Hawk nodded.
“Had to be something in addition to money,” Hawk said.
“And what would be in addition to money?” Susan said.
“And you a shrink,” Hawk said.
“Love,” I said.
Hawk nodded. Susan nodded, too. We were silent.
“Rugar and Heidi?” Susan said after a while.
I turned my palms up. Hawk said nothing.
“Nothing is proven,” Susan said.
“But some of it can be,” I said. “Sooner or later we’ll find out if Heidi knew Rugar. Sooner or later we’ll get a look at her finances. Sooner or later we should be able to find out if Adelaide was abused and by whom.”
“If she’s alive,” Hawk said.
I nodded.
“If she’s alive,” I said.
“You think she is?” Susan said.
“I don’t know that she isn’t,” I said.
Susan nodded. She cut up a leaf of romaine lettuce and ate part of it, and drank some wine.
“Do you think Rugar killed Bradshaw?”
“Who in this mess more likely?” I said.
“Tony Marcus?”
“Nope, I believe him. I think he had Ty-Bop ace Leonard to sever himself from the whole business, and to remind his employees of the zero-tolerance rule.”
“Why would Rugar kill Bradshaw?”
“Don’t know. But if there’s a connection back to Bucharest, we might be able to find out,” I said.
“If Heidi is in collusion with Rugar,” Susan said, “and if she tells him the truth, Rugar is smart enough to know that you have a handle on this whole thing, and that eventually you may be able to unravel it.”
“Yes,” I said.
“And he must know you well enough to know that you will stay with it, however long it takes.”
“Yes.”
“Which means he may decide it is time to take decisive action.”
“Yes,” I said.
“Why am I hanging around?” Hawk said.
“The two of you are formidable,” Susan said.
Hawk and I both nodded.
“But so is Rugar,” she said to me. “He almost killed you once.”
“I wasn’t around when that happened.”
“True.”
“I am around now,” Hawk said.
“Yes,” Susan said.
“Him against both of us?” Hawk said. “I like our chances.”
Susan nodded slowly. She looked at me. I smiled and nodded. She looked back at Hawk.
“And you’ll continue to hang around,” she said.
“I will,” he said.
“Until it’s over,” she said.
“Until there’s no need for my skill set,” Hawk said.
The waiter brought Susan a second glass of wine. For Susan, that was a binge. She sipped some of it and put the glass down.
“Hawk,” she said, “in regard to me having nice legs?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Thanks for noticing.”
Hawk grinned at her.
“My pleasure,” he said.
60
I was studying a strip called
I offered her a seat. She took it. I gave her coffee. She took that. I went back behind my desk and sat down and tilted my chair back a little.
“What’s up?” I said.
“I am no longer employed,” she said, “by the Bradshaws.”
“Bradshaws?” I said.
“Excuse me?”
“Plural?” I said. “Bradshaws?”
“Yes,” she said. “It’s what I wanted to speak to you about.”
“Okay,” I said.
“When I heard about poor Mr. Bradshaw being killed,” Maggie Lane said, “I… The place is like a fortress now. Heidi is terrified. She won’t leave the island except with a bunch of guards.”
“I know,” I said. “What’s she terrified of?”
“I assume whoever killed her husband,” Maggie Lane said.
I nodded.
“I had to get out of there. I was, very simply, frightened. I’m as loyal as the next person, and I stuck with them during that awful time at the wedding. But now Mr. Bradshaw is gone. And I don’t feel close enough to Heidi, and in truth, my salary is insufficient to overcome my anxiety.”
“So you quit,” I said.
“I resigned,” she said. “Yes.”
“And why was it you said that you worked for the Bradshaws plural?”
“I did,” Maggie said. “I was equally assistant to both. Run the household staff, arrange their travel, see to the laundry and dry cleaning, deal with the caterer, manage their social calendar, everything… except finances.”
“Who handled the finances?”
“Mr. Bradshaw,” she said.
“Himself?” I said.
“Yes, he was very private about that.”
I nodded.
“And is that what you came here to tell me?” I said. “That you worked for both of them?”