Lethal Legacy

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Lethal Legacy Page 22

by Linda Fairstein


  “When my committee was figuring out what to deaccession, we stumbled on a few things that had come in to the library through Jasper the Second-Hunt’s father,” Krauss said. “Things the library doesn’t really need. We’ve had a Gutenberg Bible from the time this library was built, right? Printed in 1455-a simply amazing accomplishment, for the man to invent a movable press that re-created the finest Gothic scripts of his age. Maybe one hundred and eighty of them printed, and close to fifty survive. Ours is usually on display on the third floor. James Lenox donated it when the library was built-the first Gutenberg that was ever brought to America. You’ve seen it, haven’t you?”

  “Yes.” It was one of the centerpieces of the library’s collection.

  “Well, Jasper Hunt gave us another one, not in such good shape as the Lenox gift. Questionable provenance. Why do we need it locked up in a vault somewhere underground when we could sell it for a healthy price?”

  “Still sounds like it would be a pretty desirable thing to have, from a curator’s standpoint,” I said.

  “J. P. Morgan set the standard for Jasper Hunt, and that’s not a compliment. Neither one was a very picky shopper. They both bought up English and European estates by the boatload. Morgan’s library has three Gutenbergs. I say one is enough. His advisors had the good sense to make him get rid of the objects that didn’t enhance his collection-medieval tapestries, Egyptian sculpture, second-class art. We could sell the excess and get things our curators really want and need.”

  “Was that what you wanted to deaccession?” Mike asked. “His Gutenberg Bible?”

  “It wasn’t at the top of my list, but it was there. I would have preferred to start with a gaudy little prayer book that came from his father’s collection. Extremely rare volume when Jasper Hunt the First bought it, but then he had it covered in jewels-to commemorate his son’s birth.”

  Mike cocked his head. He was obviously thinking of the object that had been found with Karla Vastasi’s body.

  “Rumor has it that the president of Cartier offered the Hunts a king’s ransom to buy it. Seems the jewels were chosen and set by Louis Cartier himself, and the current managers of the business are peeved that it’s collecting dust in storage.”

  It appeared that everyone had lost the significance of the prayer book’s original purpose.

  “What became of Jasper’s death threat?” I asked.

  “Sort of withered and lost its energy, just like he did,” Jonah Krauss said, snapping the lock on his case. “Three or four months of aggravation, then he was on to his next enemy. Now, I’d like to get a start on my weekend, Ms. Cooper. Any objections?”

  Krauss had the briefcase in his right hand, and with his left he reached down to pick up a gym bag.

  “That looks like it weighs a ton,” Mike said. “Let me help you out with it.”

  “Part of the reason I lift weights, Detective. I’ve got twenty-five pounds of catalogs for the winter auctions, in addition to my own paperwork.”

  “One last thing, Mr. Krauss. You got any idea where Jasper Hunt’s little jeweled book is now? I mean, like where in the library is it, if I wanted to see it today?”

  Krauss held open the door for us, then stopped and turned to answer Mike. “I haven’t a clue. Last I heard, Tally was taking lessons from the ne’er-do-well son of Brooke Astor. I made such noise about selling off the things that didn’t belong in our collection that he started to try all kinds of tricks to break his father’s will, transfer some of the bequests made to the library ages ago out from under our roof.”

  “But how could he do that?” Mike asked.

  Krauss pressed a button at the side of the glass door and it seemed to zap every system in his room, dimming lights, turning off electronics, and sealing the exit.

  “I assume his lawyer explained the legal liability to him, Mr. Chapman. I guess that’s why he probably resorted to theft.”

  TWENTY-SIX

  “You see his pecs?” Mike asked Mercer as he held open the car door and ushered me into the back seat. “Bet Krauss could lift that armillary sphere with two fingers. Smash the daylights out of Karla Vastasi. Good we got there in time so nobody skinned her to decorate his library.”

  “There’s no middle ground with you,” I said. “It’s easy to dislike the guy, but what’s a motive for him to be snooping around Tina’s apartment? Killing Vastasi?”

  “They’re all so greedy, Coop. The Hunts spend generations coveting and buying and preserving all these things, and this clown’s ready to discard them all.”

