The Little Death

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The Little Death Page 14

by Michael Nava


  I lay back on the bunk and closed my eyes. Maybe it was the ever-present atmosphere of sexual tension in the jail or just my own loneliness, but I thought back to the last time Hugh and I had made love. Once again I saw the elegant torso stretched out beneath me as I lowered my body to his, and felt that body responding, resisting, yielding. The image of his face came to me with such clarity that I could see the fine blond hairs that grew, almost invisibly, between his eyebrows. And I could see his eyes and in those eyes I saw, with more regret than horror, the face of Aaron Gold bathed in blood.

  I sat up. Sonny Patterson was watching me from just outside the cell.

  “You all right?”

  “Yeah, I must have fallen asleep.”

  “You look bad, pal.”

  “I’ve had better days.” I rose from the bunk and walked to where he was standing. “Well?”

  “It didn’t look so good at first. Two shots fired from the gun, and your fingerprints all over the place. Fortunately for you, the same neighbor who called the cops also saw the guy going into the yard, and it wasn’t you.”

  “Saw the guy?”

  “Well, saw a guy. Blond, about your height. Good build. Good looking. Couldn’t be you.”

  “I do what I can.”

  He lit a cigarette and offered me one. I hesitated and then accepted it. The last time I smoked I was eighteen.

  “Incidentally, does that description sound like anyone you know?”

  I shook my head.

  “What about the guy you saw on the side of the house?”

  I took a puff. It went down pretty smoothly. “It happened too fast. All I really saw was the gun.”

  “You’re sounding like a witness for the prosecution. How come your defense witnesses always had such better memories?”

  “Clean living, Sonny,” I said, dropping the cigarette to the floor and crushing it with my heel. The second drag had made me want to vomit.

  “Well, that’s something I’ll never be accused of.” He smiled. “Hey, Wilson,” he yelled to one of the jailers, “release the gentleman. He owes me a couple of drinks.”

  “I owe you a case.”

  “No,” he said, suddenly serious. “You owe me an explanation.”

  “Did you call Terry Ormes?”

  “Yeah, she’s up in my office. That’s where we’re going.”

  It was only around ten but if felt like midnight. Sonny brewed a pot of coffee and brought out a fifth of Irish whiskey from the deep recesses of his desk. Terry yawned, accepted coffee but laid her hand across the cup when he started to pour the whiskey in. He shrugged and poured me a half-cup of coffee, a half-cup of whiskey. For himself, he dispensed with the coffee.

  “Now that we’re all comfortable,” he began, settling into his armchair and his affected Southern drawl, “why don’t you begin at the beginning?”

  Between the two of us, Terry and I told Patterson the history of the Linden-Smith-Paris clan from the end of the nineteen twenties to the burial of Robert Paris that very afternoon. Patterson listened without comment, moving only to lower the level of fluid in the whiskey bottle now and then. There wasn’t a lot left when we finished.

  He looked back and forth between us and shrugged. “So,” he said, “what crime has been committed that I can prove?”

  Terry looked at him. “How about four murders, a burglary, and conspiracy to obstruct justice?”

  “A crime that I can prove,” he repeated. “In the murders of Christina and Jeremy Paris, the eyewitness is dead, the coroner is dead, and the deaths have the appearance of being an accident. The remaining evidence—the will—is grist for speculation but not nearly enough to make out a murder. And the trail is twenty years old. The officers who wrote these reports might be dead themselves, and you know as well as I do that their reports are inadmissible hearsay. The death of Hugh Paris—” he glanced over at me. I’d told him that Hugh and I were lovers. “Put out of your head how much you liked the guy. Let me put it as crudely as I can—a hype O.D.’s and drowns. No one sees the death, no traces of murder survive except in Ormes’s recollection. So maybe we can impute a motive to the judge, after a lot of circumstantial fandangos, but so what? The judge is dead. Even assuming he arranged Hugh’s murder, I doubt very seriously that he jotted it down in his appointment book.” He looked at us.

  “Aaron,” I said.

