The hallway was narrow, cluttered with bits of broken furniture and a mattress was propped up against a door. A girl of about nine was sitting on the stairs, whose bare boards were dusty and well worn.
‘Hi, I’m looking for someone called Nick. Do you know which floor?’
The child wiped her nose with the back of her grubby hand. ‘Up, number eight,’ she said, and held out her hand. Lorraine opened her purse and gave her a dollar, and the little girl ran out, squealing with pleasure.
Lorraine tidied her hair, then tapped on the door. She could hear a male voice talking and laughing, so rapped again louder, then hit the door with the flat of her hand.
A chain was removed, and the door opened an inch. ‘Yes?’
‘I’m Lorraine Page – I called earlier.’
‘Oh, yes, one moment.’ A dark-haired woman unhooked the chain and opened the door wide, stepping back almost to hide behind it. ‘Come in.’
Lorraine followed her into the apartment. The cramped hallway was dark, with coloured shawls tacked to the wall. A fishing net was draped over a doorway, and a large papier-mâché sun hung above a stripped pine door, which stood open.
Lorraine was surprised – the room was large, and very bright. The sloping ceiling and walls were painted white, while the bare floorboards had been stripped and stained, then varnished to a gleaming finish. All four windows were bare of curtains, as the room was obviously used as a studio, and the light was important. Paintings were displayed on easels, and stacks of canvases lined the walls, propped against one another.
The woman, who had still not introduced herself, moved with a lovely fluid grace from window to window, drawing down blinds for much-needed shade: the room was unbearably hot. ‘We don’t have air-conditioning,’ she said.
Lorraine recognized her vaguely from Harry Nathan’s funeral. She was pale, almost unhealthy-looking, with large brown eyes, quite a prominent nose, and a rather tight mouth with buck teeth. She was not unattractive, but there was a plainness about her, and her straight dark hair, swept away from her face with two ugly hair-grips, needed washing. She wore leather sandals and a loose-fitting print dress, which left her arms bare, and she held her hands loosely in front of her.
‘Do you want some coffee?’ Her voice was thin, and she kept her head inclined slightly downwards, as though she didn’t want to meet Lorraine’s eyes.
‘Yes, please, black, no sugar – but if you have some honey . . .’
‘Sure.’
She started to walk out, but stopped and performed a sort of pirouette when Lorraine asked if she was Nick’s wife. ‘I suppose so – I’m Alison. Please look around. He won’t be long – he’s just on the phone.’
As the door closed Lorraine smiled. She began to look first at the half-finished work on the easel, a portrait of a dark-haired man with finely cut features, but full, sensual lips, apparently looking through water, with flowers resting against his cheek and the lips slightly parted, as if he were gasping for air. The painting was unnerving, because Lorraine was sure the subject was Harry Nathan. She didn’t like it, not that the work wasn’t good, for it was, but it had a childish, almost careless quality. She turned her attention to some of the bigger canvases on the walls, all of which had a similar wash of pale colour in the background, and featured the same man from different angles and in a variety of poses – hidden by ferns, screaming and, in one, with a sports shoe carefully painted on top of his head.
Other canvases were traversed by a series of palmprints, or featured pieces of fabric and leaves, but all appeared half-finished, as if the artist had grown bored mid-way and moved on to something else. Lorraine looked closely at a painting on the wall furthest from the door, which showed a group of tall trees with some scrawled writing superimposed on them.
She turned as Alison reappeared with a large chipped mug, and held it out to her. ‘Coffee.’ Lorraine took it, and the woman remained standing nearby, her head still bowed.
‘Are you a painter?’ Lorraine asked, with false brightness: there was a servile quality about Alison that made her skin crawl, as if she were afraid of something.
‘No.’
She was tough to make conversation with.
‘Have you lived here long?’
‘Awhile.’
Alison straightened up and flexed her shoulder. She began to massage the nape of her neck, then gave a faint smile and left the room.
Lorraine could hear what they were saying in the next room.
‘I’m going out now – I’ve got a class.’
‘Okay, see you.’
