‘I have recently interviewed Sonja Nathan,’ Lorraine said, keeping her voice expressionless. ‘She denies having any sort of contact with Harry since they got divorced. The separation was not amicable, I understand.’
‘No wonder.’ Mrs Nathan snorted. ‘Sonja couldn’t stand the fact that Harry finally realized that he should have married a nice, sweet, normal, natural girl.’ God knows how he ended up with Kendall in that case, Lorraine thought privately, but the older woman was in full flow. ‘Sonja was a completely unnatural woman from the day and hour Harry met her, and she simply got worse with age. I blessed the day Harry got that woman out of his life, and it broke my heart when he started seeing her again.’
‘What makes you think he war seeing her again?’
‘He used to telephone her from here,’ Abigail Nathan said, and Lorraine felt her pulse quicken. At last: someone had stated that Harry and Sonja Nathan had indeed remained in contact, but whether it was an indulgent mother’s attempt to cover up her son’s wrongdoing and incriminate a woman she disliked remained to be seen. ‘It was the only time Harry ever lied to me. That woman had a hold over him of a kind I’ve never seen.’
‘What sort of untruth do you mean?’ Lorraine asked.
‘He said he was talking to some business associate, fixing up meetings, but I knew it was her.’
‘How did you know it was her?’ Lorraine asked.
‘Because I called the phone company and got a record of the long-distance calls made on my line,’ Mrs Nathan said, giving Lorraine an arch look.
‘I don’t suppose you still have these records anywhere in the house,’ Lorraine asked, glancing around the room – it looked as though nothing had been thrown out in a decade, and it struck her suddenly that if Nathan had been in regular correspondence with his mother, those letters, too, were in all probability nearby.
‘I might have,’ Mrs Nathan said, looking carefully at Lorraine, as though her appearance might yield some clue as to whether or not she could be trusted.
‘Mrs Nathan, if Sonja is responsible for a substantial fraud and perhaps a more serious crime,’ Lorraine said, meeting Mrs Nathan’s eyes with what she hoped was a frank, honest gaze, ‘then I will naturally be handing over the matter to the police.’
‘I told the police that I suspected that woman was mixed up in my son’s death and they pretty much told me to go home to my patty-pans. Just an old lady with a bee in her bonnet. They didn’t have to say it, but that’s what they were thinking.’
No doubt they were, Lorraine thought, and the fact that Harry Nathan had called his ex-wife a few times must have seemed innocent enough. But in the context of so many other circumstances that seemed to point to Sonja, and in particular the flat denials Lorraine had received from both Sonja and Arthur that there had been any contact between her and Harry after they divorced, it was important evidence. Though Nathan could, of course, have been calling to speak to Arthur – the two men had known one another for years, and it was possible that Arthur was helping Nathan with his forgery scam without Sonja’s knowledge. Lorraine realized she had never asked Arthur if he had had any contact with Harry Nathan. But that had seemed unlikely – Harry Nathan had to be the last person with whom Arthur would secretly have been best buddies.
‘I’m afraid that the police often take such allegations lightly when they’re made by a member of the public,’ she said, ‘but they might be more inclined to take it seriously against a background of other evidence coming from a . . . more professional source.’
‘You mean from you,’ Abigail Nathan said bluntly.
‘Yes, I do.’
There was silence for a few moments while the old lady weighed up the pros and cons of trusting Lorraine. ‘Well,’ she said at last, ‘I could go and look upstairs, if you have time to wait.’
‘I’m in no hurry,’ Lorraine said. ‘Or I could come and help you, if you’d like.’
‘That won’t be necessary,’ said Abigail Nathan. ‘You wait right here. You can look around my collection.’
She got up, and Lorraine heard her slow footsteps climbing the stairs. Look around the collection was exactly what she would do, and particularly the collection of papers in the ginger jar. She waited until she heard the woman’s footsteps overhead, tipped it out and flicked through the contents – Abigail Nathan had kept all sorts of junk, matchbooks, photographs, dinner menus and letters, but the most recent was from a woman friend, dated 1994.
