The Big Fix (19 page)

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Authors: Linda Grimes

BOOK: The Big Fix
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After the police were through, Frannie took charge of me, and I let her. I figured Jack, in his grief and shock, would be more than willing to have his assistant handle the details.

The ride back to Jack’s condo was awkward, more so because Billy kept grinning at Frannie’s attempts to scoot closer to me. His mood had improved greatly after I found a private moment to assure him I wouldn’t be filling in for Jackson again after this. If someone was out to kill my client, Billy wanted to make sure it was my
client
who got killed and not me. Me, I’d just as soon it was neither one of us.

Not having any idea of the true nature of Jack’s relationship with Frannie, I wasn’t sure how to act around her. Did she suffer from unrequited love for her employer? Did he know it, or was he oblivious to it? Or was he having an affair with her, too? I mean, hey, if he cheated with Lily-Ann, why not Frannie?

I finally decided my safest course of action was to plead exhaustion, close my eyes, and pretend to be asleep for the long ride back to town. Convincing Frannie it was safe to leave me alone at the condo was trickier. She apologized for kissing me, tears in her big brown eyes, saying she knew how inappropriate it was to do that at my wife’s funeral, but she’d been so afraid for me, and she hoped I wasn’t mad at her.

Which didn’t clue me in about her relationship with Jack, because even if Jack were boinking her on a regular basis, surely he’d consider kissing him anywhere in public, much less his wife’s freaking funeral, to be a lapse in propriety. Thank God we’d been blocked from the helicopter news cameras by the tent when it had happened.

To keep Frannie from setting up outside the condo as a self-appointed bodyguard, I promised we’d go to dinner, just the two of us, as soon as I was up to resuming my commitment to the movie. When she still hadn’t seemed inclined to leave, I gave her a mission: to redecorate my Fifth Wheel trailer. Knowing from my file on Jack that Angelica had been the one to decorate it originally, I told Frannie I’d never be able to bear going into it again—the reminder would be too painful.

Frannie was ecstatic. Admitted she never thought it suited my true personality anyway, swore she’d turn it into a completely different place as soon as humanly possible, so I’d be able to come back to the set without fear.

If Jack had a problem with that, so be it. I had a problem with being shot at.

Billy winked at me after he ushered her back into the car, so I knew I’d be seeing him later. As soon as they were gone I’d tried calling Jack, who of course didn’t answer.
Damn it.
I’d thought he’d know it was me if he saw the call was from his own cell phone, but it looked like he was taking my admonition not to answer the phone for
anyone
way too seriously.

Either that or he wasn’t there. Which got me thinking in a whole other unpleasant direction.

*   *   *

I was still waiting for Billy (currently stuck running redecorating errands with Frannie, according to the text he’d sent) when Jack finally called, a good five hours from the time of the shooting. Time enough to drive back to Vegas, if one were inclined to believe he was somehow involved. But why would he do something like that? It didn’t make any sense.

He claimed he’d been afraid to answer my calls at first, after seeing the news of the attempt on “his” life (it was splashed all over television almost immediately, with lots of aerial footage of panicked A-list celebrities, via those handy choppers). Apologies poured out of him for putting me in that kind of danger, that if he’d known something like that would happen … yadda yadda BS yadda. Frankly, his smooth tongue was starting to wear thin.

“Hold on, Jack. The police aren’t sure the attempt was on
your
life. For all we know, someone was aiming at your father-in-law. Or even the urn itself.”

“Why would anyone shoot an urn full of ashes?” Jack said.

“You got me,” I said. “But why not Joe? Maybe someone is out to get the Conrad family.”

There was a pause, filled with breathing. “Yeah … yeah, I suppose you’re right. They do have a lot of enemies. Corporate ones, I mean. But surely no one would go this far.”

“Listen, Jack, Joe said something odd to me before the service. ‘You lose, you son of a bitch.’ What did he mean by that?” I wished I could be looking him in the eye as he answered—reading somebody is so much harder over the phone.

“You must’ve misheard. There’s no reason for him to have said that.”

Had his voice sounded tighter? More stressed? Difficult to say.

“No, I’m certain I heard him right. He enunciated each word very clearly,” I said. “Jack? Are you there?” The breathing began again. I was starting to worry he might have asthma. “Does this have anything to do with why you wanted me to follow the Conrads?”