She moved closer to the open door: Alison was standing in the doorway opposite and the conversation continued in audible whispers.
‘Is she looking at them?’
‘Yes, she was when I took her coffee in.’
‘I’ll give her a few minutes, then. What’s her name again?’
Alison replied, but Lorraine couldn’t hear what she said, nor could she see the man she presumed was Nick. A phone rang, and Alison turned to cross to the front door, but waited a minute listening. Nick said hello to the caller, and Alison left.
Lorraine finished her coffee. She was becoming irritated – the call went on and on. She set the mug down on the floor and started to detach some of the canvases from the stack – all of the same man. She moved to the next group. These were much better, stronger. She found one she liked a lot and pulled it out. It was a crude, but powerful, life-sized portrait – not, for once, of the dark man but of an Indian brave in feathered headdress. She put it to one side, planning to ask the price – it would make a nice present for Jake. She was about to move to the next group of canvases when she heard a loud shriek, sustained for some time. She ran over to the open door. ‘It says what? Go on! How old does it say he was?’ The cries continued. Lorraine stepped into the hallway and made her way to the doorway at the end of the passage. She stood just outside the kitchen.
Nick Nathan had his back to her and was leaning against the side of a table talking on a wall-mounted phone. His dark, slightly greying hair was pulled back, as it has been at the funeral, with a rubber band. He was barefoot and wore torn, dirty jeans and a paint-stained cotton shirt, whose sleeves were rolled up to reveal muscular arms, one wrist encircled by a heavy silver bracelet, and a similar ring on the third finger of his other hand.
‘Vallance shot himself? You’re kidding me.’
He listened, then shrieked again in the same high-pitched fashion. He was almost bent double, and Lorraine realized suddenly that he was laughing. And whoever was on the other end of the line was telling him about the suicide of Raymond Vallance.
The call continued for another ten minutes. Lorraine returned to the studio, wishing there was somewhere to sit down. She lit a cigarette, and had smoked half of it when the shrieking stopped.
Finally Lorraine heard the receiver banged down. She hoped that Nick Nathan would finally come in and greet her, but then heard the clatter of dishes, and his voice calling the cat. At last the man came in like a whirlwind. ‘Hi – sorry to keep you waiting. I’m Nick.’
He danced across to her, and pumped her hand up and down. His eyes had a manic look, and he was sweating profusely, his thinning hair sticking to his scalp. He darted close to her, then moved just as rapidly away, looking pointedly at the cigarette and opening a window.
‘I’m sorry.’ She gestured to her cigarette, but Nick shrugged.
‘You want to die, it’s your choice.’
He smiled suddenly, showing even white teeth, but his eyes were hunted, and he couldn’t keep still, wandering around the room dragging out one canvas after another. Now that she had seen him, Lorraine wondered if the man in the paintings was himself, but he didn’t have the same high cheekbones – his face was flatter and plainer than his brother’s.
‘I’m interested in that one,’ Lorraine said, tossing the cigarette out of the window.
Nick whipped round to look at the painting she had pulled out of
the stack.
‘How much?’ she asked, uncomfortable. She couldn’t seem to get centred around Nathan – he was so off-beam that he unnerved her.
‘Five thousand dollars,’ he snapped, as if challenging her, but she didn’t flinch.
‘I’ll take it,’ she said calmly, and he beamed, picking the piece up to admire it himself. Then he started to drag out canvases at an alarming rate, laying them around the room. He babbled to her, asking about her gallery, if she was looking for a one-man show, or intended displaying a number of artists’ work together.
‘How did you find me?’ he said, so intent on finding work to show to her that he didn’t appear interested in her reply.
‘Raymond Vallance suggested I call you,’ she said, and saw him stiffen.
‘He’s dead,’ he said, staring at her.
‘I know, he committed suicide.’
She was wondering how in the hell she could start to question him – the reason she had come – but knew that she had to tread carefully. From what she had seen of his work, Nathan did not have the technical virtuosity to imitate better artists, and he seemed so mentally unstable that he would be too dangerous to have in on any scam – but she had come all this way to interview him and she intended to do so.