There were papers all over the house, and Lorraine decided to investigate further. She opened the door to the next room noiselessly and found herself in a den full of trinkets and toys, bursting out of cupboards and balanced on a number of little spindle-legged tables. Looking round the room, her eye was caught by a most unusual display of carved red wooden devils, no more than a few inches high, with hideous faces and cloven hoofs, holding a pack of miniature playing cards. Lorraine bent down to look closer, genuinely interested, and saw, tucked into the corner of the cabinet, an airmail envelope with a German stamp. She eased it out, recognizing Harry Nathan’s large, untidy handwriting. The postmark was a few months old.
‘Mrs Page?’ Abigail Nathan called. ‘Are you down there?’
Scarcely thinking what she was doing, Lorraine reached under her jacket and slipped the letter into the back of the waistband of her skirt, then walked smartly out to see the old lady making her way downstairs.
‘Yes, I’m here, Mrs Nathan. I just went to the bathroom.’
‘I see. I have what you wanted here – I never throw anything away.’
She held out two sheets of paper. Lorraine’s hand almost trembled as she took them. ‘Thank you, Mrs Nathan,’ she said. ‘May I take these back to LA?’
‘You take them wherever you like,’ Abigail Nathan replied, ‘if it’ll help to get justice for my son.’
Lorraine placed the sheets of paper in her briefcase, and said, ‘I’d better be on my way now, I’m afraid. Can I call a cab?’
‘Certainly,’ Mrs Nathan said graciously, waving her hand towards the filthy kitchen as though ushering Lorraine into a palace. ‘Phone’s through there.’
Lorraine found a card for a cab company pinned next to the phone and made a quick call. ‘It’ll just be a few minutes,’ she said, hanging up. ‘One last thing, Mrs Nathan. I don’t suppose you know anything about a man named Arthur? I don’t know his last name, but Harry knew him as a young man and he’s living with Sonja now in the Hamptons.’
‘You mean Arthur Donnelly. He and Harry were in college together. He was a painter, he said, but I knew he’d never get anywhere. Masterly technique, of course, but simply nothing of his own to say. I told him he ought to count his blessings and join the family firm.’ She laughed at the recollection.
‘What was that, Mrs Nathan?’ Lorraine asked curiously.
‘Oh, an outfit in the antique trade. All reproduction.’
Another piece of the puzzle slotted into place, Lorraine thought, recalling the sticker Cindy had found inside the fake antique jar. It looked like Arthur had indeed taken Mrs Nathan’s advice.
The doorbell rang and Lorraine picked up her briefcase. She thanked Mrs Nathan profusely.
‘So glad to have been of assistance – if I have – and if you hear anything you will contact me, won’t you?’
Once the cab was clear of Abigail Nathan’s house, Lorraine reached carefully under her jacket and extracted the envelope. She took out a single sheet of folded airmail notepaper, with no address, simply the salutation ‘Dearest, sweetest Cherub-face’. The first few lines expressed hopes that she was sticking to a diet, using her exercise bike and not, underlined, eating too many cookies. He went on to say that he was abroad for just a few days, and from Germany he would be going on to Switzerland, but then underlined was, ‘No one must know, that also means do not’ underlined ‘tell even Nicky.’ He said he would explain on his return. He went on to say that within a few months he would be mega-rich, that he was on to something that would
set him up for the rest of his life. The writing was slapdash, and looked as if it had been scrawled in a hurry: some was in cursive script, the rest in capital letters.
Lorraine replaced the note in the envelope and slipped it into her case. There had been no record of this trip to Germany and, most importantly, to Switzerland on Nathan’s official passport. This must be a clear lead to the secret bank accounts. She suddenly sat up. Germany! Sonja Nathan had said what? There was an exhibition of her work being shown in Berlin. Sonja was there now, and Lorraine did not doubt that it was in connection with the art fraud that she and Arthur had evidently been running with Nathan.
