Violent Crimes (20 page)

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Authors: Phillip Margolin

BOOK: Violent Crimes
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CHAPTER 47

Amanda had the Sunday
New York Times
delivered to her condo. After breakfast, she would take a cup of coffee into her living room and curl up on the couch with the crossword puzzle. She liked the Sunday puzzle because it usually had a theme or a gimmick. Once you figured out the trick, you could fill in a lot of the words and the puzzle was easy to solve.

While Amanda was working on her puzzle, Mike was studying a variation of the Petroff Defense on a walnut chess table with beautiful inlaid squares he had brought over from his apartment. The Sunday puzzle was getting the best of Amanda and Mike's concentration was constantly being interrupted by swearing. Then Amanda barked out a victorious laugh.

“I assume you've finally figured out the big clue,” he said.

“I'm so stupid,” Amanda answered. “The title of the puzzle is ‘Reverse Engineering.' You're supposed to fill in some of the words from right to left instead of left to right.”

“Great. Now that you've got that solved, is there a possibility
that I'll be able to work on my chess opening in peace and quiet?”

“Sorry,” Amanda apologized meekly.

“I love you,” Mike said with a big smile, “even if you're not too bright.”

Amanda gave Mike the finger and started filling in some of the answers that had stumped her. She was working on the bottom right corner of the puzzle when she paused and stared into space. Then her mouth opened.

“You're right. I am an idiot,” Amanda said.

Mike sighed and looked up. “What is it now?” he asked.

“This case—Kiner's murder and all the rest of it. I've been looking at it the wrong way, just like I looked at the puzzle.”

Amanda pulled out her cell phone and walked into her home office so she wouldn't bother Mike. Then she speed-dialed Kate Ross.

“I've got two jobs for you,” Amanda said when Kate answered the phone. “First, I want you to find every newspaper article, TV news story, and mention on the Internet about Tom Beatty's assault case.”

“That should be easy,” Kate said. “What's task number two?”

Amanda gave Kate a name. “I want a complete net worth: every bank account and investment account, real estate holdings, jewelry, art, cars, boats . . . everything. And I don't care how you get the information as long as you don't get caught.”

“Can you tell me why I'm going to spend my day of rest working overtime while risking a stay in a federal penitentiary?”

“Yes, I can.”

Amanda explained what she expected Kate to find and what they would do with the information if Kate's search panned out the way Amanda thought it would.

CHAPTER 48

Amanda walked into Jaffe, Katz, Lehane and Brindisi a little after seven on Monday morning. Before she went to her office she checked to see if Kate Ross was in. When she didn't find her in her office Amanda left a note for the receptionist to have Kate come to where she worked as soon as she walked in the door. Then she went to her office and tried to concentrate on a brief she was writing.

Kate knocked on Amanda's doorjamb at one-thirty. Amanda told her to come in and close the door.

“So?” she asked when Kate was seated.

“First, as far as I can tell, there were no stories about Tom's arrest or the fight at the Lookout, but that's not surprising. A bar fight usually isn't newsworthy unless someone dies.”

“Okay, what about your other assignment?” Amanda asked.

“You were right. The problem is you won't be able to use anything I found because I broke several state and federal laws finding it.”

“That's okay. I just wanted to know if I was right. Now we have
to get Billie Brewster on board, because she can legally get ahold of the information we need to nail the person who murdered Reginald Kiner. All we have to do is point her in the right direction.”

“These are the ground rules,” Billie said when the three women were gathered in a booth at the back of Juniors Cafe. “One, this meeting never happened.”

“That works for me,” Amanda said.

“Two, we put all our cards on the table. No attorney-client bullshit.”

“I'm bound by the attorney-client privilege, Billie; you know that. But I could speak hypothetically about things a client might have told me if I knew you wouldn't subpoena me to a grand jury.”

Brewster shook her head. “I am so glad I didn't go to law school. You must have gotten an A plus in obfuscation and doublespeak.”

Amanda cocked her head to one side, raised an eyebrow, and remained mute.

