by PJ Parrish
Louis thought that it didn’t look any worse than some of the other places he had seen on the south end of the island last night, but he kept quiet.
“What can I get you to drink?” Reggie asked.
“A beer?” Louis asked.
Reggie grimaced. “I’ll have to check. I might have—”
“Lemonade’s fine,” Louis said.
“Same here,” Mel said from the chaise in the corner where he had stretched out.
Reggie handed them each a slender tumbler, and they took seats near Mel. Louis took a drink of the lemonade. It was heavy with vodka.
Reggie’s mini-buffet was set up on the table between them. The centerpiece was a glass bowl set in ice and filled with what looked like mud. Also on the table were tiny cups of minced onion and chopped egg and a carefully arranged assortment of toast wedges.
“Please, help yourself,” Reggie said.
Mel sat forward and picked up one of the tiny pearl-handled spoons and began to heap some caviar onto a toast wedge. Louis watched him, surprised. Louis had never seen him eat anything but bloody steaks, grouper sandwiches, and tacos.
“Is this osetra?” Mel asked.
Reggie’s face reddened slightly. “Yes. I’m sorry, but beluga is a bit out of my price range these days.”
“Don’t apologize,” Mel said, helping himself to another toast wedge. “It’s good. Tastes like nuts.”
Reggie smiled. “I’m glad you like it. This one is from Iran. I first tasted it at a birthday party for—”
“Excuse me,” Louis interrupted. “If you two are done comparing culinary experiences, can we talk about the problem at hand?”
Reggie stared at him for a moment, tiny spoon in midair. “Yes, you’re right, of course,” he said. He carefully spread some caviar on a toast wedge. “Where do we start?”
Louis leaned forward. “We start, Mr. Kent, with you. You’re not exactly leveling with us.”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean that we aren’t going to take your case if you don’t start telling us the truth.”
Louis felt Mel’s eyes on him but didn’t look at him. They hadn’t talked any more since yesterday in the cattle pen, and Louis had decided he needed to push Kent before he agreed to take this on.
Reggie looked at Mel, as if he expected him to intervene on his behalf.
“Louis is right, Reg,” Mel said. “I want to help you, but if you don’t tell us what we need to know, we’re out of here.”
Reggie sighed. “Okay, ask me what you must.”
“Let’s start with your relationship with Mark Durand and why you lied about that,” Louis said.
Reggie shifted in his chair, an unlit cigarette dangling from his fingers. “I didn’t really lie,” he said.
“Were you lovers or not?” Mel asked.
“We were,” Reggie said softly. “But it ended months ago.”
“How and when did it start?” Louis asked.
“I used to occasionally go to a club over in West Palm,” Reggie said. “I had been alone for quite some time, and when I saw Mark that night at Kashmir’s, I knew he was someone I could fall in love with.”
Reggie stared out at the ocean, a sad wistfulness in his eyes. Louis let him have a few more seconds, then prodded him.
“He felt the same?”
“No,” Reggie said. “Like I told you, he was a lot younger. And at the time he was seeing this rich lawyer from Fort Lauderdale. The man was married and used to drive up to West Palm looking for anonymous, one-night encounters. He was paying Mark money for seeing him on a regular basis.”
“So Durand was a prostitute,” Louis said.
Reggie cringed. “Well, he was arrested in Miami for that once,” he said. “But to me he was simply a beautiful young man in need of direction.”
“How did you convince him to leave the other guy and hook up with you? You’re not rich, are you?”
“Heavens no,” Reggie said. “In fact, I usually rent this place out during the season to make money.” When he saw the look on Louis’s face, he went on. “I rent it out, pocket twenty grand a month, and go live in someone’s guesthouse until Easter.”
Louis glanced at Mel, who shrugged.
“But when this whole thing hit the newspapers, my tenant backed out,” Reggie said. He looked around, shaking his head. “I mean, between the lawn man, the pool, the maid, the taxes, I have no idea how I’m going to get by if I don’t find someone—”
“Mr. Kent, please,” Louis said. “You were talking about how you and Durand got together.”
