71. A few years later Albert Camus persuaded Gallimard to publish her essays, notebooks and letters.
72. A fierce, terrified elation raced through her veins as her eyes fell on the knife only an inch away from her hand.
73. A fine cold sweat dampened her face and neck.
74. A fire broke out in her ammunition hold and the crew were taken off by an attendant destroyer.
75. A fire leaped in the hearth under a Marble mantelpiece identical to the one in her own flat.
76. A flat, tense quality crept into her voice.
77. A flight attendant was thrown to the floor, breaking her ankle.
78. A flow of love and light and warmth seemed to move from his hard nearness into her own body.
79. A forensic psychiatrist was called in to help solve the mystery of her disappearance as she broke down under questioning.