Billie sighed and said, “Okay, I'll let you play your games if it helps nail the person who's behind all these killings. So why don't you start.”

“Here's what we think,” Amanda said. “It all began with Masterson, Hamilton's attempt to land Global Mining as a client. The firm was in financial trouble. I'm pretty certain that Dale Masterson and Mark Hamilton worked on their books to make it look like their financial position was better than it was.”

“Do you know if any of the other members of the firm were involved?” Billie asked.

“I have a source who told me that Dale Masterson and Mark Hamilton ran the law firm, and the rest of the partners were just along for the ride. You can probably get the partnership agreements and see if any other partners were in the inner circle.”

“I'll do that. Go ahead.”

“I'm positive that Christine Larson found out about the cooked books and threatened to spill the beans to the people at Global. Dale Masterson and/or Mark Hamilton panicked and got in touch with Reginald Kiner. It was probably Dale Masterson.”

“What makes you think that?” Billie asked.

“Hamilton told someone who told me,” Amanda said.

“Who is this confidant?”

“A little bird, and that's all I can say.”

“Did this little bird cut off the tip of Mark Hamilton's ear?”

Amanda just stared at the detective. After a few seconds, Billie shook her head and told Amanda to continue.

“We believe that the firm used Kiner in the past to deal with situations like this,” Amanda said.

“You mean to kill people?” Billie asked.

“Or something similar: threats, coercion. I don't have details about crimes unconnected with the current cases, but I am very certain that the men who were found in the car trunk went to Tom Beatty's house on the evening he was released from jail and tried to kill him. I am equally certain that Tom Beatty killed both men in self-defense and would be found not guilty if a jury knew all of the facts.”

“What about the men we found at the campsite in Forest Park?” Billie asked.

Amanda flashed on the violence she'd witnessed in the park
and had to take a deep breath to calm down. She was subdued when she answered the detective's question.

“I was there when that happened, Billie. Those men followed me to Tom's camp. They were going to torture me. Tom rescued me. He saved my life.”

Billie lost her hard edge. “Why haven't you said something?”

“I didn't know if you'd find Tom's camp and the bodies.” She looked down at the tabletop. “I couldn't get him in more trouble after he saved me.”

“There's something else,” Kate said. “Amanda realized that she must have been under surveillance, so she asked me to sweep her condo and her office and check her phones and her car. I found state-of-the-art, very expensive bugs in her office and home, taps on her phones, and a tracking device on her car—the type of equipment an outfit like RENCO could get their hands on.”

“Interesting,” Billie said. “What about Dale Masterson? Did your client kill him?”

“So you think Brandon is innocent?” Amanda asked.

“Since we're off the record, I can tell you that I have very serious doubts that Brandon Masterson killed his father.”

“Why haven't you dismissed the charges?”

“I said that I had doubts. Alan isn't as open-minded as I am.”

“If it helps, Brandon told me that his father was dead when he found him. He confessed to get a platform to spout his views about the environment and to tell the world what a shit his father was. Now he deeply regrets that lamebrain decision.”

“You still didn't answer my question. Did Beatty kill Masterson?”

“He swears that he didn't. He was in Masterson's den but he
says Masterson was dead when he found him. I'm pretty certain that was also Kiner's work.”

“Did your boy pop Kiner?” Billie asked.

“No, but I'm pretty certain I know who did. Only I'll need your help to prove it. Kate talked to a retired PPB detective who was investigating Kiner when he was on the force. He said Kiner was a bad cop. Can you tell us anything more about him?”

“When Kiner's name started coming up I did get curious, and I talked to Greg Nowicki—Kiner was Greg's partner just before he left to work for RENCO. Nowicki didn't have anything good to say about him. Alan Hotchkiss knew him too. Alan told me that everyone thought Kiner was dirty. He was suspected of killing a drug dealer, stealing drug money he'd confiscated in other cases, and making a witness disappear, but they could never get enough evidence to go to a grand jury.