Lorraine took out her cheque book and started writing. ‘Do you show your work mainly in Santa Fe?’ she said, pretending to make conversation but paving the way for the real question she wanted to ask.
‘I guess,’ Nathan said. ‘I’ve shown in California too.’
‘Did you work with your brother’s gallery?’ Lorraine said casually.
Nick eyed her suspiciously. ‘How do you know my brother had a gallery?’ he asked.
‘Oh, just contacts,’ Lorraine said airily. ‘I know a lot of people in the art world – I’ve come across Kendall too. It must have been very useful, having a gallery in the family, so to speak.’
Nick said nothing for a while. Then, ‘I had a few pieces in there.’
‘Did you ever live in Los Angeles?’
‘No. I just stayed at his place a few times.’
Lorraine finished writing the cheque with a flourish and Nathan slowly relaxed. ‘I hated LA,’ he said. ‘Full of fucking phoneys. They wouldn’t know art if it walked up and bit them in the face.’
‘That’s a pity. I’m sure Kendall could have promoted your work.’
He sneered, ‘The only person Kendall ever promoted was herself, money-grubbing bitch. My brother wanted more of my work, but she wouldn’t have it.’
‘Her gallery was successful, though,’ Lorraine said.
‘Bullshit! Filled with crap, wallpaper paintings.’
‘Yes, some of those paintings look as though just about anyone could do them,’ Lorraine said innocently. ‘I’m sure you could do stuff in exactly the same style if you wanted to.’
‘You bet I could,’ Nick said. ‘If I wanted to.’
‘It must be a great temptation,’ Lorraine said, flattering him, ‘I mean, for a real artist, if money’s tight, to know you could make a lot more just by imitating someone who happens to be flavour of the month.’
‘Well,’ he said, ‘sometimes I’ve worked in a particular way because that was what a buyer wanted – that’s the difference between working to a commission and working for yourself.’
‘You haven’t ever copied, say, a specific painting?’ Lorraine went on.
‘What? You mean an exact copy of a named work?’ Nick said. ‘Absolutely not – that’s forgery, in case you hadn’t heard.’
‘But it must be quite a temptation,’ Lorraine persisted.
‘Not to me,’ Nick said. ‘I couldn’t do it if I tried – it’s a specific skill, and besides, my own work’s too strong.’
‘You don’t know anyone connected with your brother who maybe . . . wouldn’t have quite the same scruples?’ she asked. She tore out the cheque and laid it on the table.
‘Who the fuck are you?’
‘Someone who’s got five thousand dollars on the table for you, but I need you to answer a few questions.’ He shook his head, and kept on shaking it. ‘I’m a private investigator.’ She flipped him her card, but he didn’t take it. ‘I’ve been hired by your brother’s lawyer, Mr Feinstein. Do you know him?’ Nick glared at her, his arms wrapped around his body. ‘I’ve been hired to trace assets missing from your brother’s estate.’ This elicited a flicker of interest. ‘Paintings.’
‘What?’
She’d hooked him. ‘Either there’s a mountain of valuable art concealed somewhere, or there’s several million dollars hidden in an undected account.’ She took the list of missing paintings from her briefcase, and passed it to him. ‘These are the works I’m looking for.’
He took a long time reading the list, then let the paper drop onto the table. ‘I wouldn’t pay a hundred bucks for any one of those assholes’ pictures.’
‘Maybe you wouldn’t, but other people did – or at least they thought they did. Various buyers at Gallery One viewed an original, got it authenticated, but then someone copied it, and it was the copy that was hung on their walls.’
‘Well,’ Nick said, ‘it was nothing to do with me. Nice scam, though – I wish the bastard had cut me in on it.’
Lorraine studied him. Her gut feeling was that he was telling the truth. ‘You don’t know of anyone Harry could have been working with?’ she asked.
‘Well, Kendall’s a pretty obvious candidate, isn’t she?’ he said. ‘She would have dug up her grandmother’s grave if she thought there was a nickel in it.’
