by Linda Barlow
“Darlin’, I wish you’d be a little more charitable toward your own sister.” Daisy’s voice was gently chiding.
“Isobelle and I haven’t been charitable towards each other in years.”
“Why did the daughter inherit?”
Christian laughed shortly. “Who knows. Rina was unpredictable to the last.”
“Have the police made any progress towards finding the killer?”
“None that I can see.”
“Well, I sure hope they get him. Your stepmother was the closest friend I ever had. In fact, she—” her voice broke for a second. Christian heard her take a steadying breath. “If it weren’t for her, I wouldn’t be headed for the Senate. She changed my life, and the thought that her murderer is running around free turns my stomach something fierce.”
“Yeah, well, maybe the Dallas police commissioner can do something about it. They’ve got a history there of trying to solve mysterious assassinations.”
A beat. Then, “You’re not jealous, are you, hon? The man is happily married.” Her smoky voice devolved into a laugh. “He’s also about five-six and two hundred fifty pounds. Not my type, I promise you.”
“No,” he said impatiently, “I’m not jealous. But if you can fit New York into your busy schedule sometime soon, I’d like to see you. Now I’ve got to go. I’ve got another call.”
“I’ll be there next Sunday morning, hon, I promise. Miss you!”
“Bye,” Christian said and dropped the phone back into its cradle.
There was of course no other call.
He lit another cigarette and turned back to his computer screen.
Concentration proved to be impossible, though.
Christian stared into space for several minutes, then pulled out his wallet and searched for the card he and everyone else had received from Agent Martin Clemente, FBI. He noted the number and dialed.
He got an answering machine. He waited for the beep, identified himself, then said, “You asked us to contact you with even the most trivial information, so here’s one for your list. It’s been a badly kept secret in our family that my stepmother had a brief affair with President Kennedy just before his death. I’ve never been a conspiracy buff, personally, but what if there was some kind of plot? And what if Rina knew something about it?
“I know it’s far-fetched. You’d be better off investigating Rina’s clients, not to mention the strange and unpleasant people my sister hangs out with. But I’m sure you don’t want to leave any stone unturned.”
Christian hung up the phone.
Then he leaned back in his desk chair and smiled.
Chapter Seven
As April entered the building on Park Avenue whose address she had been given over the phone, she was aware of venturing into a world that was very different from what she had seen so far in New York.
There were doormen at many buildings, but this one was as prim and correct as a British butler. She’d expected to have to explain who she was, but he knew her.
“The elevator will take you right up, Madame,” he told her and ushered her into a large, dark-wood paneled elevator with a plush oriental carpet on the floor.
“Which apartment?” she asked.
He smiled gravely. “It’s the penthouse, Madame,” he said.
There were no controls that she could see on the inside of the elevator. It must have been controlled by the doorman, however, since it sped her directly up to the penthouse on the twenty-second floor.
She stepped off the elevator into a small room papered in a Chinese design. A large blue-and-white porcelain vase stood on a pedestal beside a tall double door. There was a brass knocker on the door that was as large as an andiron. April was about to see if she could lift it when the door opened and she was greeted by a middle-aged uniformed maid.
“Ms. Harrington? Welcome. Do come in.” She had a British accent and April had to repress the thought that she looked very similar to Jean Marsh from Upstairs Downstairs.
This was an apartment on the twenty-second floor? It looked more like the ground floor of a mansion. The front door opened directly into a large gallery, complete with Roman pillars on either side, and several yards ahead of her a wide grand staircase swept upward to another floor. The floor underfoot was black marble, and there were faded, yet beautiful tapestries hanging on the walls. One showed a hunting scene, complete with sylvan woods and horsemen; the other was an exquisite representation of the Judgment of Paris.
The maid took April’s cardigan and hung it out of sight behind a massive oak door that April assumed must hide a closet. “Monsieur awaits you upstairs,” she announced. “Please follow me.”
“Would you do me the honor of joining me for dinner this evening?” Armand de Sevigny had said on the telephone this morning after the reading of her mother’s will. He had been very courtly, and it had been impossible to refuse.
Besides, she was curious.
They were partway up the staircase when Armand appeared at the top and began descending to meet her. “Miss Harrington, welcome!” He nodded to the maid and said, “That’ll do, Anna. We really needn’t stand on ceremony so much around here.”
Anna climbed on past him while Armand held out his hand to April. “The servants take themselves much too seriously,” he whispered with a smile. “They have me terrorized!”
“I doubt that very much,” April said, also smiling.
“Sabrina knew how to manage them, but I don’t.” His expression grew somber. “I can’t believe she’s gone.”
April squeezed his hand. “I’m sorry.”
“This must be an exceedingly strange situation for you, April. May I call you April instead of Miss Harrington?”
“Of course.”
“I hope you were not too upset by what happened yesterday at the lawyer’s office. My daughter behaved regrettably.”
“It was a shock to everyone,” April said.
