âThis is an initial investigation into the death of Ricardo Paul Arias.' Monk's voice was methodical; each word stood alone. âIt is October twenty-seventh at seven-thirty-five p.m. I am Inspector Charles Monk; with me is Inspector Dennis Lynch. The witness is Teresa Peralta, and we are at the home of Christopher Paget, who is also present.' Monk turned to Paget with a bland expression. âAre you representing Ms Peralta?'
It was a game, Paget knew. âNo,' he said evenly. âI was just here with Ms Peralta when you happened to show up. This is, as you point out, where I live.'
Monk looked at him, then turned to Terri as if Paget were not there. He skipped the Miranda warnings; Terri was not in custody, and he could ask whatever he wanted. Within moments, Monk had Tern's age, her work and home addresses and telephone numbers, and enough background information for him to find her at will, subpoena her bank records, and interview her neighbors for the last five years. Then he turned to the subject of Richie.
âWere you related to Ricardo Arias?'
The question seemed to surprise her. âI was his wife,' she answered simply. âFor over six years.'
âDo you have children?'
âA daughter. Elena Rosa.'
âAnd she is how old?'
âSix.' Tern's voice was flat. âAlso.'
Monk watched her. âAt the time of Mr Arias's death, were you still living with him?'
âNo.' Quite deliberately, it seemed, Terri did not look at Paget. âWe were separated.'
âFor how long?'
Terri still gazed at Monk. âSince the end of the Carelli trial. However long that's been.'
Paget suppressed a smile; he was certain that Monk remembered the date precisely. Calmly, Monk asked, âAnd where did Elena live? Before your husband died, that is.'
âRichie had preponderant custody.' Terri's voice had the first tinge of wariness. âYou've already interviewed my mother. So you know all this.'
Monk did not respond. âWas there some question about custody?' he asked.
â
I
had some questions.' Terri flicked her bangs. âI didn't think that Richie should raise her.'
Monk leaned back, hands folded in his lap. The room seemed quieter now. âWhy not?'
Terri breathed audibly, as if thinking about Richie made her weary. âHe had emotional problems,' she said at last. âI don't think he was stable.'
âDid you ever go to a counselor? Seek help of some kind?'
Terri hesitated. âNo.'
Monk glanced at Paget. âWhy not?'
Terri seemed to draw inward; her gaze became self-questioning. âFor years,' she said at last, âI told myself that Richie was just unusual. At the end, when I saw him more clearly, I thought that nothing would help.'
Monk caught Lynch's eye. In a sympathetic voice, Lynch asked, âWhat did you think was wrong with him, Terri?'
âPeople weren't
real
to him.' As if hearing Paget's silent warning, she caught herself, and the vehemence left her voice. âHowever he needed someone to be or feel, that's what he imagined they were.'
Lynch nodded his encouragement. âDid he go to a psychiatrist, anyone like that?'
âNo.' Terri gazed down. âRichie thought he was fine.'
Lynch paused, blue eyes narrowing slightly, as if sorting something out.
âWas
he going to a psychiatrist?' Paget asked.
Monk turned to Lynch; Lynch saw this, faced Paget, and shrugged. No one answered.
âDid
you
ever consult a mental health professional?' Monk asked Terri.
Terri glanced at Paget. âOnly to talk about Elena.'
âConcerning what?'
Terri hesitated; Paget watched the thought of Carlo cross her face, and then she answered simply, âEmotional problems.'
âOf what kind?'
Terri folded her hands. âSince the separation,' she said slowly, âElena has seemed troubled. I thought it was getting worse.'
Monk leaned forward. âDid Mr Arias agree?'
For an instant, Terri looked cornered: as if thinking along with her, Paget imagined the police interviewing Alec Keene and combing through the files of Terri's divorce case. He was glad that Carlo was at a friend's tonight.
âI don't know whether he agreed or not,' Terri said coolly.
