to see you here." But she had registered no surprise
whatsoever. When she turned her head to speak
a greeting, she had known exactly whom she would
be addressing.
In fact, it appeared that she had been braced for the
introduction, just as he had been. She had almost
overplayed the aloofness, had turned away almost too
quickly to be polite.
There was no longer any question about it--their
meeting had been by design, and, for reasons that
were still unapparent, the time they had spent together
was as compromising to her as it was to him.
Frank Perkins spoke first. "Hammond, this is a
complete waste of my client's time."
"Very possibly it is, Frank, but I would like to
make that determination for myself. Detective
I Smilow seems to think that what Dr. Ladd can tell us
warrants my hearing it."
The lawyer consulted his client. "Do you mind
going through it again, Alex?"
"Not if it means that I can go home sooner rather
than later."
"We'll see."
That comment had come from Steffi, and it made
Hammond want to slap her. Turning the Q and A over
to Smilow, he propped himself against the closed
door, where he had an unrestricted view of Alex's
profile.
Smilow restarted the tape recorder and added
Hammond's name to those present. "Did you know
Lute Pettijohn, Dr. Ladd?"
She sighed as though she had already answered
that question a thousand times. "No, Detective, I did
not."
"What were you doing downtown Saturday afternoon?"
"I could argue that I live downtown, but in answer
to your question, I went window-shopping."
"Did you buy anything?"
"No."
"Go into any stores?"
"No."
"You didn't duck into any stores or chat with any
shopkeepers who could corroborate that you were
there for the purpose of shopping?"
A
"Unfortunately, no. I didn't see anything that
caught my eye."
"You just parked your car and walked around?"
"That's right."
"Wasn't it a little hot outside for a stroll?"
"Not for me. I like the heat."
Her eyes flickered toward Hammond, but he didn't
need that glance to stir his memory.
"Now that the sun has gone down, it's not so hot."
She smiled up at him, the lights of the spinning
carousel reflected in her eyes. "Actually, I like the
heat."
Hammond blinked Smilow back into focus.
"Did you go into the Charles Towne Plaza?"
"Yes. Around five o'clock. To get something to
drink. A soft drink. I'm certain that's where this Mr.
Daniels saw me. That's the only time and place he
could have seen me because I was never on the fifth
floor standing outside Mr. Pettijohn's room."
"He gave us a vivid account of you doing just that
at around five o'clock."
"He's wrong."
"You had a drink in the bar."
"Just off the lobby, yes. Unsweetened iced tea."
Steffi leaned toward Hammond and whispered.
"The waitress bears that out. But that only confirms
that at least two people saw her in the hotel."
He nodded, but he didn't comment because
Smilow was asking another question, and he was interested
in Alex's answer.
"What did you do after finishing your drink?"
"I walked back to the parking lot where I'd left my
car."
"What time was that?"
"Five-fifteen. No later than five-thirty."
Hammond's knees went weak with relief. John
Madison's initial guess had placed the time of death
later than that. So his silence was justified. Almost. If
she were entirely innocent, the victim of a mistake
made by a man suffering food poisoning, why hadn't
she reacted when he came in? Why had she pretended
they'd never met? He had his reasons for keeping
their meeting a secret. Obviously she did, too.
"I gave the parking lot attendant ten dollars, which
was the smallest bill I had," she was saying.
"That's a very generous tip."
"I thought asking for change would seem cheap.
The lot was full and he was busy, but he had been
very nice and polite."
"What did you do after retrieving your car?"
"I left Charleston."
"And went where?"
"To Hilton Head Island."
Hammond swallowed audibly. So much for truth-telling.
Why was she lying? To protect him? Or herself?
"Hilton Head."
"Yes."
"Did you stop anywhere along the way?"
"I stopped for gasoline." She lowered her eyes, but
only momentarily, and probably only Hammond noticed.
His heart was knocking hard against his ribs. That
kiss. The kiss. The kiss he would remember for the
rest of his life. None had ever been that good, or felt
so goddamn right, or been so goddamn wrong. That
kiss could ultimately change his life, ruin his career,
condemn him.
"Do you remember the name of the place?"
"No."
"Texaco? Exxon?"
She shrugged and shook her head.
"Location?"
"Somewhere along the highway," she replied impatiently.
"It wasn't in a town. Self-serve. Pay at the
window. There are dozens of them along that highway.
The cashier was watching a wrestling match on
TV. That's all I remember."
"Did you pay by credit card?"
"Cash."
"I see. With one of those large bills."
Hammond saw the trap and hoped that she did.
Most self-serve stations and convenience stores
didn't take bills larger than a twenty, especially
after dark.
"With a twenty, Mr. Smilow," she said, giving him
a retiring smile. "I bought twenty dollars' worth. I
didn't get change."
"Veddy, veddy cool."
Steffi had spoken beneath her breath, but Alex
heard her. She glanced in their direction, looking first
at Steffi, then at Hammond, and he vividly remembered holding her face between his hands and bringing
her mouth up to his.
"Don't say no. Don't say no."
Smilow's next question drew Alex's attention back
to him. Hammond exhaled without making it obvious
that he'd been holding his breath.
"What time did you arrive at Hilton Head?"
"That was the beauty of the day. I had no plans. I
wasn't on a schedule. I wasn't watching the clock,
and I didn't take a direct route, so I don't remember
what time it was when I actually got there."
