back. Now if she could just sort out the impressions she'd received

  talking with Dr. Highley and Dr. Fukhito.

  Taking out her notebook, she began to scan what she had jotted

  down during the interviews. Dr. Highley. He'd explained that

  Vangie Lewis was in serious trouble with her pregnancy. What

  he told Katie was completely reasonable. What then? What more

  did she want of Dr. Highley? He'd expressed regret over Vangie's

  death, but certainly not sorrow. Of course, a doctor had to stay

  objective, as she'd heard both Bill and Richard say.

  Richard. Her eyes slid over to the table where they'd sat together.

  Was it possible that it could happen twice in a lifetime,

  that from the very beginning you know someone is right?

  When she and Richard were leaving Molly's after lunch yesterday,

  Molly had asked them both to dinner Thursday night-

  tomorrow—to meet Liz and Jim Berkeley. "She's the one who

  thinks Dr. Highley is God," Molly had said. Katie realized how

  much she was looking forward to that dinner.

  Again she looked down at her notes. Dr. Fukhito. Something

  was wrong there, the way he'd weighed every word when he'd

  discussed Vangie's Monday-night visit. It had been like watching

  someone walk step by step through a minefield. What was he

  afraid of? He had said Vangie left by his private entrance.

  No one had seen her go.

  Suppose she hadn't left? Suppose he'd gone with her or followed

  her home. Suppose he'd realized that she was suicidal, that he

  was responsible in some way.. . .

  The waiter arrived to take her order. She made one final entry

  in her notebook: "Investigate Fukhito's background."

  EVEN before he crossed the George Washington Bridge, Richard

  knew that he should have canceled the date with Clovis. He was

  preoccupied with Vangie Lewis' death. He had missed something

  in the autopsy. What was it?

  And he was worried about Katie. She had looked so thin and

  pale last night. She wasn't well. That accident. Was it possible that

  she'd been hurt more than anyone realized? The thought haunted

  Richard as he turned into East Fifty-fourth Street and headed for

  Clovis' apartment.

  Clovis had a pitcher of martinis waiting, and a plate of crab-meat

  puffs fresh from the oven. With her flawless skin and Viking

  coloring, she reminded Richard of a young Ingrid Bergman. Until

  recently he'd thought they might end up together. But as he returned

  her kiss, he was acutely aware that he'd never worry about

  Clovis the way he was now worrying about Katie.

  He realized Clovis was talking to him as she filled two glasses.

  "... and I just got home. So I fixed the drinks and figured you could

  relax while I get dressed. Hey, are you listening to me?"

  Richard accepted the drink and smiled apologetically. "I'm

  sorry. Do you mind if I make some calls while you get ready?"

  "Go ahead and dial away," She picked up her glass and started

  toward the hall that led into the bedroom and bath.

  Richard took out his credit card and dialed the operator. He

  gave his account number and the call went through. The phone

  rang a dozen times before he gave up. Katie wasn't home.

  Next he tried Molly's house. But Molly had not spoken to Katie

  today. "She'll probably call me later. But I wish she was home by

  now. She should take it easy."

  It was the opening he needed. "Molly, what's the matter with

  Katie? There is something wrong physically, isn't there? Besides

  the accident, I mean?"

  Molly hesitated. "You'd better talk to Katie about that."

  Cold fear washed over him. "What's the matter with her?'

  "Oh, not much. I promise you that. But it's nothing she wants

  discussed. See you tomorrow night. Don't forget."

  The connection broke. Richard frowned into the dead receiver.

  Then he called the prosecutor. "Anything going on?"

  Scott did not waste time on preliminaries. "The body of a woman

  was found in an apartment in Edgeriver. She was the receptionist

  Katie wanted to talk to at Westlake. Name's Edna Burns. We're

  heading over there, and we need you."

  "Give me the address," Bichard said.

  He wrote it quickly and hung up the phone. Vangie Lewis and

  now Edna Burns. He knocked on Clovis' bedroom door. Wrapped

  in a terry-cloth robe, she opened it. "Hey, what's the hurry?"

  "Clo, I'm sorry." Quickly he explained. He was frantic to get

  away.

  She was clearly disappointed. "Oh, of course I understand. Go,

  but let's have dinner tomorrow night. Promise?"

  Richard temporized. "Well, very soon."

  ON THE way home from the restaurant, Katie thought about

  the conversation she'd had with Edna Burns on her first visit to

  Dr. Highley. Edna was a bom listener. How much had Vangie

  told her? And how much did Edna know about Dr. Fukhito?

  Katie pulled up in front of her house and decided not to put the

  car away yet. Suppose she phoned Edna and suggested driving

  over to see her? If Katie was any judge, Edna Burns would love a

  chance to have a cup of tea and gossip about Vangie Lewis.

  Inside, Katie looked up Edna's number in the telephone book

  and quickly dialed it. The phone rang once and was picked up.

