Murder at the Kennedy Center

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Murder at the Kennedy Center Page 13

by Margaret Truman


  “I need time off,” Smith told him.

  Gerry, whose round, pink, and pleasant face belied a leg-trap intellect and rock-hard convictions, raised his white eyebrows. “A leave of absence?”

  “Maybe not that formal, Roger. Without going into too many details at this stage, let’s just say that my involvement with the Ewald family is going to keep me occupied for a period of time.”

  “How long do you anticipate this will go on?” Gerry asked.

  Smith shrugged. “Could be a couple of months. I possibly can handle an occasional class, but I can’t be bound to it. How about Tony Peet covering for me when I can’t make it?” Peet was the youngest member of the law school faculty, a brilliant Harvard scholar who made no attempt to hide his aspirations to one day become a justice of the Supreme Court. Few doubted he’d achieve his goal, except those who knew what a roulette wheel court appointments were.

  “All right, Mac, but you discuss it with him. If it’s okay with him, it’s okay with me. I need you both. Tell me, is the Feldman murder something you really want to be involved in?”

  Smith laughed. “I’ve been asking myself that question ever since she was killed, and Ken and Leslie Ewald asked me to advise them. Annabel has been asking that question, too, and I’m not sure we’ve come to the same conclusion. She says she understands why I feel compelled to do this, but I don’t think she really does. We both left the active, hectic practice of law to pursue things that were gentler and longer term. I suppose I can view this as a momentary digression, sort of keeping my hand in something. Besides, I’ve known Ken and Leslie for years. And …”

  Gerry’s white eyebrows peaked again like mountaintops, and a smile crossed his face. “And Mackensie Smith was getting bored, needs a little action in his life, sort of like an older man taking up with a young woman. Just remember one thing, Mac—old men who have flings with young women enjoy it for a brief period of time, but find that if it lasts for any duration, against all odds, it loses its appeal. And I’m not speaking legally.”

  “I’ll keep that in mind, and please refrain from using that analogy with Annie next time you see her.” Smith checked his watch. “I really can’t stay long, Roger. It was kind of you to take time from your guests for this discussion.”

  “You will have something to eat with us?”

  “Would you be offended if I didn’t?”

  “Of course not. I know you have many things to do, all of them undoubtedly due yesterday. Go on. Just say good-bye to Charlotte, and promise me one thing.”

  “What’s that?”

  “To keep me informed on all the sordid, inside details as they develop. I may be a law school dean, but I haven’t lost my interest in the hectic, active practice—or in gossip.”

  “I’ll give you a regular report, Roger. And thanks again. I appreciate your understanding.”

  Mac took Rufus for a long walk. Such a pleasant and easy conversation with Gerry seemed out of place, almost perverse. The son of the man likely to become the Democratic presidential nominee was a prime murder suspect, and he, Mac Smith, had accepted the responsibility of trying to keep suspect from becoming accused.

  As he headed back toward the house, he said to himself, Pull out, pull out before it’s too late.

  That was as long as the thought lasted. He wouldn’t pull out. The surge of purpose—and, yes, he admitted to himself, importance—would override any cautious evaluation of the situation in which he’d placed himself. He was in, all the way in, and there was a lot of work to do, the contemplation of which was full of mess, as Marcia put it, but also of an odd, fulfilling pleasure.

  15

  “Are you awake?” Smith asked Annabel, looking over at her. The sight of her copper hair strewn over a pillow never failed to delight him.

  She mumbled and buried her head a little deeper in the pillow.

  “It’s important.”

  “What’s important?”

  “We should have made coffee last night,” Smith said.

  “Uh-huh.”

  They’d decided to stay at her place Saturday night to avoid the constant ringing of the telephone in Smith’s house.

  “I’ll get up and make some,” he said.

  “Good,” she said, and sank into sleep again.

  He kissed a small exposed portion of her cheek, rolled out of bed, and went to the kitchen, where he prepared the coffee using the various blends that he had made certain were always stocked there. He found fresh eggs, scrambled them expertly, popped oatmeal bread into the toaster, poured orange juice, and when everything was ready, shouted, “Get up! Eat. Breakfast is ready. The world is waiting.”

