Read Death By the Glass #2 Online
Authors: Nadia Gordon
“Let’s just skip where it came from for the moment,” said Sunny sternly. “Because you and I both know the answer to that. The more important question is, how are you going to keep me from contacting the police about it?”
Remy frowned. “I have no idea what you’re talking about.”
“I can show you,” she said.
Her heart was beating fast and her hands had started to shake so that she had trouble keeping the plate of morning buns steady. She fished in her jacket pocket with one hand and took out the cork from the bottle of Marceline that Andre had opened Sunday night and held it up for Remy to see.
“Is this the cork from a bottle of 1967 Château de Marceline St.-Quinisque Premier Grand Cru Reservée?” she asked.
He took it and examined the stamp.
“It is from a bottle of Marceline, I couldn’t be sure which one. A red wine, obviously.”
“But you think it could be from a bottle of Grand Cru?”
“Who knows? It might be, it might not.” He looked at her questioningly and handed the cork back. Was it possible he really didn’t know? She didn’t believe it.
“I wonder what I would find,” she said, “if I visited the people who belong to your wine club and had a look at the collections you helped them build? I wonder what an expert might notice about the expensive wines they’ve bought from you? Would odd
little details jump out at him? Like that the topping foil is the wrong color, the corks aren’t quite right, and the wine doesn’t taste exactly like it ought to?”
She realized she was getting a little carried away, stretching what she suspected about one case of wine into a whole pattern of fraud, but this was her shot at Remy, and she had the element of surprise.
Remy glared at her and crossed his arms. “I seriously doubt that the members of my wine club would open their front door, let alone a single bottle of their wine, to satisfy your whim.”
She put the cork back in her pocket and nodded slowly. She was beginning to regret the morning buns, which had failed to smooth over the visit and were now making it hard to look tough. She was getting nowhere.
“Okay,” she said, trying to seem unfazed. She used what she knew was her last bit of ammo. “We both know that that case of Marceline in Vinifera’s cellar is fraudulent to the tune of about eight grand. Are you going to let me in, or am I going to go to the police right now?”
Remy stared at her for a moment, then reluctantly stood aside. She handed him the plate of morning buns and entered the house. He led the way into the living room.
“Have a seat,” he said, gesturing toward a couch. “I’ll be back in a moment.”
The room was elegantly decorated but cluttered with artifacts competing for notice. The couch was upholstered in wine-red velvet, the dark wood floor lined with kilim rugs in shades of ruby and purple, and the bookshelves loaded with hundreds of old, unjacketed volumes on the theory and practice of wine-making. Mementos of winemaking covered every surface. There was an old wire wine bottle caddy from a French café, a
stack of letterpress menus from nineteenth-century French wine bars, and, on a side table, an assortment of what looked like handblown wine bottles, unevenly shaped and presumably very old.
The walls were painted thunderhead gray, including the ceiling, which sat close overhead, heavy and low. Across from the couch was a gas fireplace with a porcelain log burning orange, and on the mantel, rows of antique corkscrews and absinthe spoons were set out like rusty surgical instruments. Velvet curtains a shade darker than the walls prevented the morning sun from coming in. She wondered if it would feel less oppressive if the purpose of her visit were more pleasant.
The heat felt stifling. She took off her jacket and waited. The kettle piped in the kitchen and several minutes later Remy appeared carrying a tray with two cups of tea, cream, and sugar. He had changed into a black T-shirt and jeans. He put the tray down, carefully set one of the cups in front of her, then took up the other cup for himself. He had apparently brewed the tea and poured it in the kitchen, because there was no pot and there were tiny bits of leaves floating in the cup. Where was the teapot? Why not bring it out? Such a small thing, and yet it seemed symbolic, like he was hiding something. She stirred cream and sugar into her tea.
“This tea was grown on the estate of my mother’s family in Ceylon,” said Remy. “I think you’ll find it unlike any other you’ve tasted.”
She took a tentative sip and put the cup down. “It’s very good,” she said.
“That is hardly enough to taste it properly,” he said. “You won’t get another chance for tea like this without taking a very long journey. You can’t buy anything like it in the States.”
