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"You got it."
"Oh, and one more thing," Dennis said into the phone. "Do me a huge favor, tell the guard not to stick him in another time zone. It's important that he gets a good look at Dayle during the shoot. So give him a spot close to the action. Will you make sure about that?"
"For you, Dennis, I'll make dead certain."
The man on the other end of the line couldn't see Dennis Walsh smile.
Dennis handed her a bottle of Evian water. "Here. Don't say I never gave you anything." He sat on the steps to her trailer door.
"Thanks." Dayle said, twisting open the bottle. She rested in her "star" chair outside the open door of her trailer. For another flashback sequence, she sported a sixties look: a Petula Clark-influenced auburn wig, coral frost lipstick, and Twiggy-style, inch-long false eyelashes. She wore fat plastic earrings, a miniskirt, and a ribbed turtleneck. According to Dennis, she looked like The Girl from U.N.C.L.E The Girl from U.N.C.L.E.
Providing her with a fresh Evian bottle every couple of hours had been Bonny's self-appointed undertaking. Dayle had briefly talked to her on the phone this morning. Bonny sounded tired and doped up, but still managed to get in a dig about "human target" not being part of her job description. She was supposed to be out of the hospital by next week, in plenty of time for Thanksgiving at home. Meanwhile, Dayle had a temporary stand-in.
The telephone rang in her trailer. "I'll pick it up," Dennis volunteered. He ducked into the trailer. A few moments later, he emerged with her cordless phone. "It's Slick Nick the Private d.i.c.k. Want to 'rap' with him?"
"Nick?" Dayle sat up. "Yes, I'll take it. Thanks."
Dennis gave her the phone, then settled back on the trailer steps.
"h.e.l.lo, Nick?"
"Yo, you got me. Y'know, that a.s.sistant of yours is a real wisea.s.s."
"No kidding," Dayle said. "Do you have any news for me?"
"Sure do," he said. "One of the five license plate numbers you gave me doesn't go with the others. It's some schmuck from Burbank, probably boinking his secretary. But the other four rental plates matched with credit cards that seem to belong to a group. I don't know if the names on these cards are real, but feature this: three of these same dudes were renting cars and staying at the Sandpiper Motel in Portland, Oregon, when Tony Katz and his boyfriend bought the farm. And two of them had a return engagement a couple of weeks later when Leigh Simone cashed in her chips. All those credit cards have the same mailing address, a post office box in Opal."
"Opal?"
"It's a little town in Idaho. So here's the skinny. I'm catching a plane to Boise or Spokane tomorrow morning. But it might be a few days before I can track down who in Opal is paying these hotel and car rental bills."
"A few days?" Dayle said.
"Yeah, we'd need a court order to find out who has that PO box. Even El Nerdo, our computer expert, can't help us with this one. I'll have to go to Opal and stake out the post office. Eventually, somebody's got to pick up their mail. And Nick Brock will be on them like ugly on an ape."
"That's good, I guess," Dayle said. "Listen, we better give this information to the police. Maybe you can fax it-"
"Woah, wait a minute, Ms. Sutton. The last thing you want right now is for the cops to catch on. Once the feds descend on Opal, this group will scatter in a dozen different directions, and we're back to square one. They have to think it's business as usual. That's how I'm gonna catch them with their pants down. I'll fax you the info at home, in case something should happen to yours truly-G.o.d forbid. But don't hand it over to the cops just yet, okay? Give old Nick forty-eight hours at least."
"Well, all right," she said with a sigh. "I'll give you 'til Sunday."
"Fantastic. I'll call you from Opal tomorrow."
"Well, good luck, Nick," she replied. "And, hey, for the record, you're pretty d.a.m.n good at what you do."
"Hey, think I'm good on the job? Check me out during playtime."
Dayle shook her head. "Nick, you're a pig, you really are. G.o.d knows why I like you. B'bye." She clicked off and handed the phone to Dennis.
"So who's Opal?" he asked with a curious smile.
