"And it was a match for Claire?" Eileen collapsed back. "My God."
"This is where I need your help, Eileen."
Eileen looked up at her as though through a haze. "Anything."
"I need you to think back."
"Okay."
"Was Claire acting any different before her murder? Was anything odd going on? Anything at all?"
"I always thought it was a random thing." Eileen was still stunned. "A home invasion."
"It wasn't. We know that now. I need you to focus, Eileen, okay? Claire is dead. Joe is dead. The same weapon was used to murder both of them. Maybe they were both mixed up in something--"
"Mixed up in something? Claire?"
"Nothing bad. But something was going on. Something that connected the two of them. Think, Eileen. You knew Claire better than anyone."
Eileen lowered her head.
"Eileen?"
"I didn't think it had anything to do with it . . ."
Maya felt that jolt. She tried to stay very still. "Tell me."
"Claire was acting . . . not weirdly or anything but . . . there was one thing."
Maya nodded, trying to encourage her to say more.
"We were having lunch at Baumgart's one day. This was a week, maybe two, before the murder. Her cell phone rang. She turned all white. Now normally she answers the phone in front of me. We don't really have secrets, you know that."
"Go on."
"But this time, Claire grabbed the phone and hurried outside. I looked out the window and I could see she was all animated. She was on for maybe five minutes, then she came back."
"Did she tell you who was on the phone?"
"No."
"Did you ask?"
"Yes. She said it was nothing . . ."
"I hear a 'but.'"
"But it clearly wasn't nothing." Eileen shook her head. "How could I not make her tell me? How could I just . . . ? Anyway, she was distracted the rest of lunch. I tried to raise it a few more times, but she just shut me down. Jesus. I should have done more."
"I don't know what more you could have done." Maya thought about it. "The police would have gone through her phone records anyway. They would have looked into all her calls."
"That's just it."
"What?"
"The phone."
"What about it?"
"It wasn't hers."
Maya leaned forward. "Come again?"
"Her normal phone, the one with the case with the kids' picture on it, was still on the table," Eileen said. "Claire was carrying a second phone."
Chapter 10
The Burkett servants lived in a complex of small homes on the back edge of the Farnwood estate, just left of the delivery entrance. The homes were all one level and reminded Maya of army barracks. The largest belonged to the Mendezes, Isabella's family. Isabella's mother, Rosa, still worked in the main house, though it was hard to say what she did now that all the children were grown.
Maya knocked on Isabella's door. There was no sign of life, but these were hardworking people. Their hours were insane. Maya was far from a socialist, but she found it ironic how much the Burketts complained about staff and workers, really believing that this country was a meritocracy, when everything had been handed to them because, two generations earlier, a grandfather had found a way to exploit real estate laws. She knew most of the Burketts wouldn't last a week working their servants' hours.
Hector's Dodge Ram pickup pulled in behind her. He parked a good distance from her