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Authors: Phillip Margolin

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BOOK: Fugitive
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Senior pushed himself to his feet. At seventy, his joints were stiffening and his back had tightened up. Walking was a chore but he didn't let anyone see his discomfort, because he never showed weakness. After completing the laborious climb to the second floor, he worked his way slowly and painfully to the room at the far end of the corridor, where Junior had spent his boyhood. Now it was a shrine. The shades were always down in this room and the ceiling fixture was coated with dust. When he flipped the switch, muted light cast a yellowish glow over the pictures on the walls and the trophies, medals, and mementos that filled the shelves. Across the room was a bed whose sheets never needed to be changed.

Senior sat on the bed and stared at a picture of Junior with the first President Bush. Senior was a good friend of the ex-president, who had spoken on Junior's behalf at a fund-raiser during his son's first congressional campaign. Other notable politicians had helped his boy get to Congress. They knew he was the future and they flocked to embrace him. Senior, who almost never cried, felt tears well up as he thought about what might have been had Junior not been cut down in the prime of his life by that He took deep breaths until he was back in control of his emotions.

Pope shifted his attention to another photograph, Junior in his dress uniform shortly before his discharge from the Marines. If ever there was a man who looked like he should be president of this great country, it was Arnold Pope Jr.

Next to the picture of his son in his dress uniform was a picture of Junior holding a child in his hand as he would a football. It had been taken when Arnold Pope III was two weeks old. That bitch had named Junior's boy Kevin out of spite, but his grandson would always be Arnold III to Senior. Just thinking of his only grandchild made Senior's fists clench. Junior's whore had kept Senior away from his grandson with restraining orders and by putting the Atlantic Ocean between them, but he had photographs and videos taken surreptitiously through telescopic lenses. What he did not have was his grandson, the future of the Pope clan and the last of his bloodline.

Junior was dead. Senior faced that fact every day. His boy had been a candle whose light would have guided America to a radiant new day of decency and honor. Charlie Marsh and the whore had snuffed out that candle and they would pay. Senior knew that he could never get his son back, but he could get revenge.

Chapter 25

H erb Cross's wife was a CPA in the Portland branch of a national accounting firm. When she was promoted to a position in the firm's national headquarters in Atlanta, Herb regretfully resigned. The regret went both ways. After Herb left, Frank used several investigators but none of them had been satisfactory. Then Amanda told Frank about Kate Ross.

Kate had a degree in computer science from Caltech and had been recruited by the Portland Police Bureau to investigate computer crime. After a few years of pounding a keyboard for a living, Kate had asked for a transfer. While working in Vice and Narcotics, she was involved in a shoot-out at a shopping mall that had left civilians and an informant dead. The Bureau had made Kate the department's scapegoat and she'd been driven off the force.

Kate's computer skills and police background helped her secure a job as an investigator at Oregon's largest law firm. When Daniel Ames, a first-year associate at the firm, was charged with murder, Kate asked Amanda to represent him. After the two women cleared Daniel's name, Jaffe, Katz hired Kate as the firm's investigator and Daniel as an associate, and Kate and Daniel started living together.

Kate was five seven, with a dark complexion, large brown eyes, and long, curly black hair that made her look faintly Middle Eastern. She usually dressed in jeans and man-tailored shirts that showed off her athletic figure. When Amanda returned from her meeting with Karl Burdett, she poked her head into Kate's office. The investigator had her feet up on her desk and was immersed in a police report.

How would you like to work on the case of the century? Amanda asked casually.

Kate looked up, her expression blank. I've gotta pass, Amanda. She held up her police report. I've pledged my life to helping a dipsomaniac insurance executive avoid conviction for his fourth DUI and I won't rest until he's back on the highway endangering the lives of all of Oregon's citizens.

Gee, I hate to interfere with your mission, but I' m going to pull rank and insist you give my case priority.

Okay, if you insist. But you've got to square it with Ernie. This guy is repeat business and he refers a lot of his alcoholic buddies to the firm.

I'll talk to him.