Sunny looked at Remy, sitting across from her with his cup of tea on his lap, playing the part of the pleasant host. “I’d like your opinion on something,” she said.
Remy waited, watching her.
“I would like to know,” she said, “how you think a bottle of the wine club’s Marceline ended up broken in the middle of Nathan Osborne’s living room on Saturday night.”
“How do you know it was the wine club’s Marceline?” he said.
“Isn’t it?” she asked.
“It might be, it might not,” he said. “If it is, my guess is that Nathan removed it from the cellar himself. He was in the habit of tasting whatever wine interested him, and that wine in particular was of great interest, being relatively unusual.”
Remy picked up a silver tastevin from the end table beside him. He turned the little cup in his hands, rubbing its embossed handle with his thumb between revolutions. Sunny waited. Was it a nervous gesture, or the unconscious adoration of a collector for his treasure?
“You mean he would just take wine home from Vinifera’s cellar?” she asked.
“Certainly. As owner of both Osborne Wines and Vinifera, he viewed every bottle in our cellar as his to take, which was true in a sense, though not of the wine club stock. But he wouldn’t have paid attention to that. Nathan wasn’t one for technicalities.”
“That would account for one of the two bottles missing from the case. Where is the other one?”
“I see you’ve made an inventory,” he said. “I have no idea. I only discovered that the wine was missing in the first place after the police mentioned the broken bottle on Monday. Naturally, as I have paid for it already, I would like to know. You have the cork, maybe you took it.”
She smiled. “You yourself said that cork might have come from any bottle of Marceline.”
“So which one did it come from?” he asked.
“It didn’t come from a Grand Cru, that much I know for sure,” she said. “Let’s get back to the bottle in Nathan’s living room. Nick Ambrosi says it looked like it was broken after he was already dead, and the police agree. You must know that from talking with them.”
“Yes.”
“Then Nathan couldn’t have been the one who dropped it.”
“That seems a safe assumption.”
“Who do you think did?”
“I have no idea,” said Remy. “What makes you think I would know anything about it?”
She’d thought all this through last night and on the way over, thought about each card she had to play, knowing this would be a game of bluff. It was time to take the plunge and hope he would give her something more to go on.
“I’ll tell you what I think,” said Sunny, leaning toward Remy. “I think you faked that case of wine. I think you did it for the money. You bought the standard-release Marceline, soaked the labels off, and replaced them with phony Premier Grand Cru Reservée labels. The label on the box was easy. I think you’ve done it before, maybe you’ve done it for years. You put, what, an extra seven, maybe eight thousand dollars in your pocket with every case?”
Remy smiled at her coolly. “Don’t you want your tea? It’s best when it’s still hot.”
He turned the tastevin in his hands, staring at her. His eyes were dark gray, like the wall behind him, and like the limp strands of hair pushed behind his ears. She lifted her teacup and
sipped, looking over it at him. The revelation that she’d found out about his forgeries did not seem to have had much of an impact. She decided to push harder.
“It should be relatively easy to prove what’s been going on,” she said matter-of-factly. “You obviously don’t have invoices for the Premier Grand Cru Reservée, since you never bought it, but you’ll have the income from having sold it. And I’m sure there is plenty of evidence on your computer. It might take a recovery expert to get at the deleted files, but the scanned images are probably still on the hard disk somewhere. They say it takes months to write over memory. Even if I can’t prove that you perpetrated the fraud yourself, you will still have been caught dealing in forged wine, which I’m sure isn’t good for a sommelier’s reputation. Eliot certainly won’t be amused, and I can’t imagine that the people at Marceline will enjoy having their name sullied with the publicity this kind of crime generates.”
His eyelids were half lowered and he gazed at her with a drowsy expression. If she didn’t know better, she would guess he was bored.
