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Authors: Margarite St. John

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Chapter 34
Hungry Pythons
Friday, June 14, 2013

Instead of returning to Fort Wayne, Lexie changed her flight plan. She needed to talk to Jessica, not just about the decoration of the pool house in Gretna Green -- a consultation that could easily be delayed, since the expansion and remodeling probably wouldn’t be finished before September -- but about Mad Madeleine. She didn’t want advice so much as a sympathetic hearing, woman-to-woman.

Jessica kept her home furnishings shop in Carmel open late Friday night -- with a Closed sign on the door -- so she and Lexie could look at a few things without interruption. In the little courtyard on the side of the shop, Lexie looked around. “I don’t see much of the stuff you imported from Tuscany,” Lexie said.  “Didn’t you buy a bunch of angel figures?”

“Everything sold out so fast -- especially the angels and fountains and old urns -- that my staff thought the stuff had wings,” Jessica said with a big smile. “Remember how scared I was after I emptied out Fabiano’s stone yard? I must have blacked out in Italy because when I came to I realized with a fluttering heart that I’d somehow bought a railroad car full of bric-à-brac nobody wanted.” She gave a a dramatic blink of relief. “Fortunately, my clients
did
want it. I never told Ed how much I spent at Fabiano’s, but once the items were flying out the door and I was making money, I finally confessed.”

Lexie smiled. “After the Derby party, I did the same thing with Steve about the diamond I bought a few years ago at a New York auction. Only after I made money did I confess. A woman’s trick, isn’t it?”

“Somewhere I read that deceiving others is what the world calls romance.”

“Oh, that’s awful. But very funny.”

Jessica pointed to the corner of the courtyard. “But I do have a couple of those giant olive oil jars left if you want them. They’re as tall as Ed and they’d be perfect on either side of the pool house with some feathery plant to suggest the tropics. If I knew plants better, I’d name something.”

“Oh,” Lexie said, waving a hand dismissively, “Todd will know. Since becoming our steward -- .”

“Did you say steward?” Jessica asked, laughing.

Lexie laughed too. “Some time ago he decided he wasn’t a handyman. I think he and Phyllis had been watching
Downton Abbey
. Anyway, he’s learned everything there is to know about horticulture. He’s not an expert on every plant, but he’s just sayin’, he knows what will grow and what will die just by looking at it.”

Jessica laughed again. “Todd’s a one-off, that’s for sure.” She sat down on a stone bench from Tuscany and waved Lexie to join her. “You seem distracted.”

“Do I?”

“What happened in New York, Lexie?”

“A lot. I ran into Madeleine.”

“You’re kidding. Where?”

“At the agent’s office. My appointment was right after Madeleine’s.”

“She’s a writer?”

“She hasn’t published anything but she wants to. I don’t care whether she does or not, but she forged a letter of introduction or recommendation or whatever you want to call it so that Bettina would at least give her some face time.”

“That’s low.”

“It got lower. At lunch -- .”

“You had lunch with her? Why?”

“She asked me to lunch. I said yes because of you.”

“Me?”

“Yes, Jessica,” Lexie said with a touch of reproof. “You told me to keep an eye on her.”

“For Pete’s sake, I didn’t mean lunch!” Jessica protested.

“Well, I had lunch with her. She spent most of it telling me how wonderful her marriage to Steve was, how many surprise gifts they gave each other. She called him Lefty, of course, as if she owned the rights to the nickname. She said we should be friends because we have him in common.”

“Never trust a hungry python when it’s cold and hungry!”  

Lexie flinched. “What an image!”

“First she’ll smother you, Lexie; then she’ll squeeze really hard and eat you up.”

“Speaking of eating, I’m starving. All I’ve had today is half a Caesar salad.”

“Ed’s meeting us,” Jessica said, checking her watch, “in a half hour at Ruth’s Chris Steak House. He likes the porterhouse for two -- for himself. . . . Are you up to telling both of us what’s on your mind or is this strictly a girls’ conversation?”

“What difference does it make what Ed hears? If there’s anything he doesn’t know about my life at this point, I can’t imagine what it is,” Lexie said wryly. “Am I right?”

Jessica smiled a little sheepishly. “Pillow talk, you know.”


C’est normal
. I just hope I don’t spoil his porterhouse.”

“Oh,” Jessica laughed as she got to her feet, “nothing ever spoils a steak for Ed. You want to stop at our house to change first?”

“What’s wrong with what I’m wearing? It’s Armani’s latest patterned jacket. Trent found it for me. He’d be very hurt if he thought you didn’t like it.”

“Nothing’s wrong with it, Lexie. Tell Trent I do like it and I’m wounded he didn’t show me first.” Jessica’s eyes sparkled with amusement. “In fact, I’m warning you right now, if you take it off and turn your head away, you’ll have a hard time finding it again.” She held open the door from the courtyard to the shop. “I just mean, you look very formidable, like you’re about to announce a takeover of the world, or at least a medium-sized country, instead of relaxing over an expensive steak. But if you’re comfortable, I am. Let’s go.”  

