started to close the drawer, then stopped. "Oh, Doctor, look."
   Setting the jewelry box on the bed, she reached back into the
   drawer. "My mother kept her mother's old black hat for sentimental
   reasons. Edna must have done the same thing."
   She was holding up an object for him to see. It was a scuffed
   brown moccasin, shaped for the left foot.
   As Dr. Highley stared at the shoe, Katie said, "This was probably
   her mother's and she considered it such a treasure she kept
   it with that pathetic jewelry. Oh, Doctor, if memorabilia could
   talk, we'd hear a lot of stories, wouldn't we?"
   EDGAR HIGHLEY STARED AT KATIE DEMAIO as she stood there
   holding that shoe in her hand. Was she mocking him? No. She
   believed that the shoe had had some sentimental meaning for
   Edna. Suppose she showed it to the detectives? Or to Gertrude?
   She'd been at the desk many times when Vangie came in.
   He had to have that shoe.
   Katie put it back, closed the drawer and walked out of the bedroom,
   the jewelry box tucked under her arm. He followed her,
   desperate to hear what she would say. But she simply handed
   the jewelry box to the detective. "The ring and pin are here,
   Charley," she said. "I guess that shoots any possibility of burglary."
   There was a rap at the door, and Katie opened it to admit two
   men carrying a stretcher. Edgar Highley said to Gertrude, "I'll
   get you more water, Mrs. Fitzgerald." The others were watching
   the attendants as they lifted the body. It was his chance. He had to
   risk taking the shoe.
   He walked rapidly to the bathroom, turned on the tap, then
   slipped across the hall to the bedroom. Using his handkerchief to
   avoid fingerprints, he opened the night-table drawer. He was
   reaching for the shoe when he heard footsteps coming down the
   hall. Quickly he pushed the drawer shut, stuffed his handkerchief
   into his pocket, and was standing at the door of the bedroom when
   Richard Carroll appeared. "Dr. Highley," he said coldly, "I'd like
   to ask you a few questions about Edna Burns."
   "Certainly." Then, in what he hoped was a casual tone, Highley
   said, "Excuse me. I'm letting the tap run. I want to get Mrs. Fitzgerald
   a glass of cold water. The poor woman's terribly distressed."
   Richard Carroll stood aside to let him pass. Highley filled the
   glass and took it to Gertrude. The attendants had left with the
   body, and Katie DeMaio was not in the room.
   "Has Mrs. DeMaio left?" he asked the detective.
   "She's talking to the super's wife. She'll be right back."
   He could not leave until he was sure that Katie did not talk
   about the shoe. When she came back a few minutes later, she did
   not mention it.
   They left the apartment together. Deliberately he stayed with
   Katie as she walked to her car, but then Richard Carroll joined
   them. "Let's get some coffee at the Golden Valley diner, Katie,"
   he said, and Highley watched them drive off.
   On his way home, Edgar Highley decided there must be a personal
   relationship between Katie DeMaio and Richard Carroll.
   When Katie bled to death, Carroll would be both professionally
   and emotionally interested in the cause of death. He would have
   to be very careful.
   He drove into his garage, then entered the house. The cold lamb
   chops were on the plate; the asparagus had wilted; the salad was
   limp and warm. He would reheat the food in the microwave oven,
   prepare a fresh salad.
   As he set to work, he found himself becoming calm. He was
   so near to being safe. And soon it would be possible to share his
   genius with the world. He already had his success. He could prove
   it beyond doubt. He had accurate records, pictures, X rays, the
   step-by-step accounts of how he had dealt with all the problems
   that had arisen. All in the files in his secret safe.
   When the proper time came, he would burn the files on the
   failures and claim the recognition that was due him. By then there
   would surely be more triumphs. He sat down at the table and
   slowly ate his dinner. As always, food restored his sense of wellbeing.
   Tomorrow the Newsmaker article would appear. It would
   enhance his social as well as his medical prestige.
   "My patients are not allowed to drink or smoke during their
   pregnancies," he had told the Newsmaker interviewer. "They are
   required to follow a specific diet. I will not accept a patient who
   will not cooperate with my methods. I can show you dozens of
   women I have treated who have had a history of several miscarriages
   but now have children. Many more could experience that
   same joy, if they were willing to change their habits, particularly
   their eating and drinking habits."
   The Newsmaker reporter had been impressed. But her next
   question was a loaded one. "Doctor, isn't it true that a large number
   of women have miscarried, even after following your schedule
   rigidly—and paying you ten thousand dollars?"
   "It would be insane for me to claim that I bring every difficult
   pregnancy to term. Yes. There have been occasions where a de
   sired pregnancy was spontaneously aborted. After several of these
   occurrences, I suggest that my patient adopt a child, and I help
   to arrange a suitable adoption."