Kate put her feet on the floor and swiveled her chair in Amanda's direction. So, what's this big case you want me to work on?

Amanda told the investigator about her meeting at the airport with Martha Brice and the editor's recent phone call. Kate knew about Charlie Marsh because of his book, but she only had vague memories of Sally Pope's trial, so Amanda brought her up to speed on the old case.

I' m flying to New York tomorrow morning to meet with Marsh, Amanda said. While I' m gone I'd like you to go through the file and start organizing it for trial. Burdett indicted Sally Pope on a conspiracy theory, so, to get a conviction, he had to prove that Marsh murdered Congressman Pope. That means he'll be presenting many of the same witnesses he used in Pope's trial. See if you can have a trial book ready by the time I get back.

AS SOON AS Kate finished her work in the drunk-driving case, she carried a mug of coffee and her laptop into the conference room. She sighed when she saw the mass of materials piled high on the long table. Then she booted up her laptop and went to work.

Kate spent the first few hours typing a synopsis of the police, lab, and autopsy reports, witness statements, and trial testimony into her computer. Then she organized the digested materials into categories. When she was through, she went back to the reports and made a list of those that dealt with different time periods or subjects.

One category had to do with testimony concerning the murder weapon. The initial mention of the ivory-handled .357 Magnum was in a statement by Mickey Keys, who said he'd first seen the gun in Texas when Charlie was given the weapon as a gift. He told the police that Charlie played with the gun in his hotel room but never took it out, because he was on parole. The literary agent said that Delmar Epps, Charlie's bodyguard, got a kick out of toting the weapon in public when he was guarding Charlie. Keys remembered seeing Epps with the gun in the limo on the way to the Westmont.

In Tony Rose's report of his run-in with Charlie at the Dunthorpe seminar, Rose told the police that Epps had flashed the gun when the bodyguard was manhandling him. He remembered it because of the fancy grip.

When Kate put Rose's report on top of a stack of items that were pertinent to the Dunthorpe seminar, a photograph caught her attention. She pulled it out of the center of the pile and studied it. The photo showed Charlie and his entourage as they were about to enter the mansion in Dunthorpe. Kate was glad she'd found it, because it put a face to the people about whom she'd been reading.

Charlie sported a great tan and looked like a poor man's John Travolta circa Saturday Night Fever in his white jacket, white slacks, and black silk shirt. Gold chains graced his neck and a gold Rolex encircled his wrist. His smile was warm and he appeared to be relaxed and in control. Standing to Charlie's right was a grinning Mickey Keys. Keys wore a navy blue blazer, tan slacks, and an open-necked, emerald green sports shirt that went perfectly with his styled red hair.

Slightly behind Charlie was a massive black man with a shaved head, who Kate assumed was Delmar Epps. On Charlie's left was a young woman who was looking up at Charlie with adoring eyes. Several things about her were odd. Her head was as devoid of hair as the guru's bodyguard' s, and while everyone else in Charlie's entourage was dressed in expensive, stylish togs, the girl was wearing a peasant dress and blouse. To Kate's eye, the woman seemed out of place, like a gypsy who had wandered into a night club full of partying movie stars.

A thought occurred to Kate. Epps had testified that he'd left the .357 Magnum in the limo when he'd gotten out at the entrance to the Westmont on the night of the shooting, but no one had corroborated that assertion. What if Epps did have the gun when he left the limo but lied so no one would think he fired the fatal shot? If Epps was carrying the revolver when he left the limo, how could Marsh have gotten it?

Kate studied a photograph of the weapon. Then she went on the Internet and discovered that the Ruger weighed over two pounds. The gun also had a six-inch barrel, so it would be a bit unwieldy. Epps had been fighting with the security guards shortly before the fatal shot was fired. Kate remembered a witness testifying that Epps had knocked down a guard with a karate kick to the head. All that jumping around could have dislodged the gun if the heavy, cumbersome weapon was stuck in Epps's waistband, and anyone in the crowd around the combatants could have picked it up.