  A man said, "Yes." The short word was delivered in a clipped,

  familiar voice. It belonged to Charley Nugent from the prosecutor's

  office.

  "Charley? It's Katie. What are you doing in Edna's apartment?"

  "She's dead. Fell—or was pushed—into the radiator. Split her

  head open." His voice became a whisper. "Get this, Katie. She

  was last seen alive around eight o'clock last night. A neighbor was

  with her. The neighbor heard her on the phone with Chris Lewis.

  Edna Burns told Lewis that she was going to talk to the police

  about Vangie's death. You better come right down."

  AFTER he finished a second Scotch, Highley went into the kitchen

  and opened the refrigerator. He had told Hilda not to prepare

  anything for him tonight, but had given her a shopping list: lamb

  chops, fresh asparagus, and watercress for a salad.

  Emotional exhaustion always compelled him to eat. After Winifred's

  death, he'd left her relatives and friends at the grave site,

  refusing invitations to join them for dinner. "No. No. I need to be

  alone." Then he'd driven to the Carlyle Hotel in New York. There

  he had requested a quiet table and ordered dinner. Halfway

  through the meal he looked up and saw Winifred's cousin, Glenn

  Nickerson, seated at a table across the room. He was dressed in the

  dark blue suit and black tie he'd worn to the funeral. It was obvious

  that he had followed Highley to the Carlyle. Nickerson had

  lifted his glass in a toast, a mocking smile on his face. He might as

  well have shouted, "To the grieving widower."

  A week later Alan Levine, the doctor who'd treated Winifred,

  indignantly told him that Glenn Nickerson had asked to see Winifred's

  medical records. "I told him that Winifred had developed

  classic angina symptoms. Even then, he had the gall to speak to
r />   the police. I had a call from a fellow in the prosecutor's office asking

  if a heart ailment could be induced. I told him that being alive

  today was enough to induce heart trouble. They backed off, said

  it was obviously a disinherited relative trying to cause problems."

  But you can induce heart trouble, Dr. Levine. You can prepare

  intimate little dinners for your dear wife. You can use her sus

  ceptibility to gastroenteritis to bring on attacks that register as

  heart seizures on her cardiogram. After enough of these, the lady

  has a fatal seizure. No one suggests an autopsy. And even if someone

  had, there would have been little risk.

  But if they had thought to delve into Claire's death . ..

  The chops were nearly cooked. He expertly seasoned the watercress,

  removed the asparagus from the steamer and took a half

  bottle of Beaujolais from the wine rack in the pantry.

  He had just begun to eat when the phone rang. He hurried to

  the extension in the kitchen. "Dr. Highley," he said curtly.

  A sob sounded over the phone. "Oh, Doctor, it's Gertrude Fitzgerald.

  I decided to go see Edna on my way home."

  He tightened his grip on the receiver.

  "Doctor, Edna is dead. The police are here. She fell. Doctor,

  could you come right away? They're talking about performing an

  autopsy. She hated autopsies. She used to say how terrible it was to

  cut up dead people. Doctor, oh, please come here and convince

  them that she fell and that they don't have to cut her up."

  KATIE made a cup of tea and took it with her in the car. She'd

  planned to have tea with Edna. And now Edna was dead.

  How could a person she'd met only once have made such an

  impression on her? In that one conversation they'd had, Edna

  had understood perfectly about John. She'd said, "I know what

  it is to watch someone die. You want the misery to be over for

  them, but you don't want to let them go. When Mom and Dad

  died, all my friends said, 'Now you're free, Edna.' And I said, 'Free

  for what?' I bet you felt that way too."

  Edna had reassured her about Dr. Highley. "You couldn't find

  a better doctor. That's why it makes me so mad when I hear him

  criticized. And those people who file malpractice suits! I could

  shoot them. I tell you, when a doctor loses a patient today, he has

  to worry. I guess nobody's supposed to die anymore."

  What had Charley meant by saying that Edna had phoned

  Chris Lewis last night? Was Charley suggesting that Edna might

  in some way have threatened him?

  As she drove into the parking lot of Edna's apartment complex,

  she slowed down; a black medium-size car was pulling in ahead

  of her. The driver chose the first spot available on the right. Katie

  found a space directly behind the building, parked and got out of

  the car. Suddenly she heard footsteps and turned quickly. A figure

  loomed near her, a silhouette accentuated by the dim light from

  a solitary lamppost. "Excuse me. I hope I didn't startle you." The

  cultured voice had a faint English accent.

  "Dr. Highley! Did my office call you?"

  "Mrs. DeMaio. We didn't expect to see each other so soon and

  under such tragic circumstances, Here. Let's take this footpath

  around the building." Lightly touching her elbow, he followed

  her on the path. "Mrs. Fitzgerald called me. Evidently she was

  the one who found Edna."