  “Krauss is new to the ’hood, but he has surely learned fast,” Mercer said. “Those Hunts, though, I think it’s in their genes. I can’t figure how Tina Barr got caught up in this.”

  “It wouldn’t be the first time I got fooled by someone who wasn’t what she appeared to be,” I said.

  “Did you hear back from Minerva Hunt?” Mike asked.

  I checked my cell for messages. “Nothing new.”

  “You called her?”

  “Twice since you told me to this morning. Why don’t you try your magic? She seemed to like you.”

  Mike didn’t answer.

  “I get it,” I said, ruffling the hair at the nape of his neck. “She hasn’t returned your calls either. That’s why you’re hounding me.”

  He flipped open his cell and dialed information. “Yeah, operator. In Manhattan, Rizzali Investigations. Connect me.”

  Someone answered the phone.

  “Mike Chapman here. Homicide. Looking for my buddy Carmine. You got his cell for me?”

  Apparently, whoever was in charge didn’t want to give that out.

  “Okay, patch me through,” Mike said, waiting for the receptionist to make the connection. “Yo, Carmine. How’s things? Someday I’m going to have my own secretary, too. You’re living the good life, man. You working with Ms. Hunt today?”

  I could hear the gruff voice barking back at Mike.

  “Where at? No, no. I don’t want to see her. I want to make you a hero, Carmine. Ms. Hunt dropped an earring in the office the other night. I’ll hand it off to you, you give it back to her,” Mike said. “Why would I kid you? One high-maintenance broad on my hands is enough. Where are you? Yeah, right now.”

  Mike gassed the car and we were off.

  “Where to?” I asked.

  “He’s parked at the corner of Fifth Avenue and Eighty-third Street. I tell you, Minerva may pay him a lot more than the City of New York did, but Carmine is still one dumb schmuck. Take off one of your earrings, kid.”

  I instinctively clasped my hands to my ears and covered the small gold hoops. “I like this pair. Way too simple for Minerva Hunt. Can’t have it.”

  “Once she tells him he’s crazy, Carmine’ll give it back to me. I’m just trying to get to the broad.”

  I unhooked one earring and passed it to Mike.

  “What did you find out about that tote that Karla Vastasi was carrying?” he asked.

  “Oops, I dropped the ball on that. Didn’t think it would be important until we saw her again.”

  “You’re about to get your wish, if I know Carmine.”

  I dug my cell out of my handbag and it was my turn to call information. “Bergdorf Goodman,” I said, and accepted the operator’s request to dial the number of the department store that carried the distinctive bag.

  “I’m wondering if you can help me,” I told the saleswoman when the switchboard connected me. “I was with a friend of mine last week. She had one of those open totes with the geometrical pattern-that French line that you’ve carried for the last couple of years.”

  She mentioned the designer’s name, reminded me that Bergdorf’s had the exclusive, told me the exorbitant price, and asked if I wanted to purchase one.

  “Yes, but before I make the trip over, I want to be sure I can get exactly the same color, same monogram style. I’m not sure if she got if from you, or while she was traveling.”

  The woman groaned at my insistence. �
��Who’s your friend?”

  “Minerva Hunt.”

  “Ms. Hunt?” I could envision the saleswoman standing at attention at the sound of the name. “Yes, of course. She has that bag in three colors. Would you like the black or the navy? We can stamp the monogram on overnight. I don’t think we have the burgundy in stock.”

  “Too bad. That’s the one I wanted.”

  “Would you like me to special-order it for you?”

  I had already disconnected the phone as I announced to the guys, “Minvera lied. Remember when she said that tote was a gift to her and that she didn’t like it? Well, she bought three of them herself.”

  “You think people go to their doctor and say they’ve got a bellyache when their ears hurt? Or a sore throat when its hemorrhoids?” Mike asked. “But they’ve got no problem lying to the prosecutor. See how smart she is and whether she can figure out the truth.”

  Mike squared the block in front of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and pulled in on Fifth Avenue, behind Carmine’s Mercedes S500. I looked through the list of library trustees and found Jasper Hunt III. “I think Minerva may have dropped in on her father. He lives on this block.”