* * * * *

When Lexie arrived home the next day, a package was waiting for her. The Tiffany box in robin’s-egg blue held a silver cherub charm with a note:

Lexie:

My deepest apologies for being such an ass in New York. To new beginnings. (I assume that you, as the sophisticated woman you are, already have a Tiffany charm bracelet.)  

Affectionately, Madeleine

What Lexie didn’t know was that Bettina Lazare received the same charm with a similar note, as did the New York hotel maid, whom Madeleine had falsely accused of stealing a pair of Louboutins.

Chapter 35
Convertibles and Goats
Friday, June 14, 2013

When Dr. Anthony Beltrami left the police station in Fort Wayne, he was shaken. He’d expected the interview with Detective Powers to be interesting but not worrisome.

Frowning, he stood for a minute or two beside the driver’s door of his new red Fiat 500 Cabrio. Though not expensive, the Italian car suited his desire to look young and edgy and sexier than he felt. With the Cabrio, he had magically been transported into the zingy ad running on television, the one where beautiful young women tore off their clothes and bonnets at the sight of Fiats roaring into town to the cries of “The Italians are coming!” The convertible was a present to himself in honor of his fifty-third birthday, which was only a few days away. Just sitting behind the wheel took twenty years off his life.

Conveniently, the car was also emblematic of his virtue. A cousin who once worked at Fiat’s Mirafiori plant in Turin had been out of work for two years because car sales in Europe had been plummeting for a long time. Only a month ago, Renzo humbly asked for a little financial help from his rich American cousin, the pride of the Beltrami family, a doctor who was educated and highly respected and much admired in the country of his birth. Renzo was supporting a wife, a child, two dogs, and an ancient aunt who needed expensive medicine. Life had become insupportably austere. A few hundred dollars a month would be worthy of many candles at church.

Renzo’s groveling moved Dr. Beltrami. For a few days he searched his heart for an answer. Perhaps he should send a few hundred dollars a month to Renzo. On second thought, perhaps not.

Though a hard worker, Renzo had always been the family clown. Once, when he was still a teenager, while rolling down the boulevard to impress the girls with his ancient Alfa Romeo convertible, he’d set his own back seat on fire with a carelessly discarded cigarette. Once he realized the girls’ screams weren’t whoops of delight but cries of alarm at his mobile trash fire, he abruptly pulled over, stood on the front seat, and tried to douse the flames by urinating on them. Unfortunately, among the amused onlookers were two nuns and a gendarme. Then, as a spectator at a village goat race, he’d had an unfortunate encounter with a whiskery and crazy-eyed billy goat who decided that winning the race was less interesting than eating Renzo’s shorts.  The goat, rakishly wearing his tattered prize over one eye, resumed his trot toward the finish line but got distracted by a girl wearing braids. Renzo crossed the finish line before the goat did.

Being a clown didn’t make Renzo unworthy of family help, but it made it easier for Dr. Beltrami to justify what he was inclined to do anyway. His decision, of course, had to be expressed in the loftiest terms. “Charity,” he wrote to Renzo, “demeans both parties and solves nothing. But you have moved me to do something much grander that in the long run will help you. I cannot bail you out, but I can bail out the car company that laid you off.” Thus, the purchase of a Fiat convertible became, not an act of selfishness, but an act of generosity and patriotism as well as a signal of reinvigorated manhood.

He got in, simultaneously fired up a cigar and the engine, pushed a button to put the top down, and stared idly through the windshield, wondering what to do next.

He was tired. He needed a drink. He wanted to talk, but Madeleine hadn’t returned yet from New York, and his other friends would already have made plans for an end-of-the week celebration. For once, he did not contemplate with pleasure an evening alone listening to Donizetti’s
Lucia di Lammermoor
.

Thus, he found himself driving aimlessly around the city, turning this way and that, distractedly lingering at red lights until honked into action, having no destination in mind. For a rational man, he found it strangely hard to prioritize his concerns about the questions posed by Detective Powers. Had any of his answers made the matter worse?

He denied that Kimberly Swartz had ever threatened him. “The fact that she was still my patient after twenty-three years was a testament to how much she valued my counsel.” Even while he uttered that smug pronouncement, he wondered if the police had found something to the contrary on the girl’s phone or computer. Had she told anyone other than himself and Madeleine about the sex and the cocaine? He wished he knew.

He emphatically denied that he ever purchased cocaine or had any connection with the drug courier now in jail. As a physician licensed by the State, he meticulously followed all rules about medication.

He denied that he’d ever been in the Highland Park Cemetery. “Why would I?” he asked.

He scoffed at the idea that he might own a 3-D printer. “Technology doesn’t interest me,” he declared, as if all such advances were beneath him and shouldn’t interest anyone else either.

He claimed to know nothing about a Captain Ahab other than that Madeleine had had her wrist grabbed by a man dressed like a ship captain at her one-woman show in Indianapolis. “I never saw him, but I saw the marks on Madeleine’s wrist.”

