"I saw Mr. Calder lying on the floor in the hall, and blood was coming out of his head."
"What else did you see?"
"I saw the gun on the floor beside Mr. Calder."
"
What kind of gun?"
"An automatic; I don't know what kind."
"What color?"
"Silver."
"What else did you see?"
"I saw a woman running down the hall."
Stone's stomach suddenly felt hollow, and he couldn't speak.
Cordova went on. "She was wearing one of them robes made out of that towel stuff." He rubbed his fingers together.
"Terrycloth?"
"Yeah. It had this…" He moved his hands around his head.
"Hood?"
"Yeah, a hood. She was barefoot; I don't think she had nothing on, except the robe."
"Could you see her body?"
"No, just her feet."
"Did you see her face?" Stone held his breath.
"No."
Stone let out the breath.
"But it was Mrs. Calder."
Stone's stomach flip-flopped. "If you didn't see her face, how do you know it was Mrs. Calder?"
"C'mon, man, who else would it be, naked and in a robe in the Calders' house?"
"But you didn't see her face."
"No, but it was her. Same size and everything; same ass, you know?"
"Which way was she running?"
"Away from me-that's all I know, man; I got the hell out of there, you know? I was over that fence and out of there in a big hurry."
Stone took him through it again, made him repeat every statement, but nothing changed. Finally, there was nothing else to ask. He shelled out another five hundred, and Cordova put it in his pocket.
"You want to make another three hundred?" Stone asked. Sure.