Day stared into space for a moment, his expression blank. Then he brightened.
“I do remember a big black man fighting with a security guard. People were pushing to get out of the way and I was shoved back from the action. Then I heard a shot. When I turned I saw Junior staggering. I remember Sally running to him, but I didn’t see much of what anyone else was doing, because I was focused on Junior.”
“Can you remember anyone else in the crowd, a witness we can talk to who may have seen something?”
Day’s brow furrowed as he tried to remember the twelve-year-old scene. After a while, he rattled off a few names Kate recognized from the police reports.
“That’s all the people I can recall right now. I’ll think about it some more and if…”
Day paused. “Oh, I’ve got one more. Tony Rose was there.”
“You saw Rose?”
“He was on the edge of the crowd almost in a line from where I was but much closer to the pro shop.”
“Near the spot where you saw the guard and the black man fighting?”
“Right. He may have had a better view of the shooting. You should ask him.”
“I’ll be sure to do that,” Kate said.
“IT LOOKS LIKE the interview was a bust. Day doesn’t know much,” Dennis said.
“Yeah, but we didn’t know that before we talked to him,” Kate answered, concealing from Dennis the conflict between what Tony Rose had told her about his location when Junior was shot and Day’s recollection.
“You know, I feel bad about the way I acted when we were on our way to see Day,” Levy said. “I’d like to make it up to you.”
“Forget about it. I have.”
“No, seriously, how about dinner, tonight? You can pick the restaurant. I’m on an expense account. Make it someplace expensive and romantic.”
Kate turned her head for a second and Levy flashed a wolfish grin. The investigator made a note to ask Amanda for hazardous duty pay.
“Thanks, Dennis, but I’m living with someone.”
“He doesn’t have to know. Tell him it’s a business meeting.”
“Dennis, let me ask you directly. Are you hitting on me?”
Levy’s grin shifted from wolfish to sly. “Maybe.”
“Don’t.”
“By this time next year, I guarantee you I’m going to be famous and rich. You could do a lot worse.”
“Dennis, I’m trying to be nice and I’m trying to be clear. I’m in a serious relationship and it’s not with you. Furthermore, it won’t be, ever. Do you understand what I just said? And while you’re thinking about your answer, remember that I carry a gun and I know how to use it.”
CHAPTER 34
Twelve years ago, Sally Pope had made a vivid impression on the college student who was watching her father try his biggest case from the spectator section of a Washington County courtroom. The media portrayed Sally as a “femme fatale” and she embodied the secret fantasies of every school-girl who stayed on the straight and narrow. Women like Sally populated television soap operas and the romance novels serious young women read when no one was watching. Her looks were breathtaking and her figure was an advertisement for sex; she was mysterious and she may have been a murderess.
Something else had riveted Amanda’s attention on Mrs. Pope. Frank’s daughter could not help noticing the way her father’s eyes strayed to his client and the way Sally Pope’s hands strayed to her father’s forearm when they leaned close to confer. Amanda was living with Frank that summer. After the trial ended, he was conspicuously absent at night, often arriving home in the early hours of the morning.
Amanda had been fiercely protective of her father and not comfortable with the idea that he might be having a serious relationship with anyone. The possibility that the woman he was seeing could have murdered her husband ramped up the dread Amanda felt each time Frank disappeared.
Amanda never knew for certain that her father was romantically involved with Sally Pope and she never got up the nerve to confront him. Amanda almost forgot about Sally when she returned to the rigors of her college studies and the demands of the swim team, and she was very relieved when Sally left for Europe. But Amanda’s old emotions had resurfaced with the resurrection of the charges against Charlie Marsh.
A powerful sun was directly overhead when Amanda parked her car in the turnaround in front of Sally Pope’s house. She squinted to avoid the glare as she hurried into the shade of the front porch. Gina, Sally Pope’s personal assistant, showed Amanda into a large living room that looked out on a colorful flower garden through a set of French doors. Sally Pope entered the room a few minutes later.
“It’s good to see you again, Amanda,” Sally said with a pleasant smile. She was wearing tan shorts, sandals, and a yellow T-shirt, and her blond hair was pulled back in a ponytail. Amanda could see signs of aging but was still impressed by her beauty and poise.
“I’m surprised you remember me,” Amanda said as they shook hands.
“Of course I remember you. You were in court every day and Frank talked about you all the time. He’s very proud of you.”
Amanda blushed and Sally pointed toward a long, beige couch. “Why don’t we sit? Do you want coffee or an iced tea?”
“Iced tea sounds good,” Amanda said.
Gina had been waiting unobtrusively near the door to the living room. She left as soon as she heard what Amanda wanted to drink.
“I understand you saved Charlie’s life,” Sally said.
“I just pushed him down when the first shot was fired.”
“That was quick thinking.”
Amanda shrugged.
“Is Charlie okay?”
“He was shaken up but he’s not hurt.”
“Good. Frank said you wanted to talk to me about his case.”
“Is that okay?”
“Of course, but I don’t know what I can say that will help.”
“Let’s start with how you and Charlie met.”