  “Twofers, kid. May be our first break.”

  Carmine was wiping the side of the car with a chamois until he looked up and saw Mike. He dropped the polishing cloth on the hood and headed toward us.

  “Coming at my bait,” Mike said, “faster and dumber than a guppy swimming up for food. Maybe he thinks Minerva’ll give him a reward.”

  “Carmine’s looking pretty buff himself,” Mercer said. “He could hoist a garden ornament over my head, don’t you think?”

  “No question about it.”

  “Got the earring, Chapman?” Carmine said, his thick hand gripping Mike’s door.

  “In my pocket. Let me get out,” Mike said, stepping onto the sidewalk as he fumbled with his jacket. “You waiting to get in to see the Monets?”

  “Nah, she stops by to check on her father every couple of days,” Carmine said, pointing his thumb over his shoulder. “Lemme see.”

  “Minerva have you working last night? We could have taken you to the Yankees game with us, isn’t that right, Mercer?” Mike was checking Carmine’s whereabouts-maybe Minerva Hunt’s, too. “Here it is.”

  “Had a breather last night. She didn’t want no company, and me and my goomada had a quiet night at home. No charity balls, no Thursday-night shopping spree. Like doing a day tour, back when I was in your shoes.”

  Mercer got out of the car and opened my door.

  “Whoa. You told me you weren’t looking for Minerva. Where you all going?” Carmine asked. “Hey, these ain’t hers. She don’t have anything without sparkles. Someone else dropped this. Check the projects, you jerk.”

  “Could have fooled me,” Mike said. “I was sure it was Minerva’s. What number, Coop?”

  “Right here-the one with the green awning.”

  Mike straightened his blazer and adjusted his tie as he approached the doorman.

  “Jasper Hunt,” Mike said, displaying his gold shield. “And no, he isn’t expecting us, but his daughter will be by the time her hired goon gets off the phone.”

  Carmine’s face was red and his eyes bulging as he stood on the sidewalk with his phone in hand.

  The doorman spoke to someone on the intercom and gestured to the elevator. “You want the penthouse.”

  The three of us got in, and Mercer pressed the button while Mike sat on the red velvet bench behind. The mahogany paneling and brass trim were complemented by the small oil painting over Mike’s head. “This is decorated nicer than my apartment,” he said. “And I think it’s bigger.”

  “You’ve refused all my offers to help you put your place together,” I said.

  “I didn’t say I wanted it to look like a brothel, with all your fancy tassels and pillows and stuff.”

  I remembered how his fiancée, Val, had transformed the small space of the dark walk-up he referred to as” the coffin,” and I bit my tongue rather than remind him of her.

  There was only one apartment on the floor, and as the elevator door opened, we were greeted by a woman in a white uniform. Before she could say a word, Minerva Hunt stepped in front of her.

  “Why don’t you go out for a walk, Martha. Father won’t need you while I’m here.”

  “Yes, mum. I’ll just be getting my jacket.”

  “So, Detective, Carmine tells me you’re a bit desperate to see me.”

  “Actually, I stumbled into him while we were on our way to meet your father.”

  “Oh, he can’t be talking to you, sir,” the woman, whom I assumed to be a nurse, said to Mike as she reached for a jacket in the hall closet.

  “I’m dealing with this, Martha,” Minerva said, her long arm stretched across the door frame. “We’ve just finished lunch and he’s resting, Mr. Chapman.”

  “I’m famished. Must be some leftovers. What do you feel like, Mercer?”

  Minerva let down her arm so that the nurse could exit, and Mike stepped into the foyer of the apartment. “Cook has plenty of roast beef left, Miss Minerva.”

  “So you’re in, Detective,” Minerva said, turning her back to us and following Mike into the living room. “Exactly what is it you want?”

  Mike had crossed through to the living room, an enormous space flooded with early-afternoon light from the tall windows that provided a view over the top of the museum and the fall foliage of Central Park. The antique furniture and old masters paintings were extraordinary.

  “I’m about to leave,” Minerva said, looking over her shoulder at Mercer and me. “You’ve got no business being here. If your issues are with me and about my housekeeper, then let’s go somewhere to talk.”