  They finished breakfast by eight, and sat at the dining room table drinking second cups of coffee and reading the Sunday paper, enjoying an interlude both sensed must be brief. There was a long feature on the Feldman murder, including pictures of Paul, his mother and father, and the deceased. There was also a shot of Mac Smith taken outside the Ewald home.

  Annabel giggled. “I never knew you had a double chin, Mac.”

  “Shadows from the lighting,” he said.

  She laughed again. “Since you’re going to be the subject of media attention, maybe you should hire a media adviser, like politicians do.”

  “Or a surgeon, for a tuck or tug.” Smith went to the funnies. He was reading Doonesbury when Annabel said, “Mac, time to fill me in on everything.”

  Which he did, in as much detail as he could summon. He told her about the call from the New York shyster Herbert Greist, replayed his interview with Paul Ewald, his conversations with Ken and Leslie Ewald, what had transpired during his meeting with Joe Riga at Riga’s office, and his brief talk with Ken Ewald in which Ewald had said he hadn’t stayed in his office the night of the murder but had instead gone to the Watergate Hotel for a tryst with an unnamed woman.

  “Interesting, that he would tell you about that but not tell you who she is,” Annabel said.

  “Dumb but not unusual,” Smith commented. “It’s known that Ken has had a proclivity for pretty faces other than Leslie’s, but he’s always been mostly a model of discretion, thank God for her sake.”

  “Aren’t you curious about who she is?”

  “Yes, I’d like very much to know who she is. I need to know everything so we are not surprised, caught off base. I’ve learned too much from the radio so far. I’ll have to know eventually. Unfortunately, so will too many other people.”

  “Think he would tell you if you asked him again?”

  “Yes. I will—ask him, I mean. I also want to ask you a favor.”

  She cocked her head and raised her eyebrows. “My dear … asking for my favors on this Sunday morning?” Sunday mornings were a favorite time with them for making love, like the rest of the world, with the alarm clock turned off.

  “That’s favor number two,” he said. “First, I want to set up a meeting in New York with this Greist character as quickly as possible. I thought I’d try to call him today and see if he’s available sometime tomorrow. His type can be in the office Sundays—not always working. My problem is that I have to spend time here getting organized, hiring a temporary secretary to work out of the suite, lease some word-processing equipment, get a couple of extra phones in there, a copying machine, all the things I used to take for granted when I had the office. Would you go to a meeting with Greist in New York?”

  “Mac, I own an art gallery, remember? I used to be a lawyer.”

  “Once a lawyer, always a lawyer, and you know it. Look, if you’re really jammed up at the gallery, I’ll try to figure out something else, but if you could go to New York as a representative of my …” His voice took on a certain pomposity. “As an associate in my law firm”—his voice returned to normal—“I would be forever grateful.”

  She poured them more coffee, and the sight of her voluptuous body beneath her robe, hair hanging loose and natural, pretty bare feet with red-tipped toes on white terra-cotta tiles, took his mind off murder
for the moment. When she sat down, he repeated his request, adding, “I’ll make it up to you.”

  “How?”

  A shrug. “I don’t know, a long trip somewhere exotic once this is over.”

  She sat back and looked at him. What she saw was a different man. Always intelligence itself, he now had the look of someone with a large commitment, almost religious in intensity. He was very much alive. She liked what she saw, even if she didn’t like the reason for it. “How are things going with Tony Buffolino?” she asked.

  He laughed. “He’s as big a character as ever, but no matter what Tony is or isn’t, he’s a damned good investigator, very creative.” He told her of how Tony had used the movie-star photo.

  She shook her head. “You’re an amazing man, Mac Smith. You have Ken Ewald, who, if he were to become president, would want you as his attorney general. You’ve counseled the rich and famous, and you’ve become a distinguished professor of law at a leading university. At the same time, you hire a foul-ball ex-cop, put him up in a suite at Watergate, and pay him probably a lot more than he, or any other private investigator, is worth, I’m sure. What’s next, a limo and dancing girls?”