  “Yes, Aaron Gold. After I persuade the cops that you didn’t do it—and you didn’t, did you—?” I shook my head, “what do you think they’re gonna conclude?”

  “A break-in,” Terry said wearily, “that got out of hand.” Contemptuously, she added, “All the pieces fit.”

  “Detective,” Patterson said, “cops are like prosecutors in this respect: we have to play the facts we’re dealt. We can’t engage in cosmic theories, because we’re bound by the evidence we gather and the inferences we can draw from it. You can’t expect me to put Robert Paris on trial for a murder that was committed four days after he died. All that the evidence will support in the case of Aaron Gold is a bungled burglary.”

  “The perfect crimes,” Terry muttered.

  “Exactly,” Patterson said, shaking the last drops of liquor out of the bottle, “the perfect crimes. No witnesses, no evidence. Plenty of motive—if the murders could be connected, but nothing connects them except a few bits of circumstantial evidence and one hell of a lot of conjecture.” He looked at us again and sighed. “Drink up.”

  “Drink up? Is that the D.A.’s position on these murders?”

  “Jesus Christ, Henry, think of this case as a defense lawyer. Wouldn’t you love to be defending Robert Paris? With the case I have against him?”

  “Paris didn’t physically kill Hugh, and he didn’t pull the trigger on Aaron,” I said. “The murderer is still alive.”

  “Then bring him to me,” Patterson said, “and we’ll talk.”

  I said, “This is a police matter.”

  Patterson shook his head. “You know as well as I do that the police don’t have the time or interest to pursue this investigation. They’ve got their hands full. And as for you,” he said, turning to Terry, “my advice is that if you place any value on your career on the force, you’ll discontinue your interest in closed cases.”

  She lifted her eyebrows. “What do you mean?”

  “I mean Hugh Paris,” Patterson said. “I’ve been known to bend elbows with Sam Torres. He knows that you’ve been assisting Rios, and he doesn’t like it. In fact, he considers it a personal affront that his subordinate would use police resources on a case that he closed and on behalf of a civilian.”

  “Christ,” I muttered. Terry looked stricken and I knew why. A woman detective, even a good one—no, especially a good one—would always be walking the line. A misstep could have disastrous consequences on her career. I couldn’t ask her to risk it for me.

  “You’re on your own, Henry,” Patterson said. “Take my advice and forget it. Go away until things cool down. You’re not safe.”

  “Then you believe the murders are all connected?”

  “Of course I do. I believe every word of it. The rich are malignant.” He held out his empty coffee cup to me. “Now what about those drinks?”

  I woke late the next day, having closed a bar with Patterson the night before. Terry had begged off early. Sonny and I remained, getting drunk, swapping trial stories and he complaining about his marriage. Boys’ night out, except that Aaron Gold was dead.

  I went out for the papers. The San Francisco Chronicle made no mention of the murder, but the local daily put it on page one. I read it while the coffee brewed—burglary suspect, unidentified man detained and then released, no other suspects, would anyone having any information kindly notify the police.

  As I drank my coffee, I wondered who there was to mourn Aaron. His law firm associates? A few ex-girlfriends? He had family in L.A. that he had spoken of maybe twenty times in all the years I’d known him. After all those years and all the people he’d known
, I probably was still his closest friend. It disturbed me to think that he’d gone through life so alone. That image of opulent self-worth that he projected to the world was shadow play. My grief was real.

  I needed to think, but the effort was painful; all the easy connections between Hugh’s death and Aaron’s led to a dead man, the judge. But there it was. Aaron had information he wanted to share with me about Hugh’s death. The man who broke into my house was also interested in that information—not gaining access to it—but suppressing it. He also had taken the only proof I had linking Robert Paris to his grandson’s death, so I’d assumed that Aaron’s information further implicated the judge. But the judge was dead. What difference would it make to anyone whether his reputation was ruined?

