The River Valley Series

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The River Valley Series Page 67

by Tess Thompson


  “Okay, just one more thing,” said Peter. “Can you describe to me exactly what you saw in the parking lot?”

  Spike proceeded to describe what he saw. It matched Ben’s story almost perfectly.

  After Spike finished, Peter handed him his card. “Call me if you think of anything else.”

  “You’re with the Seattle cops?” said Spike. “What’re you doing down here?”

  “Making sure an innocent man doesn’t get blamed because of faulty police work,” said Peter.

  “You sure you two don’t want a beer?” asked Spike.

  “Not today, Spike,” said Bella, putting her hand on top of his rough one. “But I’ll come back. I promise.”

  “Say hi to Annie for me.”

  “Will do.”

  In Peter’s car, they sat for a moment, taking in what they’d just learned. After a moment, Peter took out his phone. “Jocelyn Zinn, right? Yeah, here it is.” He shook the phone in the air, almost triumphantly. “Rumored Madam is what the press calls her.”

  “There’s no rumor about it in Hollywood. I’m sure that little black book of hers was filled with half the actors and two-thirds of the elected officials in Los Angeles. But seriously, I can’t imagine Tiffany was doing this. For one thing, where is the money? Sabrina said they were broke.”

  “The industrious Miss Zinn’s been arrested a bunch for refusing to give up her client list. Could make her angry enough to kill if she thought, even erroneously, that Tiffany took it and was blackmailing some of these guys.”

  “Which means we have yet another suspect,” said Bella. “What do we do next?”

  “Let’s go back to Drake’s and tell Ben what we learned. Should give him some peace of mind.”

  On the way, Bella’s phone rang.

  “Bella, it’s Sabrina.”

  “Oh, Sabrina, I’ve been worried about you. Did you get my message?”

  “No. My phone’s so full I haven’t been able to sift through anything. I’ve just been sitting in my hotel room staring at my hands. I can’t believe she’s gone. And the police are saying she was raped. Her room was torn apart too, like someone was looking for something.” Her voice broke. There was the sound of tears on the other end of the phone. “I can’t stop thinking about her final moments.”

  “Oh, Sabrina, don’t think about that. You’ll make yourself crazy.”

  “I’m glad our parents aren’t alive to see any of this.”

  She glanced at Peter and mouthed, “Sister.”

  He nodded, understanding.

  “Bella, the cops told me they brought Ben in for questioning.”

  The wipers were on intermittent. Rain fell steadily, causing the window to blur until the wipers wiped them clean. She fiddled with the car vents, moving the lever up and down. “Yes.”

  “I told them how nice he’d been to pick her up outside the bar and that he didn’t seem the type, what little I knew of him, to be violent. But they didn’t seem to believe that. Bella, they seem like complete idiots. Or worse, not on the up and up.”

  “I know. Ben’s scared and so am I. We had a friend come down from Seattle. He’s a detective, Sabrina, with the Seattle Police Department. He’s helping me poke around a bit.”

  She heard Sabrina sigh. “You have no idea how much better I feel to hear you say this. I want whoever did this brought to justice. Do you think your friend can help us do that?”

  “They say he’s the best.” She glanced over at Peter. He reminded her of the Australian actor Simon Baker, only younger. Had anyone ever told him that?

  “Will you come see me? I feel so friendless here and the press and paparazzi are swarming the hotel. I’m like a trapped animal in here. Maybe I could tell your cop friend something that would be helpful?”

  “Of course, we’ll come.”

  “Now?”

  She made eye contact with Peter who nodded in the affirmative. “We’ll be there in five minutes.”

  Bella filled him in on what she knew about Tiffany’s financial situation, according to what Sabrina had told her the night before. At the lodge, they parked in visitor parking. Sabrina was right. Every big and small news station, magazine, and newspaper seemed to be represented. As they walked past the vans and cameras and reporters wearing heavy coats and sipping coffees, several of the reporters gave them the once over, but clearly decided they were no one important and turned away.