The net was closing, and Lorraine felt an almost ungovernable impulse to follow Sonja to Europe and run her to earth. She would have to act immediately – but the thought of telling Jake that she had to make just this one trip, follow this one lead, pushing his patience and understanding yet again was too much for her. She knew that next time he saw her, he wanted to give her a ring and make their engagement public. Suddenly she wanted nothing more than to see him, Rosie, Rooney, Tiger. She had been away too long.
CHAPTER 19
SONJA STOOD in one of the airy, vaulted halls of the Hamburger Bahnhof in Berlin, the former railway station that had been stunningly restored as an art gallery. All the pieces she had executed during the past seven years were placed around her. People stood sipping drinks in front of them, but even more were gathered before her latest work, a huge rectangular structure draped in a black cloth, which was to be unveiled later in the evening. She scanned the unmistakably prosperous but vapid-looking crowd as she waited for Arthur to come back with her drink, and reflected that art snobs were the same all over the world.
Arthur returned with a glass of champagne for her just as she observed the two organizers of the exhibition bearing down on her. ‘Arthur, I think I’m about to be carried off.’
He knew that she wanted him to go and, glancing at his watch, saw that it was almost time for him to pick up the car that would take him to Kreuzberg.
‘Well,’ he said, ‘I’m afraid I have to run. Good luck, Sonja.’
Outside, the car was waiting, and Arthur switched his mind to the negotiations, which had been complex, though on the surface not illegal – none of the paintings he was about to sell were known to be stolen, none had been reported as such. By the time that happened he and Sonja would be long gone, and if the Japanese buyer he had lined up took the bulk, he wouldn’t care. In Japan if a buyer of a painting could prove ownership for two consecutive years, the work became irrecoverably his or hers, and could be shown with impunity. This evening’s sale had taken years of planning, years of secret meetings and hours of his time forging the artists’ work. It was his own work now that he was thinking about: if this deal came off he would have the rest of his life to paint in luxury. If it went wrong, then he might spend it in prison. Either way, he mused, he’d be able to paint.
Because California time was two hours behind Chicago, it was only mid-afternoon when Lorraine got back to LA. She went straight to her office, eager to check Decker’s research, but it wasn’t until she was there that she remembered Rooney had it. She dialled Feinstein’s number. To her irritation, he was in court, so she left a message. Next she called Rosie and Rooney, and left a message asking Rooney to bring Decker’s carrier bags to her apartment as soon as he could.
At that moment Rosie and Rooney were with Jake Burton in his office. He had listened intently to everything Rooney had to say about Eric Lee Judd.
He had warmed immediately to the couple, knowing how highly Lorraine regarded them. ‘Did she mention anything to either of you about her brake cables being cut and that someone broke into her office?’
They shook their heads.
‘Well, whoever it was did some damage – didn’t steal anything but made their presence known by using acid to destroy some tapes.’ He shrugged. ‘Could be whoever it was had been hired by one of the suspects and discovered something else in the office.’
‘Like what?’ Rooney interjected, leaning forward.
‘That it was someone from her past who knew her, had a grudge against her,’ Burton said.
Rooney looked to Rosie. ‘I said there was some kind of hidden agenda, didn’t I?’
Rosie was chewing her lip. She felt very uneasy. ‘Do you think Lorraine knows?’ she asked Burton.
‘No, I don’t, but she must be told. Have you any idea when she’ll be back from Chicago?’
Rosie tried to recall exactly what Lorraine had said when they had last spoken. ‘I’m sure she said she’d be back in LA this evening.’ She looked up as Burton eased from his chair. He cracked his knuckles. He was obviously worried.
‘Is she in danger?’ Rosie asked.
‘Not for the moment but, all the same, I want you to go back to your apartment in case she makes contact. In the meantime, I’ll check out this Eric Lee Judd, maybe get someone to monitor what he’s up to.’ Burton put an arm around Rooney. ‘I appreciate all you’re doing for Lorraine, but don’t worry, I won’t let any harm come to her.’
Rooney coughed and stuck out his hand, which Burton clasped. ‘I wasn’t sure about you, not at first, but . . . we also appreciate everything you’ve done for our girl. She’s very special.’
‘Yes, I know,’ Burton said softly.