Sally laughed. “He ‘rescued’ me from Tony Rose after one of his seminars at an estate in Dunthorpe. It really wasn’t necessary but he put on this macho act. He even punched Tony in the nose.”
“Was this when Rose says you asked him to murder your husband?”
Sally stopped smiling. “There was not one shred of truth in anything that bastard testified about.”
“Then why do you think he said it?”
“Isn’t it obvious? Senior paid him to lie. Who do you think bankrolled Mercury?”
“Can you prove that?”
Sally shook her head. “Senior is like some mythical beast when it comes to his business practices. You might think you’ve spotted a partial footprint in the snow but you never see the beast itself. Then the wind comes up and obliterates the track and you’re left with nothing.”
“If I call you, will you testify that you never asked Charlie to kill your husband?” Amanda asked as Gina returned with her iced tea.
“Of course. The only evidence Karl Burdett had was those photographs and the note, and Frank proved that was a setup.”
“But you and Charlie were lovers?” Amanda asked.
“Amanda, there were a lot of things I’ve done that I’m not proud of, and sleeping around is at the top of the list. Before I married Arnie, I did it because I thought that my body was the only thing I had going for me. After I married Arnie, I slept around to get his attention. Charlie was a roadside flare¸ that’s all. We never meant anything to each other.”
“What did you see at the Westmont?” Amanda asked.
“I didn’t see the person who shot Arnie, if that’s what you’re after.”
“Just tell me what you do remember.”
Sally closed her eyes for a moment and Amanda took a sip of iced tea.
“John Walsdorf, the club manager, and I were outside the front entrance when Charlie’s limo pulled up.”
“Before the limo arrived, did you have a conversation with Tony Rose?”
“That’s right! I forgot about that. Only it wasn’t a conversation. He wanted to talk but I didn’t. Especially not then, with the guest of honor arriving.”
“What happened?” Amanda asked.
“I told Tony I couldn’t talk to him and he left me alone.”
“Did you notice where he went?”
Sally’s brow furrowed. After a few seconds, she shook her head.
“I’m sorry. As soon as Tony walked off, Charlie’s limo pulled up. Then Arnie started causing trouble and there was the fight. I forgot all about Tony.”
“So you don’t remember seeing him after he tried to talk to you?”
“I’m pretty certain Frank asked me who I remembered seeing and where they were standing soon after I hired him. He probably made notes.”
“I’ve seen them. I wanted to get your impressions now.”
“I remember Charlie getting out of the car. There was some trouble with a man who looked like a biker. He testified at the trial, but I don’t remember his name. Then Arnie came storming up and threw the photos in my face. That’s when the fight started.”
“Did you see your husband get shot?”
Sally nodded. She looked sad. “I was watching him during the fight so I did see him get shot, but I didn’t see who did it because my eyes were on Arnie.”
“And you don’t remember who was near him?”
“Just people. It was dark, there was a lot of confusion.”
“What about the guy who looked like a biker? Did you see him?”
“Yes. He was fighting with one of the security guards. So was Charlie’s bodyguard, Delmar Epps.”
“Were you close to Mr. Epps at any time that evening?”
“I was right next to him when he got out of the limo. There was some problem with a man who opened Charlie’s door. It wasn’t his driver. I can’t remember his name. He wasn’t a witness at the trial.
“Anyway, the driver was coming around to do it, but this man walked up to the car and opened the door. Then Delmar got out and it looked like there might be trouble, so I walked over to the car to cool things down.”
“How close were you standing to Mr. Epps when you went to the car?”
“I was in front of him, almost touching.”
“Did you notice whether he was carrying a gun?”
“In his hand?”
“Anywhere on his person.”
Sally closed her eyes and concentrated. After a short time she opened her eyes and shook her head.
“I don’t remember seeing a gun, but I wasn’t really looking. He could have had a gun under his jacket.”
“What about Charlie? Where did he go when the fighting started?”
“I’m not sure. I didn’t see him in a fight with anyone, but that doesn’t surprise me. Charlie was a talker, not a fighter. He wouldn’t have hit Tony if his bodyguard wasn’t right behind him. Quite honestly, I can’t imagine he would shoot someone, either.”
“Your husband had just hit him and was running toward him.”
“I know, but I just don’t think Charlie had that kind of violence in him.”
CHAPTER 35
Amanda decided to spend the rest of the day reviewing the file in State v. Pope. Dennis Levy was no longer in the conference room and she thanked God for small favors. By the time she was done for the day, she was working on her third mug of coffee and everyone else in the office was gone. Mike Greene called to see if she wanted to grab a bite to eat, but she was so tired she decided that a quick dinner, a warm bath, and an early bedtime was what she needed.
Amanda ordered sushi to go at a restaurant near her office. A little before eight, she parked in her spot in the garage of a converted redbrick warehouse in Portland’s trendy Pearl District and took the elevator to her loft. It was 1,200 square feet of mostly open space with hardwood floors, high ceilings, and tall windows that gave her a view of the metal arches of the Freemont Bridge, the traffic on the Willamette River, and the snow-covered slopes of Mount St. Helens, an active volcano. Most of the art that decorated her condo had been purchased in the galleries scattered among the restaurants and coffee houses that were so easy to find in the Pearl. She loved living someplace where she could walk to work or take the trolley on days when she didn’t need her car.
