to make an appointment.'
'I know who you are, and I know what you're doing. And I'll have you know I'm just as concerned about this as you are. I happen to be involved with the issue at this very moment. You'll have to wait downstairs until I'm ready for you.'
'I'm afraid that won't be possible, Mrs. Petersen. I can talk to you here, or you can come with me to the station now.'
'To the station? Who do you think you're talking to? I can't go to the station. Do you have any idea what's going on? There are people from the press all over the place.'
April inclined her head. She hadn't noticed any in the immediate vicinity. 'Maybe you can tell them you're helping the police with their investigation. I need to know a few things about your husband's habits, his schedule, and what you know about his driver.'
'Wally?'
'Yes.'
'Actually, I'm just giving an interview right now.' The pressure on the door eased just a little. April gave the door another little shove, but by this time Daphne had made her decision and backed away, causing April to lose her momentum and fall into the room.
'What's going on, Daphne?' A large woman with bright red hair rushed to the door. 'Sorry, didn't mean to abandon you, I was in the loo,' the woman whispered. 'Sick tummy.' Then she gushed to April, 'I'm Monica Abeel, who are you with and
April showed her ID and pushed farther into the room. The thick ice blue living-room rug was now snaked with fat black wires for TV lights. Some of the furniture had been moved and a love seat had become the focus of an instant TV set. A crew of three lolled around on the furniture eating doughnuts and drinking coffee from Styrofoam cups. The interviewer, a dark woman in an unbecoming lemon yellow suit, was on the phone.
'Oh, my,' the redheaded Monica said. 'Didn't you tell the officer we're working here?' '
'She didn't want to listen. Deal with this, will you.'
Daphne Petersen walked away.
April flashed to Steve Zapora and the mirror in Bed-Sty.
'Oh, my.' Monica flapped after April, changing course toward the woman in the nasty yellow suit. 'Oh, my. Cinda dear. Can you take a short break, darling? Daphne has just a
'Sergeant—' April began. Across the room the TV crew looked alive.
'Never mind,' Monica cried. 'Come this way, dear.'
'A cop?' The woman called Cinda drifted over.
Monica grabbed April's arm. 'You're very pretty, aren't you? Do you have an agent yet? I've never seen a Japanese cop before.'
April stared. 'I'm Chinese,' she said.
'Well, that wouldn't hurt sales either. Look, don't say a
'I wouldn't dream of it,' April murmured, taking it and thinking her mother would love this.
At 10
A.M.,
April was filling in her notes on Daphne Petersen's views on Liberty's violent temper, his abusive behavior to his wife, and Merrill Liberty's ten-year affair with her dead husband, Tor, when Hagedorn pushed open the door of her office. A huge grin transformed his pudgy face.
'Yeah, Charlie, what you got?' She glanced up at the detective and was reminded of a moon-faced bully she'd known in grammar school, who was now running half a dozen sweatshops in Chinatown that paid illegal immigrants starvation wages. The bully sweatshop owner had a complicated evasion system that nailed his partners every time there was a shutdown and allowed him to get richer and fatter every year.
Charlie leaned against the open door, one hand gripping the knob as if to keep it from getting away. He was wearing a green jacket, a yellow shirt, and a thin black tie. His girth was too big for the shirt. It gapped at the lower buttons. His jacket pockets bulged. His trousers hung dangerously low on his hips. Energetic for a change, he was punching the air triumphantly. 'I thought I remembered something about this guy Liberty,' he began.
'He was a famous football player,' April suggested, wondering for the ten thousandth time just how dumb Hagedorn could possibly be.
'Uh-uh.' Hagedorn continued grinning. 'Something else.'
'He's a stockbroker, makes a million dollars a year.' April tapped the phone,- willing it to ring and transport her to another subject. 'That's a lot of money.'
'What are you getting at?' Hagedorn's eyes narrowed with suspicion. 'What difference does that make?'
'No difference whatsoever.' Except that Iriarte had told her he wanted them to go very gently on this one. Was that the reason he'd chosen gentle Charlie to do the deep background profile on Liberty and her to check out Petersen's will, and the close friendships and recent activities of his charming widow?
. 'No dumb mistakes,' the lieutenant had told her before going home last night. He had thrust a finger in her face adding, 'And watch that Sanchez.'
April glanced at her watch, annoyed and suspicious of everyone. Why did she have to watch Sanchez? Was he up to something, or was Iriarte just nervous and wanted her to mess up, lose face and possibly her entire career on this thing? Mike hadn't phoned her last night, hadn't turned up yet, and hadn't bothered to call in with his plan for the day. So maybe he was up to something. She seethed at his coming in on this case and then going off on his own, pissing off Iriarte and keeping her in the dark. Why couldn't they get organized on this thing? She had thought they had a plan, but were they working to plan? Were they organized? No, they were not.
'What do you remember, Charlie?' she prompted cordially, as if she had a high opinion of him and actually wanted to know.
'Oh, I remember we had problems with this guy before.' Hagedorn continued to clutch the doorknob, still undecided about whether it was safe to advance further.
'Problems with-?'
'Liberty, who else?'
'Ah, Liberty. What kind of problems?'
'Complaints from the neighbors.'
'What about?' Hagedorn was so slow getting his stories out that April yearned to rap his nose with her knuckles.
'Screaming, yelling, domestic disturbances.'
'Aod—?' She kept her face deadpan.
'Aod an officer went to the scene . . . domestic dispute, possible domestic violence.' Hagedorn grinned.
'An officer went to the scene. You have a namc on that officer and the report, Charlie?'
'I suppose I can find it.' His triumph deflated.
'Thanks.'
'It could be significant.' Belligerent now.
What was it with this guy? She flashed to the advice of a supervisor she'd had once:
April did as he'd advised and widened her perimeter.
'How many such reports, Charlie? Was the wife bruised? Was she in need of medical treatment? Did she go to the hospital? You want to check that out?'
He wanted to check that out. He nodded. 'I'll get you every single incident in the bastard's life.'