Motion for Murder (33 page)

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Authors: Kelly Rey

BOOK: Motion for Murder
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"Um hmm," she murmured. "Well, I'm on my way out the door right now, but maybe some time next week I could give you that half hour." Next week was not going to do me any good. I thought for a moment.

"Could I buy you a drink tonight?" I asked. "Or dinner?" I'd read or heard somewhere that journalists are notorious cheapskates, and I hoped the offer of free food might do the trick.

She paused. I didn't know if she was really thinking about my offer, or if she just wanted me to think she was thinking about it. "That might work," she said coyly. "Your treat, you said?"

I smiled. "Naturally. You pick the place."

She thought for about four nanoseconds before she said we'd meet up at Hugo's, a spot downtown near the newspaper's main offices. We agreed to meet there in an hour. On the way over, I wondered whether talking to a member of the media was such a great idea, but I decided I could probably learn more from her in an hour than I could from an entire week of reading through her old stories. Money and time well spent.

Hugo's Cellar is a joint famous with locals but all but unknown to the millions of visitors who pour into Las Vegas and never leave the area between the Strip and the airport. Hugo's caters to the kind of people who don't have any use for dancing fountains, wine stewards, or martinis that have anything in them besides gin and vermouth.

For a Tuesday night, Hugo's was surprisingly crowded. To the left of the entrance a large woman sat hunched over the bar, clutching a glass of pink wine. She was reading a worn paperback book through reading glasses that were attached to a chain around her neck.

"Ms. Trondheim?" I asked.

She twisted back to me and frowned—I was obviously not what she was expecting.

"Who in the world are you?" she asked.

"Raven McShane. We just spoke on the…"

"The PI?" She practically spit out her pink wine. Her eyes dropped to my heels and made their way up to my chest, where they lingered a moment too long. "You're so…" She let the phrase hang in the air.

"Sorry," I said stupidly, not knowing what I was apologizing for. Who did she expect, Nancy Drew? I self-consciously adjusted my top to cover up some cleavage. It was mostly a waste of energy.

Leslie scooted the bar stool back a few inches and struggled a bit to get up. She stuck out her hand. "Call me Les," she said and gave my hand a firm shake. She was all smiles and neck fat now. Apparently she had forgiven me.

"Are we eating or drinking?" I asked.

"Both," she said and winked. She slurped down what looked like a half-glass of wine. So that's how it was. Les smiled apologetically and whispered something to the bartender. She stood only about five-two and looked like she ran a good two-hundred pounds, although instead of appearing wide and bulky she somehow carried the narrow, tubular frame of a juvenile walrus. A prominent quadruple chin gave her face a lumpy appearance, and it was framed by straight hair that used to be dark but was now streaked heavily with white and various shades of gray. With her reading glasses on, she could have passed for Benjamin Franklin.

I gestured toward the dining room, and we made our way to a small table near the door. For some reason I pulled the chair out for her and helped her into the seat. She seemed to like that.

"You're a cute one," she said, looking me over as I sat down. I couldn't tell if she was being flirtatious or grandmotherly.

"Thanks." I hoped I wasn't blushing. A compliment was a compliment.

"So why in the world are you looking at that boring old case?" she asked, her eyes fixing on me over the reading glasses she still wore.

"Just idle curiosity, really."

She arched her left eyebrow up at me as though I'd just told the whopper of the century. Another glass of pink wine suddenly appeared in front of her, and I told the waiter to bring me a glass of Prosecco, champagne's budget-friendly cousin.

"So how can I help?" she asked.

"Well, to put it bluntly," I said, "how the hell was Cody found not guilty?"

She smiled broadly. "Isn't it obvious? You have to remember that the jury had eight women on it, okay?" Her voice had the kind of rehearsed self-assurance shared by celebrities on talk shows who have answered the same few questions a million times. I hadn't known about the jury's heavy female slant, but I nodded anyway.

"And any woman would find it very difficult to send that man to prison. His face, his eyes—" She sighed dramatically, like a character in an Austen novel.

"Okay, okay," I laughed, cutting her off.

 "It's true," she insisted. "No other explanation for it."

"So you think he was actually guilty?" My drink arrived. We had forgotten to study the menu, so we perused it quickly while the waiter stood by. Les ordered a lobster bisque to start and an entree of prime rib with a side of garlic potatoes. I got the bone-in rib eye with a house salad.

