It's important."
"Certainly."
Barrow and Highsmith shook hands with the judge and left.
"I don't like this," Barrow said as soon as the front door closed. "It's too much like the other crime scenes.
Especially the TV. She'd have turned that off if she was going out with a friend."
"There was no note or rose."
"Yeah, but Darius isn't stupid. If he's got his wife, he's not going to broadcast the fact. He could have changed his m.o. to put us off the track. Any suggestions?"
"None at all, unless you think we've got enough to pick up Darius."
"We don't."
"Then we wait, and hope Lisa Darius is out with a friend."
Part Seven
Chapter Twenty-three
Betsy heard a car pull into the carport and looked out the kitchen window.
"It's Daddy!" Kathy yelled. She had been waiting in the living room all afternoon, giving only half-hearted attention to the television, since Betsy told her she was going to Rick's for the weekend.
"Get your things," Betsy told Kathy as she opened the door.
"They're all here, Mom," Kathy said, pointing to her backpack, book bag, small valise and Oliver, the stuffed skunk.
The door opened and Kathy jumped into Rick's arms.
"How you doin', Tiger?" Rick asked with a laugh.
"I packed myself," Kathy said, pointing at her things.
"Did you pack your toothbrush?" Betsy asked suddenly.
"uh oh," Kathy said.
"I thought so. Run and get it right now, young lady."
Rick put Kathy down and she raced down the hall for the bathroom.
"She's very excited," Betsy told Rick. He looked uncomfortable.
"I thought I'd take her to the Spaghetti Factory."
"She likes that."
They stood without talking for a moment.
"You look good, Bets."
"You should see how I look when I haven't had to spend the day in judge Spencer's court," Betsy joked self-consciously, sidestepping the compliment. Rick started to say something, but Kathy was back with her toothbrush and the moment passed.
"See you Monday," Betsy said, giving Kathy a big hug and kiss. Rick gathered up everything but Oliver.
Betsy watched from the doorway until they drove away.
Alan Page looked up from his desk. Randy Highsmith and Ross Barrow were standing in the doorway. He glanced at his watch. It was six twenty-five.
"I just got off the phone with justice Ryder. She's still missing," Ross said.
Page put down his pen.
"WHAT can we do? There's not a shred of evidence pointing toward Darius," Page said. He looked pale and sounded exhausted and defeated.
"We have a motive, Al," Barrow said. "Lisa Darius is the only person who can connect Martin to Sam Oberhurst. He couldn't get to her when he was in jail. I say we have at least probable cause. No sooner is he out than she's missing."
And there was that phone call," Highsmith added.
"Ryder can't be certain there was a threat. The call can even be interpreted as a warning to Lisa to be careful of someone else." Page shook his head. "I'm not making the same mistake twice. Unless I'm certain we have probable cause, I'm not asking for a search warrant."
"Don't get gun-shy, Al," Highsmith warned. "We're talking about a life here."
"I know that," Page answered angrily. "But where do we search? His house? He's not going to be stupid enough to keep her there. Some property he owns?
Which one? I'm as frustrated as you are, but we have to be patient."
Highsmith was about to say something when the intercom buzzed.
"I know you didn't want to be disturbed," his secretary said, "but Nancy Gordon is on the line."
Page felt cold. Highsmith and Barrow straightened.
Page put the call on the speaker phone.
"Detective Gordon?"
"I'm sorry I disappeared on you, Mr. Page," a woman said. Page tried to remember what Gordon sounded like. He remembered a throaty quality to her voice, but their connection was bad and the woman's voice was distorted.
"Where are you?"
"I can't tell you that now," Gordon said. Page thought she sounded sluggish and uncertain.
"Have you read the news? Do you know Darius is out, because we didn't have your testimony at his bail hearing?"
"It couldn't be helped. You'll understand everything in a while."
"I'd like to understand it now, Detective. We have a situation here.
Darius's wife has disappeared."
"I know. That's why I'm calling. I know where she is and you have to act quickly."
Darius Construction was in trouble. When Darius was arrested, the company was on the verge of bringing in two lucrative projects. Both jobs were now with other construction companies and no new projects would appear while Darius was indictment. Darius had been counting on the income the projects would generate to help him with the company's financial problems. Without the new income, bankruptcy was a real possibility.
Darius spent the day closeted with his accountant, his attorney and his vice presidents working on a plan to save the company, but he had trouble keeping his mind on business. He needed Betsy Tannenbaum, and she had dropped him. At first he'd wanted her to represent him simply because he thought a feminist attorney would give him an edge with the jury. Then Betsy won the bail hearing and convinced him that she had the skills to save him.
Their recent meeting had increased his respect. Tannenbaum was tough.
Most women would have been too frightened to confront him alone. They would have brought a man for protection. Darius believed Betsy would never break the pressure of a trial and he knew she would fight to the end for a client in whom she believed.
When the meeting ended at six p.m. Darius drove home. He punched in the alarm code for his gate and it swung open with a metallic creak. Darius glanced in the rearview mirror. He saw the gleam of headlights as a car drove past the gate, then the driveway turned and he lost his angle.
Darius entered the house through the garage and deactivated the alarm.
The house was cool and quiet.
While Lisa was living with him, there was always an undercurrent of noise in the background. Darius was learning to live without the murmur of kitchen appliances, the muted chatter from the television and the sounds Lisa made passing from room to room.
The living room looked sterile when he turned on the light. Darius took off his jacket and tie and poured himself a scotch. He wondered if there was a way to talk Betsy into coming back. Her anger was evident, but anger could cool. It was her fear that was keeping Betsy from him. He could not blame her for thinking him a monster after what she learned from Colby. Normally a woman's fear would excite Darius, but Betsy's fear was driving her from him and he could not think of a way to allay it.
Darius draped his tie and jacket over his arm and walked upstairs to his bedroom. He had barely eaten all day and his stomach growled. He switched on the bedroom light and set his glass on his dresser. As he turned toward the closet, a flash of color caught his eye. There was a black rose on his pillow. Beneath the rose was a sheet of stationery.
Darius stared at the note. His stomach turned. He spun toward the doorway, but there was no one there. He strained for the slightest noise but heard only the normal house sounds.
Darius kept a gun in his dresser. He took it out. His heart was beating wildly. How could someone get into his house without setting off the alarm? Only he and Lisa knew the alarm code and… Darius froze. His mind made the logical connection and he headed for the basement, switching on the house lights as he went.
Darius paused at the top of the cellar stairs, knowing what he would see when he turned on the light. He heard the first siren when he was halfway down. He thought about going back, but he had to know. A police car skidded to a halt in front of the house as Darius reached the bottom of the stairs. He put his gun down, because he did not want to risk being shot. Besides, he would not need it. There was no one in the house with him. He knew that when he saw the way the body was arranged.