“And there's something else that could be important. Kiner was partnered with Nowicki when Carol White started informing for Greg. Greg says that Kiner knew her. So Masterson or Hamilton or both could have gotten Kiner to send men to murder Christine. Then Kiner could have paid White to go to Nowicki so he'd get a warrant for Tom's house. After that, all they had to do was lure Tom to the law office. That would give Kiner's men the time they needed to plant the body and the heroin in Tom's house.”

“Have you checked on Mark Hamilton's whereabouts during the time Kiner was murdered?” Amanda asked.

“We're taking a hard look at Mr. Hamilton,” Billie assured her. “He says he was at his office from seven thirty at night until his bodyguards got him two hours later. Most of the employees were
gone by seven-thirty, and no one we talked to can say he was or wasn't there during the crucial times. We checked the law firm's security cameras and there are blind spots, so he could have left and come back.”

“Do you have any other suspects?” Amanda asked.

“Veronica Masterson is going to be a very rich woman when the will is probated. She signed a prenup, but it cut her out of Dale's estate only if they divorced.”

“Does she have an alibi for the time Dale was murdered?”

“She told us she was shopping all day, and we've talked to salesclerks who back up her story for some of the day, but there are some times she can't account for during which she would have been able to drive home, kill Masterson, and go back to shop. Two girlfriends cover her from five to seven thirty. They had dinner at the Westmont before she drove home.”

“What about Kiner? Does she have an alibi for the time of his murder?” Kate asked.

Billie told them what Veronica's hunk had told her and Hotchkiss.

“Do you have any other suspects in Kiner's murder besides Veronica Masterson and Mark Hamilton?” Amanda asked.

“I thought you wanted to meet me so you could tell me whodunit,” Billie said.

“All I have is a theory,” Amanda answered. “What we need is hard evidence. And that's where you come in.”

The women talked a little longer before driving off in their separate cars. Amanda was lost in thought during the return to Portland, but part of her brain had been on high alert ever since Kate had told her that she was being spied on.

On the way to Juniors she'd thought that a dark green Chevy had followed her into Washington. Then the car had taken the exit before the one that led to Juniors and she'd written off her suspicions as paranoia. Now, as she crossed the border into Oregon, she thought she saw the Chevy several cars behind her, but it was too far back for her to be certain. Before she drove to her condo, Amanda took several fast turns and circled through back streets until she was convinced that she had lost any tail that might be following her.

CHAPTER 49

Mike was watching a movie when Amanda got back to the apartment. She sat next to him on the sofa and tried to lose herself in the film, but her mind wandered as she tried to twist and turn the facts in the Masterson and Larson cases this way and that, with the same lack of success she'd always had when she tried to solve a Rubik's Cube or a Chinese box puzzle. She was pretty certain she knew who had killed Kiner, but she wasn't in a position to prove it until Billie found the hard evidence the case was lacking.

The movie ended, and Mike wanted to make love. Amanda was distracted, but she didn't want to disappoint him, and she hoped sex might take her mind off murder. It didn't. When Mike fell asleep, she was still wide awake, and what little sleep she got after that was fretful.

The next morning, Amanda crawled out of bed, more tired than she'd been when she went to sleep the night before. She had no appetite, so she ate a piece of toast and drank a cup of tea
before heading to the gym in hopes that a vigorous workout would clear the cobwebs that were wrapped around her brain.

During the first ten laps Amanda's mind wandered to the questions posed by Reginald Kiner's murder, but she went all out in every set, and the harder she swam, the less energy she had for anything but survival. When she hauled herself out of the pool, she was thoroughly exhausted and it took everything she had left to shower and dress.

Amanda didn't have any court appearances or client conferences on her calendar, so she decided to carbo-load with a hearty pancake breakfast before going into the office. She was walking to her car, thinking how great it would be to polish off a stack of blueberry pancakes and a side of thick-sliced bacon drenched in maple syrup, when she saw a car racing toward her. She'd started to turn when she was tackled into a space between two cars. Before she could defend herself she heard a gunshot and a car window just above her head exploded, showering her with glass.

“Stay down,” a voice shouted in her ear. Then the weight that had pressed her to the asphalt lifted.

