"She's married to one of Dow's business associates?"
"Joel Glazer, that's right. How do you know him?"
"I don't. I know her, or I did back when she was married to someone else."
"She couldn't be too bright. Fiona's milking her for everything she's worth."
"What about Dow's daughters? What's your relationship to them?"
Crystal shrugged that one off. "They're all right. They don't know the half of what goes on. They probably hate me, but at least they're too polite to say so. They're usually busy sucking up to their dad. I'm sure they're worried he'll die and leave all his money to Griffith and me, which I can understand. I'd worry about the same thing if I were in their shoes."
She picked up a butter knife and cut into a wedge of Brie. She spread the soft cheese on a cracker, which she held out to me. I took it, watching while she made a second for herself, popped it in her mouth, and chewed. "Anyway, with Dow gone, it doesn't seem important. Whatever quarrel I have with Fiona is immaterial."
"You have any idea where he is?"
"I wish. That's all I've really thought about for the past nine weeks."
"Do you believe he's alive?"
"No, not really, but I can't be sure. If I knew he was dead, at least I could make my peace with it and get on with life."
"The police detective mentioned money missing. He says close to thirty thousand dollars had been pulled from his savings over a period of the past two years."
"So I heard. I didn't know anything about that until they brought it to my attention. I know he kept a large sum of money somewhere, but he never said anything else about it. Apparently, the statements for that account were being forwarded to a post office box that I used to keep. Dowan asked about it a couple of months ago and I told him it'd been canceled. Now it looks like he was paying to keep it open all this time."
"I wonder why he asked you when he already had the answer."
Crystal shrugged. "Maybe he was wondering how much I knew."
"Why would he need that kind of cash?"
"I have no idea. He used credit cards for everything."
"Could it be extortion?"
"For what?"
"That's what I'm asking. Any ideas about that?"
"You think he's being blackmailed? That's ridiculous. How so?"
"Isn't it possible?"
She stared at me briefly and then shook her head, apparently drawing a blank. "You'd think a blackmailer would be interested in a lump sum, not a piddling three bills a week."
"Maybe it seemed more acceptable that way. It's one thing to demand a large sum of cash. It's something else again if someone asks for help making ends meet."
"I'm sure he'd have told me if someone were extorting money. Dow told me everything."
"As far as you know."
She blinked. "Well, yes."
"Besides, it might have involved you."
"In what way?"
He might have paid the hush money in your behalf, as protection." I don't think so." I could have sworn her cheeks tinted, but in the fading light it was difficult to tell. Her hand certainly didn't tremble as she raised the glass to her lips. She set her wineglass on the deck and pressed her flattened hands between her knees as though to warm them.
I changed tactics, not wanting her to disconnect from the conversation. "Would you be willing to go back and talk about what it's been like for you the past nine weeks?"
She let out a breath. "It's been awful. Horrendous. At this point I'm numb, but the first two or three days, I was running on pure adrenaline and it really wore me down. The house was teeming with people-my friends, Dow's daughters, his friends and colleagues. I didn't want to see anyone, but I couldn't refuse. I didn't have enough energy to resist, so they swarmed right over me. I was barely holding on. All I wanted to do was sit and stare at the phone, pace to the door and back, scream, or get drunk. For days I'd get in the car and drive between the clinic and home, checking every possible route. I'd find myself on the road and then I'd realize how dumb it was. Dow could be anywhere and the chances of my spotting him were astronomically low."
"Was there anything unusual about the day he disappeared? Any behavior-anything he said-that seems different in retrospect?"
Crystal shook her head. "It was like any other Friday. He was looking forward to the weekend. Saturday, he was playing in a tennis tournament at the country club. Nothing special, but he enjoyed it. Saturday we were going out to dinner with friends- this was a couple who'd recently moved here from Colorado, where they owned some restaurants."