Reggie nodded. “Yes, I’m sorry. Well, Mark wanted to leave the lawyer, so I told him he could come stay with me. He was living in a ratty little efficiency by the turnpike, so you can imagine how excited he was when he saw Palm Beach.”
“So what went wrong?” Mel asked.
Reggie was silent for a long time. “The age thing, of course,” he said softly. “That, and Mark realized I wasn’t really rich. At least, not rich enough. But I didn’t want him to leave.” He gave a wry smile. “No fool like an old fool, they say.”
He drew deeply on the cigarette and blew out a slow stream of smoke. “I knew I couldn’t afford to keep him happy, and I had no illusions about him being faithful. So we struck a deal.”
“What kind of deal?” Louis asked when Reggie didn’t go on.
“I need a refill,” Reggie said. He rose, picking up his tumbler. “Anyone else?”
Mel held out his glass. Louis hadn’t touched his. Reggie went to the bar and returned with two more lemonades, handing one to Mel. Reggie sat down, staring glumly into his drink.
“What was the deal?” Louis pressed.
“This is so sordid,” Reggie muttered.
“So is prison,” Mel said.
Reggie took a big drink before he went on. “The deal was that if Mark stayed with me, I would leave him alone. And I would help him become a walker.”
“He agreed?”
“Not at first. But I was able to convince him it was an easy way for him to have the kind of lifestyle he wanted, and that he could be a great walker if he tried.”
“So you trained him?” Louis asked.
“You don’t train to be a walker,” Reggie said. “You either have it or you don’t. Mark was very handsome, and he had a certain avoir la gueule.” When he saw their blank looks, he added, “A certain animal appeal.”
He snuffed out the Gauloise. “All I did was help him round off the rough edges. I got him to a good tailor, taught him how to order wine. Then I started introducing him to my ladies. I was determined to transform him into the kind of gentleman who could escort the richest women in the world. I didn’t want him to have to depend on men to pay him for sex anymore.”
“You’re a regular Pygmalion, Reg,” Mel said.
Reggie’s gaze drifted out toward the ocean. The sunlight was making his eyes water and in them Louis could see both grief and love. But there was something else stewing in them, too. Betrayal?
Reggie seemed to feel Louis’s eyes on him and he reached for a pair of sunglasses and slipped them on.
“What happened?” Louis asked.
“Well, things were good at first,” Reggie said. “He was starting to get some requests for functions. As I watched him blossom, I took great solace in the idea that, if nothing else, I saved him from the awful life he had before.”
Louis couldn’t see Reggie’s eyes behind the sunglasses but he could tell the man was having trouble not breaking down.
“But after a few months I knew something was wrong,” Reggie said. “Mark started drinking heavily and disappearing for days at a time. He was moody and restless, like he was looking for something that he couldn’t find here on the island. God knows what that was. There isn’t anything you can’t get here.”
“Did you talk to him about it?”
Reggie nodded. “One night I got a call from Rusty Newsome. Mark didn’t show up to take her to a party. When he
finally came home the next day I asked him what was wrong. He wouldn’t talk about it. And he wouldn’t call Rusty to apologize. It was so embarrassing.”
“That was it? He broke one date?” Louis asked.
Reggie shook his head. “There were others. And he just kept pulling further away from me. I was desperate to keep him, so I started smothering him, nagging him about where he was and who he was seeing. I started buying him all these gifts. For his birthday, I gave him a beautiful monogrammed robe from Kassatly’s. I found it the next day wadded up in the bottom of his closet.”
Reggie fell quiet. The silence was broken by the screech of wild parrots taking flight from a palm tree, streaks of acid green against the vivid blue sky.
“Tell us about the fight at Testa’s,” Mel said. “What started it?”
Reggie took another drink. The ice cubes tinkled against the crystal as he set the glass down. “I found a Patek Philippe in Mark’s bedroom,” he said.
