Chapter 10

JUDGE AND MRS. LAIRD TOOK THEIR TIME OVER LUNCH. DUNCAN had been spying for-he checked his wristwatch-one hour and twelve minutes.

DeeDee had argued against leaving, reminding him that if she did, he would be on foot. He said he would call a taxi and insisted that she return to the Barracks and see if they’d received the ballistics reports on the two weapons fired in the Lairds’ house.

Primarily they’d been interested to learn if Trotter’s pistol had been used in the commission of another crime, but had decided, what the hell, while they were at it, it wouldn’t hurt also to test the one Elise Laird had fired.

Duncan had also asked DeeDee to check with Kong for any updates on the missing Meyer Napoli. “If Kong’s not in today, call his cell phone.” It was possible that the PI’s secretary was wrong and that her boss was shacked up with a new girlfriend. If so, this case, and by extension Duncan ’s life, would be made simpler.

After seeing DeeDee off, Duncan returned to the country club’s casual dining room and claimed a table that provided an unobstructed view of the Lairds’ table on the terrace. The judge had ordered a roast beef sandwich, Elise the recommended shrimp salad. Two parties had stopped at their table to chat briefly, but their exchanges had been mostly with the judge.

There were few lapses in the Lairds’ conversation with each other, and both seemed totally absorbed in it. After they finished the meal and were waiting for their plates to be removed, he stroked her bare arm from shoulder to elbow, and once he raised her hand to his mouth and kissed the palm of it.

For the whole seventy-two minutes that Duncan had been observing them, he saw nothing to indicate that the judge wanted her dead. Instead, Cato Laird seemed like a man totally besotted with a woman that he might want to fuck to death, but otherwise had no intention of killing.

When the judge signaled for the check, Elise excused herself and left the table. She didn’t see Duncan when she passed through the dining room in which he was seated. He got up and followed into an empty hallway, and saw her go into the ladies’ room.

He waited, he paced, keeping a nervous eye on the terrace. The judge signed the tab, pocketed his receipt, and left the table. “Shit!” Duncan hissed. But, fortunately for him, before the judge reached the door, a group of men at another table hailed him and he stopped to chat. Duncan hoped they had a lot of breeze to shoot.

Sensing movement behind him, he turned. When Elise saw him she drew up short, half in, half out the door.

“Trying to decide whether to brave it or slink back into the powder room?”

She stepped into the hallway and let the door close behind her. “I thought you’d left.”

“And I thought you might have changed your mind.”

“About what?”

“That crock of crap you told me this morning.”

“It’s the truth.”

“Now, now. Is that any way to talk about your husband after he treated you to that romantic lunch?” Her eyes flashed angrily. She tried to sidestep him, but he didn’t let her, saying, “I caught your trick with the cherry.”

For dessert, both she and the judge had ordered iced coffee drinks with whipped cream on top. The judge had offered his to her.

“I watched you lean in and pull that cherry off the stem with your lips. And I gotta tell you, Mrs. Laird, it was sexy as all get-out. The kind of come-on a man can’t mistake. Even with a tinted window between us, I got aroused.”

“I have to act as though everything is normal.”

“You normally do things for him like sucking that fruit into your mouth?” He snuffled a laugh. “That bastard’s got all the luck.”

Color spread up from her chest into her cheeks. Whether the blush was from embarrassment or anger, he didn’t know, but he suspected she was getting angrier by the moment. She barely moved her lips, pushing the words through her teeth. “Don’t you understand? If I tip my hand, I’ll be dead.”

“Hmm. Okay. Makes sense. And the reason your husband wants you dead is…why?”

She remained silent.

“Oh, right.” He snapped his fingers. “He’s got no motive.”

“He has motive.”

Duncan moved closer, lowered his volume, but increased the intensity of his voice. “Then tell me what it is.”

“I can’t!” She looked beyond his shoulder, registering alarm. “Cato.”

He turned to see Laird entering the dining room. He spotted them immediately. Coming back around to Elise, Duncan said, “You know, I could just ask him if he wants you dead and why.”

He’d tossed that out there just to see her reaction.

Her face drained of the color that had filled it only moments before. The fear looked genuine. Either that, or she was very good.

No. Please.

Reading the soundless words on her lips worked more effectively than if she’d spoken them aloud.

“Detective Hatcher, I thought you’d left hours ago.” As he joined them, the judge was smiling, but Duncan could tell that he wasn’t pleased to see him. He divided a curious look between him and Elise. “You seemed awfully engrossed in your conversation.”

