Natural Causes

Home > Other > Natural Causes > Page 37
Natural Causes Page 37

by Michael Palmer


  Eventually Singh joined forces with Peter Ettinger, and then with a marketing agency that had an understanding of the power of infomercial television. King Midas himself could not have done a more efficient job of turning their herbs and protein into gold. A portion of the profits from the sale of the product was now finding its way into the coffers of the hospital, perhaps in payment for the early work done there. Some other monies were at work fostering the establishment of Xanadu and Ettinger’s holistic healing empire.

  But the rest?

  According to Jeremy Mallon’s operatives, the sums funneled to Xanadu and the Medical Center of Boston were still only fractions of what the marketing blitz was actually generating. It was quite possible that Colin Smith did not have the whole picture of what was going on. But he had to know something.

  The South Boston Yacht Club, for many decades a landmark for boaters, was a rambling, three-story, clapboard affair, built on pilings. Easily visible from the expressway and from the harbor, it was harder to get admitted into than a Celtics playoff game. A network of floating docks fanned out from the old building like spokes. During the summer, not one slip of the several hundred along the docks was unaccounted for. And even this late in the season, there were still a good number of boats in the water. The dirt-and-gravel parking lot adjacent to the club was fenced off, with access restricted by a guard house. Matt slipped a ten across to the attendant in exchange for allowing him unannounced to surprise his old college classmate, Colin Smith.

  Following the attendant’s directions, Matt parked just behind the club and made his way down a stony slope onto the docks. Colin Smith’s boat, the Red Ink, was at the far end of spoke 5. A thirty-foot, crimson-hulled catboat, the attendant said. The prettiest boat in the club. Smith was neatening some lines at the stern and was apparently alone. His expression upon seeing Matt approaching was not one of pleasure.

  “Daniels,” he said, dusting his hands off on his tan jeans and eyeing Matt suspiciously. “What brings you down here?”

  “Business,” Matt said simply.

  “With me?”

  “Mind if we sit down for a couple of minutes?”

  “No longer, though.” He motioned Matt into the cockpit. “This is the nicest day in weeks. I’m late as it is, and I want to get out there.”

  “You can sail her alone?”

  “Blindfolded.”

  “I’m impressed. Listen, Colin. Have you seen this morning’s paper?”

  “You mean about their finding Andrew Truscott’s body?”

  “What was left of it.”

  “What has that got to do with me?”

  “Maybe a lot. Sarah Baldwin and I have been telling people all along that Truscott was murdered. No one believed us. Now they will. From the day Sarah was sued by Willis Grayson, someone has been doing his damndest to make sure she appeared guilty of causing those DIC cases. Truscott was murdered trying to prove she was being framed. Then, last night, someone tried to murder her and make it look like she had killed herself. To be perfectly frank, Colin, I think you’re involved.”

  “You’re crazy.”

  “I think you either did it, or you know who did it.”

  Smith stood up and began to uncleat one of his stern lines.

  “Go chase an ambulance,” he said.

  “Colin, what’s with the McGrath Foundation? Why is it sending money to your hospital at the same time it’s sending money to Peter Ettinger’s operation? Who started it? Who’s the one that’s really getting rich?”

  The money man finished uncleating the line and started loosening another. Matt looked for anger in his face, but saw only fear and confusion—hardly the expression of a man who was a willing participant in murder.

  “I’m heading out now, Daniels,” he said. “If you have accusations to make, I think you should be talking to the police or to a lawyer. Not to me.”

  Shit, not Plan B again. Matt sighed. He grabbed Smith by the front of his shirt and yanked him upright. The spark of fear in the man’s eyes intensified.

  “Listen to me and listen good,” Matt said through nearly clenched teeth. He hoisted the smaller man up until he was on his tiptoes. “That fucking powder that everyone is getting rich off of is killing people. Dead! Young women and babies and God only knows who else. You may not know that, but somebody you’re connected with does. And that somebody doesn’t give a damn whether people die or not, as long as the bucks keep pouring in. Do you understand?”

  Smith’s weathered face was chalk. “Let me go,” he said hoarsely.

