Joshua shuddered.
He folded the letter, returned it to his coat pocket.
For the first time, he realized how gloomy these rooms were–overstuffed with furniture and expensive ornaments, windows covered by heavy drapes, floors carpeted in dark colors. Suddenly, the place seemed far more isolated than Leo’s clifftop retreat.
A noise. In another room.
Joshua froze as he was walking around the desk. He waited, listened. “Imagination,” he said, trying to reassure himself.
He walked swiftly through the house to the front door, and he found that the noise had, indeed, been imaginary. He wasn’t attacked. Nevertheless, when he stepped outside, closed the door, and locked it, he sighed with relief.
In the car, on his way to his office in St. Helena, he thought of more questions. Who actually had died in Los Angeles last week–Frye or his look-alike? Which of them had been at the First Pacific United Bank on Thursday–the real man or the imitation? Until he knew the answer to that, how could he settle the estate? He had countless questions but damned few answers.
When he parked behind his office a few minutes later, he realized that he would have to give serious consideration to Mrs. Willis’s advice. Bruno Frye’s grave might have to be opened to determine exactly who was buried in it.
***
Tony and Hilary landed in Napa, rented a car, and arrived at the headquarters of the Napa County Sheriff’s Department by 4:20 Wednesday afternoon. The place was not somnolent like the county sheriff’s offices you saw on television. A couple of young deputies and a pair of industrious clerical workers were busy with files and paperwork.
The sheriff’s secretary-receptionist sat at a large metal desk, identified by a name plaque in front of her typewriter: MARSHA PELETRINO. She was a starched-looking woman with severe features, but her voice was soft, silky, and sexy. Likewise, her smile was far more pleasant and inviting than Hilary had expected.
When Marsha Peletrino opened the door between the reception area and Peter Laurenski’s private office and announced that Tony and Hilary wanted to see him, Laurenski knew immediately who they were, and he didn’t attempt to avoid them, as they thought he might. He came out of his office and awkwardly shook their hands. He seemed embarrassed. Clearly, he wasn’t looking forward to explaining why he had provided a phony alibi for Bruno Frye last Wednesday night, but in spite of his unconcealed discomfort, he invited Tony and Hilary in for a chat.
Laurenski was somewhat of a disappointment for Hilary. He was not the sloppy, potbellied, cigar-chewing, easy to hate, small town, good old boy type that she had expected, not the sort of countrified power monger who would lie to protect a wealthy local resident like Bruno Frye. Laurenski was in his thirties, tall, blond, clean-cut, articulate, friendly, and apparently dedicated to his job, a good lawman. There was kindness in his eyes and a surprising gentleness in his voice; in some ways he reminded her of Tony. The Sheriff’s Department’s offices were clean and Spartan rooms where a lot of work got done, and the people who labored there with Laurenski, the deputies and civilians alike, were not patronage cronies but bright and busy public servants. After only one or two minutes with the sheriff, she knew there was not going to be any simple answer to the Frye mystery, no obvious and easily-exposed conspiracy.
In the sheriff’s private office, she and Tony sat on a sturdy old railback bench that had been made comfortable with corduroy-covered foam pillows. Laurenski pulled up a chair and sat on it the wrong way, with his arms crossed on the backrest.
He disarmed Hilary and Tony by getting straight to the point and by being hard on himself.
“I’m afraid I’ve been less than professional about this whole thing,” he said. “I’ve been dodging your department’s phone calls.”
“That’s the reason we’re here.” Tony said.
“Is this an … official visit of some kind?” Laurenski asked, a bit puzzled.
“No,” Tony said. “I’m here as a private citizen, not a policeman.”
“We’ve had an extremely unusual and unsettling experience in the last couple of days,” Hilary said. “Incredible things have happened, and we hope you’ll have an explanation for them.”