“One thing puzzles me,” said Remy. “I don’t understand why you would choose to make any of this your business. Why do you care? Suppose you’re right and the wine isn’t what it’s supposed to be. What is the harm of a few gullible rich people drinking the wrong grape juice? They don’t really care what it tastes like anyway, trust me. The thrill is in the expense. They want to pay excessive amounts of money. It’s part of the high. It makes them feel powerful and privileged. In fact, you may be onto something. Repackaging wine might not be such a bad idea. That way, the rich customers get what they want, the repackager gets what he wants, and someone else, perhaps someone who actually understands what he is drinking and can appreciate it properly,
gets to buy the real Reservée, of which, as you know, there is an extremely limited supply. I’m starting to like this idea of yours.”
She smoothed her bangs to the side with her fingers. Was it getting even hotter? She had the urge to pant, like when she was sick to her stomach. The tea. Did he put something in the tea, or was it just too hot in this room?
“Let me be very clear about this,” she said, struggling to keep her voice steady. “I’m going to need some kind of cooperation from you, or else I’m going to have to go to the police with what I know right now. Why I care is irrelevant to you. I have my reasons. But I know something and I can’t not know it.”
“What interests could you possibly have in anything that goes on at Vinifera? It has nothing to do with you,” he said.
“I think you’re missing my point,” said Sunny, losing her patience. “It’s not important that
you
know or understand
my
motives. Someone is dead, someone is committing wine fraud, and unless I get your help, I’m going to the police with my theories, right or wrong.”
Remy put his head down and rubbed his temples. After a long pause, he looked up at her. “There is no reason to discuss any of this. It’s in the past. It’s over. The guilty party is beyond punishment, and the victims never knew what happened and were only harmed in ways they could afford. Nathan came up with the idea a couple of years ago. I was never involved.”
“You mean you didn’t participate.” Sunny tried not to seem too relieved that he had finally cracked.
“No.”
“But you didn’t stop him.”
“He signs my paycheck.”
Sunny nodded. “Nathan owned two businesses, both of them successful. You’re telling me he risked it all for penny-ante wine fraud? And if that’s the truth, why would he involve you in it?”
“Nathan wasn’t as financially secure as some people would like to believe,” said Remy. “A few thousand on the side every now and then could make a big difference. I have to admire the scheme. You fake a few of the very expensive wines that get sold to an audience that self-selects for people guaranteed to have a great deal of money and no idea what they are buying. Nobody gets hurt and he puts a nice chunk of cash in his pocket.” He paused. “That’s the only good thing about his death. Now he’ll never get caught.”
Sunny watched his eyes, searching for signs of whether or not he was lying. She didn’t like him or want to believe him, but he seemed to be telling the truth. “He won’t get caught, but you might. What if somebody who knows what to look for gets hold of those bottles? Dealing in phony merchandise is a crime.”
“I didn’t do anything. I don’t even know that anything has been done. Frankly, I’m not even sure Nathan ever acted on his idea, I just know he talked about it. I simply chose to look the other way. The forgery you are talking about, if that’s what it is, has not been sold, and won’t be until I check it out. This is much ado about nothing.”
“I wonder if the police will buy that,” said Sunny.
Remy walked over to the fireplace to adjust the flame. He turned to her with a smirk. “Go ahead and go to the police if it amuses you. It will only make a sad week more difficult for all of Nathan’s friends, and the headlines certainly won’t make your boyfriend feel any better. I’m sure Andre would love to see Vinifera and wine fraud splashed across every newspaper in the country.”
She tried not to show any reaction. “Tell me more about why you think Nathan would do this. If anyone found out, it would ruin him and both of his businesses. His life in the Valley would be over, and he’d probably go to jail. What you’re saying
doesn’t make any sense. He wouldn’t take that kind of risk for what amounts to pocket change to a man like him.”
“You didn’t know Nathan,” said Remy dryly. “He liked to play with people, and he liked taking risks, even foolish, pointless risks. It was how he had fun. The money was just an associative benefit. He especially liked to watch people rave about bad wine. I’ve seen him do it on a number of occasions. He liked to play tricks on them, especially if they pretended to know something about wine. I’ve seen him swap labels, funnel one wine into another bottle, lie about what’s in a glass. I even saw him put food dye in a glass of cheap Chardonnay and serve it as a fine Burgundy. He loved to mess with people.”
“Is that really who Nathan was?”
“That’s who he was as long as I knew him, and that’s close to six years.”