She said, “I bumped into him on my way out of the restroom.”

“And I told Mrs. Laird that I needed to talk to you. Alone.” Out the corner of his eye, he watched Elise. He saw her breath catch.

“I’m scheduled for a massage,” the judge said. “You can follow me to the locker room and talk to me while I change.”

“Downstairs?” The judge nodded. “I’ll wait for you there. Mrs. Laird.”

Duncan looked directly into her eyes, then turned away.


The judge came into the locker room a few minutes later. “She’s still not herself,” he said without preamble. “On edge. Jittery. I think it will take a while for her to recover from this.”

“It was frightening.”

“And then some. My locker’s over here.” He led Duncan down a row of lockers and when he reached his, he began working the combination lock.

Duncan sat down on a padded bench nearby. “Before I forget, I charged my lunch to your account. Club sandwich and iced tea. You know they charge for refills? I also added a twenty-five percent gratuity.”

“Twenty-five percent? Very generous of you.”

“I figured you would have a soft spot for the waitstaff here.”

The judge gave him a wry look. “You’ve done some background investigation.”

“That’s my job.”

“So you know Elise’s employment history. I suppose you also know what she did before she came to work here at the club.” He stated it, he didn’t ask. “Do you think less of her for it?”

“No. Do you?”

Duncan ’s brusque comeback got the judge’s ire up. The heavy lock thumped against the blond wood locker when he let go of it. Angrily, he turned toward Duncan. Then, rather than take issue, the fight went out of him. He sat down on the far end of the bench.

He shook his head with self-deprecation. “I’m a cliché, I suppose. Actually, I know I am. I knew I would be when I began seeing Elise, not just here at the club, but actually taking her out.”

“Sleeping with her.”

The judge raised one shoulder in a negligent shrug. “Gossip spread like wildfire among my friends and associates. Our affair became the talk of this club. Then of all Savannah. Or so it seemed.”

“That didn’t bother you?”

“No, because I was in love. Still am. As much as possible I ignored the gossip. Then a ‘well-meaning friend,’ ” he said, forming quotation marks with his fingers, “invited me to lunch one day for the express purpose of informing me that the cocktail waitress I was seeing wasn’t a suitable companion for a man of my position and social standing. He told me where she’d worked before the Silver Tide. He expected me to be shocked, horrified. But I already knew about Elise’s former employment.”

“You’d done your own investigating.”

“No, Elise had told me herself. She was honest about it from the start, which made me love her all the more. Acquaintances of mine who overtly snubbed her, I consider former friends. Who needs friends like that? But it bothers Elise. She thinks I’ve suffered because of our marriage.”

“Have you?”

“Hardly.”

“You haven’t run for reelection since you married her. Voters may side with those former friends of yours.”

“I’m sure anyone running against me will dredge up her past. We’re prepared for that. We’ll own up to it and dismiss it as irrelevant, and it is.”

“Except that it may cost you the election. Will you be okay with that?”

“Which would you choose, Detective? A judgeship, or Elise in your bed every night?”

Duncan realized he was being tested. He held the judge’s stare for several beats, then deadpanned, “What’s the choice?”

The judge laughed. “My feeling exactly.” He raised his hands, palms up. “In the eyes of many, I’m a man to be pitied, a fool for love. I fell in love the moment I saw her, and I’m still in love.”

Duncan stretched his feet far out in front of him and studied the toes of his shoes. “I believe that.” He waited several seconds, then said, “What I don’t believe is that you had no dealings with Meyer Napoli except inside your courtroom.” He gave up the study of his footwear and turned his head. “You lied about that, Judge.”

Duncan won the staring contest. The initial challenge in the judge’s glare slowly evaporated. Finally he sighed with resignation. “You’re good, Detective.”

“Thanks, but I don’t need your compliments. I need an explanation for why you lied.”

He took a deep breath, let it out slowly. “So Elise would never know that I had hired Meyer Napoli to follow her.”

Duncan had thought it might be something like that. “Why did you?”

“I’m not proud of it.”

“That’s not what I asked.”

“I can’t believe I resorted to hiring that-”

“Unscrupulous sleazoid,” Duncan said, impatient because he wasn’t getting a straight answer. “ Napoli didn’t come with character references, but you hired him anyway. You hired him to follow your wife. Why?”

“Again, it’s a cliché. The oldest reason in the world.” He looked sadly at Duncan.

