Rory?" She came to stand within touching distance
and, tilting her head to one side, smiled up at him.
"After all, we're practically kinfolk."
She extended him her hand. His was dry and
warm. Hers was slightly damp and very cold, and she
wondered if he guessed that came from holding a
tumbler of vodka.
He released her hand and indicated the woman
with him. "This is Stefanie Mundell."
"Steffi," the woman said, aggressively thrusting
her hand at Davee.
She was petite, with short dark hair and dark eyes.
Eager eyes. Hungry eyes. She wasn't wearing stockings
even though she had on high-heeled pumps. To
Davee that was a breach of etiquette more offensive
than her own bare feet.
"How do you do?" Davee shook Steffi Mundell's
hand but released it quickly. "Are y'all selling tickets
to the Policemen's Ball, or what?"
"Is there someplace we can talk?"
Concealing her uneasiness with a bright smile, she
said, "Sure," and led them into the formal living
room. The housekeeper, who had admitted the two
before notifying Davee that she had guests, was moving
about the room switching on lamps. "Thank you, Sarah." The woman, who was as large and dark as a
mahogany armoire, acknowledged Davee's thanks,
then left through a side door. "Can I fix y'all a
drink?"
"No, thank you," Smilow replied.
Steffi Mundell also declined. "What a beautiful
room," she said. "Such a wonderful color."
"You think so?" Davee looked around as though
assessing the room for the first time. "Actually, this is
my least favorite room in the whole house, even
though it does offer a lovely view of the Battery, and
that's nice. My husband insisted on painting the walls
this color. It's called terra-cotta and is supposed to be
reminiscent of the villas on the Italian Riviera. Instead,
it makes me think of football jerseys." Looking
directly at Steffi and smiling sweetly, she added, "My
mama always said that orange was a color for the
common and coarse."
Steffi's cheeks flamed with anger. "Where were
you this afternoon, Mrs. Pettijohn?"
"None of your goddamn business," Davee retorted
without a blink.
"Ladies." Smilow shot Steffi a stern look with a
silent command behind it for her to shut up.
"What's going on, Rory?" Davee demanded.
"What are ya'll doing here?"
Coolly, calmly, and deferentially, he said, "I suggest
we all sit down."
Davee held his gaze for several seconds, gave the
woman a withering glance, then with a brusque gesture
indicated the sofa nearest them. She sat down in
an adjacent armchair.
He began by telling her that this wasn't a casual
call. "I'm afraid I have some bad news."
She stared at him, waiting him out.
"Lute was found dead late this afternoon. In the
penthouse suite at the Charles Towne Plaza. It appears
he was murdered."
Davee kept her features carefully schooled.
One never displayed too much emotion in public.
It simply wasn't done.
Holding emotions intact was a skill one naturally
acquired when Daddy was a womanizer, and Mama
was a drunk, and everybody knew the reason she
drank, but everybody also pretended that there wasn't
a problem. Not in their family.
Maxine and Clive Burton had been a perfect couple.
Both descended from elite Charleston families.
Both were utterly gorgeous to look at. Both attended
exclusive schools. Their wedding was a standard by
which all others were compared, even to this day.
They were a sublime match.
Their three adorable daughters had been given
boys' names, either because Maxine was drunk when
she went into labor each time, or because she was so
far gone she was confused about the gender of her
newborn, or because she wanted to spite the wayward
Clive, who yearned for male offspring and blamed
her for producing only females. Never mind the absence
of Y chromosomes.
So little Clancy, Jerri, and Davee grew up in a
household where serious domestic problems were
swept beneath priceless Persian rugs. The girls
learned at an early age to keep their reactions to any
situation, no matter how upsetting, to themselves. It
was safer that way. The atmosphere at home was unreliable and tricky to gauge when both parents were
volatile and given to temper tantrums, resulting in
fights that shattered any semblance of peace and tranquillity.
Consequently the sisters bore emotional scars.
Clancy had healed hers by dying in her early thirties
of cervical cancer, which the most vicious gossips
claimed had been brought on by too many bouts
of venereal disease.
Jerri had gone in the opposite direction, becoming a convert to a fundamentalist Christian group her
freshman year in college. She had dedicated herself
to a life of hardship and abstinence from anything
pleasurable, particularly alcohol and sex. She grew
root vegetables and preached the gospel on an Indian
reservation in South Dakota.
Davee, the youngest, was the only one who remained
in Charleston, defying shame and gossip,
even after Clive died of cardiac arrest in his current
mistress's bed between his board meeting in the
morning and his tee time that afternoon, and following
Maxine's being committed to a nursing home
with "Alzheimer's" when everybody knew the truth
was that her brain had been pickled by vodka.
Davee, who looked as soft and malleable as warm
taffy, was actually tough as nails. Tough enough to
stick it out. She could survive anything. She had
proved it.
"Well," she said, corning to her feet, "even if y'all
declined a drink, I believe I'll have one."
At the liquor cart, she dropped a few ice cubes into
a crystal tumbler and poured vodka over them. She
drank almost half of it in one swallow, then refilled
the glass before turning back to them. "Who was
she?"
"Pardon?"
"Come on, Rory. I'm not going to have vapors. If
Lute was shot in his fancy new hotel suite, he
must've been entertaining a lady friend. I figure that
either she or her jealous husband killed him."
"Who said he was shot?" Steffi Mundell asked.
"What?"
"Smilow didn't say your husband had been shot.
He said he'd been murdered."
Davee took another drink. "I assumed he was shot.
Isn't that a safe guess?"
