Stripped

Home > Other > Stripped > Page 19
Stripped Page 19

by Brian Freeman


  “Bad move, huh?” Cordy said. “Guess they should have had some of your boys around.”

  Kamen didn’t reply.

  “Did Tierney call and cancel security arrangements with you yesterday?” Serena asked.

  “Yes, she did.”

  “What were the original arrangements?”

  “She was going to spend the evening at one of the Strip casinos. One of my men was going to pick her up and escort her. But she contacted us around noon and indicated she was planning to stay home that night and would not need our services.”

  “Did you talk to her directly?”

  Kamen shook his head. “She talked to our receptionist.”

  “You work with a lot of stars, I bet,” Cordy said. “Must see a lot of wild things. Guess it’s like the Secret Service, you have to keep your mouth shut.”

  “We’re very discreet.”

  “How about that soap star? The one that did the porno with MJ Lane. You ever work for her?”

  “Karyn Westermark is one of our clients, yes,” Kamen acknowledged.

  “But not MJ Lane?”

  “No.”

  “How about last Saturday?” Serena asked. “Was one of your men with Karyn?”

  He nodded. “Ms. Westermark contacted us when she arrived in town, and Blake, one of our people, stayed with her while she shopped in the afternoon. She prefers shadow security, where we stay in the background, not with her. We’re there if needed, but we’re not obvious.”

  “Was Blake with her on Saturday night, too?”

  “No. She dismissed him when she was going to meet MJ.” Kamen added, “I hope you’re not suggesting that any of my people could be involved in the string of murders. Or that we released information about the schedules of our clients.”

  “We’re just looking for connections,” Serena said. “When two of our murder victims have ties to the same security agency, we get curious.”

  “We work with hundreds of clients, Detective, including many of the most famous people in the city. If someone decides to murder celebrities, or people close to them, there’s a good chance we’ll have a relationship. There’s nothing odd about it.”

  Serena knew he was right. Tracking celebrities in Vegas was like shooting fish in a barrel. They were everywhere.

  She raised the other names with him-Linda, Carter, and Peter Hale, Albert and Alice Ford-and wasn’t surprised to find that neither of those middle-class families had anything to do with Premium Security. Kamen looked relieved.

  “Do you have any other celebrity clients that have ties to the Sheherezade casino?” Serena asked.

  She saw a flutter of hesitation in his eyes. “I’m sure there are many,” he replied cautiously. “The Sheherezade has been around for years. Why?”

  “There may be a link between the victims and the casino.”

  “What kind of link?” Kamen asked.

  “We’re not talking about that publicly yet,” Serena replied. “You sound like you’re holding out on us, Mr. Kamen.”

  He was silent, pursing his lips and studying her intensely. Serena had the uncomfortable feeling that this was the same look he used on victims through the scope of his sniper’s rifle. “Mr. Kamen?” she added.

  “We don’t have any actual ties to the Sheherezade,” he said.

  Cordy leaned forward. “Actual ties? How about unactual ties? Sideways ties? Give us a clue, Dave.”

  Kamen looked as if he would rather chew glass. “The agency is owned by Mr. Fisso,” he said.

  “Boni Fisso owns Premium Security?” Serena asked.

  “He owns many businesses,” Kamen said. “Slot manufacturing. Direct marketing. Golf apparel. He has no active day-to-day role in our operations. It’s simply an investment.”

  Cordy’s white teeth shone as he grinned at Kamen. “So you’re telling me that you and the boys never do any private work for Mr. Fisso? Teach a few slot cheats that they’re messing with the wrong guy?”

  “Nothing like that,” Kamen said through tight lips.

  Serena didn’t buy that for a minute. A security agency owned by Boni Fisso was a great way to get muscle on demand and cloak their shadier services under the guise of a legitimate operation. It also explained the low-rent location, to keep the entire agency under wraps. She wondered whether any celebrity secrets made their way back to Fisso as grist for influence and blackmail.

