The Trials of Nikki Hill

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The Trials of Nikki Hill Page 22

by Christopher Darden; Dick Lochte


  “Nothing,” his partner replied sullenly. Then he added, “My mother believed in all this crap. Not the fucking waterskiers; tha’s some kind of Americano rip. But the skeletons. The family picnic. Sweet bread with the little plastic toy baked in. You bite down on the toy it’s supposed to be good luck, unless you break yo’ damn tooth.”

  He waved his hand angrily as if to dismiss all the little statues. “Le’s wrap this up.”

  The woman with the bright red hair was still describing, in minute detail, exactly what she wanted. “It should have a sort of pastel Santa Fe exterior. Tile roof of course.”

  Morales looked at his partner, perplexed. Goodman whispered, “Doghouse.”

  “Doghouse?” Morales replied, definitely not whispering. “Fuck that.” He moved to the desk and faced the woman.

  “Sorry, lady, but we here on police business to talk with Mr. Palmer. You gonna have to cut this short.”

  She looked him up and down. “I pay your salary,” she said. “You can wait until I’ve finished.”

  Palmer stood up. “I think I’ve got the gist of it, Frieda,” he said to the woman as he circled the desk and stood beside her. “I could drop by your home this afternoon, check out the location, take some measurements, and get my guy working on this immediately.”

  Frieda was clearly annoyed at being rushed, but Palmer had left her with no alternative but to leave. She made up for it by telling him, “Don’t come before three. I can give you fifteen minutes then and no more. And I may ask you to take back that pot you sold me last month. I’m not sure the glaze is exactly what I want.”

  “I’ll look at it. I appreciate your coming in, Frieda. See you at three.”

  Frieda took her time leaving the store. When she’d gone, Palmer said, “Sorry about that.”

  “You might want to lock up,” Goodman said. “That way, we won’t be disturbed.”

  Palmer frowned, obviously curious. He closed the front door, locked it, and hung the little cardboard “Back in an hour” card. He returned, pulled over another chair for Morales, and then retreated behind the desk. “What’s this all about?”

  “What exactly was your relationship with Arthur Lydon, Mr. Palmer?” Goodman asked.

  “Relationship? I suppose ‘friends’ would cover it. I was shocked to hear about the murder. Is it connected to Maddie’s death?”

  “We don’t know,” Goodman said. “Could you explain your concept of ‘friends’?”

  Palmer scowled. “I don’t understand. Are you accusing me of something?”

  “You guilty of something?” Morales asked.

  Palmer glared at him but elected not to even try to respond to the loaded question.

  “We just want to know if you were close friends,” Goodman said.

  “I wouldn’t say that. Not close. In point of fact, we had lunch together every so often. Talked about common interests.”

  Morales snickered. Goodman reached into his inside pocket and withdrew a snapshot. He held it out so that Palmer could see it.

  It was a picture of him and Lydon in Madeleine Gray’s black-sand pool, naked, doing their version of an arms-locked showgirl kick in front of the fake waterfall.

  The shop owner raised his hand, but Goodman cautioned him not to touch the picture. “That’s you and the deceased, am I right?”

  Palmer nodded.

  “You guys forget your swimsuits?” Morales asked.

  Palmer didn’t answer.

  “Just friends, though,” Morales said. “When was the picture taken?”

  “Two years ago.”

  “Who took it? Your wife?”

  Palmer mumbled something.

  “Huh? What’s that?”

  “Maddie took the picture,” Palmer said.

  “She wearin’ her swimsuit at the time?”

  Again, no reply.

  Goodman took another photo from his pocket. Palmer blinked when he saw it.

  “That’s you and Madeleine Gray, correct?” Goodman asked.

  “Y-yes.”

  “Way to go, Mr. Palmer,” Morales said. “In the short strokes, looks like.”

  “I—I didn’t know—there was a picture...”

  Goodman replaced that photo with a third snapshot. In this one, Palmer and Lydon were having sex in the sunshine. The store owner’s eyes were blinking rapidly in disbelief. “How could they have taken these without my knowledge?”