  Matt loosened his grip, then slowly released it. “Every second you keep your mouth shut, you’re getting dirtier and dirtier. I don’t think you’re behind all those people dying, Colin. I wondered about you while I was driving out here, but I can see now that you’re not. I actually think you might be a decent guy.”

  “I am. Now get off.”

  Matt handed over his business card.

  “It’s Paris, isn’t it?” he said. “Glenn-the-Showman Paris and that Dr. Singh.”

  “Get off.”

  “You may not have known before today that people were dying,” Matt said, stepping up onto the dock, “but you do now. So I’m holding you responsible for whatever happens from here on out. You hold out … women and babies die … your fault. Get that?… Call me when you change your mind about sharing what you know.… And have a real nice sail.”

  Without waiting for a reply, Matt turned and stormed off. He was twenty yards down the dock when the Red Ink’s engine rumbled to life. Matt slowed but continued walking, his eyes straight ahead, his concentration riveted on the man behind him.

  Come on, he urged, certain he had gotten to Smith, but not at all certain how deeply. Call out to me, Colin. Call me back.

  “Daniels, wait!”

  “Yes!” Matt said.

  He whirled around and had taken a single step back toward the Red Ink when it exploded. It was a fierce, molten, petroleum-driven explosion—one that no living thing could have survived. Reftexively Matt dove belly first onto the coarse planking. Fiery debris clattered about him and hissed in the water. Seconds later the cabin cruiser in the slip adjacent to Smith’s catboat exploded in sympathy, taking with it what remained of the seaward thirty feet of dock.

  Accident? Something rigged to the ignition? Something detonated by radio?

  Matt scrambled to his feet and brushed himself off. He stepped to the smoldering edge of the dock and assured himself that there was no sign of Colin Smith. Then he spun back toward the clubhouse. Six or seven people were racing frantically onto the dock. He scanned upward, beyond the men to the parking lot, just as a jade-green Jaguar XJS backed up and sped away, spitting sand and gravel. Matt had no chance to make out the driver.

  “I’ll be right back!” he lied to the men as he dashed past them.

  Head down, he sprinted up the slope to the parking lot. His Legacy, only a year old, was damn quick. But the Jaguar had quickness, power, and a huge head start. If it reached the expressway unseen, there would be no way of knowing whether it had turned north or south. And that, for all intents, would be that. Matt cursed his habit of always activating his Z-loc security system. He deactivated it and then lost several more precious seconds fumbling with the ignition key. Spraying a rooster tail of dust and gravel, he shot past the bewildered attendant, out of the lot, and down the access road. The Jaguar was nowhere in sight. Immediately the guessing game began. The first choice was no contest. Left at the paved road and head toward the expressway.

  Matt skidded around the first corner, then cut the next one by speeding across a lawn. The Subaru’s engine, usually remarkably silent, was screeching—first gear to fifth, then to first, then back to fifth. Still no Jag. Another intersection. More possibilities. Right. Keep heading toward the expressway. To his left, above the trees, Matt could see the expanding cloud of black smoke, carried up and outward by an offshore breeze—the breeze that Colin Smith, just a few minutes before, was expecti
ng to fill his sails.

  “Oh, God,” Matt whispered as the horror of what he had just witnessed sank in.

  The expressway was just ahead, and the chase just that close to being finished. Then, far to the right, Matt saw the Jag. It was already up on the elevated highway, speeding north toward the city. But by the time Matt had cut off half a dozen cars and a tractor trailer and darted out to the left-hand lane of the expressway, the XJS was gone again. He flashed past one off-ramp, then another. There was nothing he could do now but keep heading north and pray they were still both on the same highway. The traffic slowed as he approached the Mass. Ave. exit, and beyond it, the South Station tunnel. The distance between cars quickly narrowed. A vintage midday central artery tie-up. The chase was over. Matt slammed his fist against the wheel. He would have to find some way to backtrack from the distinctive Jag to its owner. Difficult, perhaps, he thought, but certainly not impossi—