  Still, she knew they didn’t have enough, just based on the ties to Karyn and Tierney, to get a warrant to open up their books and go digging. Kamen and Boni were safe for the time being.

  “If someone else gets killed and we find out you had information that might have prevented it, we’re going to be taking a long, hard look at Premium Security,” she said. “Is that clear?” Serena knew it was an empty threat, but she made her voice cold and hard.

  “Of course, Detective.” Kamen wasn’t intimidated.

  Cordy reached inside his jacket pocket to retrieve a copy of the police sketch and handed the paper across the desk. “Now it’s time for show and tell, Dave.”

  “We want you to take a look at this sketch and then show it around to your men,” Serena added. “If anyone has seen this man, we need to know about it immediately. And tell them to watch out for him around your clients.”

  “Naturally,” Kamen said. He unfolded the sketch and laid it facedown on his desk, using his thumbs to smooth out the creases. He turned it over, and the dark eyes of the killer stared up at him.

  Serena watched his face turn to ash.

  TWENTY-SIX

  Stride had never been in a private jet before. It beat hell out of flying cattle class, where he spent most of the flight with his knees almost under his chin. The Gulf-stream cabin offered seating for eight in rich ivory-colored recliners that seemed to swallow up his body in leather and cushiony foam. He was the only passenger, just him, two pilots, and a middle-aged flight attendant who smiled at his overawed expression. He had his choice of sitting at a maple dining table or lounging in front of an entertainment center with satellite music and movies. When the flight attendant, whose name was Joanne, described a lavish lunch, he chose to sit at the dining table, read the Wall Street Journal, and watch the desert terrain giving way to the Rockies forty thousand feet below him. It was easy to pretend for a few minutes that he was one of the super-rich, and he realized it was a lifestyle that would be easy to get used to.

  He changed seats after lunch and settled in with a cup of black coffee that tasted dark and smoky, exactly how he liked it. Joanne showed him how to navigate the remote control, and he found the country music station on satellite radio and boomed it through the cabin. He figured it was the first time that anyone on this plane had heard Tracy Byrd singing “Watermelon Crawl,” but Joanne was kind and didn’t complain. His plan was to review his notes on the case and plow through more of the research he had done on Walker Lane. Despite the coffee, though, the heavy lunch and the bouncing of the jet as it passed over the mountains acted like a sedative. Several days of stress and sleeplessness caught up with him, and he wound up reclining the seat and closing his eyes.

  His dream took him back to Minnesota. He was on the beach in front of his old house on a finger of land jutting out between Lake Superior on one side and the placid harbor water on the other. He was in a dirty plastic lounge chair, watching the lake waves crash on the shore, and his first wife, Cindy, was in a matching chair beside him. They held hands. Every hand had a different feel, and he could actually touch hers again and feel the prongs of her emerald ring scratching his skin. She didn’t talk. There was a part of him that knew it was a dream, and he wanted to listen to the sound of her voice again, which had faded in his memory over the years, but she was quiet, staring at him, loving him. Eventually, in his dream, he fell asleep, and when he awoke, he was alone on the beach. Her chair was gone. There had been children playing by the waves, running in the sand, but they were gone, too. There had been an ore boat moored out on the water, the kind of ship o
n which his father had worked until a winter storm washed him into the lake, but the boat was gone, too.

  Stride woke up as a thermal jostled the plane, and he heard Montgomery Gentry singing “Gone” on the satellite radio. That was how the dream made him feel. Long gone.

  Joanne told him they were getting ready to land, and Stride looked out to see snowy peaks looming beyond the downtown Vancouver skyline. He knew why he had dreamed of Cindy. They had been to Vancouver together once, several years earlier, when they took a cruise of the Alaskan inner passage. They had spent a weekend in the city after the cruise, and it had been magical, jogging together through the fog of Stanley Park in the early morning and eating Dungeness crab meat from the market on Granville Island on a bench by the water, surrounded by hungry gulls. He remembered thinking on that trip that he had never been quite so happy in his life. It wasn’t long after they returned that a teenaged girl named Kerry McGrath disappeared, launching one of the darkest investigations of his career. In the midst of it, his beautiful Cindy was overrun by cancer, so swiftly and appallingly that he barely recognized her in the end. He figured later that the cancer had already taken root while they were in Vancouver. He wondered what that said about life, and he wasn’t sure he wanted to know.

