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Body of Evidence ks-2

Page 8

by Patricia Cornwell

My stare stopped him.

  "Kay…"

  "You bastard." I pushed back my chair and dropped my napkin on the table.

  "Kay!"

  Mark grabbed my arm, pulling me back into the seat. I angrily shook him off and sat rigidly in my chair, glaring at him. It was in a Georgetown restaurant many years ago that I had snatched off the heavy gold bracelet he had given me and dropped it into his clam chowder. It was a childish thing to do. It was one of the rare moments in my life when I had completely lost my composure and made a scene.

  "Look," he said, lowering his voice, "I don't blame you for what you're thinking. But it isn't like that. I'm not taking advantage of our past. Just listen for a minute, please. It's very involved, has to do with things you know nothing about. I have your best interests in mind, I swear. I'm not supposed to be talking to you. If Sparacino, if Berger knew, my ass would be nailed to the nearest tree."

  I didn't say anything. I was so upset I couldn't think.

  He leaned forward. "Start with this thought. Berger's after Sparacino and, right now, Sparacino's after you."

  "After me?" I blurted out. "I've never met the man. How could he be after me?"

  "Again, it's all got to do with Beryl," he repeated. "The truth is, he's been her lawyer since the beginning of her career. He didn't join our firm until we opened the office here in New York. Before that, he was on his own. We needed an attorney who specialized in entertainment law. Sparacino's been in New York for thirty-some years. He had all the connections. He brought over his clients, brought us a lot of business up front. You remember my mentioning when I first met Beryl, the lunch at the Algonquin?"

  I nodded, the fight in me fading.

  "That was a setup, Kay. I wasn't there by accident. Berger sent me."

  "Why?"

  Glancing around the restaurant, he replied, "Because Berger's worried. The firm's just getting started in New York, and you've got to be aware how hard it is to break into this city, to build up a solid clientele, a good reputation Last thing we need is an asshole like Sparacino driving the firm's name into the gutter."

  He fell silent as the waiter appeared with the salads and ceremoniously uncorked a bottle of cabernet sauvignon. Mark took the obligatory first sip and glasses were filled.

  "Berger knew when he hired Sparacino the guy's flamboyant, likes to play fast and loose," Mark resumed. "You think, well, it's just his style. Some lawyers are conservative, others like to make a lot of noise. Problem is, it wasn't until some months back that Berger and a few of us began to see just how far Sparacino was willing to go. You remember Christie Riggs?"

  It took a moment for the name to click. "The actress who married the quarterback?"

  Nodding, he said, "Sparacino masterminded that one from soup to nuts. Christie's a struggling model doing a few TV commercials here in the city. This was about two years ago, at the same time Leon Jones was making the covers of all the magazines. The two of them meet at a party and some photographer snaps a picture of them leaving together and getting inside Jones's Maserati. Next thing, Christie Riggs is sitting in the lobby of Orndorff amp; Berger. She's got an appointment with Sparacino."

  "Are you telling me Sparacino was behind what happened'" I asked in disbelief.

  Christie Riggs and Leon Jones had been married last year and divorced about six months later. Their tempestuous relationship and dirty divorce had entertained the world night after night on the news.

  "Yes " Mark sipped his wine.

  "Explain."

  "Sparacino fixes on Christie," he said. "She's gorgeous, smart, ambitious. But the real thing she's got going for her at the moment is she's dating Jones Sparacino gives her the game plan. She wants to be a household name. She wants to be rich. All she's got to do is draw Jones into her web and later start crying in front of cameras about their lives behind shut doors. She accuses him of slapping her around, says he's a drunk, a psychopath, fooling around with cocaine, smashing up the furniture. Next thing you know, she and Jones are splitting and she's signed a million-dollar book contract."

  "Makes me have a little more sympathy for Jones," I muttered.

  "The worse part is I think he really loved her and didn't have the smarts to know what he was up against. He started playing lousy ball, ended up in the Betty Ford Clinic He's since dropped out of sight. One of America's greatest quarterbacks is washed up, ruined, and indirectly you can thank Sparacino for it. This kind of muckraking and slandering isn't our style. Orndorff amp; Berger is an old, distinguished firm, Kay. When Berger began to get a scent of what his entertainment lawyer was doing, Berger wasn't exactly happy."