   "For a fee."
   "Young woman, I assume you are being paid to interview me.
   Why don't you use your time for volunteer work?"
   It had been foolish to antagonize her, foolish to give her any
   reason to want to discredit him or to delve into his background.
   The interviewer's next question had been meant to entrap him.
   "Doctor, you also perform abortions. Isn't it incongruous to try
   to save one fetus and to eliminate another?"
   "I refer to the womb as a cradle. I despise abortion. But I also
   deplore the grief I witness when women come to me who cannot
   conceive because their wombs have been damaged during abortions.
   It is my wish that all women carry their babies to term.
   For those who do not want to, at least I can make sure that when
   they do want a child, they will still be able to have one."
   That point had been well received.
   He finished eating, leaned back in the chair and poured himself
   more wine. He was feeling expansive. Tomorrow morning he had
   a cesarean section scheduled—another difficult case that would
   add to his reputation. The mother was from the socially prominent
   Payne family. The father, Delano Aldrich, was an officer of a prestigious
   foundation. This was the sort of family whose championship
   he needed.
   Only one obstacle left. He had brought Katie DeMaio's file home
   from the office. He would begin now to prepare the substitute file
   that he would show to the police after her death.
   Instead of the history she'd given him of prolonged periods of
   bleeding, he would write, "Patient complains of frequent hemorrhaging,
   unrelated to monthly cycles." Instead of sponginess of
   uterine walls, a condition that could be remedied by a simple
   operation, he would note signs of vascular breakdown. 
					     					 			 Instead of
   a slightly low hemoglobin, he would indicate that the hemoglobin
   was chronically in the danger zone.
   He went into the library. Her official file was on top of his desk.
   From the drawer he extracted a new folder, put Katie's name on
   it and set down her previous medical history. This was the folder
   he would take to the hospital. He added several paragraphs to the
   file he would put in the wall safe when completed.
   Patient was in minor automobile accident on Monday night,
   February 15. At 2:00 a.m. sedated patient observed the transferal
   of the remains of Vangie Lewis by this physician. Patient still does
   not understand that what she observed was a true event rather than
   a hallucination, but inevitably she will. She cannot be permitted
   to remain as a threat to this physician. On pretense of preparation
   for Saturday surgery, this physician prescribed anticoagulant medication
   to be taken on regular basis until Friday night.
   He laid down his pen. It was easy to imagine how he would
   complete this report.
   Patient entered the hospital at 6:00 p.m. Friday, February 19,
   complaining of dizziness and general weakness. At 9:00 p.m. this
   physician, accompanied by Nurse Renge, found the patient hemorrhaging.
   Blood pressure was falling rapidly. Emergency surgery
   was performed at 9:45 p.m. The patient expired at 10:00 p.m.
   He smiled in anticipation. Every detail was perfectly planned,
   even to assigning Nurse Renge to floor duty Friday night. She was
   young, inexperienced and terrified of him. Putting the file in the
   temporary hiding place in the top desk drawer, he went upstairs to
   bed and slept soundly until six in the morning.
   Three hours later he delivered a healthy baby boy by cesarean
   section to Mrs. Delano Aldrich and accepted as his due the tearful
   gratitude of the patient and her husband.
   CHAPTER NINE
   AT EIGHT a.m. Thursday morning the Investigative Squad of the
   Homicide Division of Valley County pulled up to the Lewis home.
   The six-man team was headed by Phil Cunningham and Charley
   Nugent. The detectives in charge of fingerprinting were told to
   concentrate on the master bedroom and bath and the kitchen.
   According to the lab report, Vangie's fingerprints had been
   found on the tumbler that had been lying next to her. She had
   been right-handed. When she poured the cyanide crystals into
   the glass, it would have been natural for her to hold the glass with
   her left hand and pour with her right. Yet only her right prints
   were on the tumbler. This further discredited the suicide theory.
   Every bottle in the medicine chest was opened, sniffed. But the
   bitter-almond scent they were looking for was not to be found.
   The bedroom was carefully vacuumed in the hope of finding
   human hair. As Phil put it: "Any house can have hairs from delivery
   people, neighbors, anybody. We're all shedding hair all the
   time. But most people don't bring even good friends into the bedroom.
   So if you find human hair that doesn't belong to the people
   who sleep in the bedroom, you might have something."
   Close attention was given to the shelves in the garage. The usual
   garden tools, hoses, insecticides and weed killer were there in
   abundance. Phil grunted in annoyance as a prong of a gardening
   fork pulled at his jacket. The prongs had been protruding over
   the edge of the shelf, the handle wedged in by a heavy paint can.