  And then it came to me. No one cared about the judge at this point. The break-in and Aaron’s murder were the acts of someone with something left to lose should it become public knowledge that the judge had arranged his grandson’s death. And who was that someone? Hugh’s actual killer—the man or men hired by the judge to carry out the murder. Robert Paris’s death hadn’t really solved the crime. Hugh’s murderer was still at large and I believed that that person was more than a goon employed for the occasion but someone upon whom the judge had relied pretty often. Who would know about the inner-workings of Paris’ staff? Only a peer who had frequent dealings with that staff. John Smith.

  And who was John Smith?

  I had done a little research on Smith, gleaning the few facts I knew about him from the back issues of the Chronicle and my conversations with Grant. He was eighty-one years old, unmarried, a banker by profession, and something of a philanthropist. Four months out of the year he lived in Geneva where he was associated with various banks headquartered there. He was also chairman of the Linden Trust and, by virtue of his control of the disbursements of that fund, was more responsible for the development and course of nuclear research than any other private citizen. He gave money to Catholic charities, had had a rose named in his honor, had never graduated from college. In virtually every respect his life was opposite that of his brother-in-law, Robert Paris. Yet Smith, who lived in relative anonymity, was by birth something that Robert Paris never became, a member of the American aristocracy.

  Nor, apparently, did the two men like each other. There was never anything as obvious as a public falling out. As stewards of the Linden fortune, their economic interests frequently converged and were too important to allow personal feelings to stand in the way of greater enrichment. Nonetheless, Grant had spoken as if the enmity between the two ancient tycoons was public knowledge.

  All this made Smith a potential ally. Someone in Robert Paris’s retinue had killed Hugh and Aaron. I could not interest the police in pursuing the investigation but Smith, with his money and influence, could. What remained was to make an appeal to him. I needed entry into his world. Once again I would have to rely on Grant Hancock whose family, though perhaps poorer, was as distinguished as Smith’s.

  I picked up the phone and dialed Grant’s number.

  Grant was at work. I reached his secretary who made it clear to me that unless I was a paying client I could leave a message. Finally, after lengthy negotiation, she agreed to give Mr. Hancock my name. He was on the phone a moment later.

  “Henry, I was going to call you. I just heard a very disturbing rumor about Aaron from one of our classmates who was working on a case with him.”

  “It’s true, Grant. Aaron’s been murdered.”

  “Jesus.”

  “And I was arrested for his murder and spent half the night in jail.”

  “What?”

  “And the same day he was murdered, someone broke into my apartment and stole the letters that Hugh had written to his grandfather. Aaron called my apartment while the break-in was in progress. He said he had information about Hugh’s death. Whoever was in my apartment—and I think it was Hugh’s killer—heard the phone message and tried to erase it. Then the killer went to Aaron’s. When I got to Aaron’s house, he was dead.”

  “Wait—Hugh’s killer killed Aaron? The judge killed Hugh.”

  “No, the judge had Hugh killed. An important distinction, Grant. The man who did the actual killing is still at large and probably in a panic since the death of his employer.”

  “Didn’t you also just say you’d been arrested for Aaron’s murder?”

  “Yes.”

  “How did that happen?”

  “I was holding the gun.” I heard Grant make a noise, and I explained how it was I came to be at Aaron’s house when the police arrived. I also told him that the police were treating the case as a burglary and that the district attorney considered any other interpretation of the events leading to Aaron’s death unprovable.

  “But you think differently.”

  “Yes.”

  “I was afraid of that. I take it, then, this is not a social call.”

  “Grant, I’ve respected your wish to be left out of this, until now.”

  “Is that the sound of chips being cashed I hear?” he said.

  “The police are prepared to write off Aaron’s death the same way they wrote off Hugh,” I continued, ignoring his joke. “I want to make contact with John Smith.”

  “You’re obsessed with Smith,” Grant said. “He’s just a private citizen—albeit a rich one.”

  “Money makes things happen,” I replied, “and if even you feel intimidated by John Smith, imagine his effect on a chief-of-police. Or the mayor.”

  There was a thoughtful silence on the line.

  “First,” Grant said, “you’ll have to engage his attention.”

  “All I want is my foot in the door.”

