The In Death Collection 06-10 (152 page)

BOOK: The In Death Collection 06-10
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“Yes, sir.”

 

By the time they were assembled in her office, Feeney had arrived. He’d reviewed the video of the play himself, had enlarged, refocused, enhanced, and worked his e-magic so that the team was able to confirm the time frame of the switch.

The two courtroom scenes were side by side on a split screen, with Feeney in front, showing the minute difference in the shape of the knife, its angle of placement from one to the other.

“Whoever did the switch copped a knife that so closely resembled the dummy nobody would have noticed it without picking it up and giving it a good looking over.”

“The prop master?” McNab asked.

“He’d have no reason to do more than check to see that the knife was still on its mark. The courtroom set
stayed—what do you call it—dressed throughout the performance. He’d have noticed if the knife was missing,” Feeney added. “According to his statement, he checked the set immediately after the scene change and immediately before it changed again. He had no reason to check otherwise.”

“That gives the perpetrator approximately five minutes.” Eve tapped her fingers on her mug. “However, we narrow that if we follow the line that Quim saw something or someone suspicious, as it appears he did during the scene break. Under three minutes to get the dummy knife hidden and be back wherever he needed to be. Onstage or in the wings.”

“Then the perp had to wait.” Peabody narrowed her eyes. “Wait, and count on no one making the switch through the next courtroom scene, through the dialogue and action. Wait out the play until Christine Vole grabs it up and uses it. That’s about thirty minutes. A long time to wait.”

“Our killer’s patient, systematic. I think he or she enjoyed the wait, watching Draco prance around, emoting, drawing applause, all the while knowing it was his last act. I think the killer reveled in it.”

Eve set down her coffee, sat on the edge of her desk. “Roarke said something last night. Life imitates art.”

Peabody scratched her nose. “I thought it was the opposite.”

“Not this time. Why this play? Why this time? There were easier, less risky, more subtle ways to off Draco. I’m thinking the play itself meant something to the killer. The theme of love and betrayal, of false faces. Sacrifice and revenge. The characters of Leonard and Christine Vole have a history. Maybe Draco had a history with his killer. Something that goes back into the past that twisted their relationship.”

Feeney nodded, munched on a handful of nuts. “A lot of the players and techs had worked with him before.
Theater’s like a little world, and the people in it bump into each other over and over.”

“Not a professional connection. A personal one. Look, Vole comes off charming, handsome, even a little naive, until you find out he’s a heartless, ruthless opportunist. From what we’ve uncovered, this mirrors Draco. So who did he betray? Whose life did he ruin?”

“From the interviews, he fucked over everybody.” McNab lifted his hands. “Nobody’s pretending they loved the guy.”

“So we go deeper. We go back. I want you to run the players. Look for the history. Something that pops out. Vole destroyed a marriage or relationship, ruined someone financially. Seduced someone’s sister. Set back their career. You look for the data,” she told McNab and Feeney. “Peabody and I will chip away at the players.”

 

Eve decided to start with Carly Landsdowne. Something about the woman had set off alarms in her head since their first conversation.

The actress lived in a glossy building with full security, glitzy shops, and circling people glides. The expansive lobby area was elegantly spare, with water-toned tile floors, modest indoor shrubbery, and a discreet security panel worked into an arty geometric design in the wall.

“Good morning,” the panel announced in a pleasant male voice when Eve approached. “Please state your business in The Broadway View.”

“My business is with Carly Landsdowne.”

“One moment, please.” There was a quiet tinkle of music to fill the silence. “Thank you for waiting. According to our logs, Ms. Landsdowne has not informed us of any expected visitors. I’ll be happy to contact her for you and ask if she is able to receive guests at this time. Please state your name and produce a photo ID.”

“You want ID? Here’s some ID.” Eve shoved her badge up to the needle-sized lens of the camera. “Tell
Ms. Landsdowne Lieutenant Dallas doesn’t like waiting in lobbies.”