"It's a little town in Idaho," Dayle said. "Nick's on his way there tomorrow."
"Well, this place is pretty nice, Mom," Avery said into the cordless phone. Exhausted, he sat slouched in a deck chair by the pool. For the last hour, he'd been putting off this call to his parents.
Joanne had been transferred by ambulance to Glenhaven today. Avery had gone there to say good-bye and drop off some of her clothes. They discouraged visitors for the first week. He saw her only briefly, and she didn't seem to recognize him. Coming home, he felt the house to be so empty. He was used to being alone here, but this was a totally different kind of solitude. Joanne wasn't in New York, pa.s.sionately working on a play. She was in a sanitarium. And if she came back, would she ever be the same? It was as if something about the house had died. Avery aimlessly wandered from room to room, and finally settled by the pool-with a beer and the cordless phone. Maybe Joanne truly didn't want to be rescued out here the other morning.
By the time he called his parents, he was pretty much cried out. He even managed to sound upbeat for them. "The people at Glenhaven gave me a tour yesterday," he said. "They have these beautiful gardens and walking paths, a pool, private jacuzzis, saunas, messages, lots of personal attention."
"Did they say if she'll be out in time for Thanksgiving?" his father asked on the other extension. "Or do they think it might be longer?"
"They're really not sure, Pop. But I know she's better off there than she was in the hospital."
Someone buzzed from the front gate. Avery hopped off the pool chair and hurried into the house. "Somebody's at the door. Can you hold on for a sec?" He stole a glance out the front window. A police car waited at the end of his driveway. Avery went to the intercom and pressed the b.u.t.ton. "Yes?"
"Mr. Cooper, this is Sergeant Rick Swanson of the Beverly Hills Police. We'd like to accompany you to the station for some questioning. It shouldn't take too long. Could you let us in?"
Avery covered the mouthpiece of the phone so his parents wouldn't hear. "Am I under arrest?" he asked.
"Oh, no, Mr. Cooper. They simply want to ask you some questions down at headquarters, that's all. We've been instructed to escort you."
"Um, I'm not dressed," Avery said. "Let me put some clothes on, then I'll buzz you in." He brought the phone back up to his ear. "Mom? Pop? Can I call you back? It might not be until tomorrow. I have something going on here that's kind of important-"
"What happened?" his father asked. "I can tell from your voice that something's wrong...."
"I'm fine, Pop, really. Let me call you later. Okay?"
As soon as he disconnected with his folks, Avery phoned Sean's cellular number. He caught her at the lab where they'd a.n.a.lyzed his sperm samples. He explained about the police waiting outside his house.
"Don't let them in," Sean said. "Dayle's chauffeur and stand-in were gunned down by a man dressed like a cop, driving a patrol car. No. Don't do a thing until I check on this. What's this police sergeant's name again?"
"Swanson," Avery said.
"Okay. Sit tight until you hear back from me.'
She hung up. Avery glanced out the window again-at the police car parked by his front gate. The cop stood near the intercom on the post.
With the cordless in his hand, Avery went back and closed the sliding gla.s.s door to the pool area. A feeling of dread gnawed at his insides. He checked out front again. The cop was now staring up at the house, arms crossed.
The telephone rang, and Avery quickly answered it. "Yes, h.e.l.lo?"
"Hi. It's me," Sean said. "I checked. These guys are on the level. They're taking you in for some questioning. I'll meet you at the station. Don't tell them anything until I get there. Okay?"
"Right. Thank you, Sean."
Avery hung up, took a deep breath, and walked into the front hall. He pressed the switch for the front gate. Then at the window, he watched the police car slowly pull into his driveway.
Sean clicked off her cellular and apologized to the lab supervisor for the interruption. Avery's sperm samples had been stored and a.n.a.lyzed here at Kurtis Labs. The receptionist up front had given Sean a lab coat to wear, then sent her to this supervisor, a fidgety man in his mid-fifties named Alan Keefer. He had dark hair, a rubbery smile, and beneath his white lab coat, he wore a yellow polyester shirt and a tie that just had to be clip-on.