“She was having an affair.”

The judge’s vulnerable smile was out of character for the man Duncan knew, but he supposed a cuckold was about as humble a creature as there was. “I had my suspicions,” he replied. “But before I tell you anything more, I want you to understand that it happened months ago. Last year.”

“Okay.”

“It’s over and has been for some time,” he insisted.

“Okay.”

Satisfied that he’d made that crucial point, the judge said, “For months I tried to ignore the signs.”

“She had a headache every night?”

He chuckled. “No. Even at the height of my suspicion, Elise was as passionate in bed as she’d always been. Our sexual appetite for each other never waned.”

Duncan tried to keep his expression impassive, but even if he couldn’t, the judge wouldn’t have noticed. He was submerged in his recollections.

“It was other things,” he said. “Classic signs. Telephone calls she pretended were wrong numbers. Rushing in late for meals without having a good excuse for her lateness. Time unaccounted for.”

“Sounds like an affair to me.” Duncan was perversely glad to cast doubt on Cato Laird’s confidence in his wife’s sexual appetite for him.

“I thought so, too. It got so that the thought of her in bed with another man dominated my mind. It’s all I could think about. If it was true, I had to know it, and I had to know who he was.”

“So you retained the services of Meyer Napoli.”

“Which indicates the degree of my desperation. I refused to go to his office. We met late one evening at a driving range. I practiced my swing while he asked pertinent questions. Did I know who her lover was? How long had the affair been going on?”

He shook his head with disgust. “I couldn’t believe I was discussing my wife with a man of his caliber. His phraseology, the vulgar terms he used, I couldn’t even apply to Elise. It all seemed so wrong, I started to call the whole thing off right then.

“But,” he continued with a sigh, “I’d gone that far, and not knowing was making me miserable. So I gave him the required advance on his fee, and left. That’s the last time I ever saw him.”

Duncan had been following the story, practically anticipating every word the judge was going to say before he said it. It was a familiar story that he’d heard many times over the course of his career. Passion led to possessiveness and jealousy, which spawned all sorts of mayhem, and frequently murder.

But the judge’s last statement didn’t gibe with the rest of it. “The last time you ever saw him? Napoli didn’t come through?”

“No, he came through,” the judge said tightly.

“She was having an affair?”

“I don’t know.”

“Sorry, Judge. You’ve lost me.”

“ Napoli got back to me,” he explained. “He had followed Elise to several clandestine meetings. He identified the man. He had times and places. But…but I stopped him there. I didn’t want to hear any more. I didn’t want it confirmed to me that she was having an affair.”

“That’s not the usual reaction, Judge,” Duncan said slowly. “The husband may be the last to know, but he usually wants to know.”

“Knowing wouldn’t have made a difference in how much I loved her. I wouldn’t have left her.”

But would you want to kill her over it? Duncan thought. “So you never knew the details of those clandestine meetings?”

Looking pained, the judge shook his head. “No.”

“Did she ever know you’d found her out?”

“No. I didn’t want her to know I’d stooped so low as to have her spied on. I was ashamed of it. Besides, a few weeks after I dismissed Napoli, it ceased to matter.”

Duncan frowned with misapprehension. “She stopped seeing the guy?”

“In a manner of speaking.” After a beat, he said, “Elise’s rendezvous were with Coleman Greer.”


Even at midafternoon, the White Tie and Tails Club was as dark as midnight except for the strobes flashing on the girl dancing onstage, and the pink and blue neon stars that twinkled on the ceiling.

Well ahead of the Saturday night crowd that would pack the place after nightfall, a handful of customers were seated along the semicircular stage, nursing drinks and enjoying the dancer’s performance. Only one was whistling and rowdily applauding the act.

Savich occupied a booth at the rear of the club, far enough from the stage that he could tolerate the volume of the music. He was seated on the banquette against the wall, facing out into the room. He never left his back exposed.

He watched as a hostess in black leather bra and chaps escorted Elise through the maze of empty tables and chairs. When they reached the booth, he indicated that Elise sit down.

“Can I bring you anything, Mr. Savich?” the hostess asked.

He looked at Elise inquisitively. She shook her head. “Are you sure?” he asked. “Pardon my saying so, but you look a bit strung out, like you could use a drink.”

“No, thank you.”

He waved the hostess off. “We’re not to be disturbed.”