Les picked up where we'd left off. "I didn't say I thought he was guilty," she said carefully, "but I think any other man would probably have gone away for a long time. There was a lot of evidence, of course. When they find the murder weapon buried in your backyard, it's not a good thing. There was the motive to help his wife take over the casino. And Cody was known to not get along with George Hannity. And no one believed the alibi," she added confidently.

"The wife, you mean?" I vaguely recalled reading that Cody's wife Amy had backed up Cody's story that the two of them were in bed together the night of the murder.

 She snorted softly. "Amy Masterson," she said, making a face. "Nice looking girl, but not on par with Cody. Thinks she's a princess of some sort, I'm convinced. Let me tell you, though, she played well with the jury. She's as sweet as they come. Anyway, she did a number with that alibi. Cody took the stand first and said they were together the night of the murder. In bed. Then Amy comes on the stand and says, not only were they in bed together, they were making passionate love most of the night. She explained that her sweet husband was just too polite and gallant to mention those details to the jury."

I laughed. "Nice touch."

She continued. "And it helped that she was the victim's sister—no one would stick up for her own brother's killer, right? But I think she lied about the alibi business. Overall, Cody seemed pretty believable to me, but since I want to snuggle his brains out I might be a little biased," she admitted with a devilish smile.

I grinned. Leslie was not a shy woman to begin with, I figured, and the wine had her pretty well lubricated. I decided to let her take the conversation in whatever direction she wanted. "So what else?" I asked.

She paused to consider the question. "I've covered hundreds of trials, okay? And it's almost always an obvious case of guilt—a slam dunk or whatever man-invented metaphor you want to use." She slurped down a healthy glug of wine. "But this wasn't like that. There was a ton of evidence—the murder weapon being found in his backyard, for example. But it was like, why is this here, you know? Why kill a guy and clean the weapon of prints but then bury the gun in your own backyard?"

"Hmm," I murmured. She had a point. "I'd at least drive it out to the desert or something."

"Right. Not exactly original, but it works. But I've seen so many of these cases that I'm always a little skeptical. And when you see these prosecutors and cops on a daily basis, you know they're not always the brightest bulbs."

"But Masterson wasn't really an Einstein himself, right?"

"Yeah. Look, I'm not saying he was innocent, just that it looked a little too neat to me."

That was the first time I'd heard anyone say that. It was pretty much common knowledge that Masterson was guilty, and the not-guilty verdict was always pointed to as a cautionary example of how high-priced lawyers could game the system to secure "justice" for the well-heeled.

The food came, and we ordered another round of drinks. I decided I liked Leslie. She had grown wise and cautious through years of experience, I guessed, but rather than being bitter and jaded she seemed to process and dispense information with a sense of humor and a shrug. I was not surprised when she ordered dessert. By the time we parted ways, the wine had made Leslie more than a bit giddy. She thanked me profusely and joked I was the best date she'd had in years. Unfortunately for me, that sentiment was mutual.

 

CHAPTER FOUR

 

I had forgotten to close the shades the night before, and by 6:30 my bedroom was bathed in piercing sunlight. I knew it was too early to get up, but I couldn't get back to sleep. My mind was racing with thoughts of breakfast.

I needed to work off the pound of beef I'd eaten the night before, but I always felt uncomfortable using the building's gym at this time of day. Okay, I
hated
using the gym at
any
time of day. It was full of motivated people who were burning carbs or toning thighs before heading off to their normal jobs as bankers or casino execs. I got most of my exercise dancing twenty hours per week, but that wasn't quite enough to keep my abs trim, and my thirty-something butt needed a little help if I wanted to compete for tips with eighteen-year-old girls who didn't know a porterhouse from a pancake. I knew if I thought about it another second, I'd find some way to rationalize being lazy, so I grudgingly put on my running clothes and headed out to the Strip.

