had never experienced it before, so how could he put
a name to it? He only knew that it was encompassing
and debilitating, that he had never felt like this before
even though he had been with a lot of beautiful, captivating,
sexy women.
From there his thoughts had wandered from his
sexual history to hers. And that's when he had re
membered the telephone call. Frowning, he had
looked at the telephone on the table across the room.
When he had caught her using it, she had looked startled
and guilty. Who could she have been calling?
Suddenly he had sprung off the bed. Heart racing,
he bent over the telephone and ran his finger along
the rubberized buttons on the panel. He wasn't even
sure that this particular model had the feature he
sought, but then, yes!, there it was.
Auto Redial.
Hesitating only a second, he depressed the button.
Beeping a series of tones, the telephone automatically
dialed the number, which simultaneously appeared
on the LED. He grabbed a pencil and the only
paper within reach--last season's Sports Illustrated swimsuit edition. He scribbled the telephone number
across the cover girl's abdomen.
"Dr. Ladd."
He didn't know what he had expected, but after
two rings when his call was answered by a clipped,
professional, female voice, it caught him off guard.
"Pardon?"
"Were you calling Dr. Ladd?"
"Uh ... I'm ... I might have the wrong number."
He repeated the number he had jotted down.
"That's correct. This is an answering service. Were
you trying to reach the doctor?"
At a loss, he said, "Uh, yeah."
"Your name and a number where you can be
reached, please."
"You know, on second thought, I'll wait and call
during office hours."
He had hung up quickly, but for a long time afterward,
he had sat on the edge of the bed and pondered
who the hell Dr. Ladd could be, and why she had
been calling him in the middle of the night.
He had run through a roster of names and faces in
his memory bank. He mixed socially with a number
of physicians. He was a member of two country clubs
that were jam-packed with doctors of every specialty.
But he couldn't recall ever having met a Dr. Ladd.
But had he met Dr. Ladd's wife? Did he know Dr.
Ladd's wife intimately?
Annoyed by that grim but very real possibility, he
had forced himself to get up and shower. Not that a
hot shower was indicative of anything. Not that he
felt guilty and in need of cleansing. If she was married
and had lied about it, he was blameless. Right?
Right.
After dressing, he had trudged into the kitchen,
where he settled for two cups of decaf freeze-dried
coffee. He even forced down half an English muffin,
chewing and ruminating in sync. She had told him
she wasn't married, but hell, how could he believe a
woman who hadn't even told him her name?
He didn't even know her name, for chrissake!
She had told him a lot of things. For instance, that
she didn't habitually go to bed with men she had only
just met. Casually or routinely. Weren't those her
exact words? But how did he know if that was true?
How did he know that she wasn't a compulsive
liar and slut, who happened to be married to a poor
schmuck with a medical degree? She could be a
wayward wife who had cheated on Dr. Ladd so much
that he was no longer surprised by telephone calls in
the middle of the night.
The more Hammond thought about it, the more
morose he became.
As he straightened up the kitchen, he had checked
the wall clock and was surprised to see that it was already
midafternoon. How could he have slept so late?
Easy. They hadn't stopped making love. . . . They
hadn't drifted off to sleep until nearly six.
He hadn't intended to return to Charleston until
dark. He had planned on spending a leisurely Sunday
fishing, or sitting on the porch and taking in the
scenery, basically doing nothing that required him to
think too much.
But staying in the cabin hadn't held much appeal.
Nor had thinking. So he had locked up the place and
headed back ahead of schedule. Now as he crossed
Memorial Bridge into the city, he wondered if she
was a Charlestonian who had taken a similar route
home.
What if they bumped into each other some night at
a cocktail party? Would they acknowledge their night
together, or would they greet one another like polite
strangers and pretend they had never met?
It would probably depend on whether or not they
were with other people at the time. How would he
feel if he was introduced to the seemingly happy couple,
Dr. and Mrs. Ladd, and was required to look her
husband in the eye and shake his hand and make
small talk and act like he hadn't had carnal knowledge
of the woman standing beside him?
He hoped for many reasons that he would never be
faced with a situation like that, but that if he was, he
would handle it with a reasonable degree of aplomb.
He hoped he wouldn't look like a sap. He hoped he
would be able to turn his back on her and walk away.
He wasn't sure he could. That's what worried him
most.
When faced with a moral dilemma, Hammond
usually chose on the side of right. Beyond normal
childhood pranks, high school mischief, and college
debauchery, his conduct was unimpeachable.
Whether he was cursed with an extra measure of
virtue or merely cowardice, he customarily abided by
the rules.
It hadn't always been easy. In fact, his unshakable
sense of right and wrong had been at the crux of most
of his conflicts with friends and colleagues, even his
parents. Especially his father. His father and he
didn't abide by the same rules of behavior. Preston
Cross would consider this quandary over a woman
amusing.
Turning into the condo complex where he lived,
Hammond asked himself what would have happened
if he had walked in on her moments earlier last night
and had heard her say into the telephone something to
the effect of, "Darling, since it's so late, I've decided
to stay over with my friend [insert feminine name
here. That is if you don't mind. I thought it might be
dangerous to drive back alone this late. All right then,
see you in the morning. Love you, too."
When the automated door opened, Hammond
guided his car into his narrow garage. But for several
moments after he had turned off the engine, he sat
there and stared into near space, pondering whether
or not he would have passed or failed that particular
test of his moral fiber.
