For the next two hours Elizabeth sat hunched up on the couch, her arms locked around her knees, her eyes staring ahead unseeingly. This was what you wanted, she tried to tell herself. He's going to pay for what he did to Leila. But the pain was so intense it gradually retreated into numbness.

When she got up, her legs were stiff, and she moved with the cautious hesitancy of the old. There was still the matter of the anonymous letters.

Now she would not rest until she had found out who had sent them and precipitated this tragedy.

* * *

It was past one o'clock when Bartlett phoned Ted. 'We have to talk right away,' Henry said shortly. 'Get over as soon as you can.'

'Is there any reason we can't meet here?'

'I've got some calls from New York coming in. I don't want to risk missing them.'

When Craig opened the door for him, Ted did not waste time on preliminaries. 'What's up?'

'Something you won't like.'

Bartlett was not at the oval dinette table he used as a desk in this suite. Instead, he was leaning back in an armchair, one hand on the phone as though expecting it to leap into his hand. He had a meditative expression, Ted decided, not unlike that of a philosopher confronted with a problem too difficult to solve.

'How bad is it?' Ted asked. 'Ten years? Fifteen years?'

'Worse. They won't take a plea. A new eyewitness has come forward.'

Briefly, even brusquely, he explained. 'As you know, we put private investigators on Sally Ross. We wanted to discredit her in every way possible. One of the investigators was in her apartment building night before last. A thief was caught red-handed trying to rob the apartment one floor above Mrs. Ross's. He's been making a deal of his own with the district attorney. He was in that apartment once before. The night of March twenty-ninth. He claims he saw you push Leila off the terrace!'

He watched the sickly pallor that stole over Ted's face change his deep tan to a muddy beige. 'No plea bargain,' Ted whispered. His voice was so low that Henry had to lean forward to catch the words.

'Why should they, with a witness like that? From what my people tell me, there's no question that his view was unobstructed. Sally Ross had that eucalyptus tree on the terrace, obscuring her line of vision. One floor higher up, and the tree wasn't in the way.'

'I don't care how many people saw Ted that night,' Craig blurted. 'He was drunk. He didn't know what he was doing. I'll perjure myself. I'll say he was on the phone with me at nine thirty.'

'You can't perjure yourself,' Bartlett snapped. 'You're already on record as saying you heard the phone ring and didn't pick it up. Don't even think of it.'

Ted jammed clenched fists into his pockets. 'Forget the goddamned phone. What exactly does this witness claim he saw?'

'So far the district attorney has refused to take my calls. I've got a few inside connections there, and from what they've been able to find out, this guy claims Leila was struggling to save herself.'

'Then I could be facing the maximum?'

'The judge assigned to this case is an imbecile. He'll let a throat-slasher from the ghetto off with a slap on the wrist, but he likes to show how tough he is when he deals with important people. And you're important.'

The phone rang. Bartlett had it at his ear before the second ring. Ted and Craig watched as his frown deepened; he moistened his lips with his tongue, then bit his lower lip. They listened as he barked out instructions: 'I want a rap sheet on that guy. I want to know what kind of deal he was offered. I want pictures taken from that woman's terrace on a rainy night. Get on with it.'

When he put down the receiver, he studied Ted and Craig, noticing how Ted had slumped in his chair and Craig had straightened in his. 'We go to trial,' he said. 'That new eyewitness has been in the apartment before. He described the inside of several of the closets. This time they caught him when he barely got his feet in the entrance hall. He says he saw you, Teddy. Leila was clawing at you, trying to save herself. You picked her up, you held her over that railing and you shook her until she let go of your arms. It won't be a pretty scene when it's described in court.'

'I… held… her… over… the… railing… before… I… dropped… her…' Ted picked up a vase from the table and threw it across the room at the marble fireplace. It smashed, and sprays of delicate crystal cascaded across the carpet. 'No! It's not possible!' He turned and ran blindly for the door. He slammed it behind him with a force that shattered the window panel.

They watched as he ran across the lawn to the trees that separated the Spa grounds from the Crocker Woodland.

* * *

'He's guilty,' Bartlett said. 'There's no way I can get him off now. Give me a clean-cut liar and I can work with him. If I put him on the stand, the jury will find Teddy arrogant. If I don't we'll have Elizabeth describing how he shouted at Leila, and two eyewitnesses to tell how he killed her. And I'm supposed to work with that?' He closed his eyes. 'By the way, he's just proved to us that he has a violent temper.'

'There was a special reason for that outburst,' Craig said quietly. 'When Ted was eight years old, he saw his father in a drunken rage hold his mother over the terrace of their penthouse.'

He paused to catch his breath. 'The difference is his father decided not to drop her.'

Four

At two o'clock, Elizabeth phoned Syd and asked him to meet her at the Olympic pool. When she got there, a mixed water-aerobics class was starting. Men and women holding beach balls were studiously following the directions of the instructor. 'Hold the ball between your palms; swing from side to side… no, keep it underwater… that's where we get the pull.' Music was turned on.

She chose to sit at a table at the far end of the patio. There was no one nearby. Ten minutes later, she heard a scraping sound behind her and gasped. It was Syd. He had cut through the bushes and pushed aside a chair to get onto the patio. He nodded in the direction of the pool. 'We had the janitor's apartment in Brooklyn when I was growing up. It's amazing how much muscle tone my mother got swinging a broom.'

His tone was pleasant enough, but his manner was guarded. The polo shirt and shorts he was wearing revealed the wiry strength of his arms and the taut muscles in his legs. Funny, Elizabeth thought, I always considered Syd soft-looking, maybe because he has such a poor carriage. That's a mistake.

The scraping sound. Had she heard a chair being moved last night when she was leaving the pool? And Monday night, she thought she had seen something or someone moving. Was it possible she'd been watched while she was swimming? It was a fleeting but upsetting thought.

'For a place that costs so much to relax in, there are quite a few uptight people around here,' Syd said. He sat down across from her.

'And I'm the most uptight, I suppose. Syd, you had your own money in Merry-Go- Round. You brought the script to Leila. You handled some of the script revisions. I have to talk to the playwright, Clayton Anderson. Where can I get in touch with him?'

'I have no idea. I never met him. The contract was negotiated through his lawyer.'

'Tell me the lawyer's name.'

'No.'

'That's because there is no lawyer, right, Syd? Helmut wrote that play, didn't he? He brought it to you, and you brought it to Leila. Helmut knew Min would throw a fit if she found out about it. That play was written by a man obsessed-by Leila. That's why for Leila the play would have worked.'

His face turned a dull red. 'You don't know what you're talking about.'

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