The Phantom Photographer: Murder in Marin Mystery - Book 3 (Murder in Marin Mysteries)
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The Phantom Photographer
A Murder in Marin Mystery – Book 3
Martin Brown
© 2016 Martin Brown. All rights reserved.
Signal Press, San Francisco, CA
info@signaleditorial.com
V041216AMZ
Table of Contents
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
CHAPTER NINETEEN
CHAPTER TWENTY
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
NEXT UP
NOVELS IN THE MURDER IN MARIN SERIES
ABOUT MARTIN BROWN
COPYRIGHT INFORMATION
CHAPTER ONE
Michael Marks, camera always at the ready, was on the scene for every event in the picture-perfect town of Mill Valley.
For as long as most locals remembered, he was there every spring, catching children waving small American flags at the Memorial Day parade along Throckmorton. Every summer, he stood at the bottom of the Dipsea Steps, waiting for the start of the world-famous race. In the fall, he caught the steady stream of attendees wandering through the redwood groves of Old Mill Park during the annual art show; and in the winter, he memorialized countless smiles as Santa arrived at the Depot, the small town’s center, to the cheers of parents and the ever hopeful eyes of their children.
In addition to Michael’s expert handling of a camera, his charming manner, his quick wit, welcoming smile, and apparent good breeding, most agreed that no one in Mill Valley had a more generous nature or engaging personality.
Michael had made himself such a fixture at every special event that it was simply assumed he would be there. When the mayor one day was about to present a city proclamation to three women of the Mill Valley Historic Preservation Society for their years of service, he instinctively paused before beginning and asked his city clerk, Ethel Marion, “Where’s Michael?”
“He should be here; I spoke to him yesterday, and I know he was planning on joining us,” she replied.
Then everyone heard the sound of Michael pushing his substantial bulk up the back steps, and the mayor, his clerk, and the honorees all gave a sigh of relief, knowing that this important moment, like so many others, would be captured for the local newspaper, The Mill Valley Standard.
Michael was a big man. He was six-foot two and weighed approximately two-hundred and eighty-five pounds. He had a florid face that was spotted with beads of perspiration on days both warm and chilly. At the top of his head was a mop of brown hair that just in the past few years was flecked with wisps of gray. His smile revealed less than perfect teeth, faintly yellow with several misaligned; he was reluctant to smile broadly, despite encouraging others to do so.
Over the past dozen years, Michael had grown so frustrated in laying aside his size thirty-eight jeans, for size forty, forty-two, forty-four, and beyond, that he began wearing black cotton stretch pants that more generously covered his expanding girth. Here, too, he graduated from XXL to XXXL before resolving to give more thought to his diet.
Only his love of photography competed with his love of fine cuisine. From a favorite booth at D’Angelo, the always-popular Italian eatery opposite the Depot, to the comfortable bar at Bungalow 44, two blocks away, where he enjoyed California fusion cuisine, Michael was known wherever he went. On a less regular basis, he would go to the regionally popular, but extravagantly expensive, El Paseo.
Given that he was a sales associate at a local camera shop, there were many who thought that his dining choices were well beyond his financial means. But the polite consensus concluded that how Michael spent his money was no one’s business but his own.
Rob Timmons, publisher of the Mill Valley Standard, was likely the person most pleased that Michael was nearly always in town with a camera at the ready.
As Mill Valley’s only source for community news, the Standard was one of a group of four Marin County weekly newspapers, the first of which was The Sausalito Standard. With this first venture, Rob learned that the economics of community newspapers, in a world where print publications were already in constant financial peril, required constant vigilance. He watched like Scrooge the narrow line between profit and loss, but even with his careful disposition, it was difficult to provide a living for his family.
Necessity, as ever the mother of invention, brought Rob a needed moment of inspiration. He approached the owners of other struggling weeklies. In succession, he purchased, at a bargain price, The Mill Valley Crier, The Peninsula News, and the Ross Valley Advertiser, and put them under one umbrella. Different Standard editions landed in residential mailboxes on different days of the week. Sausalito on Wednesday, followed by Mill Valley on Thursday, The Peninsula, which covered the towns of Tiburon and Belvedere, on Friday, and finally the many small towns of Ross Valley on Saturday.
With a full-time staff of two, himself, and his production manager, Holly Cross, Rob knew the weekly paper’s only real chance of achieving a modest level of financial success was in creating other economies as well. First, the papers, all of which were printed as tabloids, shared a common core of twelve pages. The outside wrap, consisting of the cover, pages two, fifteen, and sixteen, would be unique to those communities with local photos and news reported on these pages.
The second ingredient for success was to have a string of volunteers to provide everything from coverage of planning commission meetings to reporting on social and civic events. On occasion, Rob got lucky and the late middle-aged, retired, local citizen who provided several news stories could snap a photograph as well. If not, he needed to search for a local volunteer photographer as well.