  The lobby was quiet; the two front desk people nodded in their direction as they walked past the desk to the elevators. There was no one in the elevator or the hallway. All the movie folks were inside their rooms, thought Bella, probably in shock over the news and also hiding out from the press.

  Sabrina answered the door wearing one of the lodge robes. Her hair was dirty and she wore no makeup, making her crimson scar seem more vivid than usual. Bella’s hands itched, wishing she could dim it with foundation and powder. But Sabrina had never let her do her makeup, refusing to attend any public events with her sister. “I don’t want to deal with the stares,” she had said once.

  The two women embraced; Bella held her tightly for a moment before releasing her. There was an open bottle of wine on the table. Bella looked at her with surprise. “I’ve never seen you drink.”

  “I don’t really. Well, I never wanted to in case it made it harder for Tiffany. But today I just felt like it. Would either of you like some?” She put her hand to her mouth. “Oh, I’m sorry. I’m Sabrina Archer.” She held out her hand to Peter.

  “No thanks on the wine,” said Peter, shaking her hand.

  “Me either,” said Bella. She needed one. But she’d wait until she was back at Drake’s. She thought of Ben then, at home with Drake and Annie, probably scared out of his mind. How could this be happening? What had Tiffany Archer done to her life? This was the inevitable question. What was it that had made her self-destructive? Early fame as Stefan had suggested? Or something deeper, some seed of madness that lay in wait, dormant until the cruelties of the world made it bloom and take root? Why else would someone as talented and privileged as Tiffany Archer destroy her life? Not that she deserved to be murdered and raped, of course.

  The three of them sat in the easy chairs in the sitting room. Sabrina, seeming to have forgotten her wine, folded and unfolded her hands, alternately staring at the gas fireplace and the ceiling. “I’ve arranged for her body to be sent back to Los Angeles after the coroner’s done with her. She wanted to be cremated. We talked about it once.”

  “Will you have a memorial for her?” asked Bella. “I could help you, if you need it.”

  “No, I don’t think so. We have no family.” Sabrina pulled on her unwashed hair. “She did good work, you know, when she was clean.”

  “Sabrina, she was talented and respected by many in the industry. No one can take that away from her. Or you,” added Bella.

  “But all anyone will remember is her drug use and that she was murdered. This is the legacy she’ll leave. Not her body of work.” Sabrina picked at a bandage around her thumb.

  “What happened to your thumb?” asked Bella.

  “I cut it yesterday. In the afternoon. Opening a box for Tiffany. New shoes she had sent up from her favorite boutique in Beverly Hills.” She fiddled further with the bandage. “Seems like a million years ago now.” Sabrina turned her gaze to Peter. “I’d give anything to know the truth. Otherwise I’m afraid I’ll lose my mind. I need to know what happened. Do you find this to be true for all victims’ loved ones?” She asked it almost clinically, as if she were conducting a survey for scientific study.

  “I do.”

  “No matter how horrific the end?” asked Sabrina.

  “Right,” said Peter.

  And then, there it was. The memory of Drake sitting with Peter in his Seattle home after Esther and Chloe were murdered. Drake had asked for every detail. “Tell me exactly.” After Peter told him every detail, he’d asked for it again. This had surprised Bella. Might it be too painful for him to know? Bu
t she understood later he wanted to measure the suffering in their final moments. They hadn’t known what was happening, Peter Ball had told him over and over. It was too quick. This had given them both a small amount of peace.

  “Can I ask you a few questions?” asked Peter.

  “Of course,” said Sabrina. “Anything. Not that I’ll be much help.”

  “Tiffany told Ben Fleck you two had a fight. Bella tells me you said that wasn’t the case. But do you have any idea what might have triggered her binge drinking?”

  Sabrina’s eyes went cold; she waved her hands around dismissively. “Anything could trigger her binges. She didn’t take her sobriety seriously. Thought it was something the rest of us were manufacturing, this idea she actually had a problem. She saw it as partying.” She made quotes in the air. “‘I’m young,’ she always said to me. ‘I have every right to be out having fun whenever I want.’ Which might have been the case if she could have kept it from spiraling out of control. But she couldn’t. She was an addict.”