  They were turning the corner to the front of the building when

  Richard appeared. She was very glad to see him. He grasped both

  her shoulders and pulled her to him. Then his hands dropped.

  "Scott reached you?"

  "No. I happened to call Edna myself. Oh, Richard, this is Dr.

  Edgar Highley." The two men shook hands.

  Charley let them into the apartment. He said to Richard, "We've

  got pictures, but I'd like you to have a look too."

  Katie was used to death. She often studied gory pictures of

  crime victims. But it was a different matter to see Edna crumpled

  against the radiator, to see the solid evidence of loneliness—the

  slices of canned ham, the empty cocktail glass.

  Gertrude Fitzgerald was sitting on a couch, sobbing softly.

  Katie and Dr. Highley sat down beside her as Richard went into

  the dinette to examine the dead woman.

  Gertrude tried to talk to them. "Oh, Dr. Highley, Mrs. DeMaio,

  isn't this just terrible?" The words brought a fresh burst of sobs.

  "She was always such fun. She always made me laugh. Maybe

  she had that little weakness, but she never bothered anyone with

  it. Oh, Dr. Highley, you'll miss her too."

  "I surely will, Mrs. Fitzgerald."

  "Doctor," Gertrude blurted out, "I told them you've been here,

  that you knew about Edna's little problem. It's just silly to say she

  didn't fall. Why would anyone want to hurt her?"

  Dr. Highley looked at Katie. "Edna suffered from sciatica, and

  a few times when she was laid up I dropped off work for her to

  do at home. On one occasion I came unexpectedly. It was then I

  realized that she had a drinking problem."

  Katie nodded, looking past him. Richard had completed examining

  the body. Getting up, she walked over to him and asked what

  he had found.

  He shrugged. "I'll have to see how bad the fracture is. Certainly

  it was a hell of a smash. But she might have stumbled when she

  tried to get up."

  "Any sign of forced entry?" Katie asked Charley.

  "None. But you could spring these locks with a credit card. If

  she was as drunk as we think, anyone could have walked in."

  "What were you telling me on the phone about Chris Lewis?"

  "The superintendent's wife—name's Gana Krupshak—was a

  buddy of Edna Burns. She was with Mrs. Fitzgerald when the

  body was found. We let her go to her own apartment just before

  you came. She's shook up bad. Anyhow, last night she came over

  here around eight o'clock. She said Edna already had a bag on.

  She stayed till eight thirty, then put out the ham, hoping Edna

  would eat something and sober up. Edna told her about Vangie's

  suicide. Then, when Mrs. Krupshak went into the kitchen, she

  heard Edna on the phone. She swears Edna called whoever she

  was talking to 'Captain Lewis,' and told him she had to talk to

  the police tomorrow. And get this. Krupshak swears she heard

  Edna give Lewis directions for driving here. Then Edna said something

  about Prince Charming."

  "Prince Charming?"

  Charley shrugged. "Your guess is as good as mine."

  Richard said, "Obviously we'll treat this as a potential homicide.

  I know Scott has a hunch about Lewis. I can see why."

  Katie thought, I do not believe Chris Lewis could have done

  this to Edna; I don't believe he killed his wife. She looked around.

  "Are you sure there's nothing valuable missing?"

  Charley shrugged. "Her wallet's in her pocketbook; eighteen

  dollars there. Credit cards. The usual. No sign of anything being

  disturbed, let alone ransacked."

  "All right." Katie returned to Dr. Highley and Gertrude. "Mrs.

  Fitzgerald, I think it would be best if we
have you driven home."

  Dr. Highley reached into his pocket. "I brought these sedatives

  along in case you needed them. Here, take one now."

  "I'll get a glass of water," Katie said. She went down the hall to

  the bathroom, then came back to Gertrude and sat beside her.

  "Mrs. Fitzgerald, do you know whether Edna kept any valuables

  here—any jewelry, perhaps?"

  "She had a ring and a pin she wore on special occasions. I

  wouldn't know where she kept them. Oh, wait a minute. Doctor,

  I remember that Edna said she showed you her ring and pin when

  you were here. Perhaps you can help Mrs. DeMaio."

  Katie looked into the cold gray eyes. He hates this, she thought.

  He's angry about being here.

  "One time Edna did show me a pin and ring that were in a

  box in her night-table drawer."

  "Would you show me, Doctor?" Katie asked.

  Together they walked down the hall into the bedroom.

  "It was in there," Dr. Highley told her, pointing to the night

  table on the right side of the bed.

  Using only the tips of her fingers, Katie opened the drawer. She

  knew that the fingerprint experts would be called in.

  The drawer was deep. Reaching in, Katie pulled out a blue

  plastic jewelry case. She raised the lid to find a small butterfly-

  shaped brooch and a thin old diamond ring nestled against cotton

  velvet.

  "That eliminates the robbery theory, I guess," Katie said. She