  "Why doesn't your firm just get rid of him?" I asked, picking at my salad.

  "Because we can't prove anything, not at this point. Sparacino knows how to slide through without a snag. He's powerful, especially in New York. It's like grabbing hold of a snake. How the hell do you let go without getting bit? And the list goes on."

  Mark's eyes were angry. "When you start looking back through Sparacino's professional history and examine some of the cases he handled when he was a one-man show, it really makes you wonder."

  "What cases, for example?" I almost hated to ask.

  "A lot of suits. Some hatchet writer decides to do an unauthorized biography of Elvis, John Lennon, Sinatra, and when it comes pub time, the celebrity, his relatives sue the biographer and it makes the network talk shows, People magazine. The book comes out anyway, with the benefit of incredible free publicity. Everybody's fighting over it because it's got to be juicy to have caused such a stink. We're suspicious Sparacino's method is to represent the writer, then go behind the scenes and offer the 'victim' or 'victims' money under the table to raise hell. It's all staged, works like a charm."

  "Makes you wonder what to believe."

  In fact, I wondered that most of the time.

  The prime rib arrived. When the waiter was gone I asked, "How in the world did Beryl Madison ever get hooked up with him?"

  "Through Gary Harper," Mark said. "That's the irony. Sparacino represented Harper for a number of years. When Beryl was coming along, Harper sent her to him. Sparacino has been shepherding her since the beginning, a combination agent, lawyer and godfather. I think Beryl was very vulnerable to older powerful men, and her career was pretty bland until she decided to do this autobiographical work. My guess is Sparacino originally suggested it. Whatever the case, Harper hasn't published anything since his Great American Novel. He's history, only valuable to someone like Sparacino if there's a possibility for exploitation."

  I considered. "Is it possible Sparacino was playing his game with them? In other words, Beryl decides to break her silence-and break her contract with Harper-and Sparacino plays both sides. Goes behind the scenes and goads Harper into causing a problem."

  He refilled our glasses and answered, "Yes, I think he was staging a dogfight and neither Beryl nor Harper was aware of it. As I've said, it's Sparacino's style."

  We ate in silence for a moment. Gallagher's was living up to its reputation. You could cut the prime rib with a fork.

  Mark finally said, "What's so awful, at least for me, Kay"-he looked up at me, his face hard-"that day we had lunch at the Algonquin, when Beryl mentioned she was being threatened, that someone was threatening to kill her…"

  He hesitated. "To tell you the truth, knowing what I did about Sparacino…"

  "You didn't believe her." I finished the sentence for him.

  "No," he confessed. "I didn't. Frankly, it struck me as another publicity stunt. I was suspicious Sparacino put her up to it, had her stage the whole thing to help sell her book. Not only does she have this battle with Harper, but now someone's threatening to kill her. I didn't give what she said much credence."

  He paused. "And I was wrong."

  "Sparacino wouldn't go that far," I dared to suggest. "You're not implying…"

  "I really think it's more likely he might have agitated Harper to the point he freaked, got so enraged maybe he came to s
ee her and lost it. Or Harper hired someone else to do it."

  "If that's the case," I said quietly, "he must have a lot to hide about what went on when Beryl lived with him."

  "He might," Mark said, returning his attention to his meal. "Even if he doesn't, he knows Sparacino, knows how he operates. Truth or fiction, it doesn't matter. When Sparacino wants to raise a stink, he does, and nobody remembers the outcome, only the accusations."

  "And now he's after me?" I asked dubiously. "I don't understand. How do I fit in?"

  "Simple. Sparacino wants Beryl's manuscript, Kay. Now more than ever the book's a hot property because of what happened to the author."

  He looked up at me. "He believes the manuscript was turned in to your office as evidence. Now it's missing."

  I reached for the sour cream and was very calm when I asked, "What makes you think it's missing?"

