in contempt.”
“I’m sorry, Bernie.”
“Just keep a lid on it,” I said. “She came out of a blackout, and she tried to make the guy stop, but she couldn’t, and then she went back into a blackout, and when she came to hours later he was gone, and so was a piece of jewelry Doc Mapes had given her.”
“The necklace,” Mapes said, and colored deeply when eyes turned toward him. I don’t think he meant to say anything.
“The necklace,” Marisol confirmed. “The beautiful ruby necklace you gave me, that I loved so much. I woke up and it was gone.”
“And what did you remember?”
“At first,” she said, “I hardly remembered anything. I remembered him buying me a drink, and I remembered waking up and…and trying to fight him off, to make him stop what he was doing. It was horrible.”
“And did your memory come back?”
I saw Wally lean forward, and I was afraid he was going to cite me for leading the witness. But he got himself in check.
“Parts of it,” she said. “I was so upset about the book of photographs, and I remember that I talked to him about it. I don’t know exactly what I said, but I told him things I should have kept to myself.” She frowned. “I don’t understand it. I didn’t have that much to drink. I never get like that, not on two drinks.”
“You were drugged,” I said.
“I thought maybe that’s what happened.”
“The man who drugged you,” I said, “and went home with you, and raped you, and stole your necklace. Do you know who he is?”
“I don’t know his name. I never saw him before that night, and I never saw him since.” She paused, and her timing was right on the money. “Until today, in this room.”
“Could you point him out?”
She got shakily to her feet, hesitated, touched her forefinger to her lower lip, trembled, and then thrust her hand dramatically in the direction of William Johnson. “Him,” she said. “He did it.”
You’d think the dumb son of a bitch would have seen it coming. After all, it was his MO, and I wouldn’t have been surprised if he’d tried to patent it. But he was at a distinct disadvantage, in that he knew for a fact he’d never seen the girl before. With her Northern hair and eyes and her complexion out of the warm South, she wasn’t someone he could have seen and forgotten, and he’d certainly remember her if he’d taken her home. He might not know where she was going with all of this, but there was no way she could be coming in his direction.
And here she was, sticking her little finger straight at him.
“No way, man. No fuckin’ way. I never saw this chick before in my life.”
“Really,” I said. “The bar’s called Parsifal’s. Do you know it?”
“I was there maybe once or twice.”
“Ever take a woman home?”
“Maybe. But not this broad. I told you, I never saw her.”
“Ever put something in a drink to improve your chances?”
“Hey, c’mon,” he said, and flexed some muscles. “You think I need any help?”
“Then you’re saying you didn’t slip Rohypnol to Marisol Maris?”
“Is that the chick’s name? No, I never slipped her nothing. Not what you just said, and not what she says I slipped her.”
“In fact you never saw her before.”
“Never.” He changed expressions, trying for sincere. “What happened to her’s horrible, but I had nothin’ to do with it. You got the wrong guy.”
There was a silence, and Sigrid waited a beat before picking up her cue. “Oh, William,” she said, exasperated. “You’re so full of shit it’s coming out your pores.”
He stared.
“I’ve seen you operate,” she said. “You’re quite the stud, showing off your muscles and chatting up the ladies. You buy them one drink and the next thing I know they’re out the door with you. I figured you had a hell of a line, or maybe you were oozing some kind of sex appeal that I couldn’t see. I noticed that some of them looked a little woozy on the way out, but I just assumed lust was interfering with their motor skills. It never occurred to me that you were feeding them Roofies.”
“This is crazy,” he said.
“I’ll say it is.” To me she said, “He hit on me a few nights ago. I brushed him off, or it would have been my turn to wake up sleeping in the wet spot with my Diamonique earrings nowhere to be found. You came in