No.
I don’t know what the fuck he meant by that. Listen, has anyone checked on Lily-Ann? I hate to bring it up, but she probably hates her father worse than anybody.”

“She’s wearing a tracking anklet, Jack”—had he not known that?—“so she’s the one person we can be sure wasn’t the shooter today.”

“Those things aren’t infallible. They can be tampered with.”

“Right. I’ll check on it,” I said. As soon as I finished up our conversation, I texted Billy, telling him not to worry if I wasn’t there when he got back.

*   *   *

The winding cement path leading to the front door of Nigel Overholt’s large house in the Hollywood Hills was so artfully landscaped that one hardly noticed its primary purpose was wheelchair access. Abundant flowers, decorative grasses, and multitiered shrubbery had made the necessarily long walk to get up the hill a pleasant one.

I’d told Jack everything I’d said to the police at the funeral home, so he wouldn’t appear to contradict himself if asked the same questions again. Said he’d better start answering his home line again, in case it was them, and to expect his cell phone by special messenger sometime that evening.

Now it was time for a little chat with Lily-Ann. I wanted to meet her face-to-face and decide for myself if I thought she was capable of murder.

She turned out to be a pleasant surprise. When she wasn’t screaming at TV cameras she came across as a genuinely nice person. Her long brown hair was pulled back from her heart-shaped face, making her look even more waifish in those big black-framed glasses. A long T-shirt, a short denim vest, and a chunky necklace confirmed her dedication to hipster fashion. The only thing out of place was the tracking anklet—it’s tough to hide one of those under leggings.

Nigel had left us, for the moment, in what was one of several tastefully decorated rooms on the first floor of his magnificent Laurel Canyon home. The big picture window offered a spectacular view of the iconic Hollywood sign, not something I was expecting, considering his accident. When he’d noticed where I was looking, he’d shrugged and said it was a good reminder of the difference between a calculated risk and pure stupidity. Seemed like a healthy attitude about mistakes to me. Once again, I was impressed with the man.

Lily-Ann and I were seated on a tan camelback sofa, waiting for Nigel to return with refreshments.

“I hear I have you to thank for my bail,” Lily-Ann said. “I’m a little cloudy on the why, though.”

“Not me, exactly. A friend of mine.” At least, I hoped Mark still considered himself my friend. “As for why … well, I’m a sucker for a good cause, I guess. You and I have that in common. I admire your work for animals.”

She cocked her head. There were still questions in her eyes, but I could tell she wasn’t going to question the gift. “Thank you. And thank your friend for me, too. I’d do it personally, but”—she glanced at her ankle—“I’m a little tied up here.”

A sense of humor—good. Lily-Ann and I were going to get along fine. “No thanks are necessary,” I said.

“No? Well, pardon my bluntness, but if you’re not here to feast on my gratitude, why did you come?”

Yeah, I liked her.

“As long as we’re being blunt,” I said, “I’m here to find out if there’s any way possible you could be the one who shot your sister’s urn.”

Her eyes widened for a moment, then narrowed as her mouth twisted into a smirk. She shook her ankle. “Um, gee, I hate to disappoint you, but as I said…”

“Ms. Conrad—”

“Call me Lily.”

“Lily. I phrased that badly. What I mean is, I’m here to rule you out in the attempt on either Jackson’s or your father’s life, whichever it was.”

“Is that what that goddamned fucking asshole is claiming now?” Lily’s voice inched toward her post-arrest TV level. “That not only did I kill my sister, but I somehow managed to slip my leash and try to kill him or my father, too? He’s
such
a dick. Trust me, if I’d been there with a gun, I
would
have shot him.”

Nigel rolled in with a drinks tray connected to the side of his chair. “Did I miss something? Do share.”

“Don’t worry, Nige. I’m not divulging case strategy. I was merely confirming Jack’s status as celebrity asshole of the year for Ciel.”

Nigel shrugged and handed us each a glass of electric yellow liquid over ice.

“Jack’s personality is neither here nor there. He has an alibi, and I’ve yet to come across a trace of evidence that he may have hired a killer. And now, with this incident at the funeral, it appears even less likely he could have been responsible for Angelica’s murder. It looks like we’ll have to rethink our strategy.”