“What’s that?” Louis asked.
“A watch,” Mel said.
“Not just a watch,” Reggie said. “It was a brand-new Calibre anniversary model made just this year. I could only imagine the price.”
“So what? You said you got gifts as a walker,” Louis said.
“Not like that,” Reggie said. “God, even low-end Pateks are twenty grand.”
“Did you ask him about it?”
“I was afraid to tell him because he’d know I had been snooping in his room. So I asked him to meet me at Testa’s for dinner. I was hoping that in a public setting, Mark would be civil and calm.”
“How did he explain the watch?”
“Well, when he showed up I could tell he had been drinking.” Reggie shook his head slowly. “When I showed him the watch, he got very angry. He grabbed it and put it on, saying he had worked hard for it.”
“He was prostituting again?” Louis asked.
Reggie looked miserable. “That’s what I thought, so I asked him. But then he told me that he wasn’t even gay.”
“What?” Louis said.
Reggie put up a hand. “I know, it sounds crazy. He told me he was really straight and only did it to make some easy money. Like I said, he was obsessed with money.”
Louis’s mind churned with questions—all of them too delicate and, hell, maybe too stupid—to ask someone like Reggie. But he had to admit that he didn’t understand a man like Mark Durand. Either you were straight or you weren’t, and if Mark was straight, Louis couldn’t imagine any amount of money that would entice him into a man’s bed.
“So, where did he get the watch?” Louis asked.
Reggie closed his eyes.
“Mr. Kent,” Louis pressed. “You have to tell us.”
“I kept asking him,” Reggie said softly. “Finally, he just exploded and said that he was—pardon my language, these are his words, not mine—that he was ‘fucking some of hottest bitches on the island’ and making more money than he ever thought possible. He said one of them gave him the watch.”
“He swung back to the ladies?” Louis asked.
“Not just any ladies,” Reggie said sharply. “My ladies. My friends.”
Louis sat back in the chair. “You sound angry.”
“I am angry!”
“Why, because he betrayed you?”
Reggie wrenched off his sunglasses. “He betrayed the profession! Don’t you get that?”
Louis just stared at him.
Reggie suddenly rose. “If you’ll excuse me for a moment.” And he disappeared into the house.
Louis heard the tinkle of ice and looked over at Mel. “What the hell is his problem?” Louis said.
“He’s angry,” Mel said, and took a sip of the lemonade.
“I’d say that’s a pretty good motive,” Louis said. “Durand led him on.”
Mel slowly set the tumbler down and sat forward, resting his long hands on his knees. “Forget about the personal shit for a moment,” he said. “Reggie took this guy under his wing and trained him in a profession. Now, we might think it’s a pretty weird profession, but to Reggie it’s a noble calling. And it wasn’t supposed to include sex.”
Louis shook his head.
“Think of it this way,” Mel went on. “How would you feel if you were a cop—”
“I was a cop once, Mel.”
“I know, I know. Okay, you’re a cop, and you have to train a rookie. But the rookie disregards the rules, screws up protocol, has no respect for the badge, and is generally an asshole. How would you feel?”
“It’s not the same thing, Mel.”
“It is to Reggie.”
At that moment, Reggie reappeared. His face was red, like he had scrubbed it hard. He had a fresh tumbler of lemonade. He sat down in his chair, spotted his sunglasses on the patio floor, and scooped them up. He put them on and tilted his chin up toward Louis.
“What else do you need to know?” he said calmly.
“The police report said you and Durand got physical outside the restaurant,” Louis said. “What happened exactly? And don’t leave out any details.”
Reggie drew in deep breath. “I told Mark I didn’t care what he did to me, but I was not going to let him get away with trashing my reputation. He told me to go fuck myself and left. I followed him out.”
“And what happened?”
Reggie was silent.
“What did you say to him, Mr. Kent?” Louis asked.
“I wish you’d call me Reggie.”
“What did you say to him?”