  "Sparacino somehow managed to get his hands on the police report," Mark said. "You've seen it, I assume?"

  "It was fairly routine," I answered.

  He jogged my memory. "On the back sheet's an itemized list of evidence collected-including papers found on her bedroom floor and a manuscript from her dresser."

  Oh, God, I thought. Marino had found a manuscript. It was simply that he had found the wrong one.

  "He talked to the investigator this morning," Mark said. "A lieutenant named Marino. He told Sparacino the cops don't have it, said all evidence was turned into the labs in your building. He suggested Sparacino call the medical examiner-you, in other words."

  "It's pro forma," I said. "The cops send everyone to me and I send everyone back to them."

  "Try telling Sparacino that. He's claiming it was turned in to you, that it came in with Beryl's body. And now it's missing. He's holding your office responsible."

  "That's ridiculous!"

  "Is it?"

  Mark looked speculatively at me. I felt as if I were being cross-examined when he said, "Isn't it true some evidence comes in with the body and you personally receipt it to the labs or store it in your evidence room?"

  Of course it was true.

  "Are you part of the chain of evidence in Beryl's case?" he asked.

  "Not in terms of what was found at the scene, such as in the instance of any personal papers," I said tensely. "Those were receipted to the labs by the cops, not by me. In fact, most of the items collected from her house would be in the P.D.'s property room."

  Again he said, "Try telling Sparacino that."

  "I never saw the manuscript," I said flatly. "My office doesn't have it, never had it. And as far as I know, it hasn't turned up, period."

  "It hasn't turned up? You mean it wasn't in her house? The cops didn't find it?"

  "No. The manuscript they found isn't the one you're talking about. It's an old one, possibly from a book published years ago, and it's incomplete, just a couple hundred pages at most. It was in her bedroom on the dresser. Marino took it in, had Fingerprints check in the event the killer might have touched it."

  He leaned back in his chair.

  "If you didn't find it," he asked quietly, "then where is it?"

  "I have no idea," I answered. "I suppose it could be anywhere. Perhaps she mailed it to someone."

  "She have a computer?"

  "Yes."

  "You check out her hard disk?"

  "Her computer doesn't have a hard disk, just two floppy drives," I said. Marino's checking the floppies. I don't know what's on them."

  "Doesn't make sense," he went on. "Even if she did mail the manuscript to someone, it doesn't make sense she wouldn't have made a copy first, that there wasn't a copy somewhere inside her house."

  "It doesn't make sense her godfather Sparacino wouldn't have a copy," I said pointedly. "I can't believe he hasn't seen the book. In fact, I can't believe he doesn't have a draft somewhere, maybe even the latest version."

  "He says he doesn't, and I'm inclined to believe him for one good reason. From what I've gathered about Beryl, she was very private when it came to her writing, didn't let anybody-including Sparacino-see what she was doing until it was finished. She'd kept him posted on her progress through telephone conversations, letters. According to him, the last time he heard from her was about a month ago. She supposedly told him she was busy revising and should have the book ready to submit for publication by the first of the year."

  "A month ago?" I asked warily. "She wrote to him?"

  "Called him."

  "From where?"

  "Hell, I don't know. Richmond, I guess."

  "Is that what he told you?"

  Mark thought for a moment. "No, he didn't mention where she was calling from."

  He paused. "Why?"

  "She'd been out of town for a while," I replied as if it didn't matter. "I'm just wondering if Sparacino knew where she was."

  "The cops don't know where she was?"

  "There's a lot the cops don't know," I said.

  "That's not an answer."

  "A better answer is we really shouldn't be discussing her case, Mark. I've already said too much, and I'm not sure why you're so interested."

  "And you're not sure my motives are pure," he said. "You're not sure that I'm not trying to wine you and dine you because I want information."

  "Yes, to be honest," I answered as our eyes met.

  "I'm worried, Kay."

  I could tell by the tension in his face-a face that still had power over me-that he was. I could scarcely take my eyes off him.

  "Sparacino's up to something," he said. "I don't want you squeezed." He drained the last of the wine into our glasses.