“Tell me something, Lily,” I said, not bothering to explain Jack’s earlier claims that she couldn’t have killed her sister, because now who knew if he’d even been sincere? He’d certainly shifted the blame back to her fast enough in our last phone conversation. “If Jack
didn’t
have an alibi, would you think he killed your sister? Would he be capable of that?”

She huffed an unamused laugh. “In a heartbeat. In fact, the only thing that might make me doubt he’s involved is that I don’t think he’d hire someone else to do it—I’m sure he’d have wanted that pleasure for himself.”

“Pleasure?” I said.

“Oh, yeah,” Lily said. “Jack is charming when he wants to be. But when he doesn’t…” She shrugged. “He can be cold. Cruel. When I broke it off with him, he kicked one of my foster dogs across the room, just because it was trying to get between us. To protect me. And the look on Jack’s face when that little mutt yelped in pain—it was sick. Twisted. I was so stupid about him.”

Nigel interrupted. “Let me take a moment here to remind Ciel that this is all off the record.”

“Don’t worry—I’m not about spill any beans you don’t want spilled. I’m only trying to compile the complete picture in my head, so I’ll know if … the information … I have will prove useful for you.”

I could sense his ears perking. “Why not tell me what you know? That would be the simplest way to find out,” he said.

“Afraid there’s nothing simple about it, Nigel. But first—Lily, why should I believe you had no wish to harm your sister? Even setting aside your affair with her husband”—she had the decency to look ashamed—“Angelica was in lockstep with your parents, helping run the company whose practices go against everything you believe in so passionately.”

There was a lot to admire about Lily—her compassion for animals, and her courage in standing up for her beliefs at great cost to herself, financially at least. But being disinherited had to rankle. The question was, did she resent her sister’s choosing to remain loyal to their parents enough to kill her?

Lily looked at Nigel before answering my question. Guess she found the okay in his eyes, because she continued. “It’s true my sister and I don’t—didn’t—agree on much with regard to the family business, but she did have a certain amount of sympathy for what our parents called my foolish regard for food animals. Only, she maintained she’d be able to do more to ensure their humane treatment in the long run by playing the good daughter, and eventually inheriting, than I could hope to accomplish with my ‘basically useless’ demonstrations.”

I nodded and took a sip of my drink. Bleah.

Lily sipped hers, too, and made a face. “Seriously, Nigel? Not even a shot of vodka to make this more palatable? And I’m not just talking about your crappy healthy water either.”

“Sorry. Vitamin ‘V’ is not on the menu here,” he said, drinking his with seeming enjoyment. No accounting for taste.

Lily gave me a what’re-we-gonna-do shrug and went on, sounding calm, though her trembling hands told me another story. “The prosecutor is trying to twist Angelica’s toeing of the parental line into some big rift between us. He’s claiming that’s my motive for killing her, which couldn’t be further from the truth. As much as I enjoy shooting my mouth off on the picket line, I’m fully aware that Angelica’s plan was more practical. See, I thought we could have it both ways—I could have the pleasure of gumming up the works of my parents’ chicken-killing empire now, while knowing Angelica would stick it to them posthumously, once she gained control. But I never once considered they might outlive her.”

“Okay, I might buy that, but I can see where a jury could find it difficult to swallow. Even if your affair with Jackson doesn’t become public knowledge, you have motive,” I said. “You were also at the house in Vegas the night Angelica was killed—that’s opportunity. Did you know where they kept their guns?”

She nodded. “My prints were even inside the gun closet—Angelica and I used to go to the range together, back when impressing Jack was important to her. How’s that for suck-tastic luck?”

“And there you have means,” Nigel said.

Despite that, I didn’t believe she’d done it. Of course, it helped now that I knew she’d been within sight of either Nigel or his aide all morning—they’d been watching television coverage of the funeral. There was no way she could have been the one to fire that shot, even if she had figured out a way to disable her anklet.

“They haven’t found the murder weapon yet,” I said. “That has to be some help.”

Nigel looked at me sharply. “That’s not general knowledge.”

“Oh?” I said. He hadn’t asked a question, so I didn’t rush in to explain how I knew.

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