  “We need to speak to your father. This is bigger than Karla Vastasi. It’s about the library now,” I said. She didn’t give any hint that she knew about the murder of Tina Barr. “I’d like you to stay until we’ve finished with him.”

  Her navy turtleneck sweater and pencil skirt showed Minerva Hunt’s slim frame to advantage. She tugged at her collar and pulled it up against her chin. “He’s too weak to do this so unexpectedly. I’ll get you the number for his lawyer-Justin Feldman. Let him set the appointment for you.”

  I smiled at Minerva. “I’ve got Mr. Feldman’s number on my phone,” I said. “He’s a great litigator and a powerful adversary, Ms. Hunt. I’ve worked with him often. I didn’t realize he did estate work, too.”

  She practically slapped the phone out of my hand. “No, that’s right. He’s not-um-not handling those matters. You tell me right now what anything has to do with my father’s estate. The man isn’t dead yet.”

  “Temper, temper, Minerva,” Mike said. “We’ll explain that to him ourselves.”

  Sliding pocket doors opened and a butler appeared, summoning Ms. Hunt. “I’ll be right in. Why don’t you show my friends out?”

  “We’ll take a couple of roast beefs on rye before we go, and I’ll stay with Minerva, if you don’t mind.”

  The butler looked more perplexed than the nurse had been. Minerva pushed the doors wider apart and led us down a hallway, past the grand dining room and a parlor to a cheerful sunroom that caught the southern exposure.

  Seated in a leather armchair was an elderly man dressed in a black jacquard smoking jacket, and perfectly groomed. A large yellow cat sat on his lap, stroked by the man’s trembling, liver-spotted hand. A second one, identical in color, was curled against his slipper.

  “This is my father, Jasper Hunt. Father, these gentlemen are from the police department. Ms. Cropper-is that your name, dear?-works for Paul Battaglia. You remember Paul, don’t you?”

  Jasper Hunt lifted his head and met us with a vacant stare.

  “We’re having a family chat,” Minerva said. “I know you’ve met my brother, Tally. Perhaps you’d like to meet father’s favorite children.”

  “Siblings?” Mike asked.

  “Of course. They’re in
the will-doesn’t that make it so?” she said, approaching her father. “That’s Patience, on his lap, and Fortitude, on the floor. Golden Maine coons. Longhairs. Have I got them right, Papa?”

  The old man smiled and kept stroking.

  “Little library lions, Detective. When Leona Helmsley kicked the bucket a few years ago,” Minerva said, referring to the hotel magnate known as the Queen of Mean, “she left twelve million dollars to her dog. Gave Father all kinds of bad ideas. I’ve done everything reasonable to change his mind, but for now I’m sweet as I can be to those pussies. I may have to adopt them one day.”

  “Good afternoon, Mr. Hunt,” Mike said, getting on one knee to try to make eye contact with the patriarch of this unusual family. “Pleased to meet you.”

  Hunt’s eyes followed the sound of Mike’s voice, but he made no response.

  I turned at the sound of footsteps behind me as Talbot Hunt came into the room.

  “I forgot to tell you we’ve got visitors, Tally,” Minerva said as her brother stopped in his tracks. “I think you’ve met them before.”

  “And I forgot to tell you when I arrived that Tina Barr is dead,” Talbot Hunt said. “Murdered, of all things. In the library.”

  TWENTY-SEVEN

  It was obvious that Talbot Hunt had come to his father’s home after leaving us at the library this morning. I wondered whether it was a coincidence that he and Minerva met here.

  “I thought maybe you were organizing a memorial service for Tina,” Mike said. “Seems like she had something to do with all of you.”

  “Why don’t we move into the office?” Talbot said.

  “Because my first order of business is to talk with your father.”

  “I think you’re smart enough to see he’s not having a good day,” Minerva said.

  Mike stood up, took her arm, and walked with her to the door of the room, out of Jasper Hunt’s earshot. “What’s his condition?”

  “He’s old, Mr. Chapman. In case you hadn’t noticed. He’s infirm.”

  “Any dementia?”

  Minerva looked at her brother, and neither answered quickly. “He’s clear most of the time,” Tally said.

 

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