“Of course, Lieutenant. One moment, please.”

The music picked up where it had left off, and it had Eve gritting her teeth. “I hate this shit. Why do they think recorded strings do anything but cause annoyance and an urgent desire to find the speakers and rip them out?”

“I think it’s kind of nice,” Peabody said. “I like violins. Reminds me of my mother. She plays,” Peabody added when Eve just stared at her.

“Thank you for waiting. Ms. Landsdowne will be happy to see you, Lieutenant Dallas. If you would proceed to elevator number two. You have been cleared. Have a safe and happy day.”

“I hate when they say that.” Eve strode to the proper elevator. The doors opened, and the same violin music seeped out. It made her snarl.

“Welcome to The Broadway View.” A voice oozed over the strings. “We are a fully self-contained, fully secured building. You are welcome to apply for a day pass in order to tour our facilities, including our state-of-the-art fitness and spa center, which offers complete cosmetic, physical, and mental therapies and treatments. Our shopping area can be reached through public or private access and welcomes all major debit cards. The View also offers its patrons and, with proper reservations, the public, three five-star restaurants as well as the popular Times Square Café for those casual dining needs.”

“When is it going to shut up?”

“I wonder if they have a swimming pool.”

“If you are interested in joining our exclusive community, just press extension ninety-four on any house-link and request an appointment with one of our friendly concierges for a tour of our three model units.”

“I’d rather have all the skin peeled from my bones,” Eve decided.

“I wonder if they have efficiencies.”

“Please exit to the left and proceed to apartment number two thousand eight. We at The View wish you a pleasant visit.”

Eve stepped out of the car and headed left. The apartment doors were widely spaced down a generously sized hallway. Whoever’d designed the place hadn’t worried about wasted space, she decided. Then she had the uncomfortable feeling she was going to discover her husband owned the building.

Carly opened the door before Eve could buzz. The actress wore a deep blue lounging robe, her feet bare and tipped with ripe pink. But her hair and face were done and done well, Eve noted.

“Good morning, Lieutenant.” Carly leaned against the door for a moment, a deliberately cocky pose. “How nice of you to drop by.”

“You’re up early,” Eve commented. “And here I thought theater people weren’t morning people.”

Carly’s smirk wavered a bit, but she firmed it again as she stepped back. “I have a performance today. Richard’s memorial service.”

“You consider that a performance?”

“Of course. I have to be sober and sad and spout all the platitudes. It’s going to be a hell of an act for the media.” Carly gestured toward an attractive curved sofa of soft green in the living area. “I could have put on the same act for you, and quite convincingly. But it seemed such a waste of your time and my talent. Can I offer you coffee?”

“No. It doesn’t worry you to be a suspect in a murder investigation?”

“No, because I didn’t do it and because it’s good research. I may be called on to play one eventually.”

Eve wandered to the window wall, privacy screened, and lifted her brows at the killer view of Times Square. The animated billboards were alive with color and promises, the air traffic thick as fleas on a big, sloppy dog.

If she looked over and down, and it was the down that always bothered her, she could see the Gothic spires of Roarke’s New Globe Theater.

“What’s your motivation?”

“For murder?” Carly sat, obviously enjoying the morning duel. “It would, of course, depend on the victim. But parallelling life, let’s call him a former lover who done me wrong. The motivation would be a combination of pride, scorn, and glee.”

“And hurt?” Eve turned back, pinned her before Carly could mask the shadow of distress.

“Perhaps. You want to know if Richard hurt me. Yes, he did. But I know how to bind my wounds, Lieutenant. A man isn’t worth bleeding over, not for long.”

“Did you love him?”

“I thought I did at the time. But it was astonishingly easy to switch that emotion to hate. If I’d wanted to kill him, well, I couldn’t have done it better than it was done. Except I would never have sacrificed the satisfaction of delivering the killing blow personally. Using a proxy takes all the fun out of it.”