The hallway at the top of the stairs opened into a huge living room. The colors were muted, the furnishings elegant, and the lighting low. Armand ushered her to the sofa; he remained standing until she was comfortably seated, then took the easy chair opposite her.
“Thank you for coming,” he said.
“Thank you for asking me.”
“Anyway, as I was saying, this is an awkward situation for you. I have my children to offer their support. You are in this alone.”
From what April had seen of his children, she couldn’t imagine that too much support would be forthcoming, but she kept this thought to herself. “I’m used to it,” she said without rancor. “I’ve been fending for myself for a good many years.” She shrugged. “It’s been good for me.”
“Yes. You strike me as strong, self-assured, and independent. Sabrina, I’m sure, would have admired those qualities in you.”
April drew a quick breath. “She chose her own path.”
He nodded. “But not entirely without regret. I would like you to be able to understand that, someday.”
April saw little hope of that.
He turned the conversation to other matters, and after a few minutes she found herself relaxing and enjoying his company. He proved to be an adept conversationalist— witty and knowledgeable—and his courtliness shone through in his every word, his every gesture. His twinkle-eyed charm reminded April of an old Maurice Chevalier movie. His French accent was clear, but not thick; in many ways Armand seemed very Americanized.
He bore little in common with the man whom she vaguely remembered as the suave and dashing lover who had sailed off with her mother, leaving her standing alone on a New York City dock. It was as if he had softened with age instead of hardening the way most people did.
“And now, if you will permit me—” Armand led the way into a dining room that was large enough for a diplomatic banquet “—I suggest we eat. I find it difficult to concentrate on business when my stomach is empty. Plus, I would like to get to know you better.”
As it turned out,
it wasn’t until the entree had been cleared away and the coffee served that Armand shifted the discussion to what April suspected was the real reason they were together this evening.
“Have you given any consideration yet to coming to work for us at Power Perspectives?” he asked.
“I haven’t had much chance to think about it.”
“I suspect that when all is said and done, your impulse will be to decline.” He paused. “But, if I may, I would like to urge you to accept.”
April put down the cup she had just raised to her lips. “Forgive my surprise, but I would have wagered a month’s income that you’d invited me here tonight to try to talk me into declining.”
He tipped his head slightly to one side and smiled gravely. “If you will permit me, I would like to try to explain. You see, I loved your mother very much. Her business meant everything to her—indeed, it was far more than a business. It was a vocation. She has helped so many people—both individually and in groups. But none of it could have been accomplished if it were not for her inspired leadership.”
He stopped, sipped his coffee, then continued more slowly, as if somewhat reluctant to go on, “As you know, I have two children, Christian and Isobelle. They are both exceptional in their own way, but neither of them, I fear, well—” He shrugged, looking pained. “What I mean to say is that neither my son nor my daughter strikes me as a suitable replacement for your mother at the helm of Power Perspectives.”
“Why not?”
“You will hear of these things anyway, so I might as well be entirely forthright. My son and I have had some conflict between us over the years.” He shook his head sadly. “I have never understood him. He keeps such a tight hold on his emotions, you see. But recently he has been doing an excellent job working for De Sevigny Ltd. One day I hope to make him my successor. He had never been interested in Power Perspectives and therefore there would have been no point whatsoever in Sabrina’s naming him.”
“But what about your daughter?”
Again, Armand shook his head. “Isobelle has a good head for business. But she lacks discipline. She has always run with the wrong crowd, as I believe you say. Her choice of friends leaves much to be desired. In truth,” he added with a sigh, “she has caused me much heartache and worry over the years. You have read, of course, your great English playwright, Shakespeare?”
April nodded.
“Sadly, I have felt in recent years much empathy for the great King Lear. ‘How sharper than a serpent’s tooth it is to have a thankless child!’ “
“I see.” Armand, she sensed, was a dramatic man, who would not hesitate to grandstand emotionally if it were to bring the desired response. Courteously, she said, “But what has any of that to do with your daughter’s business acumen? Unlike your son, Isobelle seems quite an emotional woman. If passion is necessary to lead the Foundation, surely this is something your daughter possesses in full measure.”
“Passion must always be balanced.” He was speaking with more ease and fluency now. “In my son and daughter I have two opposite sides of the spectrum. One is ice, the other fire. I seek some element that is between the two, blending passion with good judgment.” He steepled his fingers and rested his chin upon them. “That is why I am so impressed with you.”
“Excuse me, but what do you know of me, monsieur?”
“I have done some checking, my dear. I know that you have successfully started and run your own business, and that you are highly respected for what you do. You are considered an expert by your colleagues, and you are very well-liked by your employees and friends.”
April twisted her cup on the table. Everyone, it seemed, was checking into her past—the police, the FBI, Blackthorn, the de Sevignys. How far back, she wondered, were they checking? How much would they find out?
“I wish I knew as much about you as you apparently know about me,” she said a bit testily.
“I would like to give you that opportunity. That is part of the purpose of this meeting.” He opened his hands in a gesture of willingness. “Please. Ask me anything you like.”