  “I hadn’t thought of that, Annabel. I will … think about it … the dancing girls part. For Tony. In the meantime, will you go to New York and talk to Greist for me? I’m going to get Tony moving tomorrow on checking into Andrea Feldman’s past. I think I’ll send him to San Francisco.”

  She assumed a pout. “He gets to go to San Francisco, and I end up in New York talking to some sleaze?”

  “Do it for me and do a good job, and we’ll go to San Francisco together. Soon.”

  “When?”

  “As soon as …”

  “All right,” she said. “James can handle things at the gallery while I’m gone. He’s working out very nicely.”

  “Good.”

  “I’ll stay an extra day or two in New York. There are some pieces I’d like to track down, and I may as well do it on your generosity.”

  “Of course.” She was having fun at his expense, and he found it amusing.

  “You will put me up in fancy digs, of course.”

  “Of course. The Y on Forty-seventh Street. No, seriously, Annabel, you name it. Then you’ll go as my associate?”

  She flashed a wide and warm smile. “I’ll go as your partner. I’ll name the hotel—and my fee. Count on it.”

  With favor number one out of the way, they proceeded to favor number two, fell asleep in each other’s arms for a half hour, then showered and went about their individual projects for the day. For Annabel, it was to sort out clothing to get ready for Washington’s infamous heat and humidity, a season that would surely arrive soon. Smith settled by a phone in the living room and called the number he had for Herbert Greist. He thought he might get an answering machine, but Greist answered.

  “I’m impressed, Mr. Greist,” Smith said. “This is Mac Smith. You must have a heavy caseload to be working on a Sunday.”

  Smith’s attempt at conciliatory chitchat fell on deaf ears. Greist said only, “Yes, I do.”

  “Mr. Greist, one of my associates”—he glanced at the bedroom—“my partner, Annabel Reed, will be in New York tomorrow on other business. I thought it might be a good time to make contact with you and to see whether there is some field of understanding that could be established.”

  “I’d rather see you, Mr. Smith.”

  “Well, as you can imagine, being the Ewalds’ attorney in this matter is going to keep me anchored to Washington for quite a while. You seemed anxious to move on this. Ms. Reed has my total confidence and can speak for me.” He wanted to add, “Take it or leave it.”

  “Yeah, I suppose so. Will four o’clock be convenient?”

  “Yes, I’m sure it will be. Her other appointments are in the morning.” They made the date, and Greist gave Smith his address on Manhattan’s West Side.

  Smith picked up the phone and called an old friend in Connecticut, Morgan Tubbs, a partner in a Wall Street law firm. He reached Tubbs at his home, and after the smallest of small talk, got to the point. “Morgan, could you have someone up there run a background check for me tomorrow morning on a New York attorney named Herbert Greist?”

  “Happy to, Mac. What’s his connection with Ewald?”

  “No connection.”

  “I was really shocked, I have to tell you, when I heard you had agreed to represent the Ewald son. I thought you were out of litigation for good.”

  “Nothing is forever, as they say.”

  Tubbs laughed. “I heard a rumor that you were doing this for Senator Ewald to try and keep his campaign on track. I’d like to think that was an altruistic act on your part, but rumor also goes on to say that if Ewald becomes president, I’m talking to our next attorney general.”

  “No, you’re speaking with an old friend who’s taken some time off to help another friend, and who will be scurrying back to academia as soon as possible.”

  “As you wish, Mac. I’ll be happy to see what I can come up with on Greist. Where can I reach you tomorrow morning, at home?”

  Smith started to affirm that, then said, “No, Morgan, I’ve established an office in the Watergate Hotel. It’s suite 1117. I should be there by late morning.”

  “Talk to you then.”

  Smith told Annabel that he would call her in New York before her meeting and fill her in on what he’d learned about Greist from Tubbs. Then he called Tony Buffolino at the Watergate, but there was no answer.