Amanda rolled onto her side and saw a woman in a shooter's stance. The car sped out of sight and the woman straightened up, dropping the hand holding a .45 automatic to her side. Amanda struggled to her feet. The fabric at her knee was ripped and the knee was bleeding. Her elbow throbbed where it had smashed against the asphalt.

The woman turned. She was dressed in a warm-up suit and she had mid-length red hair, but she was definitely the same heavyset blonde from the parking garage, and Amanda was willing to bet she was also the woman with dark hair in the business
suit who had been watching her on the morning she'd been unnerved by the crows.

“Are you okay?” the woman asked.

“What just happened?” Amanda asked.

“Someone tried to shoot you.”

Amanda tried to process what she'd just been told. It was hard to believe, but the glass fragments that covered her and the ground around her were pretty good evidence that the woman was telling the truth. Until this moment Amanda had been in shock, but now she started to shake.

“Who are you?”

“Jenny Harwell,” the woman answered. “But, many moons ago, I used to strip as Candy Delight.”

“You're a stripper?!?” Amanda asked as her addled brain tried to fit this fact into what she'd just seen.

Harwell laughed. “
Ex
-stripper. Now I do this and that for Martin Breach. After you told him about the guys who tried to kill you in Forest Park, Marty asked me to keep an eye on you.”

“Jesus,” Amanda swore as she leaned against the trunk of a car for support.

“Yeah, well, you needed more than divine intervention to save your ass just now. Someone wanted you very dead.”

“Did you see the driver?”

Harwell shook her head. “I was too busy getting you out of harm's way. By the time I got to my feet, all I could see was a blur through the car's rear window.”

“Man or woman?” Amanda asked.

“I have no idea.” Harwell shook her head. “You sure pissed somebody off.”

“And I have an idea who,” Amanda replied. “Have you noticed anyone following me since you've started being my shadow?”

“I thought a green Chevy followed you to Juniors last night. It turned off the exit before the cafe, but I spotted it parked down the road just before you left. It was hiding on a side street; that's why I didn't see it earlier. It followed you back to Portland and I tried to get a license number but the driver had caked mud on the plate. I went after the car when you went home. He must have spotted me, because he sped past your condo, then lost me later on.”

“When you see Martin, tell him thanks.”

Harwell smiled. “He really likes you, kid. That's why I moved so fast. He'd never have forgiven me if something happened to you. I'll keep watching, and I may even call in some backup now that I know this guy means business. But you better stay on your toes and carry your gun. Popping you was a desperation move, and someone that desperate is going to try again.

“Now go back inside the gym and call the cops. Then have someone patch up your knee. Oh, one more thing: I was never here.”

Amanda returned to the athletic club lobby after calling 911 and Billie Brewster on her cell phone. She was in a small office placing a large bandage over the cut on her knee when Billie arrived. As Amanda limped down to the parking lot, she told Billie an edited version of the attempt on her life, one that did not include an ex-stripper. In Amanda's version, she dove between the cars just before the shot was fired, then leaped up in time to see the car with her assailant drive out of sight. A uniformed police officer
had taped off the area around the car with the shattered window and was keeping onlookers away as they waited for the team from the crime lab to arrive.

“You think the shooter was in the same car that followed you from Juniors?” Billie asked as she took in the crime scene.

“I can't be certain because I never got a license number, but both cars were dull green and Chevys.”

“That's not enough to go on.”

“True, but I'd bet on it. And the attempt on my life is good news.”

“How do you figure that?”

“I was the first one to get to Juniors last night. If the shooter was the same person who followed me last night, he would have seen you arrive. I think he tried to kill me because we've got him spooked. If he's figured out that someone has been looking into his finances, he must be scared to death.”

“I'm relieved that you're so thrilled that someone tried to shoot you. If it was me, I'd be scared to death.”

“Yes, there is that, isn't there,” Amanda said, suddenly subdued. “Oh, and, Billie, I did some thinking before you got here, and I have a suggestion. When you find the bullet that was meant for me, why don't you compare it with the bullet that killed Reginald Kiner.”

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