Amanda opened the front door and started to punch in her alarm code. The alarm wasn’t on. She paused, her fingers over the keypad. Amanda hadn’t slept well because of the events at the courthouse. She decided that she’d probably been so tired that she’d forgotten to set the alarm when she left for work. She flipped on the lights, left the sushi on the kitchen counter, and headed toward her bedroom to change. Halfway through her living room, she froze. A slender black man was watching her from her couch.
“Not to worry, Miss Jaffe,” Nathan Tuazama said in his lilting African English. “I have no intention of hurting you.”
Amanda took a closer look at her visitor. His suit was expensive and his shoes were shined. She thought his tie might be silk. This was definitely not the attire of a cat burglar.
“I think you should explain why you broke into my apartment before I call the police,” Amanda said, keeping her voice calm while she scanned the area around her for potential weapons.
The intruder’s lips curved upward but there was something unnatural about his smile. Amanda was reminded of the rictus she’d seen on the faces of corpses in autopsy photos.
“I assure you that Charlie won’t want the police to learn of our conversation.”
Amanda pulled out her cell phone. “I just punched in a nine and a one. If I don’t get a good explanation for this break-in, I’m finishing the call.”
“Please, Miss Jaffe, sit down. I know it must be unsettling to find someone in your home but I won’t be here long and you are perfectly safe. It’s your client who should be worried.”
“If you want to talk to me about my client, I have an office and business hours.”
“Long hours, to judge from the time I’ve spent waiting for you. I’m pleased to see that Charlie has such a dedicated advocate. But let’s get to business. It’s late and you must be tired.
“I am Nathan Tuazama, the director of President Jean-Claude Baptiste’s National Education Bureau.” Amanda felt her stomach roll. “You have heard of President Baptiste?”
Amanda nodded. “Charlie’s also mentioned you.”
“I imagine he has.”
“What do you want with me?”
“President Baptiste would appreciate some assistance with a problem.”
“And that is?”
“Charlie took something that did not belong to him when he left Batanga, something that belongs to President Baptiste. If Charlie was still in Batanga I would be having this conversation with him in the basement of the executive mansion, and the problem would be solved quickly.”
Charlie had told Amanda what happened in the basement of the mansion, and it took every ounce of Amanda’s courtroom training to maintain her composure.
“Unfortunately, I am in America, so I am here to ask you, on behalf of my president, to act as our intermediary and convince Charlie to return what he has taken.”
The box! Tuazama had to be referring to the contents of Charlie’s box.
“Assuming I can get this property to you, what happens to Charlie?”
“Once I have the property, President Baptiste will have no further interest in your client,” Tuazama lied. “Charlie is an insignificant and easily forgettable individual, but he will become significant to me should he try to retain the president’s property. Tell him that. Tell Charlie that he will become someone of great interest to me if I do not get what I want. And tell him I am not a patient man when it comes to my president’s interests.”
“What is it you think Mr. Marsh has?”
Tuazama stood. “That need not concern you. In fact, the less you know, the better off you are. Believe me, you do not want to involve yourself in this business other than as a messenge
r.”
“How will I contact you to tell you what Mr. Marsh wants to do?”
“Don’t trouble yourself about anything but communicating President Baptiste’s wishes to your client. I know the number of your cell phone. Rest assured, I’ll be in touch soon. It’s been a pleasure meeting you.”
Amanda set her alarm the moment her door closed behind Tuazama. Then she sat down until her nerves settled. Amanda had no idea what Charlie was into but she was convinced that Tuazama had been responsible for the chaos in Charlie’s hotel room. Amanda wondered if Tuazama was the sniper and if he’d missed on purpose to frighten Charlie. He’d certainly frightened her.
HALF AN HOUR later, Amanda was seated on the sofa in the sitting room in Charlie’s suite.
“Do you remember telling me about Nathan Tuazama, the head of Baptiste’s secret police?”
Charlie’s eyes shifted nervously and a sheen of sweat appeared on his forehead.
“I just got a chance to meet him, Charlie. He broke into my apartment.”
“He didn’t hurt you, did he?” Charlie asked with genuine concern.
“No, but he made it pretty clear that he’s going to hurt you unless you return what you stole from President Baptiste.”
“I didn’t steal anything.”
“Then what is Tuazama doing here?”
Charlie looked ill. “He’s after the contents of the box I gave you.”
“And that is?”
“Some diamonds I smuggled out of Batanga,” Charlie answered, his voice barely above a whisper.
“How many diamonds?”
“I don’t know exactly.”
“Guess.”
Charlie looked down, unable to meet her eye. “A lot. I haven’t had a chance to show them to anyone who can tell me what they’re worth.”
“Do the diamonds in the box belong to President Baptiste?”
“No, not really.”
“Then why did Nathan Tuazama say they did?”
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