  “You looked pretty busy,” Morales said.

  Palmer continued to be captivated by the picture of himself and Arthur Lydon.

  “We didn’t come here to embarrass you, Mr. Palmer,” Goodman said. “It’s obvious from these photos that you were intimate with both victims.” He paused to put the final photo away, then stared hard into Palmer’s now watery eyes. “Were you in business with them?”

  “This is my business. Mine and my wife’s. Maddie and Art had nothing to do with it.”

  “And you’ve never seen these pictures before. Or had them described to you?”

  “No. I knew Maddie took the shot by the waterfall, because we posed for it. I thought she put the camera away after that.”

  “Was this something you did all the time?” Morales asked.

  “Of course not. I had lunch over there a few times and maybe we passed around a joint or a Thai stick. Maddie was always fun at lunch. Later, she’d get drunk and moody, but at lunch she was fine. I mean, always perverse, but fun.” He paused, then asked, “Is this just between us?”

  Goodman looked at Morales, then back at Palmer. “I don’t know how to answer that,” he said. “Suppose for the sake of argument in the next five minutes you confess to a serious crime. Then it isn’t just between us anymore.”

  “I haven’t committed any serious crime.”

  “Then there’s nothing to worry about.”

  Palmer nodded. “I’d like to explain how this happened. You have to understand, Art was a fag. Maddie knew he and I had gotten it on a few times and she assumed I was gay, too. So she’d walk around naked in front of us, fondling her-self—she did have a beautiful body—and joke about trying to bring us over to her team. Art knew I was bi, so while she was enjoying her little joke, he and I had our own going. It was like Tony Curtis telling Marilyn Monroe he was bored with women in that movie.

  “Anyway, that day, the three of us got totally ripped at lunch. Art and I stripped down. Maddie was already naked. We got into the pool and she was really coming on to me. Tongue in my ear. Groping me. I couldn’t hide the fact that it was working, so I figured, what the hell. I pretended she’d changed my luck. I never dreamed Art was taking pictures of us.”

  “How many more times did you get together?” Goodman asked.

  “The three of us, like that? Once or twice, maybe.”

  “What about you and Maddie without Art?” Morales asked.

  Palmer blinked. “You have to understand. In point of fact, my wife and I—Oh, hell, Caitlin is an ice queen and Mad-die was like a fever dream. Straights believe gays spend every waking minute thinking about sex. That’s how Mad-die was. She wanted it anytime, any way.”

  “So you two had a relationship?”

  “It wasn’t really a relationship. We just fucked well together.”

  “That was okay with Lydon?”

  “Of course. Look. We weren’t conventional people. There was no pressure. No jealousy. Just sex.”

  “I don’t know, Mr. Palmer,” Goodman said. “I’ve always found it’s a real bear to keep just one lover happy.”

  “As I said, we weren’t conventional.”

  “When was the last time you and Madeleine Gray made love?”

  “A year ago, about.”

  “That long ago?”

  “In point of fact, Maddie got busy and wasn’t available.”

  “What do you mean, she got busy?”

  “She...Oh, hell, she shined me on. Said she had too much going on in her life.”

  Goodman nodded sympathetically. “She was s
eeing somebody else,” he said.

  Palmer nodded.

  “Any idea who?”

  “Art said it was some black guy.”

  Morales’s eyes widened a bit. “Sure it was a guy? ”

  “Oh, yes. Maddie was into men. You must’ve discovered that by now.”

  Their investigation had turned up a number of lovers in Madeleine Gray’s past, none of them recent, none considered a likely suspect. They were all men, but Morales persisted in hanging on to his lesbian theory. “Did Lydon give you the guy ’s name by any chance?” he asked Palmer with heavy sarcasm.

  “No. He didn’t know or he would have told me. You can bet he tried to find out.”

  “How’d he know the guy was black?” Goodman asked.

  “Maddie told him.” He smiled ruefully. “You see, for all her worldliness, she’d never made it with a black guy before. Art said she went on and on about how much she’d

  been missing, how she didn’t know what fucking was before this guy came along.”

  “How’d that make you feel?”

