enjoyed long hikes along the cliffs. 'All right, Falcon, if you won't come with me, play your darn golf and I'll meet you at my pad later.' That mischievous wink, the deliberate leer, her long, slender fingers running along his shoulders. 'God, Falcon, you do turn me on.' Lying with her in his arms on the couch watching late-night movies. Her murmured 'Min knows better than to give us any of those damn narrow antiques of hers. She knows I like to cuddle with my fellow.' It was here that he had found the Leila he loved; the Leila she herself wanted to be.

What was Bartlett saying? 'Either we attempt to flatly contradict Elizabeth Lange and the so-called eyewitness or we try to turn that testimony to our benefit.'

'How does one do that?' God, I hate this man, Ted thought. Look at him sitting there, cool and comfortable. You'd think he was discussing a chess game, not the rest of my life. Irrational fury almost choked him. He had to get out of this spot. Even being in a room with someone he disliked gave him claustrophobia. How could he share a cell with another man for two or three decades? He couldn't. At any price, he couldn't do it.

'You have no memory of hailing the cab, of the ride to Connecticut.'

'Absolutely none.'

'Your last conscious memory of that evening. Tell me again: what was it?'

'I had been with Leila for several hours. She was hysterical. Kept accusing me of cheating on her.'

'Did you?'

'No.'

'Then why did she accuse you?'

'Leila was-terribly insecure. She'd had bad experiences with men. She had convinced herself she could never trust one. I thought I'd gotten her over that as far as our relationship was concerned, but every once in a while she'd throw a jealous fit.' That scene in the apartment. Leila lunging at him, scratching his face; her wild accusations. His hands on her wrists, restraining her. What had he felt? Anger. Fury. And disgust.

'You tried to give her back the engagement ring?'

'Yes, and she refused it.'

'Then what happened?'

' Elizabeth phoned. Leila began sobbing into the phone and shouting at me to get out. I told her to put the phone down. I wanted to get to the bottom of what had brought all this on.

I saw it was hopeless and left. I went to my own apartment. I think I changed my shirt. I tried to call Craig. I remember leaving the apartment. I don't remember anything else until the next day when I woke up in Connecticut.'

'Teddy, do you realize what the prosecutor will do to that story? Do you know how many cases are on record of people who kill in a fit of rage and then have a psychotic episode where they block it out? As your lawyer I have to tell you something: That story stinks! It's no defense. Sure, if it weren't for Elizabeth Lange there wouldn't be a problem… Hell, there wouldn't even be a case. I could make mincemeat of that so-called eyewitness. She's a nut, a real off-the-wall nut. But with Elizabeth swearing you were in the apartment fighting with Leila at nine thirty, the nut becomes believable when she says you shoved Leila off the terrace at nine thirty-one.'

'Then what do we do about it?' Craig asked.

'We gamble,' Bartlett said. 'Ted agrees with Elizabeth 's story. He now remembers going back upstairs. Leila was still hysterical. She slammed the phone down and ran to the terrace. Everybody who was in Elaine's the night before can testify to her emotional state. Her sister admits she had been drinking. She was despondent about her career. She had decided to break off her relationship with you. She felt washed up. She wouldn't be the first one to take a dive in that situation.'

Ted winced. A dive. Christ, were all lawyers so insensitive? And then the image came of Leila's broken body; the garish police pictures. He felt perspiration break out over his entire body.

But Craig looked hopeful. 'It might work. What that eyewitness saw was Ted struggling to save Leila, and when Leila fell, he blacked out. That's when he had the psychotic episode. That explains why he was almost incoherent in the cab.'

Ted stared through the window at the ocean. It was unusually calm now, but he knew the tide would soon be roaring in. The calm before the storm, he thought. Right now we're having a clinical discussion. In nine days I'll be in the courtroom. The People of the State of New York v. Andrew Edward Winters III. 'There's one big hole in your theory,' he said flatly. 'If I admit I went back to that apartment and was on the terrace with Leila, I'm putting my head in a noose.

If the jury decides I was in the process of killing her, I'll be found guilty of Murder Two.'

'It's a chance you may have to take.'

Ted came back to the table and began to stuff the open files into Bartlett 's briefcase. His smile was not pleasant. 'I'm not sure I can take that chance. There has to be a better solution, and at any cost I intend to find it. I will not go to prison!'

Eight

Min sighed gustily. 'That feels good. I swear, you've got better hands than any masseuse in this place.'

Helmut leaned down and kissed her cheek. 'Liebchen, I love touching you, even if it's only to ease your shoulders.'

They were in their apartment, which covered the entire third floor of the main house. Min was seated at her dressing table wearing a loose kimono. She had unpinned her heavy raven-colored hair, and it fell below her shoulders. She looked at her reflection in the mirror. Today she was no ad for this place. Shadows under her eyes-how long since she'd had her eyes done? Five years? Something hard to accept was happening. She was fifty-nine years old. Until this last year she could have passed for ten years younger. No more.

Helmut was smiling at her in the mirror. Deliberately, he rested his chin on her head. His eyes were a shade of blue that always reminded her of the waters in the Adriatic Sea around Dubrovnik, where she had been born. The long, distinguished face with its picture-perfect tan was unlined, the dark brown sideburns untouched by gray. Helmut was fifteen years her junior. For the first years of their marriage it hadn't mattered. But now?

She had met him at the spa in Baden-Baden, after Samuel died. Five years of catering to that fussy old man had paid off. He'd left her twelve million dollars and this property.

She hadn't been stupid about Helmut's sudden attentiveness to her. No man becomes enamored of a woman fifteen years his senior unless there's something he wants. At first she had accepted his attentions cynically, but by the end of two weeks she had realized that she was becoming deeply interested in him and in his suggestion that she convert the Cypress Point Hotel into a spa… The cost had been staggering, but Helmut had urged her to consider it an investment, not an expenditure. The day the Spa opened, he had asked her to marry him.

She sighed heavily.

'Minna, what is it?'

How long had they been staring at each other in the mirror? 'You know.'

He bent down and kissed her cheek.

Incredibly, they'd been happy together. She had never dared tell him how much she loved him, instinctively afraid to hand him that weapon, always watching for signs of restlessness. But he ignored the young women who flirted with him. It was only Leila who had seemed to dazzle him, only Leila who had made her churn in an agony of fear…

Perhaps she had been wrong. If one could believe him, Helmut had actually disliked Leila, even hated her. Leila had been openly contemptuous of him- but then, Leila had been contemptuous of every man she knew well…

The shadows had become long in the room. The breeze from the sea was sharply cooler. Helmut reached his hands under her elbows. 'Rest a little. You'll have to put up with the lot of them in less than an hour.'

Min clutched his hand. 'Helmut, how do you think she'll react?'

'Very badly.'

'Don't tell me that,' she wailed. 'Helmut, you know why I have to try. It's our only chance.'

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