âThere wasn't much about Elena we did agree on.' It was a calculated answer, Paget thought: by conceding the depth of their disagreement, Terri avoided the particulars and thus kept the focus off Paget and Carlo. Yet Monk, he suddenly realized, must have impounded Richie's papers. He watched the same thought come to Terri; she composed herself, waiting for the next question.
But Monk dropped the subject abruptly. âDid your husband own a gun?' he asked.
Terri looked down. She shook her head.
âIs that a “no”?' Monk said. âThe tape doesn't pick up shakes of the head.'
Terri raised her eyes. âIt was a “no.”'
âDid he have any interest in guns?' Here Monk paused. âBecause the gun we found with him was quite unusual.'
âHow so?' Paget asked.
Monk kept looking at Terri. âIt was a thirty-two-caliber Smith and Wesson safety model. Five cylinders.' His voice grew more deliberate. âThe last one was made in 1909, Ms Peralta. It's practically a collector's item.'
Terri looked puzzled. âRichie wasn't a collector,' she said.
âI don't know what he knew about guns. If anything.'
Monk regarded her. âDo
you
own a gun?'
âNo.' Her voice was emphatic. âAnd if I'd known Richie had one, I'd have asked him to get rid of it.'
âBecause you thought he was unstable?'
âBecause guns
kill
people. Including children.'
Monk sat back. Softly, he asked, âDo you think Richie killed himself?'
Terri rested her head on the back of the couch, staring up at the ceiling. Her face looked drawn. âI can't imagine
anyone
killing himself,' she said at last. âBut people do. So I don't know how to answer that.'
âWhat about Richie?'
Terri still watched the ceiling. âI'm not sure I understood him. Now I'm less sure than ever. But there was something wrong with him.' She paused. âToward the end, he seemed angry and more desperate. His mood swings were wider.'
âDo you know why?'
Terri lowered her eyes to him. âHe had lost me,' she said simply. âAnd he had very little money.'
âWas he employed?'
âNo.' Tern's voice was cool again. âRichie didn't like working for people. He liked it better when I worked for him.'
âDid he ever ask you for money?'
Terri hesitated. Paget saw her flash on the fifty thousand dollars Richie had wanted her to extort from him, to protect Carlo and Paget himself.
âI
gave
him money,' Terri answered. âNearly twenty-three hundred a month. Much of that was child support.'
Monk adjusted his glass. âAre you sorry he's dead?'
His tone was one of mild inquiry. But Lynch had started to fidget; the gestures had the suppressed nervousness of a thwarted smoker. Terri gave them a look that combined tolerance with exhaustion.
âNot for me,' she said. âBut for Elena, yes.'
âHow is she?'
Terri gave a shrug of helplessness, as if Elena's reaction defied easy description. âYou'd have to know her,' she said tiredly. âDuring the separation, Elena imagined she was responsible for him. So if Richie's dead now, in Elena's mind it must be her fault. As if she could have stopped this.'
The words lingered in the room. The lights from the lamp looked pallid now; the large window behind Terri was a black rectangle. It felt too quiet.
Monk leaned forward. âElena was expecting to see him, wasn't she?'
âYes. On Sunday evening.'
âAnd when did you first know that he hadn't come for her?'
âWhen I called my mother from Venice.' Terri glanced at Paget. âIt was Tuesday, I think. At night.'
âDid you consider having the police check on him?'
Terri was silent for a moment. âElena was safe at my mother's.' She glanced at Paget. âThat was all I cared about, really.'
âDid you discuss that with your mother â the fact that he was missing?'
âYes. A few days later. I told her not to call.'
Monk let the answer hang there for a while. His eyes did not leave her face now. âHad he ever done that before? Not show up?'
Terri gave him a level gaze. âI was in a custody fight,' she said at length. âIf Richie didn't show, I wasn't going to force him to. I never thought he'd killed himself.'
Monk raised his head a little. âWhen,' he asked slowly, âwas the last time you spoke with him?'
Terri glanced quickly at Paget. âThe night before I left for Italy. By telephone.'