  “How do you think? You get over it.”

  “Some do,” Goodman said. “Some don’t.”

  “I did. I can’t say I didn’t miss her, though.”

  “What about you and Lydon? When did you see him last?”

  “I had coffee with him just a few days before he died. We hadn’t had sex for a year and a half or longer.”

  “What happened there?”

  “A mutual friend died of AIDS and both Art and I swore off gay sex. I think he may have backslid—oops, I made a joke. I haven’t, because I can get off on women, too.”

  “Did either Madeleine or Lydon ever give you something to keep for them?” Goodman asked. “Maybe a computer disk? Or a locker key?”

  “No.”

  The detective stood up. “Thanks for your cooperation, Mr. Palmer,” he said.

  Morales got to his feet slowly. “So women are better?” he asked Palmer.

  “For me. It’s something we each should try and find out for ourselves.”

  “Yeah, right,” Morales said.

  Goodman sat behind the wheel of the unmarked sedan and scribbled as much as he could remember about the interview on his pad. He’d purposely not taken notes in the shop, because he’d wanted to make the meeting seem as off-the-record as possible. Palmer had responded by providing them with an assortment of informative bits and pieces. He’d also proven once again what Goodman’s years as a detective had already told him—that people went icebergs one better, showing even less than 10 percent on the surface.

  So Maddie Gray had been seeing a black guy for about a year. He’d probably been the one who gave her the trinket that was now missing, the bracelet with the tiny golden figurine. Damn. He’d convinced himself the murders were the result of blackmail. Now he was back to jealousy. He made a mental note to check the date of John Willins’s birth, just to see if his astrological sign might be the lion.

  He turned to Morales. “What’s your gut tell you about Palmer? Believable?”

  Morales shrugged. “I don’t know, amigo. Soon as the guy says he’s not gay, I figure he’s a lyin’ sonofabitch. In point of fucking fact.”

  “What about the snapshot of him and Maddie going at it?”

  “You know the old song about the woman so fine she gives eyesight to the blind? Maddie Gray paradin’ around her pool in her birthday suit musta been finer than that.”

  FIFTY-THREE

  The two petite Hispanic women were just part of the crowd of reporters, gawkers, and protesters baking in the midday sun in front of the Criminal Courts Building. They wore identical sweaters—bright yellow with red lettering that read “Alien Power.” Returning from lunch, Nikki passed them by, wondering what their grievance, real or imagined, was. In less than thirty seconds, she found out.

  On several morning newscasts, a former housekeeper of Ray Wise had accused him of forcing her, a formerly illegal alien, to work for starvation wages. As he limped toward the front doors of the CCB, the two women descended on him, flailing at him with their tiny fists and shouting at him in their native tongue. Blood spurted from his nose.

  Far from trying to assist in any way, the crowd seemed to delight in this spectacle. Video cameras clicked on. “Go, aliens,” someone cried, and the crowd took it up like a chant. Nikki rushed to grab an arm of one of the attackers, spinning her away from Wise, who struggled free from the other to hop into the lobby.

  Nikki followed him in. A guard rushed past them, heading for the two women, who were running away through the crowd. Wise was dabbing at his bleeding nose with a handkerchief. “Those morons wanted them to kill me,” he shrieked. “What a world!”

  Nikki, who hadn’t really expected any thanks for her help, said, “Next time, try being nicer to your housekeepers.”

  “The woman’s a liar,” he almost shouted, as they waited for the always overcrowded elevators. “I paid her better than minimum wage.”

  “Great,” Nikki whispered, “but this isn’t the best place to be making a speech.”

  “Caught the bitch wearing my mother’s wedding ring. Was I supposed to give her a raise?”

  “Ray,” Nikki said sternly. “Everything you say now is gonna be on TV tonight.”

  He nodded and cleared his throat nervously. He dabbed at his nose again, studied the blood on his handkerchief, and said, “Joe’s going to have to get me a bodyguard. We all are going to need bodyguards before this is over.”

  Wise was even more dejected when he appeared at her office door an hour later. “They ought to flush this day down the crapper,” he said.