Reggie glanced at Mel before he spoke. “I told him that all I had to do was whisper in the right ear, and he’d be dead in this town.”
“Dead?”
“I didn’t mean it literally,” Reggie said. “I meant that he would be a pariah. No more lunches, parties, or pretty watches. I told him that with one word from me, he would be escorted off the island and dropped off at the nearest Greyhound station.”
“Why did the cops come?” Mel asked.
Reggie looked miserable. “We argued, and he pushed me. So I pushed him back. I didn’t mean it, but I was so angry. I wasn’t trying to hurt him, but he was so drunk he just fell. He hit his hand on the sidewalk and broke the watch’s crystal. He lost it, just lost it, screaming at me about the watch and calling me ugly names.”
Louis remembered a detail from the police report. “There were people seated outside who heard you.”
“I suppose,” Reggie muttered. “And then the police came.”
“What did they do?” Louis asked.
Reggie shrugged. “They just told us to behave ourselves, and they left.”
“What happened to Durand?”
“I don’t know,” Reggie said. “The last I saw him, he was walking up Royal Poinciana.”
Louis glanced at Mel, who was spreading caviar on the last toast point. He wondered if Mel was thinking the same thing he was—that when Detective Barberry heard this whole story, he would be even more convinced of Kent’s guilt. If that was possible.
“We’re going to need the names of these women Durand was with,” Louis said.
“I don’t know who they are,” Reggie said. He gave an indignant tip of his chin. “Ironically, I would have been the first to know this sort of thing before. Gossip is currency in this town. But now—”
Before Louis could reply, a delicate ringing drifted from the house. Reggie perked up like an English pointer, then pushed his chair back.
“My phone,” Reggie said. “It hasn’t rung in days. Please excuse me.”
Louis watched Reggie until he disappeared, then leaned over toward Mel. Mel’s face was turned toward the salted breeze, his eyes closed.
“Mel, your friend is in deep shit here.”
“He didn’t do it.”
“The level of rage in this crime points to someone the victim knew,” Louis said. “Give me another theory that jibes with that kind of senseless torture.”
“A hate crime. Maybe Durand was still crui
sing the bars across the bridge.”
“Good news!”
Louis looked up. Reggie was walking toward them holding a white cordless phone. “That was Margery,” Reggie said, smiling broadly. “She wants me to take her to the ballet tonight.” He glanced at his watch. “Oh, dear, I have to get to the cleaner’s. My best tux is in there.”
Louis stood up. “Look, Mr. Kent, I think it might be better if you laid low for a while.”
“You don’t understand,” Reggie said. “This is Margery Leigh Cooper Laroche. You don’t say no to Margery. She’s one of the core people.”
“Core people?” Mel said.
Reggie’s face was lit with excitement. “I knew they’d rally around. I knew they’d help me. Margery must have put in a word. The dear, dear lady…”
“Reg, I think Louis is right,” Mel said. “I don’t think you should be going out right now.”
Reggie ignored him, gathering up the plates and silverware. “I know this is very rude, and I know we have things to talk about, but you’ll have to excuse me. I have a million things to do.”
He stopped suddenly, turning to Mel.
“Wait, wait!” he said. “I just had the best idea. Do you have a tux?”
“What?” Mel croaked.
“A tux, do you—?” Reggie frowned slightly. “No, no, of course you don’t. What am I thinking.” He set the plates down. “We’ll have to find a rental. Horrifying, I know, but I think there’s a place—”
“Reggie, what the hell are you talking about?” Mel asked.
Reggie stared at them. “Well, you’re coming to the ballet with me, of course.”
Louis laughed.
“And you,” Reggie said. “You have to come, too.”
“Get serious.” Louis was still laughing.
Reggie’s expression had gone slack. “I’m quite serious,” he said. “As you keep telling me, my life is at stake here. If anyone knows the women Mark was sleeping with, Margery does. And if you’re ever going to get any doors to open for you in this town, Margery is the key.” He paused. “Now, do you want to meet her or not?”