years ago. To the Hollywood Helpers. I didn’t have the heart to erase the names. The dead accumulated. A few live ones remained. But I gave the book away. Now it’s back. Found it when I came in tonight from the surf.”
 
 “Jesus, you swim in this weather?”
 
 “Rain or shine. And tonight I came back to find this lying like a tombstone in my yard.”
 
 “No note?”
 
 “By saying nothing, it says everything.”
 
 “Christ.” I took the old directory in one hand, Rattigan’s small names and numbers book in the other.
 
 “Two almost–Books of the Dead,” I said.
 
 “Almost, yes,” said Constance. “Look here, and here, and also here.”
 
 She showed me three names on three pages, each with a red ink circle around it and a crucifix.
 
 “These names?” I said. “Special?”