  That afternoon, they went to Smith’s Foggy Bottom house, where he prepared a list of things he wanted to accomplish the next day and fed Rufus. Later he suggested, “Let’s take a nice, long, leisurely walk. It might be the last time for a while we can just do nothing together.”

  “Were we doing nothing together this morning?”

  “No,” he said, smiling, “we were doing everything.”

  They ended up at the Mall, where they strolled through the Museum of American History, had an early dinner at Clyde’s in Georgetown, and spent the rest of the evening at Annabel’s. She finished reading the newspapers, and he skimmed through a copy of The A.B.C. Murders, an old Agatha Christie novel that he found on Annabel’s bookshelves, and that set his mind toward detection, discovery, and looking twice at the obvious.

  He returned to his house at eleven, walked Rufus, and immediately went to bed.

  16

  After dropping Annabel off at National Airport to catch the crowded 8 A.M. shuttle, he went to a business machine store and arranged to have necessary office equipment delivered to the Watergate. He made another stop at an office supply store and ordered basic supplies.

  Buffolino was at the suite when Smith arrived shortly before eleven.

  “Nice suit,” Smith said.

  “Thanks. I needed some new threads if I’m going to be hanging around a place like this.”

  “Where did you get it?”

  “Downstairs. They got a men’s shop.”

  Smith raised one eyebrow.

  “It was on sale.”

  “I see. Are you comfortable enough here, Tony?”

  “Jesus, sure I am. I really appreciate you going for this, Mac.” Buffolino looked around the living room. “Brings back old memories.”

  “Unpleasant ones, I assume,” said Smith. “Frankly, I was surprised … no, shocked is more like it, that you actually chose this suite to stay in.”

  Buffolino shrugged. “Yeah, well, I figured I’d relive the crime, like. Know what I mean? You see, I was afraid of this place. My life went south here. Actually, it’s not as unpleasant as I figured it might be. Funny, when I walked in here, I could almost see that dirtbag Garcia sitting in the chair. That’s one thing I’d like to do before I pack it in, Mac.”

  “What’s that, Tony?”

  “Find him and settle the score.”

  “Tony, that case is closed. Still, when this one is over, you’ll have enough money to buy a plane ticket to Pana
ma, if you want. He went back, didn’t he?”

  “That’s what I heard.”

  “You’d be on his turf.”

  “That’s okay,” Tony said grimly. “He was on mine.”

  Smith told Tony about the things to be delivered that day, and also said that there was the possibility he’d have to go to San Francisco, not only to dig a little further into Andrea Feldman’s background, but to find her mother, too.

  “Hey, great,” Buffolino said. “Always wanted to see Frisco. Good thing I bought this suit. Maybe I should get another.”

  “That one looks like it will travel well, Tony.”

  The message sank in, and Buffolino made a mental note not to bring up any further mentions of personal expenditures. He said, “You know, Mac, you’re okay, putting me up in a place like this. I never figured you’d pop for it, but … well, I just want you to know I appreciate everything you’ve done for me. Including what you done for me when IA set me up in here. I didn’t much go for it then, but I know you did right by me.”

  Smith was becoming slightly embarrassed, and was relieved when the phone rang. He picked it up.

  “Mac, Morgan Tubbs.”

  “Good morning, Morgan. Come up with anything on Greist?”

  “An interesting, albeit unsavory, character,” said Tubbs. “Let’s see, Herbert Greist is fifty-eight years old, a graduate of City College Law at the age of thirty. After passing the Bar, he worked for the public defender for four years after which he became deeply involved with the ACLU, but only for a year. He’s been in private practice ever since. There seems to have been a series of offices, the latest of which is on West Seventy-eighth.”

  “Yes, I have that address,” Smith said. “So far, I fail to see why you consider him to be unsavory—or even interesting.”

  “Well, Mac, here’s what led me to say that. Herbert Greist seems to have a penchant for affiliating with what some would see as our less patriotic element.”

  “ ‘Less patriotic’?”

 

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