Finally, annoyed with himself for engaging in such
pointless speculation, he got out of his car and let
himself into his townhouse through the door connecting
the garage to the kitchen. Out of habit, he
headed for the telephone to check his voice mail. On
second thought, he ignored it. There was bound to be
at least one message from his father. He wasn't in the
mood to rehash yesterday's confrontation. He wasn't
in the mood to talk to anyone.
Maybe he would go for a quick sail. There were a
few hours of daylight remaining. The sixteen-foot
craft, a gift from his parents when he passed the bar,
was moored across the street at City Marina. That's
why he'd bought a condo in this complex; it was a
short walk to the marina.
Today was a perfect day to take the boat out. It
might help clear his mind.
Quickening his pace, he went through the kitchen,
into the hall, past the living room, and was headed for
the stairs when he heard a key being inserted in the
front door lock. He barely had time to turn before
Steffi Mundell came in, a cell phone held to her ear.
She was saying, "I can't believe they're being such hard-asses about this." Juggling keys, phone,
briefcase, and handbag, she waggled her fingers in a
hello wave. "I mean, food poisoning isn't exactly
bone cancer.... Well, let me know.... I know I
don't have to be there, but I want to be. You have the
number of my cell, right? . . . Okay, 'bye." She
clicked the phone off and looked at Hammond with
exasperation. "Where the hell have you been?"
"What happened to hello?"
His colleague never stopped working. In an oversize
briefcase, she carried around with her what
amounted to a miniature desk. Upon joining the
Charleston County Solicitor's Office, she'd had a police
scanner installed in her car, and she listened to it
like other motorists listened to music or talk radio. It
was a standing joke among the other attorneys and
police officers that Steffi was the prosecution's
equivalent of an ambulance-chasing defense attorney.
She dumped her plethora of belongings into a
chair, stepped out of her high heels, and pulled her
shirttail from her skirt waistband. She fanned her
midriff with the loose blouse. "God, it's stifling outside.
I'm smothering. Why haven't you answered
your phone?"
"I told you I was going to be at my cabin."
"I called there. About a million times."
"I turned off the ringer."
"For heaven's sake why?"
Because I was totally involved in a woman and
didn't want to be disturbed, he thought. But he said,
"You must have the radar of a bat. I just came in
through the back door. How'd you know I was here?"
"I didn't. Your place is closer to CPD than mine. I
figured you wouldn't mind me waiting here until I
heard something."
"About what? Who were you talking to? What's so
urgent?"
"Urgent? Hammond?" Facing him, hands on hips,
she appeared at first to be mystified. Then her expression
changed to one of profound amazement.
"Oh, my God, you don't know."
"Apparently not." Her dramatics didn't impress
him. Steffi was always dramatic.
So much for sailing. He didn't want to invite Steffi
to come along, and she wasn't easy to shake, especially
when her spirits were running this high. He
suddenly felt very tired. "I need something to drink.
What can I get you?"
He retraced his steps into the kitchen and opened
the refrigerator. "Water or beer?"
She padded along behind him. "I can't believe it.
You honestly don't know. You haven't heard. Where
is that cabin of yours, Outer Mongolia? Doesn't it
have a TV?"
"Okay, beer." He took two bottles from the refrigerator,
opened the first one, and extended it to her.
She took it, but she continued staring at him as
though his face had just broken out in oozing sores.
He opened the second beer and tipped the bottle toward
his mouth. "The suspense is killing me. What's
got you so hyped?"
"Somebody murdered Lute Pettijohn yesterday afternoon
in his Charles Towne Plaza penthouse."
The beer bottle never made it to Hammond's
mouth. He lowered it slowly, staring at her with total
disbelief. Seconds ticked by. Gruffly, he said, "That's
impossible."
"It's true."
"Can't be."
"Why would I lie?"
At first immobilized by shock, he eventually
moved. He ran his hand around the back of his neck
where tension had already gathered. Operating on autopilot,
he set his beer on the small bistro table,
pulled a chair away from it, and lowered himself into
it. When Steffi sat down across from him, he blinked
her into focus. "You did say murdered!"
"Murdered."
"How?" he asked, in that same dry voice. "How
did he die?"
"Are you okay?"
He gazed at her as though he no longer understood
the language, then he nodded absently. "Yeah, I'm
fine. I'm just. . ." He spread his hands.
"Speechless."
"Flabbergasted." He cleared his throat. "How'd he
die?"
"Gunshot. Two bullets in the back."
He lowered his eyes to the granite tabletop, staring
sightlessly at the condensation forming on the cold
beer bottle while he assimilated the staggering news.
"When? What time?"
"He was found by a hotel housekeeper a little after
six."
"Last evening."
"Hammond, I'm not stuttering. Yes. Yesterday."
"I'm sorry."
He listened as she described what the chambermaid
had discovered. "The head injury was more
than a bump, but John Madison thinks the bullets
killed him. Naturally he can't officially rule cause of
death until he's completed the autopsy. All the particulars
won't be known until then."
"You talked to the ME.?"
"Not personally. Smilow filled me in."
"So he's on it?"
"Are you serious?"
"Of course he's on it," Hammond muttered. "What
does he think happened?"
For the next five minutes, Hammond listened
while she gave him the known details of the case. "I