"Was it a guess?"
Davee flung her arms wide, sloshing some of her
drink onto the rug. "Who the hell are you, anyway?"
Steffi stood. "I represent the D.A.'s office. Or, as
it's known in South Carolina, the county solicitor."
"I know what it's known as in South Carolina,"
Davee returned drolly.
"I'll be prosecuting your husband's murder case.
That's why I insisted on coming along with
Smilow."
"Ahh, I get it. To gauge my reaction to the news."
"Precisely. I must say you didn't seem very surprised
by it. So back to my original question: Where
were you this afternoon? And don't say that it isn't
any of my goddamn business because, you see, Mrs.
Pettijohn, it very much is."
Davee, curbing her anger, calmly raised her glass
to her lips once again and took her time answering.
"You want to know if I can establish an alibi, is that
it?"
"We didn't come here to interrogate you, Davee,"
Smilow said.
"It's okay, Rory. I've got nothing to hide. I just
think it's insensitive of her"—she gave Steffi a
scathing once-over—"to come into my house and
start firing insulting and insinuating questions at me
seconds after I've been informed that my husband
was murdered."
"That's my job, Mrs. Pettijohn, whether you like it
or not."
"Well, I don't like it." Then, dismissing her as no
one of significance, she turned to Smilow. "I'm
happy to answer your questions. What do you want to
know?"
"Where were you this afternoon between five and
six o'clock?"
"Here."
"Alone?"
"Yes."
"Can anyone vouch for that?"
She moved to an end table and depressed a single
button on a desk telephone. The housekeeper's voice
came through the speaker. "Yes, Miss Davee?"
"Sarah, will you come in here, please? Thank
you."
The three waited in silence. Fixing the prosecutor
with a cool, contemptuous gaze, Davee fiddled with
the single strand of perfectly matched pearls that she
wore around her neck. They had been a coming-out
gift from her father, whom she both loved and hated.
Her therapist had suggested that they were a symbol
of her mistrust of people, due to her father's unfaithfulness
to his wife and daughters. Davee didn't know
if that was true or if she just liked the pearls. Whatever
the case, she wore them with everything, including
the short shorts and oversize white cotton shirt
she had on this evening.
Davee had inherited her live-in housekeeper from
her mother. Sarah had been working for the family
before Clancy was born and had seen them through
all their tribulations. When she came into the room,
she shot Smilow and Steffi Mundell a hostile glance.
Davee formally introduced her. "Ms. Sarah Birch,
this is Detective Smilow and a person from the
County Solicitor's Office. They came to tell me that
Mr. Pettijohn was found murdered this afternoon."
Sarah's reaction was no more visible than Davee's
had been.
Davee continued, "I told them that I was here in
the house between five and six o'clock and that you
would back me up. Isn't that right?"
Steffi Mundell nearly blew a gasket. "You
can't--"
"Steffi."
"But she's just compromised the interrogation,"
she shouted at Smilow.
Davee looked at him innocently. "I thought you
said I wasn't being interrogated, Rory."
His eyes were frosty, but he turned to the housekeeper
and said politely, "Ms. Birch, to your knowledge
was Mrs. Pettijohn at home at that time?"
"Yes, sir. She's been in her room resting nearly all
day."
"Oh, brother," Steffi muttered beneath her breath.
Ignoring her, Smilow thanked the housekeeper.
Sarah Birch moved to Davee and enveloped her
hands between her own. "I'm sorry."
"Thank you, Sarah."
"You all right, baby?"
"I'm fine."
"Anything I can get you?"
"Not now."
"You need anything, you just let me know."
Davee smiled up at her, and Sarah ran her hand affectionately
over Davee's tousled blond hair, then
turned and left the room. Davee finished her drink,
smugly eyeing Steffi over the rim of her glass. When
she lowered it, she said, "Satisfied?"
Steffi was seething and didn't deign to respond.
Crossing to the liquor cart again, Davee asked,
"Where is the ... where was he taken?"
"The medical examiner will perform an autopsy."
"So funeral arrangements will have to wait--"
"Until the body is released," Smilow said, finishing
for her.
She poured herself another drink, then when she
came back around asked, "How did he die?"
"He was shot in the back. Two bullets. We think he
died instantly, and may even have been unconscious
when the shots were fired."
"Was he in bed?"
Of course Smilow knew the circumstances of her
father's death. Everybody in Charleston was well apprised
of the scandalous details. She appreciated
Smilow for looking a little pained and embarrassed as
he answered her question. "Lute was found on the
floor in the sitting room, fully dressed. The bed
hadn't been used. There was no sign of a romantic
rendezvous."
"Well, that's a change, at least." She drained her
glass.
"When did you last see Lute?"
"Last night? This morning? I can't remember. This
morning, I think." Davee ignored Steffi Mundell's
harrumph of disbelief and kept her eyes on Smilow.
"Sometimes we went for days without seeing one another."
"You didn't sleep together?" Steffi asked.
Davee turned to her. "Where up North are you
from?"
"Why?"
"Because you are obviously ill-bred and very
rude."
Smilow intervened again. "We'll invade the PettiJohns'
private life only if we need to, Steffi. At this
juncture it isn't necessary." Back to Davee, he asked,
"You didn't know Lute's schedule today?"
"Not today or any day."
"He hadn't indicated to you that he was meeting
someone?"
"Hardly." She set her empty glass on the coffee
table, and when she straightened, she squared her
shoulders. "Am I a suspect?"
"Right now everyone in Charleston is a suspect."
Davee locked eyes with him. "Lots of people had