Honey? Are you about done in there?’ Rickard used the tip of his knife to push open the door into the ladies’ restroom. He recalled his admonishment of the man on his apartment roof doing something similar with his gun, but this time it was different. Alisha was no threat to him, not in a physical sense. He was in a short passage that led from the dining area, three doors all on the right-hand side. The first was the men’s room, the second the ladies’. The final door had proved to be a janitors’ closet. No exit. The air smelled of bleach and there was a sickly underlying aroma of urine and perfumed tissue paper. Peering into the alien territory of a ladies’ room, he checked out the porcelain sinks, pot-pourri in little bowls on a shelf, two stalls with the doors closed tight. He walked further into the room, his shoes squeaking on terracotta tiles. ‘Alisha?’ No answer came. But this wasn’t uncommon. Often Alisha would play at being coy. He crouched to scan the floor under each stall.