"Approximately."
"Approximately . . . nine o'clock."
At approximately nine o'clock, they were eating
corn on the cob that had left her lips greasy with
melted butter. They had laughed over how messy it
was, and elected to forget their manners and shamelessly
lick their fingers.
"What did you do on Hilton Head?"
"I drove the length of the island down to Harbour
Town. I walked around, enjoyed the music from the
various open-air bars. Listened to the young man performing
for the children there under the large live
oak. Basically I strolled around the marina and out
onto the pier."
"Did you talk to anybody?"
"No."
"Eat in a restaurant?"
"No."
"You weren't hungry?"
"Apparently not."
"This is ridiculous!" Frank Perkins protested. "Dr.
Ladd admits to being in the hotel on Saturday, but so
were hundreds of other people. She's an attractive
lady. A man—this Daniels being no exception—is
likely to notice her even in a crowd."
Hammond was still watching her, so when her
eyes shifted to him, it was a repeat of that first glance
across the pavilion. He felt an instantaneous connection,
a sudden tug in his gut.
Perkins was still making his argument. "Alex says
she wasn't anywhere near Pettijohn's suite. You have
nothing that places her there. This is only a lame stab
in the dark because you've got nothing else. While I
sympathize with your ability to come up with a viable
suspect, I'm not going to allow my client to suffer the
consequences."
"Just a few more questions, Frank," Smilow said.
"Indulge me."
"Make them brief," the lawyer said curtly.
Smilow fixed the psychologist with a hard stare.
"I'd like to know where Dr. Ladd spent the night."
"At home."
Her answer seemed to surprise him. "Your home?"
"I berated myself for not making a reservation on
Hilton Head. Once I got there, I considered staying
over. I would have liked to, but I called several places
and everything was booked. So I drove back to
Charleston and slept in my own bed."
"Alone?"
"I'm not afraid to drive after dark."
"Did you sleep alone, Dr. Ladd?"
She stared at him coldly.
Frank Perkins said, "Tell him to go to hell, Alex. If
you don't, I will."
"You heard my solicitor's advice, Detective."
Smilow's mouth slanted upward in what passed
for a smile. "While you were at Harbour Town didn't
you speak to anyone?"
"I browsed in one of the art galleries, but I didn't
talk to anyone. I also bought an ice-cream cone at the
base of the lighthouse, but it's a walk-up place and
they were very busy. I couldn't pick out the young
woman who served me. She had so many customers
that night, I seriously doubt she would remember me,
either."
"So there's no one who can corroborate that you
were there?"
"I suppose not, no."
"From there you drove home. No stops?"
"No."
"What time did you get home?"
"The wee hours. I didn't notice. By then I was
very tired and sleepy."
"I've indulged all I'm going to." Frank Perkins assisted
her from her chair politely, but in such a way
that brooked no argument from either her or Smilow.
"Dr. Ladd deserves an apology for this. And if you so
much as breathe her name to the media in connection
with this case, you'll have not only an unsolved murder
to contend with, but a staggering lawsuit as well."
He nudged Alex toward the door, but before
everyone could shift positions and make room for
their departure, another detective opened the door. He
held a folder in his upraised hand. "You asked for this
as soon as it was available."
"Thanks," Smilow said, reaching for the folder.
"How'd it go?"
"Madison's persnickety. Says he apologizes for
the time it took."
"As long as he was thorough."
"It's all in there."
The detective withdrew. For the benefit of the others,
Smilow said, "That detective witnessed the autopsy.
This is Madison's report."
Steffi crowded up against Smilow as he removed
the documents from the envelope. She scanned them
along with him.
Without looking up from the report, Smilow
asked, "Dr. Ladd, do you own a weapon?"
"Lots of things could be used as a weapon, couldn't
they?"
"The reason I'm asking..." Smilow said as he
raised his head to look at her, "is because it was exactly
as we thought. Lute Pettijohn didn't die from
the blow to his head. He died of gunshot."
"Pettijohn was shot ?"
"I think it was genuine."
Steffi squeezed lime into the drink that had just
been brought to their table. "Come on, Hammond.
Get real."
"It was the first and only time that she showed any
emotion or spontaneity," he persisted. "I think her
surprise was authentic. Up to that time she didn't
even know how Pettijohn had died."
"I was surprised when I read that he had stroked
out."
That had been one startling fact to come out of
the autopsy. Lute Pettijohn had suffered a stroke. It
hadn't killed him, but John Madison deduced that the
stroke was massive enough to have caused his fall,
which resulted in the head wound. He also determined
that, had Pettijohn survived, he might have
suffered paralysis and other disabilities. It wasn't
until after Frank Perkins had escorted Alex Ladd
from Smilow's office that they read the report more
thoroughly and added this new information to the increasingly
complex mystery.
"Was the stroke caused by an event, do you
think?" Steffi wondered. "Or a medical condition he
was unaware of?"
"We'll need to find out if he was on medication for
an existing condition," Smilow said, sliding a napkin
beneath his club soda. "Not that it matters. The stroke
wasn't fatal, but the gunshots were. That's how he
died."
"Alex Ladd didn't know that," Hammond stated.
"Not until she heard it from us."
Thoughtfully Steffi sipped from her gin and tonic,
then she shook her head firmly and gave him a smart-aleck
smile. "Nope. She faked that astonishment.