"Thank you, Manolo. And do you recall if Mr. and Mrs. Calder went out that evening?"
Manolo looked thoughtful. "Yes, they went to Mr. Regenstein's home for dinner. I drove them; the chauffeur was on vacation."
"Was it a black tie dinner?"
"Yes, sir; Mr. Calder was dressed in a dinner suit."
"And do you remember what jewelry Mrs. Calder wore?"
"She wore diamonds," he said. "She usually does, when it's a black tie event."
"Thank you, Manolo; I should be back in a couple of hours."
"Will you be dining here, then?"
"Yes, I think I will," Stone said.
"I'll tell cook."
"Something simple, please; a steak will be fine."
"Of course."
Stone helped Mrs. Carter and Peter into the van, then got into his own car. They made it out the back way undetected.
Chapter 10
Stone saw Mrs. Carter and Peter off on the Centurion jet, then returned to the Bel-Air, checked out, left his rent-a-car with the parking attendant, and took a cab back to the Calder residence. He had thought of returning through the rear entrance, but he didn't want a cab driver to know about that, so he called Manolo and asked him to be ready to open the front gate. There was only a single television van at the gate when he arrived, and the occupants took an immediate interest in him, but before they could reach the cab with a camera, he was safely inside. Before he got out of the cab, he handed the driver a hundred-dollar bill. "That's for not talking t
o the TV people about who you delivered here," he said.
"Thank you, sir," the man said, "but I don't know who you are, anyway."
"Just don't stop when you go out the gate."
Manolo and a maid took Stone's bags through the central hallway of the house, out the back, and around the pool to the guest house. Stone thought the little house was even nicer than the suite at the Bel-Air. While the maid unpacked for him and pressed his clothes, Stone walked back into the house with Manolo.
"You said you wished to speak with me, Mr. Barrington?"
"Yes, Manolo; it's important that I know everything that happened here on Saturday night. Please tell me what you saw and heard."
"I was in my quarters, a little cottage out behind the kitchen entrance, when I heard a noise."
"How would you characterize the noise?"
"A bang. I didn't react at first, but I was curious, so I left my quarters, entered the house through the kitchen door and walked into the central hall." He led the way into the house.
"Which door did you come through?" Stone asked.
"That one," Manolo replied, pointing to a door down the hall.
"And what did you see and hear?"
"I saw Mr. Calder lying right there," he said. "He was lying… he…"
"Can you show me?"
"Yessir." Manolo walked to the spot and lay down on his side, then rolled pardy on to his belly. "Like this," he said. "Can I get up, now?"