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Chapter 11

WHEN THE HIGH-PITCHED WARNING BEEP SIGNALED THAT A main door of the house had been opened, Elise swiftly left her bedroom. She’d reached the top of the stairs when she heard the chirps indicating that the code was being entered. Cato was home.

He appeared in the foyer below her. She called his name. He looked up and saw her poised there at the top of the staircase. “Hello, Elise. You’re still awake. Why am I not surprised?” Rather than coming upstairs, he proceeded down the foyer, disappearing from her sight.

Her meeting with Savich had left her shaken. Meetings with Savich always did.

When she’d returned home, the house was empty. Mrs. Berry was off on Saturday evenings, so Elise hadn’t expected to find her there. But it surprised her that Cato wasn’t. As evening turned to night, she called his cell phone several times but got only his voice mail. He hadn’t responded to her messages.

It was uncharacteristic of him not to keep in touch. It was also a bad omen. She passed the entire evening and into the wee hours in a state of high anxiety, wondering what Duncan Hatcher had told her husband.

She quickly descended the staircase. “Cato?”

“In here.”

She followed the direction of his voice into the kitchen. As she entered, he turned to face her with a butcher knife in his hand. She looked from the gleaming blade to him. “What are you doing?”

“Making a sandwich.” He moved aside, allowing her to see the ham on the countertop, along with fixings for a sandwich. “Would you like one?”

“No, thank you. Wouldn’t you rather have breakfast? I could make-”

“This will do.” He turned back to carving slices off the ham.

“I’ve been calling your cell phone all night. Where have you been?”

“Didn’t you get the message?”

“No.”

“I asked the receptionist at the club to call and tell you that I’d been invited into a high-stakes poker game and that it would be late before I got home.”

He reached around her for the telephone, depressing the button that put it on speaker. The static dial tone indicated that no messages were waiting to be retrieved. “Hmm. That’s odd. She’s usually reliable.”

Elise doubted he’d ever made the request to the receptionist. If he’d wanted to assuage her concern, why hadn’t he just called her himself?

He built his sandwich and halved it with the butcher knife. “What time did you get home, Elise?”

“Around five, I think. After leaving you at the club, I got a call from the dress shop, telling me that my alterations were ready. I went to pick them up, did some shopping.”

That much was the truth. But before going to the boutique where she often shopped, she’d driven to the edge of town to the White Tie and Tails Club to meet Robert Savich.

He put the sandwich on a plate and carried it to the table in the breakfast nook. “Buy anything?”

“A pants suit and a cocktail dress.”

He licked a dollop of mayonnaise off his finger. “You can model them for me later.”

“I think you’ll approve.” She sat down across from him, studying his expression, trying to make eye contact, which he was avoiding. “You’ve never stayed out all night before. Not once since we’ve been married.”

He chewed a bite, blotted his mouth. “Not since we’ve been married have I had a day like yesterday.”

He took another bite, chewed, blotted his mouth again. And he still wouldn’t look at her. She was in an agony of suspense.

“My conversation with Duncan Hatcher was most upsetting.”

Her throat closed.

“Even Kurt the massage Nazi couldn’t work out the tension in my shoulders and back.” He took another bite.

“What did he say to upset you? What did you talk about?”

“Our relationship. Yours and mine, not mine and his,” he added, flashing a humorless smile.

“Our relationship is none of his business.”

Then he did look at her directly. “Maybe he thinks it is.”

“Why would he?”

“You tell me.”

“I’m sorry, Cato. I don’t know what you mean.”

“Twice now I’ve come upon you two with your heads together, lost in conversation. The night of the awards dinner. And again today at the club. I didn’t like it either time.”

“The night of the awards dinner, he was a stranger asking me for change. Today, when I left the powder room, he was in the hallway, looking for you.”

His dark eyes searched hers. “I wasn’t that hard to find today. And he could have asked a dozen other people for change that night. He’s deliberately putting himself in your path. You must sense why, Elise. You can’t be that naive.”

“You think Hatcher is interested in me romantically?”

He scoffed. “No romance about it. He’d love to sleep with you only to make a fool of me.”

Cato had stayed away all night out of pique and jealousy. She felt her lungs expanding with relief.

“That would be the ultimate payback for my putting him in jail, wouldn’t it?” he said. “To seduce my wife?”

Although Duncan Hatcher had said as much to her the night of the awards dinner, she smiled and shook her head. “You’re wrong, Cato. He has no interest in me outside his investigation.”

“What man could be immune to you?”

She smiled at the flattery.

“But what about you, Elise?”

“What about me?”

“What do you think of the detective?”

“You have to ask?” She placed her hand on his forearm where it rested on the table and squeezed it lightly. “Cato, since the night of the shooting, Detective Hatcher has done nothing but bully me. I dread the sight of him.”

His features relaxed. “I’m glad to hear that.” Pushing aside his plate, he reached across the table and stroked her cheek. “Let’s get in the pool.”

“Now? You just ate, and it’s nearly dawn. Aren’t you too tired to swim?”

“I’m wide awake. Apparently, so are you. And I didn’t say I wanted to swim.”

He took her hand and they walked outside together. She reached for the switch that turned on the pool light and the fountain in its center. He said, “No, leave them off.”

He stripped to the skin. It was evident that he wasn’t at all tired. He came to her, untied the belt of her robe, and pushed it off her, along with her slip-type nightgown. He ran his hands over her, possessively and with more aggressiveness than usual.

She responded as expected, but her mind was elsewhere. She was thinking of Duncan Hatcher. He hadn’t betrayed her to Cato. Did that mean he believed her? Even a little?

Cato took her hand and pulled her down the steps into the pool. He clasped her around the waist and waded in until she could no longer touch bottom. As her body floated against his, she noticed that here in the center of the pool, the water was deep and dark. Like secrets.

“ Duncan?”

He grunted a semblance of a response.

“That’s yours.”

“Hmm?” He lifted his head from the pillow and opened one eye.

“Your cell phone is ringing.”

“Oh. Thanks.” He rubbed sleep from his eyes with one hand and reached for his phone with the other. He flipped it open. “Yeah?”

“Guess who they hauled in last night and is still in a holding cell?”

“What time is it?” he grumbled, trying to pull the numbers of his alarm clock into focus.

“Gordon Ballew.”

“Who?” How was it that DeeDee didn’t sound groggy even on a Sunday morning?

“Gordie,” she exclaimed. “Gordie Ballew. One of Savich’s boys.”

“Got it.” With a groan, he rolled onto his back and sat up. The woman who’d been sleeping beside him was already up and across the room, gathering her clothing and pulling it on. “What did he do?”

“Who cares?” DeeDee said. “So long as we can get him in a bargaining mood. Meet you there.”

She hung up before he could say anything more. He returned his cell phone to the nightstand and swung his feet to the floor. “Sorry, but I’ve got to run. Work.”