The sunlight, intermittent for the last hour, was now largely blocked by incoming clouds which had crowded out blue sky, leaving only an occasional patch, like a hole in a blanket. The air was beginning to cool rapidly, a damp breeze worrying at women's hems. I looked toward the ocean and spotted that silent veil of gray that betokens rain already falling some miles out. I quickened my pace.
Once in my office again, I entered the new information in the file I'd opened. I was just on the verge of closing up for the day when I heard a tap at the door. I hesitated, then crossed to the door and peered out.
There was a woman standing in the corridor, late thirties, expressionless and pale.
"Can I help you?" I said.
"I'm Barbara Daggett."
Quickly, I prayed this wasn't wife number three. I tried the optimistic approach. "John Daggett's daughter?"
"Yes."
She was one of those icy blondes, with skin as finely textured as a percale bedsheet, tall, substantially built, with short coarse hair fanning straight back from her face. She had high cheekbones, a delicate brow, and her father's piercing gaze. Her right eye was green, her left eye blue. I'd seen a white cat like that once and it had had the same disconcerting effect. She was wearing a gray wool business suit and a prim, high-necked white blouse with a froth of lace at the throat. Her heels were a burgundy leather and matched her shoulder bag. She looked like an attorney or a stockbroker, someone accustomed to power.
"Come on in," I said, "I was trying to figure out how to get in touch with him. I take it your mother told you I stopped by."
I was making small talk. She wasn't having any of it. She sat down, turning those riveting eyes on me as I moved around to my side of the desk and took a seat. I thought of offering her coffee, but I really didn't want her to stay that long. Even the air around her seemed chilly and I didn't like the way she looked at me. I rocked back in my swivel chair. "What can I do for you?"
"I want to know why you're looking for my father."
I shrugged, underplaying it, sticking to the story I'd started with. "I'm not really. I'm looking for a friend of his."
"Why weren't we told Daddy was out of prison? My mother's in a state of collapse. We had to call the doctor and have her sedated."
"I'm sorry to hear that," I said.
Barbara Daggett crossed her legs and smoothed her skirt, her movements agitated. "Sorry? You don't know what this has done to her. She was just beginning to feel safe. Now we find out he's in town somewhere and she's very upset. I don't understand what's going on."
"Miss Daggett, I'm not a parole officer," I said. "I don't know when he got out or why nobody notified you. Your mother's problems didn't start yesterday."
A bit of color came to her cheeks. "That's true. Her problems started the day she married him. He's ruined her life. He's ruined life for all of us."
"Are you referring to his drinking?"
She brushed right over that. "I want to know where he's staying. I have to talk to him."
"At the moment, I have no idea where he is. If I find him, I'll tell him you're interested. That's the best I can do."
"My uncle tells me you saw him on Saturday."
"Only briefly."
"What was he doing in town?"
"We didn't discuss that," I said.
"But what did you talk about? What possible business could he have had with a private detective?"
I had no intention of giving her information, so I tried her technique and ignored the question.
I pulled a legal pad over and picked up a pen. "Is there a number where you can be reached?"
She opened her handbag and took out a business card which she passed across the desk to me. Her office address was three blocks away on State and her title indicated that she was chairman and chief executive officer of a company called FMS.
As if in response to a question, she said, "I develop financial management software systems for manufacturing firms. That's my office number. I'm not listed in the book. If you need to reach me at home, this is the number."
"Sounds interesting," I remarked. "What's your background?"
"I have a math and chemistry degree from Stanford and a double masters in computer sciences and engineering from USC."
I felt my brows lift appreciatively. I couldn't see any evidence that Daggett had ruined her life, but I kept the observation to myself. There was clearly more to Barbara Daggett than her professional status indicated. Maybe she was one of those women who succeeds in business and fails in relationships with men. As I'd been accused of that myself, I decided not to make a judgment. Where is it written that being part of a couple is a measure of anything?