  “You’re not still stewing about those housekeepers from hell?” she asked.

  He shook his head. “I just got a call from Teddy Maxwell’s father. The little bastard is recanting. Says he’s no longer sure what kind of car he saw at Gray’s.”

  “Let’s go pay him a visit,” she said.

  “Maxwell refuses to let us see the kid. We could force it, but I think we’d be walking the dog.”

  “Let’s bounce it off Joe,” she said. “Assumin’ he’s not too busy fornicating with your second chair.”

  Walden was in his office with Meg Fisher. He was in a fury. Both of his secretaries were busy fielding phone calls. With every incoming ring, his ire went up another notch. “I understand from Court TV that we’ve lost another witness,” he told them.

  “Teddy Maxwell?” Nikki asked.

  “Oh, then you know. I don’t suppose you felt I’d be interested in these little petty details or that the damned phone would be ringing off the hook for my reaction.”

  “That’s why we’re here, Joe,” Wise said. “I just heard from the boy’s father five minutes ago.”

  “They must have notified the media before they called us,” Meg said.

  “Aren’t you supposed to keep us a step ahead of the news vultures, Meg? Isn’t that what we’re paying you for?”

  “I thought it was because I remain so cool under fire,” Meg said flatly.

  Joe turned to Wise. “So how did you fuck this one up, Ray? Pushing the boy too hard? Misinterpreting things he said?”

  “He identified the Jag,” Wise said. “First to the detectives. Then to me. No pushing. No misinterpretation.”

  Walden sighed, then seemed to shrink within his large body. “Okay. I’m sorry, folks. I better lay off the caffeine and get more sleep.”

  Better lay off something, Nikki thought.

  FIFTY-FOUR

  Goodman stood at the open door to Nikki Hill’s empty office. Maybe it was just as well she wasn’t there, he thought. He could come back some other time. As he turned to head toward the elevators, she appeared, walking fast, a scowl on her face.

  “Nikki?”

  She stopped, turned to him. Then, as recognition dawned, she smiled. “Detective Goodman. I’m sorry. My mind was on something else.”

  “I just dropped off some new evidence with George Emerson,” he
said. Emerson was the deputy D.A. assigned to the Arthur Lydon murder. It would be his case unless or until Walden decided to link that death officially to the case against Dyana Cooper.

  “It’s good seeing you, detective,” Nikki said. “I think Ray wants to schedule some times this week for you and Carlos to go over your testimonies.”

  “Sure,” he said. “Guess you’re pretty busy, huh?”

  Her brown eyes studied him for a few seconds. “You got a problem?” she asked.

  “Uh huh.”

  “Come on,” she said, leading him to her office.

  She shut the door after them and gestured to a chair. “What’s goin’ on?”

  “Your boss was right,” he said.

  “Yeah?” she said, as if that might be a surprise. “Right about what?”

  “Remember that meeting when he said talking to Madeleine Gray’s blackmail victims wasn’t such a good idea? It wasn’t. This one lady, an old TV actress named Nita Morgan, is accusing me of blackmail.”

  He didn’t like the way the warmth went out of her eyes. “What would make her do that?” she asked.

  “Not long after I went to see her, she got this phone call from somebody asking her for money. Morgan says the caller didn’t identify himself, but it was a man and it sounded like me.”

  “I assume it wasn’t you.”

  “No, ma’am. My guess is it was Arthur Lydon. I think he had a copy of Madeleine Gray’s blackmail files and he tried to use ’em and that’s what got him killed.”

  “The files weren’t among his effects.”

  “No, ma’am. I imagine whoever killed him got ’em.”

  “You mention all this to George Emerson?”

  “I, ah, did tell him that one of Maddie’s victims had been contacted by a new blackmailer and that I thought it was Lydon.”

  “You neglected to mention the charge against you.” When Goodman sheepishly acknowledged that, she asked for Emerson’s take on the blackmail angle.

  “He asked for proof, which I don’t have,” Goodman said.

  “He strikes me as the kinda guy who, given the choice of walking or sitting, keeps his chair pretty warm.”

 

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