Judging Time
their intrusion, but she couldn't attribute a meaning to the tension in his jaw. He looked as if he were about to, or just had, bitten off the end of his tongue. As men often did, Liberty concentrated on Sanchez, stared at him challengingly as if he did not want to lower himself by asking again what was the reason for their predawn visit.
    As she watched the set of Liberty's powerful clenched jaw that was so photogenic and had daunted so many opponents on the playing field, April flashed back to the story she'd heard several years ago of the middle-class man who claimed his wife had thrown herself from the fifteenth-floor window in their bedroom. Simple case. The husband gave a great performance, weeping, telling the detectives how the tragedy occurred—what the distraught woman had said, how she stormed out of the living room where he had been sitting reading the evening paper. Everything. Problem was it didn't add up. For one thing, there had been no sign of an evening paper. For another, the woman's makeup was carefully laid out on the dressing table, and only one of her eyes had been completed. The picture was of a woman interrupted in the middle of an activity. In addition, one of her slippers had snagged on the claw foot at the end of a leg on her dressing table. The other slipper was on her foot when she was found. When confronted with the question of the unfinished makeup and the snagged slipper, the man calmly confessed that after thirty years of his wife's boring conversation he couldn't face another dinner with her and threw her out the window as she was getting ready to go out.
    "I'm sorry to have to bring you bad news," Mike said now.
    Liberty swallowed. "What kind of bad news?"
    Mike glanced at April.
    Liberty closed his eyes. "Is it my mother?"
    "It's two people," Mike said slowly.
    The man looked hostile. "Who?"
    "Your wife. And the man who was with her."
    "That's not possible. You're mistaken."
    "I'm sorry, sir," April said. "Would you like to sit down?"
    "No." Liberty spun around as if there were a sound at his front door. "My wife's fine. She's on her way."
    He stared at the door, waiting for it to open. Nothing. The tan gallery was dark and silent.
    Mike and April watched him watching for an elevator that wasn't going to come.
    "I'm sure you've made a mistake. They're fine. I know they are," he said again, concentrating on the front door.
    Mike shook his head. "I'm sorry, sir."
    Suddenly Liberty's face contorted. He put his hands to his forehead and gripped it with both huge paws, shielding his eyes.
    "Do you want me to get you something?" April murmured.
    "I get migraines. My doctors say they come from an old football injury. But I've always had them."
    Mike glanced at April.
    Liberty's hands dropped to his sides. "I have to call the restaurant. My wife is there."
    "It's four in the morning," Mike said. "There's no one there."
    "Four?" Liberty lifted his arm to check his watch. He wasn't wearing it. He frowned. "I just spoke to her. Four in the mornings—? I must have fallen asleep." He stared at them. "What happened?"
    "We're not sure yet. Mr. Petersen may have had a heart attack."
    "A heart attack?" Liberty cocked the head he said was hurting him. "A heart attack? Where's Merrill? Did she go to the hospital with him?"
    "No, she was assaulted in front of the restaurant."
    "What?" Sweat glistened on his forehead. His two-hundred-pound physique still looked like solid muscle. He towered over them. April would not like to fight him in a dark alley.
    "She was struck as she left the restaurant," April said, taking up the slack.
    "Struck? That just can't be true—"' Finally Liberty sat down.
    Mike and April remained standing. After a second the big man got up again. "Tor had a heart attack and my wife was attacked? How could such a thing happen? Where were they? I—"
    "They were leaving the restaurant. Somebody attacked your wife in the yard. She's dead. I'm sorry," April said softly.
    "Dead—?" Liberty

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