I looked back at Lily. "What had she called about?" I asked. "Or did you call her?"
"I called her myself when we got in," she said. "We got back here a little later than we thought and Leonard didn't want her to worry."
"And she sounded all right when you talked to her?"
Lily nodded. "She sounded fine. She sounded just like she always did. Leonard talked to her for a bit and then I got back on with her and we were just winding down when she said there was someone at the door and she had to go see who it was. I was going to offer to stay on the line, but we were done anyway so I just said good-bye and hung up."
Leonard pulled a handkerchief out of his pants pocket and pressed it to his eyes. His hands had begun to shake badly and there was a tremor in his voice. "I don't even know what her last moments were like. Police said the guy must have hit her square in the face with a baseball bat, something that size. She must have been terrified-"
He broke off.
I could feel myself squirm, but I didn't say anything. What actually occurred to me, as tacky as it sounds, is that a baseball bat in the face doesn't leave time to feel much of anything. Crack! You're gone. No terror, no pain. Just lights out, home run.
Lily reached over and place her hand on his. "They were married twenty-two years."
"Good years too," he said, his tone almost argumentative. "We never went to bed mad. That was a rule we made early. Anytime we had a quarrel, we got it settled. She was a fine woman. Smarter than me and I'm not ashamed to admit it."
Tears glittered in his eyes, but I felt oddly removed, like the only sober person at a party full of drunks.
"Did the police mention any possibility of witnesses? Someone who might have seen or heard something that night?"
He shook his head, mopping at his eyes. "No. I don't think so. I never heard that."
"Possibly someone in the building next door?" I suggested. "Or someone passing by? I understand you've got people across the street from you too. You'd think someone would have noticed something."
He blew his nose, recovering his composure. "I don't think so. Police never said anything to us."
"Well, I've taken up enough of your time and I'm sorry I've caused you so much distress. I'd like to go through the house and assess the fire damage if you don't mind. One of our adjusters has already been through, but I'll need to see for myself so I can make my report."
He nodded. "My neighbor has a key. Orris Snyder right next door. You go knock on his door and tell him I said it was all right."
I got up and held my hand out to him. "Thanks for talking to me."
Leonard got to his feet automatically and shook my hand. His grip was solid, his flesh almost feverishly hot.
"By the way," I said as if it had just occurred to me, "have you heard from Elaine Boldt lately?"
He focused on me, apparently perplexed by the reference.
"Elaine? No, why?"
"I was trying to get in touch with her on another matter and I realized she lived in that condominium right next door," I replied with ease. "Someone mentioned that she was a friend of yours."
"That's right. We used to play bridge together before Marty died. I haven't talked to her for months. She's usually in Florida this time of year, I believe."
"Oh, that's right. I think somebody else mentioned that. Well, maybe she'll call when she gets back," I said. "Thanks again."
By the time I got back out to my car again, both my armpits were ringed with sweat.
Chapter 10
It was now nearly three o'clock and I was feeling frazzled. I'd been up since two A.M. with just a brief time-out for sleep at dawn before the long-distance call from Mrs. Ochsner had wakened me. I couldn't face the office again, so I headed for my apartment and changed into my running clothes. I use the word apartment here in its loosest sense. Actually I live in a converted one-car garage, maybe fifteen feet square, tricked out as living room, bedroom, kitchen, bathroom, closet, and laundry facility. I've always liked living in small spaces. For months as a child, just after my parents were killed, I spent my spare time in a cardboard box that I filled with pillows and pretended was a sailing vessel on its way to some new land. It doesn't take an analyst to interpret this excursion on my part, but it's carried over into my adult life, manifesting itself now in all sorts of things. I drive small cars and I favor "littleness" in any form, so this place suits me exactly. For two hundred dollars a month I have everything I want, including a debonair eighty-one-year-old landlord named Henry Pitts.