‘She was certainly involved in setting up the initial part of the operation with Harry, but he switched the paintings again to cut her out. I was just wondering if that was all his idea, or if someone else was pulling the strings.’
‘They must have been,’ Nick said. ‘Harry was never like that.’ Unexpectedly, he started to weep uncontrollably, rubbing at his eye sockets while Lorraine watched in fascinated horror at this sudden switch of mood. The crying jag ended as suddenly as it had begun. ‘Sorry,’ he said. ‘My brother was better-looking than me, better at everything. He was a hard act to follow, and all my life, until he died, I was kind of following . . . I still can’t believe he’s dead.’
‘Kendall’s dead, too, now, did you know?’ Lorraine said.
‘Yeah,’ he replied. He was obviously not interested in discussing Kendall’s death so Lorraine changed tack.
‘What does Alison do?’
He smiled, and stretched out his arms. ‘She’s a dancer, but dancing’s a hard world, almost as hard as painting.’ Then he asked, ‘You know Sonja?’
‘I’ve met her.’
‘She sent you here, didn’t she?’ he demanded.
‘No, I told you, it was Raymond Vallance.’
He shrieked with laughter again, mouth wide open. ‘That old queen! He clung to his past glories like a falling climber.’
‘At least he had some to cling to,’ Lorraine said quietly, but her sarcasm was lost on Nathan, who gave another loud hoot of laughter.
‘He was in love with my brother, everybody was in love with him. Everybody always thought he was something special, and you know something, I did too. It wasn’t until he was dead that I realized he was a loser.’
Lorraine had heard enough and Nick Nathan irritated her. The trip to Santa Fe had been largely a waste of time, but at least she knew he hadn’t been responsible for the forgeries. It was interesting, too, that the family’s suspicions, like her own, seemed to centre on Sonja . . .
‘I have to go,’ she said. ‘Can you pack up the picture for me?’
He parcelled it in newspaper and handed it to her, saying that if she wanted any more of his work, all she had to do was call.
‘Just for my records,’ she said, ‘could you tell me when you last saw your brother?’
‘Must be a couple of years ago, just before he and Kendall broke up. Come to think of it, they were talking about getting some painting copied.
I thought they meant onto a slide – it was one of that asshole Schnabel’s.’ He moved out into the corridor, heading for the stairs, and Lorraine followed.
‘Was it just Harry and Kendall, or was anyone else there?’
‘There was another guy – Arthur something, I don’t know his last name. It was after a show Kendall had, and he and I had a kind of fight – over the Schnabel. I said it wasn’t worth the hook it was hanging from and he kind of went for me. Fucking asshole.’ Nick stopped on the landing to continue his tirade against Julian Schnabel, talentless bum, in his opinion, promoted by a clique of art insiders interested in lining their own pockets by inflating the prices of certain court favourites’ work. ‘Everything’s fixed, you realize that? Art has got nothing to do with the market.’ He jabbed his finger into Lorraine’s chest. ‘I’ve trailed my work round every fucking New York gallery. I send in my slides and they lose them. Then they buy a fucking piece of canvas with a wooden plank sticking out of it. That’s not art.’
Lorraine stepped back to avoid Nathan’s finger, and decided to risk interrupting him. ‘Do you recall anything more about this Arthur?’
‘Big guy, dark,’ Nick said, setting off down the stairs.
‘Do you know if he was a painter?’ Lorraine asked, hurrying after him.
‘I don’t know. Bastards like Schnabel probably pay people like him to talk up their work. He hung around after the show, like he was waiting for me to go, and I thought, Fine, screw you, I’m just the guy’s fucking brother, so I walked out. Then I forgot my jacket so I go back, and the three of them were out back in a kind of workroom, and Kendall and Harry were standing behind him, and he was using this big lamp, looking over the canvas, right, and . . .’
‘What exactly did he say?’ Lorraine asked. ‘It’s very important.’
‘Oh, I can’t remember. Kendall said something about having a buyer and he said something about getting a copy made quickly. Maybe he’s your rip-off artist.’
‘Did you ever see him again?’ Lorraine asked.
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