As he closed the door behind the Rooneys he stood in the centre of the room. He could feel an ominous tug in the pit of his belly because just the thought of any harm coming to Lorraine made him realize again how much he loved her and wanted to protect her.
It was almost six when Lorraine was dropped outside her apartment, paid off the cab, and checked all her luggage and parcels. She had quite a few, plus the painting from Nick Nathan, so her hands were full as she opened the street door and climbed the stairs. The apartment door was ajar, and she smiled, sure that Rosie was inside. She called her friend’s name as she pushed open the door with her case. ‘Rosie? Are you here? Rosie?’
She put down the briefcase containing the phone records Abigail Nathan had given her, her overnight bag and painting, and turned to close the door. She didn’t see or even hear her assailant, as the blow to the right side of her head had such force it lifted her off the ground. She tried to roll away, curling her body against the blows that continued to thud into her. One slammed into the small of her back and it felt as if her kidneys were exploding. She straightened out with a scream of agony, but the blows kept on coming, no matter which way she tried to fend them off. She couldn’t tell if she was being kicked or punched. The pain was so vivid it was as if she was on fire. She couldn’t cry out, she had no strength, and the last blow to the side of her head rendered her unconscious. Lorraine had not even glimpsed her attacker, who now, out of some reflex instinct for robbery, rapidly searched through her overnight bag. He found nothing of value, and as the briefcase was locked, he took it, throwing it into the back of his car before he drove off.
She lay motionless, face down, her battered body twisted like a broken doll, blood forming a dark pool around her head.
Sonja waited for the applause to subside as she stood on the small podium at the front of the gallery. ‘Ladies and gentlemen,’ she said, ‘first of all I would like to thank the board of this exciting new treasure house of contemporary art,’ she turned to smile at the two women behind her, ‘for the honour they have done me in asking me to open the series of shows dedicated to living women working in sculpture. This will, however, be an occasion of endings as well as beginnings,’ she went on, ‘because as well as inaugurating a chapter in the work of this great new gallery, this evening will mark the end of my career.’ She delivered the words in clear, ringing tones, knowing that they would take everyone present by surprise. ‘My work has been my tyrant, my torturer, and it has come close to being my murderer,’ she went on. ‘It did not exorcize and transform the dark parts of myself, it fed and magnified them, and it has left me to live with the result, which is what I, and the man
who has been brave – or foolish – enough to make a commitment to me, now intend to do.’
Somehow it was the mention of Arthur, of her private life, that turned the murmuring and head-shaking to hissing and booing: Sonja looked at the audience with the gaze of a heretic, hearing the crackle of her reputation burning around her.
Rosie was first up the steps. She knew something was wrong: Tiger was barking and yelping frantically, running from the open front door to the apartment and back inside. Rosie called Lorraine’s name, but when she made it to the top of the steps she started to scream.
Lorraine lay slumped by the side of the front door, her face unrecognizable. Her shirt and shoulders were soaked in blood, which had sprayed up the walls and splashed over the door, and formed a puddle beside her head. Rooney pushed her out of the way and knelt down beside Lorraine, feeling for the pulse on her neck, then her wrist, shouting instructions to his wife to call the emergency services. He could feel only a faint throbbing, so faint that at first he had thought Lorraine was dead. ‘She’s alive – get me blankets, hurry. Are they on their way?’
Rosie was weeping, nodding, running into the bedroom. Rooney had to knock Tiger out of the way as he tried to get to Lorraine, then growled at him. He had to shout to Rosie to get the dog out of the room.
Rosie rode with Lorraine in the ambulance to the nearest hospital, St John’s in Santa Monica, and Rooney followed behind in his car. He felt icy cold, shaken to the core, and he doubted that Lorraine would survive.
Jake had to sit down, his whole body shaking. It was some time before he could speak. ‘How bad is it?’
Rooney wanted to weep, but gritted his teeth. ‘She’s hurt real bad. She’s in a coma and they’ve taken her into Intensive Care.’ He swallowed as the tears welled up. ‘It’s bad, Jake, real bad. They don’t think she’s gonna make it.’
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