  Then, once again, Matt spotted the car. It was a hundred or so yards ahead, and three bumper-to-bumper lanes over. But even worse, it had just pulled away from the jam and was now starting on the long circular drive leading down to the Massachusetts Turnpike. Matt leaned on his horn and began screaming “Emergency!” at anyone who looked over at him. Many did not. Inch by inch, he took first one lane, then another, receiving along the way a number of obscene gestures, several of which he had never seen before. Tires screeching, he rode the very edge of control around the sweeping entry ramp and was going nearly sixty by the time he hit the turnpike. The Jag was gone again. But this time Matt was more relaxed. The Back Bay exit was less than a mile ahead. If the driver took it, there was nothing Matt could do. But if not, the Cambridge/Allston tolls would almost certainly bring them close. In fact, Matt was several miles beyond Allston, almost to the Newton tolls at Route 128, before he spotted his quarry.

  I guess it was just meant to be. He settled back in the seat, slowed down, and rolled through the automated ticket dispenser nine or ten cars behind the Jag. The trick now was to follow the driver to his—or her—destination without being seen. For a year, he had debated putting a phone in the Subaru. Now, a day late as usual, he decided he would do it. A call to the State Police would have given them a crack at the radio control that had triggered the bomb aboard the Red Ink. As things stood, Matt still had a chance at recovering it—provided the driver felt home free and not pressed to dispose of it.

  The Jag left the turnpike east of Worcester. Moving now with no apparent urgency, it headed into the beautiful, rolling countryside of north-central Massachusetts. Matt, still keeping well back, had yet to catch a glimpse of the driver. But with each passing mile, it became less necessary for him to do so. Just a dozen or so miles ahead was Hillsborough, the home of Xanadu and the Ayurvedic Herbal Weight Loss System. And unless Matt was absurdly off base, the man in the jade motorcar in front of him was six feet four, with thick silver hair and an ego the size of Greenland.

  XANADU

  ENTRANCE ONE MILE AHEAD

  AN EXCLUSIVE RESIDENTIAL COMMUNITY

  BASED ON THE HEALING PRINCIPLES OF AYURVEDA

  LIVE SPIRITUALLY … LIVE LONGER … LIVE HERE

  HOMES STARTING AT $450,000

  The huge billboard—elegant lettering, overlaid upon a Himalayan sunrise—also included a number to call for an introductory tour and interview. Matt stopped by the sign as the man he assumed was Peter Ettinger drove on down the deserted, newly paved road toward the entrance. Across the street, two endless stretches of seven-foot chain-link fence converged in what was probably one corner of Xanadu.

  Xanadu. Matt knew the name came from a mystical, magical land in some poem—one that he had once been forced to study and, it seemed, even memorize.

  In Xanadu did Kubla Khan

  A stately pleasure dome decree …

  His mind’s eye saw the words printed in an even hand on some teacher’s blackboard. Milton? Wordsworth? Maybe Coleridge. He simply could not remember the author. Nor could he remember anything else of the poem. The image, though, of Peter Ettinger as Kubla Khan was not a hard one to conjure.

  Matt was sorting out his options when he heard a car approaching—the same direction from which he and Ettinger had just come. He ducked behind the Subaru and inspected its right front tire just as a white panel truck flashed past, continuing on along the road perpendicular to the one Ettinger had taken. Having read Ettinger’s deposition almost to the point of memorization, Matt immediately honed in on the name painted on the truck. Huron Pharmaceuticals produced the vitamin capsules that were included with the Ayurvedic Weight Loss powder. Assuming the truck was making a delivery, and the billboard was pointing toward the main entrance, there had to be some back way into Xanadu. Matt scrambled into the Legacy and followed the truck.

  After half a mile, another newly paved road cut off to the right, as did the chain-link fence. Keeping a safe distance, Matt continued following the Huron truck until it made a right turn onto a dirt road that apparently cut through the fence and into the sprawling compound. He found a little-used path off the opposite side of the paved road, left the Subaru in a concealed spot, and hurried across to where the truck had turned in. The gate in the fence was about a hundred feet up the dirt track. Not surprisingly, it was unlocked. The Huron delivery man clearly anticipated a quick turn-around. Matt glanced about. Then he slipped through the gate and headed into Xanadu.