  Peter hesitated; he tugged on his ear. Bella could see his mind working behind his green eyes, debating about whether or not to tell Sabrina what they’d learned from Spike. “Did Tiffany tell you much about her last stint in rehab?”

  “No, not really. Why?”

  “Did she tell you who her neighbor was?”

  Sabrina smiled, reaching for her glass of wine but not drinking from it, merely holding it in her hands and studying its contents. “Yes. Jocelyn Zinn. Of course, Tiffany would befriend her. She had radar for other self-destructive people. Attracted and attached to them time and time again. The two of them were best friends for a month or so, spending every minute together shopping or lunching. But then they had a falling out, which is the inevitable path for all Tiffany’s friendships.”

  “Do you know what they fell out about?” asked Peter.

  “Tiffany told me Jocelyn accused her of something she didn’t do.” She took a small sip of wine. “Although, knowing Tiffany, there’s always more than her side of the story. It’s always everyone else’s fault, never her. She’s the victim.” Sabrina’s lips trembled. “I sound terrible, speaking ill of my dead sister. It’s just she was so difficult. The fact that she’s gone doesn’t change that.”

  “We understand,” said Bella. “You took good care of her.”

  “I sacrificed my own career ambitions for her but she never understood that I might have any other interests but her. In the end, it didn’t matter, I suppose.”

  Peter shifted in his seat. “Do you know anything about Miss Zinn’s client list?”

  Sabrina stared at him, turning pale. Her hands trembled so violently the wine in her glass swayed to and fro like the waves of a lake on a stormy night. “What did you say?”

  Bella reached for Sabrina’s glass, taking it and setting it on the table next to Sabrina’s chair. “She mentioned to the bartender the night she was killed that Ms. Zinn believed she not only took the book but was also blackmailing clients. You think it’s possible?”

  “I can’t imagine Tiffany showing that much initiative. Blackmail?” said Sabrina, shaking her head furiously. “She couldn’t even log into her own Facebook fan page or get money out of her bank account. There’s no way she was blackmailing people. Plus, if that was the case, where’s the money?”

  “But it’s motive for her murder,” said Peter. “Big time motive if it’s true.”

  “And it would explain why her room was torn apart,” said Bella. “Someone was looking for that book.”

  Sabrina went to the window and opened the curtains a few inches. “Did you see all those idiots down there with their cameras? Just waiting for something to put on their ridiculous shows. And all for what? To feed this fascination for scandal?” She shut the curtain, hard, and wheeled around to look at them. “If this is true, that she was blackmailing a man or men, how will we ever know for sure?”

  Peter rose to his feet and went to meet her in the middle of the room. “I’m not sure exactly. But we’ll start with scouring bank and phone records, that sort of thing.”

  “Right.” Sabrina poured more wine into her glass. She held it in both hands. “We’ll know it’s true if you can find the money.”

  “We’ll get to the bottom of this and it just may lead us to her killer.”

  “How can you possibly do this work?” asked Sabrina.

  Peter smiled. “My wife asked me that one time. And I don’t know the answer except to say it’s what I’m made to do. It’s the way I’m wired.”

  Sabrina tugged at the tie around her waist. “I used to think that about something too, but it wasn’t to be. Instead I ended up my sister’s keeper.”

  Bella wanted to ask her what this something was. What had Sabrina wanted to be when she was little? She’d always seemed so oriented toward making her sister’s career a success that it had never occurred to Bella she might have had other aspirations.

  Sabrina sank back into the empty chair. “Now what am I supposed to do?” She took a large swallow of wine.

  Peter leaned forward, covering Sabrina’s small, white hand with his. “Give it some time. Let’s get you some closure first. Then you can decide what to do next.”

  She nodded. Her eyes filled with tears. “I’m lost without having her to worry about.”

  Bella scooted into the bathroom and came back with tissues. “Have you gotten any rest?”

  “No. I can’t sleep.”

  “Could you get a doctor to prescribe you something?” asked Peter.