Paget was surprised; Terri had not told him this. He wanted to stop the interview. But he could not, and now Terri would not look at him.
âThat reminds me,' he said to Monk. âDid you check his answering machine? When Terri tried to call from Italy, it wasn't on.'
Monk turned, annoyed at the interruption. âSomeone turned it off,' he said tersely. âSeems like he erased the tape.'
He faced Terri again. âWhat time did you call him? The night before you left, that is.'
Terri was regarding Paget; she seemed to catch herself and then gave a small shrug. âI don't know. Maybe nine or so. It wasn't for long.'
Paget felt himself tense. âWhat did you talk about?' Monk asked.
Terri stared at the tape recorder. âI'd been packing. Somehow, it made me think of my honeymoon, how much hope I'd had and how sad things were now.' She looked up. âSo I called to ask if I could see him.'
Paget felt a surge of anger: this man had threatened to destroy Carlo and smear them all. Even now, that Terri had called him felt like a betrayal.
âWhy did you want to see him?' Monk asked.
Terri looked at Paget again. âTo beg him,' she said softly. âTo ask him for Elena. To see if there was something I could give him in return.'
âSuch as?'
âMoney.' She shook her head, as if at her own foolishness. âI knew it was hopeless, even then. People like Richie never stay bought.'
Why, Paget asked her silently, didn't you tell me?
âWhat did he say?' Monk asked.
Terri turned from Paget. âThat he had an “appointment” that night.'
Paget watched her, edgy. âDid he say who with?' Monk asked.
Terri's expression was one of distaste. âNo. But I thought it must be a woman â “appointment” had a sniggering sound.' Terri shrugged again. âMaybe there was no one. That would be like him: trying to impress me, or to string me out till I got desperate.'
Monk folded his hands. âDid he sound like someone about to kill himself?'
âNo.' Once more, Terri seemed to stop herself. âBut I'm not sure, really. Bravado was something he was good at â Richie needed people to think he was on top.'
Monk was still for a time. âWhat,' he asked then, âdid you do after you hung up?'
âPacked. Then I went to bed.'
âAlone?'
Terri nodded. âAlone.'
âDid anyone see you that evening?'
Terri glanced at Paget. âOnly my mother and Elena, when I dropped her off. That was around seven.'
âDid you talk to anyone else?'
Now Terri focused on Monk. âJust Chris.'
Monk inclined his head. âDo you mean Christopher Paget?'
âYes.'
âAnd when was that?'
âI don't know.' Terri hesitated. âBefore I called Richie.'
âAnd did Mr Paget call your or did you call him?'
âHe called me.'
âConcerning what?'
Terri paused again. âOur arrangements. We decided he'd pick me up the next morning.'
âAnd that was all?'
Terri glanced at Paget's hand. He raised it slightly, the bruise and swelling had vanished. âThat's all I remember,' she said.
Monk touched his chin. âYour flight,' he said. âWhen did it leave?'
âVery early. Eight o'clock, I think.'
âYou didn't go to Mr Paget's the night before?'
âNo.'
âOr to see Mr Arias?'
Terri stared at him. âNo,' she answered finally.
Monk stood, stretching himself, taking in the art on the walls with a slow sweep of the head. Paget found the gesture oddly territorial, as if Monk had appropriated his library. âDid you ever visit Mr Arias's apartment?'
Terri nodded. âI found it for him.'
âWere you there often?'
âNot often. Sometimes. When I dropped off Elena.'
âWhen was the last time you were there?'
Terri seemed to think. âThe Sunday before I left. Again, taking Elena back.'
âDid you go inside?'
Terri's eyes narrowed. âI really can't remember. But I think so.'
Monk shoved his hands into his pockets. âMr Arias had a computer, didn't he?'
âYes.' Her tone was flat again. âI'm still paying for it.'
âWhat did he use it for?'
âEverything â addresses, recipes, checkbook, business plans. You name it.'
âLetters?'
Terri looked askance at him. âLetters too, I think. Sure.'