As she walked away, she put an extra jiggle into her bare buttocks. “She’s new. Trying to work her way up to dancer.” With a smile, he returned his attention to Elise. “I’m sorry you had to come all this way. Kenny said you sounded urgent.”

“Thank you for seeing me on such short notice.”

“Speaking of short notice, you haven’t given me much time, Elise. You must be in a bigger hurry than you indicated the other day.”

“I am.”

“Why? What’s happened?”

“Nothing. Nothing else. I was just anxious to hear back from you.”

He knew she was lying, but he let it pass. He rather enjoyed her vain effort to hide from him that a new development had upset her. Otherwise she wouldn’t have called him on a Saturday afternoon, sounding “positively distraught,” according to Kenny. She’d been so eager to see him, she had agreed to join him at the topless club where they’d first met. It was miles-and light-years-away from her home, her country club, her present life as Mrs. Cato Laird.

“How does it feel to be back in the White Tie and Tails?”

She took a cursory look around. “It seems like a long time ago since I worked here.”

“You’re still missed.”

“I seriously doubt that. I’ve seen the new talent.”

“But some girls leave a lasting impression.” He let the words hover there between them for several moments. Then he leaned back against the padded banquette and reached for his gold cigarette case and lighter.

“Savich, were you able to-”

“Hatcher.”

She flinched with surprise. Possibly with something else. “What about him?”

He took his time lighting his cigarette. “Is he still the detective on the case?”

“As of an hour ago.”

“Duncan Hatcher, the homicide detective,” he said. “Why does he continue to investigate the shooting?”

“He said there were loose ends that needed clearing up before he could close the case.”

“And you believed that?” he asked, disdainful of her naivete. “He’s digging, Elise. He’s trying to find fault with your self-defense story.”

“He’s talking to us, that’s all.”

“You and your husband?”

“He’s talking privately with Cato right now.”

“Why privately?”

She took a deep breath, exhaled it along with the words “I don’t know.”

“Hmm. So that’s what got you spooked.”

“I’m not spooked.”

Her short tone caused him to arch an eyebrow, reminding her that she had petitioned his help, and that she wasn’t speaking to him with the deference that a petitioner should. It worked. She backed down.

“Were you able to do what I asked?” she said.

He blew a puff of smoke toward the ceiling. It swirled in the glow of the pink and blue neon stars. “Tell me, Elise, what do you think of Duncan Hatcher?”

“He’s tough, just as you warned me he would be.”

Lowering his voice, he said, “Maybe a more interesting question would be to ask what Detective Hatcher thinks of you, sweet Elise?”

“He thinks I’m a liar.”

“Really?” Fixing his steady blue gaze on her, he idly stroked his cheek. “Are you?”

“No.”

“Then you’ve got nothing to be afraid of.”

“I’m afraid Detective Hatcher will continue to think I’m a liar.”

“Change his mind,” he said simply.

“I’ve tried. He didn’t believe me.”

“That doesn’t surprise me. He can be charming. Or so I’ve heard. But under those rough-and-tumble Southern-boy, tawny good looks, he’s all cop. A fucking cop,” he said, letting his enmity toward Hatcher show.

“He won’t close your case as long as there’s one iota of doubt in his mind that it was self-defense. Hear me well, Elise. He’ll leave no stone unturned. And he would delight in finding something nasty beneath one. There’s bad blood between him and your husband.”

“I know about that. Most recently they clashed over your mistrial.”

“Yes, and for that, Hatcher would enjoy embarrassing you and the judge. Publicly if he can. But that’s nothing compared to the plans he has for me. He’s a man with a mission. He never forgets, and he never gives up.”

“I sense that about him.”

“You’re in a dangerous spot, Elise.”

She pulled her lower lip through her teeth. “He doesn’t have any evidence to disprove self-defense.”

“But Hatcher has been known to build cases out of virtually nothing, and, with the exception of my recent trial, he gets convictions and they stick despite appeals.” Sounding almost mystified, he said, “The man actually believes in what he’s doing. Right versus wrong. Good versus evil. He’s a crusader. True blue. Seemingly incorruptible.”

Snagged by his own words, he thought, Seemingly incorruptible.

Through the haze of cigarette smoke, he studied his guest. She really was a lovely girl. Classiness and sexiness in one stunning package. A tantalizing combination. Which even a crusader would find hard to resist.

The smile originated with his thoughts and spread slowly across his face. “Sweet Elise,” he said, his voice dripping honey, “let’s talk about this favor you asked of me. You’ll be pleased to know I’ve already granted it.”

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