  Stride was anxious to see Vancouver again. He liked the city, and he wanted to face his demons, or maybe just wallow in them. When they landed, he realized it wasn’t to be. There was no car to take him to Walker Lane but rather a helicopter waiting for him after he was cleared by a customs official who met the plane. It swooped him up and took him south, away from the city, toward the gulf islands north of Victoria. He was a little nervous flying over the water, not in a floatplane but in a rock that would simply hit the water and sink if its rotors stopped turning. At least it was a calm, cloudless day. They flew for what seemed a long time, but was probably only twenty minutes, before Stride saw islands dotting the blue water below them. He saw fishing villages and large bands of oak and fir trees covering the hills and sweeping down to narrow stony beaches. As they passed over one of the smaller islands, the pilot began to descend, perilously close to the treetops. Beyond the crest, on the southern shore of the island, Stride suddenly saw a clearing where a massive estate clung to the beach. The water seemed to lap almost to the windows overlooking the sound. The house itself was Victorian in design, with numerous gables and a large main tower topped by a cone-shaped roof. The coloring was dark and gothic.

  The pilot flew over the home itself and gently set the helicopter down on a concrete circle amid the rear gardens. He cut the engine, and Stride climbed out. An attendant greeted him and guided him back through a maze of topiaries and fountains into an expansive rear porch, with heavy antique furniture and ceramic tile the color of creme brulee.

  “ Mr. Lane will be right with you,” the woman told him, and left him alone to wait.

  Stride stood near the doors and felt the cool cross-breeze cutting across the island. He wondered what to expect from Walker Lane. All he had seen was photographs from decades ago, when Walker looked very much like his son, MJ, with unruly hair and a gangly look, like a kid whose limbs had grown too far too fast. Even then, he had been a millionaire, and over the years, he had traded the m for a b. Stride had never met a billionaire. From Walker ’s voice over the phone, he imagined the man to be tall and severe, imperially gray, wearing a sweater and cupping a glass of port.

  He was right about the sweater, and that was it.

  “Welcome to Canada, Detective,” Walker said, as he rolled onto the porch in a wheelchair operated from a joystick in his right hand. “I’m glad you agreed to join me here.”

  Stride found himself staring. He recognized the voice, which sounded like a stormy gale, but not the man. Half of Walker ’s face was strangely rigid, as if he had lost control of it in a stroke. The man’s right eye was fixed, and it took Stride a moment to realize the eye was fake, made of glass. His nose was misshapen, broken and reconstructed. When he smiled, his teeth were pristine and perfect, and Stride guessed that those were fake, too.

  “Not what you expected?” Walker asked dryly.

  Stride was too surprised to answer. He extended his hand, and Walker shook it. The man’s grip, at least, was strong and tight.

  “I don’t advertise my disability, Detective,” Walker added. “I hope I can count on your discretion. Most people who come here sign nondisclosure agreements. I didn’t do that with you, because I want to trust you, and I want you to trust me.”

  Stride was still unsettled by Walker ’s appearance and by the fake eye that seemed astonishingly real. “I understand,” he said.

  “Do you know who killed my son?” Walker asked pointedly. He sounded like the impatient man Stride had talked to on the phone.

  “Yes, we do.” Stride saw surprise bloom in Walker ’s good eye, and he reached into the slim folder he carried to retrieve the police sketch. “We haven’t arrested him, but we have his face. This is the man who killed MJ.”

  “Let me see it.”

  Stride handed him the sketch, and Walker took it eagerly. He held it far enough away in his right hand that his eye could focus.

  “Do you know him?” Stride asked.

  “No.” Walker shook his head, disappointed. “He’s not familiar to me”

  “I’ll leave the sketch with you.”

