it?â
âYou had contact with Melissa during the time of the trials?â
She shrugged. âA phone call now and then.â
âWhen was the last time you saw or heard from her?â
âDay before she left for South America.â
âIn August?â
She nodded.
I asked, âYou saw her or you talked to her?â
âTalked to her.â
âWhat was her mood like?â
âAngry. Furious. Who could blame her? The courtâd just told her she had to let Roy see Winona. Unsupervised visitation. Which was the last bloody thing in the world she wanted.â
âShe went off to El Salvador anyway.â
âThe tripâd been arranged for months. Melissa took all that charity business very seriously. Central America. Starving refugees. Trying to save the world.â She shrugged. âShe shouldâve spent more time trying to save herself.â
âDid she suggest to you then that she might disappear when she came back?â
âNo,â she said. Slowly, casually, she crossed her long legs. âJust like I told everyone else.â
I thought she was lying. I couldâve been wrongâI often amâbut behind the overly casual movement of her legs I sensed a sudden concealed tenseness, a closing off.
âWho else asked?â I said.
âWho didnât? Roy. The police. That silly little detective Roy sent over. The group she was involved with, Sanctuary. Even the FBI. Twice.â
âAn agent named Stamworth?â
She nodded. âThe second time. A week or two ago. He was a long cool drink of water.â She smiled. âOr at least he thought he was. I wasnât thirsty at the time.â Her glance slid up and down my frame again, as though she were suggesting that her thirst might have increased since then.
âStamworth talked to you recently? When, exactly?â
She shrugged. âThe end of September sometime. I donât remember the exact day.â
Why had Stamworth been asking about Melissa in September? âWhat did he want?â
She frowned slightly. âSomething to do with illegal aliens. I didnât pay much attention. I didnât care much for Stamworth. He was a jerk.â
âIs Sanctuary involved with the movement of illegal aliens?â
âTheyâre a bit too chic for that.â She shrugged. âBut I really wouldnât know. I donât pay much attention to do-gooders, either.â She smiled. âItâs not my style, doing good.â
I showed her my own smile in return, the neutral one. âDid Melissa contact you when she came back to Los Angeles?â
âNo.â Once again, I thought she was lying.
âHow did you learn sheâd disappeared?â
âRoy called me and asked me if Iâd seen her. The police talked to me later. Then the rest of them. Itâs been a damn procession.â
âDid she contact you at any time afterward?â
âNo.â
âNo calls, no letters? No postcards?â
âI got a card she sent me from El Salvador. A few days after she came back. Itâd been delayed in the mail, obviously. From some town called Santa Isabel. Just your basic postcard. Hello, how are you, see you soon.â
âNothing since?â
âNo.â
âDoes the phrase â The flower in the desert lives â mean anything to you?â
From her reaction, I could understand why her acting career had never gotten much past the giant bugs. She concentrated, frowning, for a beat too long before she shook her head and told me, âNo.â
And a good director wouldâve told her not to pause, as she did, before she asked me, âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â
âI was hoping youâd know.â
She shook her head. âNo. Doesnât mean anything to me.â
âRoy Alonzo claims that Melissa instigated the sexual abuse charge because she was jealous of the woman Roy was
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