At this hour the street was busy with morning traffic, but the wide sidewalks on either side of Las Vegas Boulevard were a ghost town. I ran past the scattered physical remains of the previous night's revelries: random call girl slips intermixed with assorted beer bottles, cigarette butts, and torn scraps of free newspapers advertising helicopter rides and Lake Mead cruises and Ferraris for rent. I encountered a few underage teens staggering about, sporting guilty grins and bleary eyes as they made a last brave stand before crashing. One kid gave me a double take then made a two-handed gesture and yelled something in Russian (I think.) at me. A Catholic priest stood a lonely post collecting for charity, and a few casino workers emerged from buses and shuffled off to work. I reached the south end of the Strip at Mandalay Bay and headed back. 

I returned to my condo feeling refreshed, and after watching a full hour of
The View,
I figured I had procrastinated enough. It was time to do more homework: I needed to look at the court's file on the Masterson case. Although the court system made some filings available online, I knew their criminal cases were still only accessible in person at the clerk's dungeon of massive file cabinets. The kind of work I hated. Handling paper would probably give me paper cuts, I theorized, and my nighttime customers would not like it if I showed up covered in Band-Aids.

I wanted a babysitter, so I picked up the phone. "Mike, I need to go downtown to the courthouse. Can you show me around?" Mike Madsen was a private investigator who had the misfortune of being assigned as my supervising detective during my first year with a license. It meant he was supposed to supervise my work ten hours a month and certify to the licensing board that I wasn't a complete nut job. An observant Mormon, Mike seemed like a fish out of water in a town that deemed vice a virtue. I harbored a natural suspicion of people who didn't drink coffee or alcohol, but Mike had the tall, muscled body of an Iowa farmhand, and his eyes were big and sapphire blue. And I had to respect the fact that he was a different breed from the skuzzy male clientele I dealt with most of the week.

He didn't sound enthusiastic about accompanying me downtown. "Haven't you been down there a lot already?"

"No," I lied. "I need someone to show me the ropes." I wasn't above using my helpless woman voice.

"All right. But I have to testify at eleven-thirty."

"Fine. You at your office? I'll swing by and pick you up."

That was a relief. The prospect of facing piles of papers by myself gave me unpleasant flashbacks to college, not to mention the aforementioned danger of paper cuts. Mike would protect me.

I dialed downstairs, and they said my car would be waiting for me out front in five minutes. I sometimes felt guilty about spoiling myself with things like valet service, but I'd worked hard for a decade at a job most people found demeaning, and I figured I was due a little pampering. When I got down to the lobby, Tommy the valet (I didn't know his last name.) was leaning on my car with a shy smile on his face. Vegas was full of beautiful people in the most unlikely places, and Tommy was one of them. He was probably twenty-two, but he looked sixteen. He didn't just have boyish good looks—he had jailbait good looks, especially in that tight gray valet uniform.

Tommy opened the door on my silver Audi TT. He blushed and smiled widely at me like a trained chimp, and then he shut the door without so much as a word. Oh well. At least I'd made him blush. I waved and headed out.

Mike's office was about ten blocks from the county courthouse. Downtown Las Vegas was experiencing something of a renaissance, but it was still a museum of 1960's architecture and buildings built primarily for function rather than form. That is the polite way of saying that Mike's office was dumpy. He met me at the street.

"This is your car?" He sounded a little offended.

I hadn't found occasion to tell Mike about my other job, and I didn't plan to. I figured it would be uncomfortable for the guy supervising me to learn that I probably earned five times what he did in a year, not to mention
how
I earned the money. He already seemed a little afraid of me, and I didn't want him offended by me as well.

"Just a little splurge," I said. "I got it to celebrate getting my PI's license."

"
Probationary
license," he corrected as he climbed in. Mike's idea of dressing for court meant a short-sleeved white shirt and a red tie, like a Bible salesman. The shirt looked cheap, but it showed off Mike's tanned, muscled arms. He was about the sexiest dork I'd ever met.

The Regional Justice Center is an imposing, all-business building completed earlier this century at a time when the county actually had money. It's about twenty stories tall, brick and glass, and is made up of a number of rectangular boxes that make it look like a big city hospital. Mike led the way to the clerk's office on the third floor. When we arrived the lobby was empty, and I approached a woman behind the glassed-in counter and requested the
State v. Masterson
file. The clerk, a middle-aged woman whose bold glasses made her look fashionable but not any younger, barely raised an eyebrow. She asked if I knew the case number but then disappeared before I could answer. Apparently she knew exactly where the file was.

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