When asked where he was the morning of Kimberly Swartz’s murder, he retorted, “Do you know where you were on any random day in the past?”

“If I don’t remember, I have ways of figuring it out,” Detective Powers responded evenly. “So where were you?”

“That early in the morning? Probably in bed, asleep.”

“Alone?”

“That’s rather personal, don’t you think?”

Detective Powers said nothing. He’d heard the same answer from Madeleine Harrod.

“I don’t know. Probably alone.” He’d have claimed to be with Madeleine if he only knew what she might have said in answer to the same question.

Come to think of it, why in hell hadn’t she told him about her interview at the police station? He cringed at the knowledge that she’d scream a retort right back at him. “You were in Indianapolis with Babette and warned me not to say anything over the phone.”

Finally, when Detective Powers asked if he’d take a polygraph, he refused in a huff. He, Anthony Beltrami, M.D., ABPN Board-Certified Psychiatrist, was now an American citizen and knew his constitutional rights.

The effort to ascertain the consequences of his police interview was too much. His thoughts roiling, Anthony abruptly pulled to the curb in front of the courthouse and once again texted Madeleine to call him as soon as her plane got in from New York. They needed to talk. They should have talked much earlier. Did she need him to pick her up?

At a noise behind him, he checked his rearview mirror.
Merda!
A police cruiser was swirling its lights at him and a uniformed officer, reflective sunglasses glinting ominously in the late afternoon sun and ticket book in hand, was striding toward him. A traffic ticket was the last thing he needed. In a sane world, he’d get a pat on the back for not texting while driving.

That night, Madeleine never answered her phone or returned a text. He didn’t even know if she’d returned from New York.

Chapter 36
Double My Handicap
Friday, June 14, 2013

At the very moment Dr. Beltrami was having his unfortunate encounter with a young police officer in front of the courthouse, Dave Powers and Walter Richardson were conferring in a corner of the police department’s parking lot. “So, give it to me,” Dave said.

“That man makes me want to stop all immigration to this country, that’s what,” Walter said with a smile. “Slick piece of work. I think we should slam the doors shut for a few years.”

“Too late for him.”

“Strange how psychiatrists are often nuttier than their patients, don’t you think?”

“Sheila claims that’s why people go into the field -- trying to find the answer to their own problems.”

“Smart lady. What stood out to you?”

“Well, for one thing, he was a lot more composed than Madeleine. He put his chin in the air and rubbed his beard a lot, though.”

“And what did you make of that?”

“A grooming gesture -- my wife calls it self-soothing, a sign of discomfort or nervousness. Little kids do it a lot -- though only a few have beards, of course,” Dave said, chuckling.

“Or?”

“Or?” Dave asked, searching Walter’s face for the answer.

“The chin in the air while he rubbed his beard said it all. Though nervous, he was congratulating himself as the smartest guy in the place.”

“Ahh. Of course. I had a professor who did that.”

“Sometimes I suppose he’s right, given his education, but not this time. What did he do when you asked where he was the morning the Swartz girl was murdered?”

Dave looked off into space, mentally running the interview backwards. “I think he shrugged his shoulders.”

“Exactly. And that means?”

“Uncertainty.”

“Right again. He had to know why you wanted to talk to him and he had time to get his story down pat. He knew his girlfriend had been questioned. So I wonder why the two of them didn’t synch up their stories about where they were that morning. They’d have an alibi if they did.”

“Maybe they don’t need an alibi,” Dave hazarded, “because they aren’t guilty of anything. If they aren’t guilty of anything, then it isn’t important to synch up stories or concoct alibis.”

“Maybe. . . . Any progress on finding Captain Ahab?”

Dave shook his head.

“My wife and I are leaving tomorrow morning for Indianapolis. We’re babysitting the grandchildren so Tim and Tanya can celebrate their anniversary Saturday night. I thought before the grandparent duties start I might drop in on the woman Madeleine mentioned, the one who owns the art gallery. Our troubled artist said she didn’t report the incident to security or the police but she said something about it to a few people. One was the owner of the art gallery. Maybe she saw the man.” Walter jingled his car keys. “Although I still wonder if that man even exists.”

“The old lady who lives near the cemetery thinks so.”

Walter looked deeply skeptical. “She saw something all right. So, what do you think?”

“About what?”

“Injecting myself into your investigation.”

“Fine with me.”

“Not stepping on any toes at the station?”

“Only Captain Schmoll’s if he knew about it. You have the woman’s full name or the name of her shop?”

“Babette Fouré,” Walter said. “Les Trésors de Babette -- probably just mangled the French, but it means Babette’s treasures. My wife found the names on Madeleine’s Facebook and saw the translation on her art blog.”

“I’ll owe you, Walter.”

“Especially if my wife buys some overpriced painting we don’t need.” Walter slapped his friend’s back. “Double my handicap next week at Sycamore Hills, Dave. That’ll be payment enough.”

BOOK: The Art of Death
12.27Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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