  For about a hundred yards, the dirt road snaked through dense woods. The trees and bushes were well past fall peak, but autumn had been unusually mild, and they were still far from barren. The forest ended suddenly at expansive acreage that had been carved out of the rolling woodland. Straight ahead of where Matt crouched was an impressively large lake, newly landscaped, and probably man-made. Spaced along the far bank were new, sumptuous homes. Merely within his line of sight, Matt could see several that appeared completed and several more that were under construction. In Xanadu did Kubla Khan …

  The Huron Pharmaceutical truck was parked behind a complex of low, whitewashed buildings, set in a densely wooded grove a short distance to Matt’s left. To his right, perhaps two hundred yards, was a large, two-story farmhouse, also white, with a single-story wing jutting toward the spot where Matt was hiding. Parked on the drive by the farmhouse was the XJS.

  There was the hum of machinery coming from the buildings that Matt assumed housed the Herbal Weight Loss factory. But there was no one in sight, either there or at the farmhouse. From the woods to the wing of the farmhouse was no more than twenty feet, and from there to the Jag fifteen more. It seemed quite possible to reach the car unseen. If it was unlocked, he would take a crack at finding the radio detonation device. Failing that, he would take as much of a look around as he could manage and then slip back out the way he had come. Even if he failed to uncover anything to connect Ettinger with the death of Colin Smith, there was always the chance that the attendant at the yacht club parking lot would have seen and remembered the Jaguar, or possibly even Ettinger himself.

  Staying low and just within the tree line, he crept to the rear of the farmhouse and flattened himself against the wall. Next he worked his way to the corner of the building and was gauging the distance to the Jag when he heard sirens approaching from the direction of the main entrance. He pushed back into the shadows. Not thirty seconds later two cruisers, their sirens now cut, sped up to the farmhouse and stopped on either side of Ettinger’s car. Two officers stayed by the Jag, while two others raced to the front door of the farmhouse. One of them had withdrawn his service revolver. Matt inched back into the woods and nestled into concealment in a shallow swale. Several minutes passed. Matt tried desperately to imagine what might be happening inside the farmhouse. He strained to make out the exchange between the two remaining policemen. They were close enough to him, but with one seated in the cruiser, and the other facing away, their conversation was muffled.

  Finally the door to the farmhouse opened, and the two officers emerged, one on either side of a clea
rly agitated Peter Ettinger. Ettinger’s hands were manacled behind him.

  “I was there. I admit that,” Matt heard Ettinger protest. “But dammit, I didn’t do anything! Colin Smith called and told me to meet him at the yacht club. At least he said he was Smith.…”

  “Remember, Mr. Ettinger,” one of the officers said. “Like I told you inside. Anything you say may be used against you in court. Now, is this the car you were driving?”

  “Yes, of course it is.”

  “And these are the keys you just gave me?”

  “Yes, yes. Now go ahead and open it, dammit. There’s nothing in there.”

  Totally bewildered, Matt scrunched even deeper into the leaf-covered gully. How could the police have gotten here so quickly? Ettinger was a national celebrity, and the Jag hardly an inconspicuous car. Perhaps the lot attendant or someone else at the club had recognized him.

  “Got it,” the officer searching the car said after just a minute or so. “Under the front seat.” He held up by its edges what was clearly a radio control box. “Someone get me an evidence bag, will you? Mr. Ettinger, do you really think we’re that dumb?”

  Ettinger, suddenly stoop-shouldered and almost limp, gazed from the policeman to the control box and back. Even at some distance, Matt could see the filmy confusion in his eyes.

  “I want to call my lawyer,” he said.

  “From the station, Mr. Ettinger.”

  Ettinger was helped into the screen-enclosed back of one of the cruisers. The slam of the door echoed in the still afternoon. Matt waited until well after the cruisers had disappeared before he worked his way over to the factory. He assumed there were security people about someplace. But without Ettinger around to identify him, he could be a bit more brazen. Some sort of inspector, perhaps. Yes, he thought as he backed against the wall of the smallest of the factory buildings. Better not to get caught. But if he did, a health inspector story should work.

 

‹ Prev