They sat in his office, which looked into one of the main labs. Through the window, Sean had a view of everyone at work, hunched over microscopes, transferring test tubes back and forth from refrigerators to centrifuges, punching data into computers.
Keefer explained that they'd run tests on all nine sperm samples and come up with the same donor, Avery Cooper. He also insisted that his lab team was beyond reproach. But Sean had cross-examined enough people in her day to trust her instincts that Alan Keefer was hiding something. And while he talked, he seemed to be leering at her.
Someone else wouldn't stop staring at her. An obese bearded man in a lab coat kept shooting her looks through the office window. Sean had been about to ask if she could talk with some of the other technicians when Avery had called on her cellular.
She slipped the phone back in her purse, pulled out a business card, and scribbled on the back of it. "I'm sorry, I have to run," she said, placing the card on Keefer's desk. "I wonder if I could come back at a later date, maybe interview some of your staff."
"Well, speaking of dates, maybe I could interview you over dinner some time?" Keefer asked with his rubbery smile. He walked her to his office door.
"Oh, that sounds nice," Sean said. "But I'm awfully busy with this case, and any free time I have, I spend with my husband and children."
"Well, I'm busy too," he replied coolly, the smile gone. "If you'd like to see me again, you'll have to make an appointment in advance. And I'm sorry, but I can't have you taking my people away from their jobs for these interviews. You'll have to make some sort of other arrangements."
Sean nodded. "I see. Well, thank you for your time, Mr. Keefer. I left my card on your desk. Avery Cooper's phone number is on the back. If you have any new information about those samples, I trust you'll call one of us."
"Yes, of course," he grunted.
Turning to leave, Sean caught the overweight lab technician staring at her again. Something told her that this visit to Kurtis Labs wasn't quite the dead end it seemed. But she didn't have any time to ponder that now. The police were about to interrogate Avery, and she needed to be there with him.
Rain pelted the hood of Sean's car, and the windows were fogging up. Neon lights from the drive-in burger joint illuminated droplets on the windshield. Sean sat at the wheel, nibbling her french fries while Avery devoured his cheeseburger like a starving man. The session with the police had left him tired and ravenous.
Riding in the back of that patrol car on his way to the station, Avery had been so sure he wouldn't return home for at least a couple of days-or however long it took to post bail. The policemen had led him into a small conference room. He'd seen enough movies to know that the large mirror on the wall was a two-way job-with someone else on the other side. They started asking about his activities on Friday night, November fourteenth. Avery politely refused to answer any questions until his lawyer was present.
Sean arrived within five minutes, and sat down beside him at the table. She was professional and courteous. Avery could tell the detectives liked her despite themselves. She whispered to him at the start, "Don't mention any conspiracy right now. It's too soon and we don't have any evidence to back that up yet. Okay?"
She didn't interrupt him much, and instinctively knew when to rescue him. "I'm sorry, guys," she'd say with a smile. "My client can't answer that at this time. Do you have another question?"
Eventually, they asked if Avery would furnish them with a sperm sample. Sean Olson jumped in before he could answer. "For the time being, I've advised my client not to submit to that," she said.
The interrogation lasted three hours. Although he hadn't been formally charged, Avery remained a suspect in Libby Stoddard's murder.
"End of round one," Sean told him, picking at her order of fries. She glanced out the rain-beaded window. "I think our boys in blue are jerking you around a bit. My guess is that they already have a DNA match on the sperm sample from Libby and your skin tissue under her fingernails. If you had a hairbrush lying around when they were in your house the other day, they probably collected and tested a sample of your hair too. They don't really need your sperm, Avery. But it looks good for their case if they asked for a sample and you refused."
"Looks even better for them if I furnish a sample and it matches."
"Exactly," Sean said, sipping her c.o.ke. "Either way, you're screwed. We're on borrowed time here."
Avery crumbled up his food bag. "Huh, could you tell me some good news?"