  Walker turned the sketch over and put it in his lap. “Would you like a tour before we get down to business? Not many people get to come here, you know.”

  Stride had come halfway across the continent to see the man, and he was curious about the estate, which was the kind of home he was never likely to see again. “Why not?” he said.

  “Good.”

  Walker spun his wheelchair around and led him from the porch into the main body of the house. For all the antique decor, it was electronically sophisticated, with every feature controlled by computers and operated from the control pad on Walker ’s chair. Windows, lights, doors, curtains, skylights, everything could be opened, closed, turned on, and turned off with a flick of the keypad. They passed from room to room, and each one felt like something out of a European palace, huge and elaborately decorated, but sterile, like a museum. Stride knew the house couldn’t be more than two or three decades old, but it felt like a relic from another century. It didn’t feel like anyone lived here.

  The house was generally warm, but some of the dampness of die region still made its way inside the walls, and the heat sometimes seemed to dissipate into the high ceilings. Stride found himself shivering and pulling die button closed on his suit coat. In just a few months, he thought, he had changed from a Minnesotan impervious to cold to a desert dweller chilled when the temperatures dipped below eighty.

  “I rarely leave the island,” Walker told him. “I’m sure you know that. But I can do almost anything from here. I see just about every movie made right in here.” He guided Stride into a full-sized movie theater that had a handicapped-access row directly in the center. They might as well have been in the upscale multiplex in Las Vegas. Stride realized the theater here was probably always empty, just Walker sitting here, alone, analyzing movie after movie. He began to feel sorry for the man.

  Walker sensed his emotions. “Don’t feel bad for me, Detective. I’m not Howard Hughes, you know. People visit me all the time-actors, directors, editors, agents. I am intensely engaged in every aspect of every one of my movies. When they’re being filmed, I have the dailies transferred to me electronically right here, and I review them and get my feedback back on the set by morning.”

  “Why not go there?” Stride asked.

  “First, I don’t need to. I can do it from here, and you have to admit, I have one of the most beautiful locations anywhere on earth.”

  Stride nodded. That was true. Every time they passed a window, he saw the island, the sound, or the gardens, and each one was a view to get lost in.

  “Second, I’m intensely private. I’m not a partier, not anymore. To be very
candid, the way I look makes people uncomfortable. I hate that. The people who come here generally know me well enough to respect my privacy and not to be put off by who I am.”

  He took Stride through the living room at the front of the house, with chambered windows looking out on the water, and then out onto a deck that led down toward the boat dock below. Stride could see a ferry passing by well offshore on its way to Victoria. The trees closed in around the estate, and he saw several eagles circling overhead.

  “This is wonderful,” Stride told him honestly.

  “Thank you, Detective.” Walker seemed to recognize that the compliment was genuine, and it pleased him. “You want to know about MJ, don’t you? How things went so wrong between us?”

  “I do, yes,” Stride admitted.

  Walker rolled his chair to the very edge of the balcony, where he could stare down at the waves slapping gently on the rocks. “Does it surprise you that many women want to marry me?”

  Stride shook his head. “Not at all.”

  Walker used his one eye to give him a knowing stare. “Very smooth, Detective. Of course, it’s my money. Actresses-hell, plenty of actors, too-seem to become very enlightened about wheelchairs and physical appearance when they think about all that cash in the bank. They tell me it’s love that matters. You really have to be from L.A. to make that line work.”

  Stride laughed. Walker did, too.

  “But MJ’s mother was different. Terrible actress-all the desire in the world but none of the talent. I think the director must have known she and I would hit it off, because he certainly didn’t send her to me because of her audition. Or maybe he just thought I needed a good lay. She wanted to be in this movie I was casting, and she was ready to do anything-I mean anything-to be in it. When I declined, she fell to pieces, crying. She was very unstable, but there was something oddly appealing about her. She was such a waif. I guess I wanted someone I could take care of. Much to the surprise of a lot of people in Hollywood, we got married. I guess you could say we were codependent for a while.”

 

‹ Prev