Rob was thankful that between Ted Dondero, a longtime Mill Valley resident, who abandoned his hopes of being a journalist for the steady pay and assured benefits of a high school teaching position; and Michael, who simply enjoyed having several of his photos featured and credited every week, all of his expectations were met.
CHAPTER TWO
Rob and Holly were always pleased to see Michael Marks. Their offices were located on the second floor of a two-story, century old walk-up on Sausalito’s Princess Street, just a few feet off Bridgeway, the town’s popular tourist street, which was crowded with restaurants, art galleries, bike rental kiosks, ice-cream stands, and T-shirt and souvenir shops.
Late in the afternoon on nearly every Tuesday, after the Sausalito edition had been sent off for printing and postal drop, Michael made his way up the steep steps to Rob and Holly’s cramped offices. His photos could be sent digitally; in fact, his Nikon camera, which hung around his shoulder most hours of the day, was equipped with Wi-Fi, making it possible for him to transmit his photos anywhere at any time. But Michael, a confirmed bachelor, enjoyed the chance for socialization, and Rob and Holly always put aside a small portion of time on one of their busy workdays for a guy they both regarded as fascinating. The official reason for the visit
was to review photos of the past week that might be applicable for one of the three pages set aside for Mill Valley news.
One aspect of these meetings would be seeing several of the pictures that Michael had done using his telephoto lens that caught an individual, a couple, or a parent and child, from a great distance without showing any identifying characteristics that might create a usage issue. An older couple walking hand in hand over the small ancient bridge that spans Old Mill Creek, a father pushing a son or daughter on a swing, two young lovers kissing at a picnic table hidden partially by the shadows cast by the massive redwood trees surrounding them.
The photo box feature was called, “Hidden Mill Valley: Life Caught in the Moment.” It was popular with locals for creating a weekly guessing game as to whom Michael had caught. And a financial benefit to Michael, because many of those photos were made into framed prints, and some into note cards that were sold in a variety of Mill Valley shops and made available during the annual art festival.
Rob was happy to have a local feature like “Caught in the Moment” that could fill half or more of a page on a slow news week. Michael was so proud of the feature that he purchased a special easy-use digital camera that had a sixty-five-times zoom view, allowing him to catch special moments at a considerable distance.
Rob, Holly, and Michael all delighted in coming up with clever captions for their picture of the week feature. Additionally, Michael regularly provided photos of all the important moments in the town’s life
It was a mutually beneficial relationship. Michael’s reputation as the Mill Valley photographer of record was burnished by the simple fact that his photos appeared weekly in the local newspaper. Without the Standard, many might have dismissed Michael as a hobbyist, as opposed to a welcomed documentarian.
Most meetings of the three ended in the same fashion; after the weekly photos had been chosen, Michael would offer to buy the two of them a pizza at Giovanni’s…steps away from the office’s front door, but most times Rob and Holly declined, insisting that they had too much work still remaining.
On occasion, Michael suggested that he had errands to run nearby and he could rendezvous with them in another hour or two. When he returned, close to six, he and Rob and Holly would go off to the No Name Bar, just two blocks north on Bridgeway, for a badly needed cocktail.
The following morning, Holly and Rob invariably spent the first ten minutes of their day speculating about Michael’s life beyond his photographs.
“He’s such a great guy,” Holly began. “I appreciate the fact that he’s always offering to buy us a drink.”
“I know! We’re really lucky to have him.”
Often, their brief conversations would lead to speculation as to what Michael did to afford the lifestyle of a gadfly, whose only apparent passion was taking photographs.
“I have no idea how he makes ends meet, but I’m certainly glad that he brings us great photos,” Rob said confidently.
“I know. He could probably sell his work as a stringer to the dailies, the Marin Independent, the San Francisco Chronicle, the Oakland Tribune.”
“I asked him about that,” Rob said, giving a crooked smile. “He said it would feel too much like work. To be honest, I can’t really figure the guy out. I’m just glad I can afford his price.”
“You mean FREE!”
“Holly, you know me too well.”
Of course, Rob and Holly weren’t the only two individuals who tried to figure Michael out, a man who lived well with no obvious source of significant income.
Speculation about Michael was a popular topic from city hall to the chamber of commerce, from the Rotary Club to the Mill Valley Preservation League. Just about everyone had a theory about Michael, and most were convinced they were in possession of the one true story.
Very few were aware how widespread these theories and rumors were. Michael knew of several of them and made no effort to help separate fact from fiction. He took great pleasure in being the subject of gossip and played his own part in adding to the mystery. He often alluded to wonderful things he had accomplished in the past. Playing an essential role in the creation of software that was incorporated into what today is known as Instagram; or sharing in the development of components that supplied new breakthroughs in the advancement of electric car batteries; and many other myths. His admirers were uncomfortable pressing for specific details. It was as if they feared real answers might end the joy of their idle gossip and speculation. Undoubtedly, the truth would be far less interesting.