   Bending to free his sleeve, he noticed a sliver of printed cotton
   hooked on the prong.
   That flowered print. He'd seen it recently. It was the dress
   Vangie Lewis was wearing when she died.
   He called the police photographer out to the garage. "Get a
   picture of that," he said, pointing to the tool. When the picture
   was taken, he removed the material and sealed it in an envelope.
   In the house, Charley was going through the desk. When Phil
   came in, Charley said, "We've come up with a big zero. Wait a
   minute. They had an answering service. We'd better check it for
   messages."
   He got the number of the answering service from a file in the
   desk, then dialed and identified himself. "Give me any messages
   left for either Captain or Mrs. Lewis starting with Monday."
   Taking out his pen, he began to write: "Monday, February 15,
   4:00 p.m. Northwest Orient reservations phoned. Mrs. Lewis is
   confirmed on Flight 235 at 4:10 p.m. from La Guardia Airport to
   Minneapolis/St. Paul on Tuesday, February 16."
   Charley asked, "Did Mrs. Lewis receive that message?"
   "Oh, yes," the operator said. "I gave it to her myself at about
   seven thirty Monday evening. She sounded very relieved."
   "All right," Charley said. "What else have you got?"
   "Also on Monday a Miss Edna Burns called at ten p.m. She
   wanted Mrs. Lewis to phone her no matter how late it was. But
   Mrs. Lewis never contacted us again that night."
   There were no further messages on the service, but the operator
   knew a call had come through Tuesday evening and had been
   picked up by Captain Lewis. "I was just starting to answer when
   he came on," she explained. "I got right off."
   Charley thanked the operator, then hung up the receiver and
   looked at Phil. "Let's go. Scott's going to want to hear about this."
   "How do you read it?" Phil asked.
   Charley snorted. "How else can I read it? As of seven thirty
   Monday evening Vangie Lewis was planning to go to Minneapolis.
   A couple of hours later she's dead. As of ten o'clock Monday night,
   Edna Burns had an important message for Vangie. The next night
   Edna's dead, and the last person who saw her alive heard her
   telling Chris Lewis she had information for the police."
   FOR Katie, Wednesday night had seemed endless. She'd gone
   to bed as soon as she returned from Edna's apartment, first taking
   one of the pills Dr. Highley had given her. She'd awakened feeling
   vaguely troubled. Her grandmother's old black hat. Why was she
   thinking about that hat? Of course. Because of that shabby old
   shoe Edna obviously prized. But why just one shoe?
   Grimacing, she got out of bed. The soreness throughout her
   body had intensified during the night. Hoping that a hot bath
   might soak some of the achiness away, she went into the bathroom
   and turned on the taps in the tub. A wave of dizziness made her
   sway, and she grabbed the side of the tub to keep from falling. The
   bathroom mirror revealed the deathly pallor of her skin. It's this
   bleeding, she thought. If I weren't going into the hospital tomorrow
   night, I'd probably end up being carried in.
   The bath did reduce some of the stiffness, and foundation makeup
   minimized the paleness. With her orange juice Katie swallowed
   another of Dr. Highley's pills. Then she grabbed a coat and her
   handbag and went out to the car.
   Charley and Phil were searching the Lewis house this morning.
   Scott was drawing a web around Chris Lewis. If only she could
   find another avenue to explore before Chris was indicted.
   She arrived at the office just befor 
					     					 			e eight and found Maureen
   Crowley already there. "Maureen," Katie said, "I've got a job.
   Could you come in when you have a minute?"
   The girl got up quickly. She had a narrow-waisted, graceful-
   young body. The green sweater she was wearing accentuated the
   vivid green of her eyes. "How about coffee, Katie?"
   "Great. But no ham on rye—at least not yet."
   Maureen looked embarrassed. "I'm sorry I said that yesterday.
   You, of all people, are not in a rut."
   "I'm not sure about that." Katie hung up her coat and settled
   down with her notebook. Maureen brought in the coffee, pulled
   up a chair and waited silently, her steno pad on her lap.
   Katie said slowly, "We're not satisfied that the Vangie Lewis
   death is a suicide. Yesterday I talked with her doctors, Dr. Highley
   and Dr. Fukhito, at Westlake Hospital."
   She heard a sharp intake of breath and looked up quickly. The
   girl's face had gone dead white.
   "Maureen, is anything the matter?"
   "No. No. I'm sorry."
   Unconvinced, Katie looked back at her notes. "As far as we
   know, Dr. Fukhito was the last person to see Vangie Lewis alive.
   I want to find out as much as I can about him. Find out where
   he came from, where he went to school, other hospitals he's been
   connected with, his personal background."