“Is this a joke to you? The end of a life by violent means?”

“Do you want me to pretend to grieve? Believe me, Lieutenant, I could call up huge, choking and rather gorgeous tears for you.” Though her mouth continued to smile, little darts of angry lights played in her eyes. “But I won’t. I have too much respect for myself and, as it happens, for you, to do something so pitifully obvious. I’m not sorry he’s dead. I just didn’t kill him.”

“And Linus Quim.”

Carly’s defiant face softened. “I didn’t know him very well. But I am sorry he died. You don’t believe he killed Richard, then hanged himself, or you wouldn’t be here. I suppose I don’t, either, however convenient it would be. He was a little, sour-faced man, and in my opinion didn’t think of Richard any more than he thought of the rest of us actors. We were part of his scenery. Hanging,
it takes time, doesn’t it? Not like with Richard.”

“Yes. It takes time.”

“I don’t like suffering.”

It was, Eve thought, the first simple statement the woman had made. “I doubt whoever helped him into the noose thought about it. Are you worried, Ms. Landsdowne, that tragedies come in threes?”

Carly started to make some careless remark, then looking into Eve’s eyes changed her mind. “Yes. Yes, I am. Theater people are a superstitious lot, and I’m no exception. I don’t speak the name of the Scottish play, I don’t whistle in a dressing room or wish another performer good luck. But superstitious won’t stop me from going back on that stage the moment we’re allowed to do so. I won’t let it change how I live my life. I’ve wanted to be an actor for as long as I can remember. Not just an actor,” she added with a slow smile. “A star. I’m on my way, and I won’t take a detour from the goal.”

“The publicity from Draco’s murder may just give you a boost toward that goal.”

“That’s right. If you think I won’t exploit it, you haven’t taken a good look at me.”

“I’ve taken a look at you. A good look.” Eve glanced around the lovely room, toward the staggering view from the window. “For someone who hasn’t yet achieved that goal, you live very well.”

“I like living well.” Carly shrugged. “I’m lucky to have generous and financially responsible parents. I have a trust fund, and I make use of it. As I said, I don’t like suffering. I’m not the starving-for-art type. It doesn’t mean I don’t work at my craft and work hard. I simply enjoy comfortable surroundings.”

“Did Draco come here?”

“Once or twice. He preferred using his place. In hindsight, I see it gave him more control.”

“And were you aware he recorded your sexual activities?”

It was a bombshell. Eve had her rhythm now, and recognized simple and utter shock in the eyes, in the sudden draining of color. “That’s a lie.”

“Draco had a recording unit installed in his bedroom. He had a collection of personal discs detailing certain sexual partners. There’s one of you, recorded in February. It included the use of a certain apparatus fashioned of black leather and—”

Carly leaped off the sofa. “Stop. You enjoy this, don’t you?”

“No. No, I don’t. You were unaware of the recording.”

“Yes, I was unaware,” Carly snapped back. “I might very well have agreed to one, have been intrigued by the idea if he’d suggested it. But I detest knowing it was done without my consent. That a bunch of snickering cops can view it and get their kicks.”

“I’m the only cop who’s viewed it so far, and I didn’t get any kick out of it. You weren’t the only woman he recorded, Ms. Landsdowne, without her consent.”

“Pardon me if I don’t give a fuck.” She pressed her fingers to her eyes until she could find a thread of control. “All right, what do I have to do to get it?”

“It’s in evidence, and I’ve had it sealed. It won’t be used unless it has to be used. When the case is closed, and you prove to be cleared, I’ll see that the disc is given to you.”

“I guess that’s the best I can expect.” She took a long breath. “Thank you.”

“Ms. Landsdowne, did you employ illegals in the company of Richard Draco, for sexual stimulation or any reason?”

“I don’t do illegals. I prefer using my own mind, my own imagination, not chemicals.”

You used them,
Eve thought.
But maybe you didn’t know what he was slipping into that pretty glass of champagne.

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