  "What's he going to do, Mark?" I asked. "Call me and demand a manuscript I don't have? So what?"

  "I have a feeling he knows you don't have it," he said. "Problem is, it doesn't matter. Yes, he wants it. And he'll get it eventually, has to unless it's lost. He's the executor of her estate."

  "That's cozy," I said.

  "I just know he's up to something." He seemed to be talking to himself.

  "Another one of his publicity schemes?" I offered a bit too breezily.

  He sipped his wine.

  "I can't imagine what," I went on. "Not anything involving me."

  "I can imagine it," he said seriously.

  "Then please spell it out," I said.

  He did. "Headline: 'Chief Medical Examiner Refuses to Release Controversial Manuscript.' "

  I laughed. "That's ridiculous!"

  He didn't smile. "Think about it. A controversial autobiography written by a reclusive woman who ends up brutally murdered. Then the manuscript disappears and the medical examiner is accused of stealing it. The damn thing's disappeared from the morgue. Christ. When the book finally comes out, it will be a runaway bestseller and Hollywood will be fighting over the movie rights."

  "I'm not worried," I said unconvincingly. "It's all so farfetched, I can't imagine it."

  "Sparacino's a whiz at making something out of nothing, Kay," he warned. "I just don't want you ending up like Leon Jones."

  He looked around for the waiter, his eyes freezing in the direction of the front door. Quickly looking down at his half-eaten prime rib, he mumbled, "Oh, shit."

  It took every bit of my self-restraint not to turn around. I didn't look up or act the least bit aware until the big man was at our table.

  "Well, hello, Mark. Thought I might find you here."

  He was a soft-spoken man in his late fifties or early sixties, with a fleshy face made hard by small eyes as blue as they were lacking in warmth. Flushed, he was breathing hard, as if the exertion of merely carrying his formidable weight strained every cell in his body.

  "On a whim, I decided to wander by and offer you a drink, old boy."

  Unbuttoning his cashmere coat, he turned to me, offering his hand and a smile. "I don't believe we've met. Robert Sparacino."

  "Kay Scarpetta," I said with surprising poise.

  5

  Somehow we had managed to drink liqueur with Spar
acino for an hour. It was awful. He acted as if I were a stranger. But he knew who I was, and I was sure the encounter hadn't been accidental. In a city the size of New York, how could it have been accidental?

  "You sure there's no way he knew I was coming?" I asked.

  "I don't see how," Mark said.

  I could feel the urgency in his fingertips as he steered me right on to Fifty-fifth Street. Carnegie Hall was empty, a few people strolling past on the sidewalk. It was getting close to one A.M., and my thoughts were floating in alcohol, nerves taut.

  Sparacino had gotten more animated and obsequious with each Grand Marnier until he was finally slurring his words.

  "He doesn't miss a trick. You think he's soused and won't remember a thing in the morning. Hell, he's on red alert even when he's sound asleep."

  "You're not making me feel any better," I said.

  We headed straight for the elevator, where we rode up in self-conscious silence, watching the floor light blink from number to number. Our feet were quiet on the carpeted hallway. Hoping my bag was there, I was relieved to see it on the bed when I stepped inside my room.

  "Are you nearby?" I asked.

  "A couple doors down." His eyes were darting around. "You going to offer me a nightcap?"

  "I didn't bring anything…"

  "There's a bar fully stocked. Take my word for it," he said.

  We needed another drink like a hole in the head.

  "What's Sparacino going to do?" I asked.

  The "bar" was a small refrigerator filled with beer, wine, and jigger-sized bottles.

  "He sees us together," I added. "What's going to happen?"

  "Depends on what I tell him," Mark said.

  I handed him a plastic cup of Scotch. "Let me ask it this way. What are you planning to tell him, Mark?"

  "A lie."

  I sat down on the edge of the bed.

  He pulled a chair close and began slowly swirling the amber liquor. Our knees were almost touching.

  "I'll tell him I was trying to find out what I could from you," he said, "trying to help him out."

  "That you were using me," I said, my thoughts breaking apart like a bad radio transmission. "That you were able to do that. Because of our past."

 

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