"Well, you have a lawyer who believes you're innocent," Sean offered. "I'd like to talk to your friends, the Webers, at their place tomorrow evening. Then we'll go through and retrace everything you did that Friday night. Think you're up for that?"
Avery nodded. "I'll call George. I can also review those security videos with you again during the day-if you'd like. I'm not working this week. I don't have any plans."
"You aren't seeing your wife?" Sean asked.
Frowning, he shook his head. "This new place doesn't allow visitors the first couple of weeks."
For a moment, there was just the patter of rain on the roof, and paper bags rustling as they put their uneaten food away. Avery turned and caught her gazing at him. Sean quickly turned away.
"It's horrible to see someone you love slip away in front of you," he said. "I feel so powerless, so sad and angry at the same time. I can't quite describe it...."
"You don't have to describe it for me, Avery," she murmured.
It took a moment for him to realize what she was talking about. He felt so stupid. "Of course," he said. "I'm sorry, Sean."
"Don't sweat it," she replied, setting the food bag aside. Sean started up the car, then switched on the lights and the windshield wipers. "I should take you home." She backed out of the s.p.a.ce, then turned out of the lot.
Avery stared at the wipers fanning back and forth. "I'm used to Joanne being away. But this is different. I've never felt this kind of loneliness. I don't know how you handle it, Sean."
"You keep going, Avery," she replied, studying the road ahead. "You just keep going."
Nineteen.
POLICE QUESTION AVERY COOPER IN BRUTAL RAPE-MURDER. So said the headline running across the bottom half of the morning's Los Angeles Times Los Angeles Times's front page-along with a somber photo of him.
A mob was waiting at the end of the driveway as Avery left his house. Behind the wheel of his BMW, he slowly cruised toward the wrought-iron doors. About thirty reporters and fifty spectators had ama.s.sed outside the gate. Several of them carried signs: KILLER COOPER, BEVERLY HILLS BUTCHER KILLER COOPER, BEVERLY HILLS BUTCHER, and AVERY COOPER: PRO-ABORTION, PRO-GUN CONTROL, PRO-RAPE, PRO-MURDER AVERY COOPER: PRO-ABORTION, PRO-GUN CONTROL, PRO-RAPE, PRO-MURDER! This last wordy placard was held by a middle-aged woman in a pink sweatshirt that identified her as a FOXY GRANDMA FOXY GRANDMA. Avery caught a closer look at Foxy's handiwork when she slammed the sign against his windshield.
Riding the brake, he tried to ignore the angry shouts, the people spitting on his car and pounding on the hood. Avery crawled through the crowd, then picked up speed. He watched them growing more distant in his rearview mirror. But a white Taurus emerged from the throng, one of the "rental mentals," Sean had told him about. Avery had to cut someone off, then speed through a yellow light to elude the car. By the time he reached Sean's office building, he figured he'd lost him. He parked in back of the hair salon.
Sean appeared tired when she met him in her office doorway. She wore houndstooth check, pleated pants and a clinging black, crew-neck sweater that showed off her figure. On their way to Avery's car, she admitted she wasn't in a good mood. She'd slept on her office sofa last night, and had to find out this morning that her husband's respirator had gone on the blink at three A.M. A.M. He'd been turning blue from lack of oxygen. It had taken the nurse on duty fifteen minutes to find the blockage in his tubes and fix it. He'd been turning blue from lack of oxygen. It had taken the nurse on duty fifteen minutes to find the blockage in his tubes and fix it.
"At least we avoided another trip to the hospital," Sean said. "But I should have been there for him. I would have known what to do, because it's happened before." She put on her sungla.s.ses and rolled down her window. "So how about you?" she asked. "Did you phone this Glenhaven place yet?"
"I'm waiting until this afternoon," Avery said, eyes on the road. "I called my friends, George and Sheila, and they're expecting us around six."
"I hope my mood improves by then," Sean said. "I feel eight different types of lousy this morning."