Michael, his countless admirers concluded, was simply an individual of considerable wealth, who happily ignored social conventions that others felt compelled to follow. In his triple X sweatpants, you might choose to think of him as poor, but when he calls for the check after completing two martinis and a three-course dinner at Bungalow 44, and perhaps offers to buy you a drink as well, he can only be considered eccentric.
“The poor, as a rule, don’t carry platinum American Express cards,” Ted Dondero explained to Ethel Marion, while they enjoyed a lunch of deli sandwiches prepared moments before at the take out counter of the Mill Valley Market, steps away from Ethel’s city hall office.
“I have no doubt that you’re right about that,” Ethel responded, while waving a pickle to help make her point, “but doesn’t it strike you as odd that Michael Marks has no obvious means of support?”
“Not really. Mill Valley, as well as much of Marin, has many people who could be considered, how would you say?”
“Unique?”
“Exactly, Ethel! No one knows the source of their wealth, but they live in nice homes and enjoy comfortable lifestyles. You could imagine they made their money moving illegal drugs, but in this part of the world, they’re most often estate babies who become a little more eccentric with each passing year.”
“Well, that’s not the town we were raised in,” Ethel said, as she shook her head, which for the last dozen years had been covered by an unruly mop of gray hair.
“No, it certainly is not. We’ve seen a lot of change over the past seven plus decades. My dad’s first job was as an engineer on the old electric train that ran between here and Sausalito.”
“And my dad,” Ethel added, “was a welder who settled here in the early forties when he worked building Liberty Ships for the war effort in the Pacific. That was when a house off Blithedale was selling for eighteen hundred dollars. Even in the fifties, when you and I were growing up, homes were about fifty-five hundred or less.”
“Imagine what our parents would think if they were alive today to see a two-bedroom one-bath home on Sycamore selling for a million dollars or more.”
“Ted, as far as Michael is concerned, the mayor and city council think he hung the moon. They’ve all requested, usually going through me, print copies of photographs he’s taken of them at one event or another.”
“The guy who owns the Standard, Rob Timmons, thinks Michael is the best of any photographers he’s ever had. Can’t blame him for being happy with Michael’s work; he gets a top-notch photographer for what I assume is nothing more than a thank you.”
“Well, that’s the same compensation you get, isn’t it, Ted?”
“True, but I don’t mind. The kids are grown and out, and Gracie passed four years ago. What am I supposed to do with myself? I’ve got a wonderful home with no mortgage, thank God. I’ve got my teacher’s pension, and during all those years working at Tam High as an English teacher, I fantasized about being a newspaper reporter. Granted, it was about covering stories that were bigger than planned renovations to Old Mill Elementary, or socialite receptions at the Mill Valley Art and Garden Club, but it’s fun and it keeps me active and sharp. We both have to think about staying sharp; of course, you’ve got all this,” Ted said, while looking around in amazement at Ethel’s office.
“I know it’s a mess.”
“I wouldn’t call it that. Let’s call it organized chaos.”
Remarkably, there were only a fe
w people in all of Marin County who were able to answer such questions as: How long had Michael lived in Mill Valley? When did he first volunteer to take photos for various organizations, groups, clubs, and others? Why was he so generous with his time?
Their reluctance to ask hard questions was a vulnerability that Michael perceived the first time he arrived in Mill Valley. Here, he could enjoy a wonderful life, while pursuing the business that provided the real source of his wealth: tracking wealthy individuals behaving badly. It was true that most of his photos he generously gave away. But there were those who paid dearly to see that the images he captured forever stayed out of the public’s hands.
It was a very good life until the day it all came crashing down.
CHAPTER THREE
Thirty years before that fateful day, Michael left college with little hope of employment, and a substantial amount of school debt; he concluded that he had not worked the system, but rather the system had worked him. From that time forward, he resolved to take a different approach to life. He would be respectful of his elders’ advice, but only he would choose the path he would travel.
The unreliability of adults first came to him at age fourteen, when his mother, Barbara, left him and his younger brother, Christopher, age twelve, and their hapless father, Caleb, for a charming and attractive man who made a good living selling corporate liability insurance. Michael’s father, an in-house accountant for a local shoe manufacturer in the family’s hometown of Fresno, California, made the mistake of considering this engaging gentleman, Fred Winters, a friend. To that end, he invited Fred, who spent a good part of his year on the road, to come to his home, meet his family, and have a, “good home cooked meal.” The salesman not only admired Michael’s mother’s meatloaf, but he greatly admired her as well. One night during one of his brief visits, Fred helped Barbara by drying dishes as she washed.