  Sabrina shook her head. “No drugs. I’m my sister’s twin.” Her eyes were flat now, without expression.

  Bella suddenly had the impression of a young person in class who day after day cannot understand the lesson. They’ve accepted their fate, their doomed march toward a hopeless future. I cannot understand; I cannot figure a way out. She glanced at Peter. He was gazing at Sabrina with an expression of kindness despite his professional demeanor. He was probably trying to think of something to say but there was no offer of comfort within their grasp for this lost twin.

  Bella stood. “We’ll go. Try and get some rest. I’ll call you later.”

  “Yes, thank you.” Her eyes were still glazed.

  “Order some food, maybe?” suggested Bella.

  “Sure. I’ll do that.” This was said without any guise at pretense. There would be no food ordered. No sleep would come. The room was dim except for the glow of the gas fireplace. Bella switched on a lamp near the window. Outside, the autumn afternoon was growing dark already. The rainstorm the night before had stripped off the last of the colorful leaves and the trees were leafless and skinny against a close, gray sky. Gray. Everything seemed gray, ugly. Bella felt a sudden homesickness for Los Angeles and her tidy, cozy apartment in Venice near the ocean. Her neighbors were artists and musicians with tattoos and purple hair. At night the bars and restaurants opened their doors and people spilled out onto the sidewalks with drinks, music blaring from unseen speakers. It was like a carnival all the time, she often thought. Today, if she were home, she would walk to the beach in her flip-flops and her wetsuit and her boogie board. The sidewalks would smell of spilled beer from the night before. The stretch of beach would smell of salt water and seaweed and marine life. She wondered for a moment, which life was real? This one with Ben and Drake and this police detective she barely knew or the one she’d left behind? Just as quickly as those thoughts came, she remembered Ben’s face that morning. It was a mixture of fear and gratitude. “You don’t have to do this,” he’d said, referring to her stint as a police detective.

  But she did. This was not the time to be the selfish young woman who lived for the surf or a night out with her friends. This was the time to do something for someone she loved without worry for her own needs.

  With that thought, she indicated to Peter they should go. With a sympathetic pat on the shoulder for Sabrina, he nodded. In the hallway that smelled of new carpet, they walked toward the elevator. “It’s
for the family,” he said, as if she’d asked him the question. “That’s why I do this work. For the families.”

  Bella punched the button for the elevator, feeling the familiar sadness. Loss. The sadness never left, never faded like the moments of joy did. The finality of death made sure of that. “I know. I was the family once.”

  The elevator doors opened. They stepped inside. Peter ran his index finger over the braille next to each floor button, gazing at the floor. She felt the weight of his thinking as the elevator dropped five floors until it reached the lobby. There, waiting to get on the elevator was Fred Hughes, River Valley’s deputy.

  “Fred?” Bella said, reaching out her hand. “How are you?”

  “Hey, Bella.” He shook her hand vigorously. “Terrible thing, this. You must’ve known her, what with working on the movie.”

  “I did. Knew her for years actually. We were just up talking with her twin sister.”

  “That’s a shame now. Poor girl.”

  Bella indicated to Peter with a lilt of her head in his direction. “Fred, this is my friend Peter Ball. He’s a detective with the Seattle Police Department.”

  “Wow. Cool.” Fred’s pale blue eyes were wide as he held out his hand for Peter to shake. “You made detective, huh? That’s a big deal.” He sighed. “Won’t ever happen for me, you know, working here in this little town. Matter of fact, Bella, the cops from Echo Grove just swept right in and took this whole thing over.”

  “I know. They took me in for questioning. I had that awful little red-haired troll grilling me for hours.”

  “Shoot, yeah, he’s a real piece of work.” Fred shuffled his feet. “Hey, Annie called me about Ben Fleck. Said they worked him over pretty good.”

  Bella lowered her voice, looking around the lobby. Fortunately for them, the staff at the lodge was successful in keeping the press outside in the cold, where they belonged. “They’re targeting him for it, Fred, and we’re all scared.”

 

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