Kate found a few photographs that showed both the area on the side of the turnaround where Epps had been fighting and the area between the turnaround and the pro shop where their client had been standing. There wasn't that much space between the two positions. If the gun had dropped out and had been kicked back toward Marsh, he could have rushed forward and gotten it.

Kate tried to remember who had been with Marsh. Werner Rollins had testified that he'd joined Marsh and Gary Hass after he'd decked the guard with whom he'd been fighting. Epps said that he had moved back so he could protect Marsh. Rollins had testified that he saw Marsh fire the shot that killed Arnold Pope Jr.

If Epps and Rollins had lied to the police so they could cut deals, any of the other men standing with Marsh could have fired the shot.

Chapter 26

A manda had returned to New York a few times since graduating from law school at NYU, and she had mixed feelings about the city. Manhattan was a wonderful place to visit. It had the best restaurants, great shopping, terrific museums, cutting-edge art, the theater, and a buzz in the air that let you know that big things were happening. But you didn't go to the theater or eat at a four-star restaurant every night when you lived in the city. At heart, Amanda was an Oregon girl. After the initial excitement of a visit wore off, she would miss Portland with its easygoing pace, snow-capped mountains, and gentle, green hills. This, however, was her first day in New York in some time, and she found herself intrigued by the bustling crowds and longing for a real pastrami sandwich when the limo that had picked her up at the airport whisked her past the Carnegie Deli on the way to her meeting with her client.

World News was hiding Charlie Marsh in a corporate condo near Columbus Circle. The driver phoned ahead to alert Dennis Levy that Amanda was on her way. As she rode up in the elevator, Amanda wondered if the real Charlie Marsh would be anything like the Charlie Marsh of her imagination: a swashbuckling bandit who had dramatically cast away his penchant for violence so he could bring enlightenment to mankind. Many people who had been won over by his vivid transformation from evildoer to saint never believed he was guilty of the congressman's murder. Amanda had been enthralled by his autobiography, but she'd learned enough about the failings of career criminals from her father to maintain a healthy skepticism about the guru's claims.

The door to the World News condo opened as soon as Amanda knocked. A skinny kid, who looked like he was barely out of adolescence, peeked through a gap in the door and anxiously scanned the corridor beyond Amanda's shoulder as if he was expecting a SWAT team to charge in behind her.

Miss Jaffe? he asked nervously.

Amanda nodded. And you must be Dennis Levy.

Come on in, Levy said, stepping back enough so Amanda could slip sideways into a large living room with an amazing view of Central Park. Several locks snapped shut behind her. A moment later, Amanda felt the freezing cold air that was blowing through the apartment like a hurricane.

What's with the air-conditioning? she asked Levy as she fought an impulse to wrap her arms across her chest.

The reporter, who was bundled up in a heavy sweater, jerked his head toward a slender, blond-haired man in a dark blue warm-up suit, who was perched on the edge of a sofa, channel-surfing on a huge flat-screen TV.

He says he hates heat and anything else that reminds him of Africa.

Amanda's idea of what Marsh would look like was based on his author photo on the back of The Light Within You and dim memories of the fugitive on television shows. Marsh looked nothing like the confident, dynamic spokesman for self-awareness she remembered. He was emaciated and his skin had the leathery look common to people who spend too much time in the sun with too little sun block.

Charlie, your lawyer's here, Levy said.

When Marsh heard his name, his head swiveled toward Amanda but his body and the remote stayed pointed at the television.

I can't get over all these channels, Charlie said. Did you know you can get porn in your own home for free in high definition?

Yes, Mr. Marsh, I' m well aware of that, Amanda said, smiling involuntarily. Her client's wide-eyed awe reminded her that he had been in exile for twelve years.

Marsh turned off the set and stood up. How come I didn't get your father?

Amanda took no offense. He represented Mrs. Pope, your codefendant. It would be a conflict of interest if he represented you, too.

Marsh inspected Amanda. You look young. Do you have enough experience to handle a case this big?

BOOK: Fugitive
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ads

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