  “I’m going to put you on hold,” Grant said, and the line went blank. Five minutes later he came back on. “Sorry,” he said, “I had to make a call. I want you to call this number and ask for Peter Barron. He’s one of Smith’s aides at Pegasus.”

  “At what?”

  “Pegasus. Smith’s corporate flagship. A holding company.”

  He gave me the number. I thanked him. We hung up.

  A company that owns companies. That’s how Terry Ormes had described the corporation that held title to the house in San Francisco that Hugh had leased and was living in at the time of his death. Pegasus Corporation.

  I dialed the number Grant had given me.

  “Good morning. Mr. Barron’s office,” a woman said.

  “Is Mr. Barron in?”

  “Yes. Who may I say is calling?”

  “Henry Rios.”

  “May I tell Mr. Barron what this call is in reference to?”

  “Hugh Paris,” I replied.

  “One moment.” I was back on hold.

  “Good morning, Mr. Rios,” a male voice said. For the briefest moment I thought I recognized the voice.

  “Mr. Barron? I’m a friend of Grant Hancock. He gave me your number—”

  “How is Grant?”

  “He’s fine. Look, I have some information about Hugh Paris’s death that I think might interest your employer, Mr. Smith.”

  “Such as?”

  “Hugh was murdered at the direction of his grandfather, Robert Paris, and whoever performed the killing is still at large.”

  There was a long skeptical pause. “I see,” he said finally. “Have you shared this information with the police?”

  “The police take the position that Hugh’s death was accidental.”

  “Oh, is that the position the police take?” His tone was mocking. Once again, his voice sounded familiar. “Well, Mr. Rios, I doubt that Mr. Smith is in any position to do what the police can’t or won’t do. He was deeply affected by Hugh’s death, and I think, at his age, he should be spared these speculations which would only make Hugh’s loss harder to accept.”

  “It’s not speculation. I have proof.”

  “Mr. Rios, give the old man a break. He doesn’t need to hear that members of his family killed each other off. Take your story back to the polic
e or, better yet, keep it to yourself.”

  Switching to a different tack I asked, “Who arranged for the lease of Hugh’s house from Pegasus?”

  “What are you talking about?”

  “Hugh leased his house from Pegasus. Who was his contact there?”

  “Pegasus isn’t in the real estate business.”

  “I saw the lease.”

  There was silence on the other end. At last he said, “Can’t be. Look, Henry, I really must go.”

  “Have we ever met?”

  “I don’t think so,” he replied, sounding, I thought, nervous.

  “I know your voice.”

  “Well, maybe we’ve met through Grant. Goodbye, Henry.”

  The line went dead.

  A moment later I was back on the phone to Grant asking him what Peter Barron looked like.

  “I’ve only seen him a few times. He’s about our age. Blond. Handsome. Gay.”

  Blond, good-looking—that’s how Aaron’s neighbor described the man he saw in Aaron’s yard the night of the murder. Was that also the man I saw? I closed my eyes, but I was unable to picture the face. Still, his hair—it was blond, wasn’t it? And I knew I had seen him somewhere before.

  “Gay?” I asked Grant. This, too, seemed significant.

  “I’ve run into him at Sutter’s Mill,” he said, naming a bar popular with professionals. “Did he say something to you?”

  “No, nothing like that. Is there any chance I might’ve met him through you?”

  “I hadn’t seen you in four years until two weeks ago,” Grant said. “Hardly enough time to introduce you to my friends, much less a cocktail party acquaintance. Do you know Peter Barron?”

  “I’m sure of it, but I can’t figure out where. He knows we’ve met, too. He lied to me about that and about Hugh’s relation to Pegasus. I think I’d better drive up to the city. Where is Pegasus?”

  Grant gave me an address on Montgomery Street.

  “I’ll call you,” I said and hung up.

  Pegasus Corporation was housed on floors thirty-eight, thirty-nine and forty of a Japanese bank building near the Embarcadero freeway. I called up to Barron’s office from the street to make sure he was in, then I entered the building. It was close to noon and I explained to the security guard that I was meeting someone for a lunchtime conference but had misplaced his office number. I gave the guard Peter Barron’s name and he made a call.

 

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