“Well,” she took a deep breath and looked him directly in the eye. “Maybe you could begin by explaining how you justified separating a mother from her only child?”
He returned her gaze. “There is no way to justify it,” he said. “I was young and selfish. The same could probably be said for Sabrina. She led me to believe that you and she were not—” he stopped and shrugged. “Well. Let’s just say she seized an opportunity to escape from a life of hardship, a life she was never suited for. We both thought that in sending you to an exclusive boarding school we were giving you an advantage that she had never had.” He paused. “But what you really needed, of course, was our love, a sense of family, a feeling of belonging. It is much easier to see that now, in retrospect.”
He paused again, gazing at her with sympathy etched on his aristocratic features. “If it’s not too late, I want to offer you now some of what you were deprived of as a child. I say this with complete sincerity. I know that the past cannot be erased, but I would like to try to make amends in whatever way I can. And I know that this is what Sabrina would have wanted me to do.”
He reached across the table and took one of her cold hands gently into his. “Come and work for us, April. Please. Life is offering you an exciting new adventure. And I am asking for a chance to make up for some of my past follies before I, too, slip into the silence of the grave.”
April felt herself wavering. He sounded very much in earnest in his regrets about the past. His eyes looked directly into hers, and she began to have a sense of what must have so attracted her mother.
“I’ll need more time to think about it. Until yesterday such a possibility had never occurred to me. I have a business back in Boston. What would happen to that?”
“And you have a partner, no? Surely he could run the bookstore for a few months while you see how you like working with us.”
“It does seem unfair to Isobelle. If she expected—”
“Isobelle had always expected far too much.”
April had nothing to say to that. The family dynamics were not yet clear to her.
“Take a few days, by all means,” he said. “You have many unanswered questions, I’m sure, both about Power Perspectives and about your mother. You didn’t know your mother well, did you?” he added in a neutral tone.
“Obviously not.”
“She was a complex woman. I loved her dearly, make no mistake about that. But she could be—” he paused as if seeking the right word “—difficult.”
April waited. She hoped he would elaborate as he eventually had about his children, but instead of continuing, he gave another shrug. “Perhaps the best way for you to get to know her is to have a look at the place where she lived. I will give you the key to Sabrina’s apartment. It was her private sanctuary, and has been left entirely as it was when she was using it.”
April raised her eyebrows. “I thought—you mean she didn’t live with you?”
Armand smiled and shook his head. “No, I see I have not made myself clear. Sabrina lived with me, of course, but she also maintained a place of her own. A small apartment on the Upper West Side. It was initially the headquarters of Power Perspectives, until the Foundation grew so large that she had to acquire professional office space. Sabrina kept the apartment to use as her office space, where she could be alone to think, to plan, to meditate.” He opened his hands. “She used to describe it as a room of her own.”
“Important to every woman,” April said with a smile.
“Yes, so every woman tells me. I could show you around, but perhaps a better idea might be simply to give you the key. You see, it was her private place. It is alien to me, in a way. I’ve been over there of course to go through her papers and sort out her affairs, but otherwise I’ve left everything the way she kept it.”
She presumed he was referring to the co-op apartment that the attorney had mentioned—the one which was
actually owned by Power Perspectives and part of Rina’s legacy to her. Had it been ethical of Armand to go through the papers and other personal items contained in the apartment? she wondered. As her husband, he may have felt that he had the right to do so. Given what had happened, the police had probably been through the place, too.
“I’d very much like to see it,” she said.
“Would you like to go now? Tonight? Do you think it might help you make up your mind about Power Perspectives?”
She told him yes. Anything that would give her more insight into her mother would help her make up her mind.
“I’ll have my driver drop you off there as soon as we finish our coffee.” Armand reached into his pocket and removed a set of keys. “This, I believe, will open both the inside and the outside doors. There is a doorman. I’ll phone over to him so he will be expecting you.”
“Thanks,” she said as he put the brass keys into her hand.
“Please spend as long a time there as you desire. After all, technically, the apartment is yours now. And remember, if you come to work for us, you’ll need a place to live.”
How odd, thought April. It was as if she were taking over her mother’s life—first her job and now her apartment.
Just as long as you don’t die the way she did.
Chapter Eight
“I hate my father,” Kate de Sevigny muttered to herself as she rode up in the elevator of the apartment building where Gran used to live. She’d been repeating the words like a litany ever since fleeing her own home where she lived with her father and catching a cab. The driver had looked at her funny until she’d pulled a fistful of cash out of the pocket of her jeans, then he’d hopped to it fast enough.
“He’s such a fuck-up,” she added as she got off the elevator on the tenth floor and hurried down the corridor to Gran’s door. Well. What used to be Gran’s door.
I miss you, Gran! she thought.
It was almost 10:00 at night, and Dad would take a hissy when he got home and found her gone. Good. She hoped he got really worried. She hoped he called all the hospitals and funeral homes. She hoped every cop in the city started looking for a skinny seventh-grader with yucky brown hair who hated her dad.