Stone sat down heavily at her desk, found her phone book and her sister’s number. He broke the news as gently as he could and said he’d be glad to see to the arrangements. The woman thanked him and said that her brother-in-law was a mortician and she’d have him take care of it. Stone expressed his condolences and told the woman how loyal and valuable Alma had been to him and how much he would miss her. Finally, he was able to hang up, drained from the experience. The phone rang almost immediately.

“Stone Barrington,” he said.

“Morning, Stone, it’s Frank Maddox,” a man’s voice said. Maddox was the attorney for the insurance company Stone was suing.

“Yes, Frank?”

“My client has authorized me to offer your client half a million dollars.”

“Unacceptable,” Stone said. He had already thought out his strategy in responding to an offer. “I’m ready to go to trial.” He was anything but ready, he thought. “I’ll pass your offer on to my client, but with a strong recommendation that it be rejected.”

Maddox sighed. “What’s it going to take, Stone? Give me a realistic number, and I’ll go back to my client.”

“It’s going to take a million dollars, plus a three-hundred-thousand-dollar attorney’s fee, and that’s bottom line, Frank. Don’t bother with a counteroffer; just show up in court tomorrow.”

“Hold on, Stone.” Maddox punched the HOLD button.

Stone waited. Maddox was obviously with his client.

Shortly, the lawyer came back on. “Done,” he said.

“I’ll want your check by close of business today,” Stone said. “I’m not canceling our court date until the money is in the bank.”

“I think I can arrange that,” Maddox said. “I’ll messenger it over to your office this afternoon.”

“Send it to Bill Eggers at Woodman and Weld,” Stone said. “I may be out this afternoon, and my secretary isn’t in today.”

“Fine; I’ll include the usual release.” Maddox hung up.

Stone called Woodman & Weld and asked for Bill Eggers, the managing partner.

“Bill Eggers.”

“Bill, it’s Stone.”

“Morning, Stone. You going to trial tomorrow?”

“They’ve just settled for a million, plus my fee. The check is coming to you this afternoon. Will you let the client know? I’d call her myself, but it’s a very bad day.”

“Sure, I’ll call her. I think it’s a hell of a settlement. What’s wrong?”

“Alma was attacked on the street last night, after leaving work; she died this morning.”

“Oh, Jesus, Stone, I’m so sorry. I know how close you were.”

“Yeah, I’m pretty shaken. I think I’m just going to shut down the phones and take the day.”

“You do that. You want me to find somebody to help you out with the work? I can speak to our personnel director.”

“Thanks, I’d appreciate that,” Stone said. “But don’t send anybody until tomorrow.”

“Fine. Again, I’m sorry, Stone. You take it easy.”

“Thanks, Bill.” Stone hung up. He should have been elated at the settlement and a rich fee, but he felt nothing but depression. Two women he knew, one of whom he had been very close to, had been murdered within twelve hours of each other. He switched on his answering machine and recorded a new message. “This is Stone Barrington. I won’t be taking any calls today, but if you’ll leave a message, I’ll return your call tomorrow.”

He trudged back upstairs, switched off his phone, and fell into bed, exhausted.

5

STONE GOT UP AS DARKNESS WAS FALLING. He got into some khaki trousers, a shirt, and some moccasins, then went to the kitchenette in the master suite and made himself a cup of tea, with a large dollop of honey. He took the mug down one floor to his study and sat in one of a pair of wing chairs before the window overlooking the garden. The doorbell rang; Stone picked up the phone beside his chair. “Yes?”

“It’s Dino.”

“Come on in; I’m in the study.” He pressed the button on the phone that opened the front door.

Dino walked into the study and threw his coat on the sofa.

“Hi. Want a cup of tea?”

“I want a cup of scotch,” Dino replied.

“Help yourself.”

Dino went to the little wet bar concealed behind a panel and fixed himself a scotch on the rocks, then came and sat down in the chair next to Stone’s. “How about some lights?” Dino said.

“I like it this way at dusk,” Stone replied. “Leave it for a few minutes.”

“How are you feeling?”

“Like somebody worked me over with a baseball bat.”

“You went to the hospital?”

“Yeah; it was Alma. Sorry, I forgot to call and tell you.”

“A citizen found her handbag in a wastebasket a couple of blocks away. There was over a hundred bucks in it, plus her credit cards.”

“Nothing at all taken?”

“Not that we can figure.”

“Doesn’t make any sense.”

“I know.”

“She was such a happy person,” Stone said. “Didn’t matter if I was having a grumpy day; she just took it in stride. Always managed to cheer me up.”

“She was a nice lady,” Dino said. “I always liked her.”

They sat quietly for a while, watching the garden grow dark and the lights come on in the other houses in Turtle Bay, all of which backed up onto the same garden.

“Stone,” Dino said finally.

“Yeah?”

“You see any possible connection between these two killings?”

“I thought about that; the only connection is me.”

“I thought about that, too,” Dino said. “Think for a minute: Is there somebody out there who hates you enough to want to kill people you know?”

“I thought about that, too; couldn’t think of anybody.”

“Neither could I.”

“They can’t be connected,” Stone said. “It’s just an awful coincidence.”

“I think you’re right; I just had to explore the other possibility.”

“I know.”

“When you’re a cop, or when you’ve been a cop, it’s always hanging over your head.”

“What is?”

Dino sighed. “The other possibility. The idea that somebody you’ve busted and sent up will come back to haunt you, to get even. I think that, after getting killed in the line of duty, it’s every cop’s worst fear.”

“I never thought about it until this minute.”

“Stone, what did you and Susan Bean talk about last night? We never got into that.”

“Just first-date chitchat,” Stone said. “What do you do? Where are you from? Like that. She didn’t seem to be happy in her job.”

“How so?”

“She said she was thinking of leaving the DA’s Office.”

“From what Martin Brougham told me last night, she was on her way up.”

“She said that, but it didn’t seem to matter. I think she was just disillusioned with the system; she didn’t like the way she had to do her job.”

“What do you mean?”

“I don’t know; it was just something she said. We never had time to go into it. You know how it is, Dino; a lot of idealistic people don’t like an up-close view of how the justice system works. It takes a pretty thick skin to live with it every day.”

“Yeah; I had a hard time with it at first, too.”

“You? I’m surprised.”

“What? You think I’ve always been the tough-but-honest, cynical cop you see before you? I had to grow a thick hide, just like you had to.”

“If you say so.”

Across the garden a light came on in a house directly opposite Stone’s, and a woman in a business suit walked into a room framed by a large picture window.

“Watch this, Dino,” Stone said.

“Watch what?”

“The woman across the way.”

“What about her?”

“Just watch. I think you’ll find this interesting.”

The woman, who was tall with long red hair, began to undress.

“You’re right,” Dino said, “this is interesting.”

“Just keep watching,” Stone said.

The woman carefully hung up her suit, then stepped out of her half-slip, unhooked her bra, and slid out of her panty hose and panties. She dropped the underwear into a hamper. Now she was completely naked, exposing a slender but shapely body with high, firm breasts.


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