Dead Midnight Page 16
Eddie nodded. “After that he really got into the drugs and the booze. I tried to warn my folks, but by then they were so caught up with grieving for Roger and getting this lawsuit you’re working on going, that they ignored everything else. And, I suppose, they didn’t want to hear what I was saying.”
“Was Harry the one who told you about having to resign?”
“No, it was Rog. Harry and I don’t talk, hardly ever. He’s got a mean streak, and it’s gotten worse since he started doing drugs and drinking heavily. I don’t blame Rog for what happened to Harry. He’s smart, and he had the makings of a good surgeon, but he couldn’t handle the pressure. Even if Rog hadn’t put him in a position where he lost his job, he’d’ve crashed and burned sooner or later anyway.”
“So after Roger died, you kept in touch with Jody?”
He poured more wine, drank deeply. “Yeah, I called her, said if there was anything I could do for her to let me know. She told me she was okay, but she didn’t sound good, so I started calling once a week, and we’d talk. A couple of weeks ago she admitted that she had a key to his flat and had found and read his personal journal. Trying to make sense of what happened, I guess. In the final entry there was a message for her, she claimed, something about an insurance policy. Now, Rog wasn’t the kind of guy to take out life insurance, so I suspected what he meant. He wanted me to show her how to retrieve his files.”
“And you did, of course.”
“Yeah. She was mostly interested in the one labeled ‘Project ’Zine.’ Of course, there was a ton of stuff in the computer’s memory besides that. I didn’t have the time—or the heart—to go through all of it with her, so she had me walk her through the retrieval process a few times, and I guess she accessed the rest later.”
I’d scanned the rest of the files, and could think of none that might be construed as insurance for Jody.
I asked, “You talk with her after that?”
“I called once. She sounded pretty bad—scared—and she cut the conversation short. After that I left messages, but she never got back to me.”
Interesting. Jody must have been able to read more meaning into Roger’s files than I had—enough to make her flee the city.
After Eddie left to be with his parents, I stayed in Roger’s flat, going over my interrupted plans for the day. Then I took from my purse the yellow sheet of scratch paper I’d found in J.D.’s raincoat and studied it. The abbreviations and words with question marks after them interested me—two in particular. Econ and TRG. Tessa Remington’s e-mail address was trg: The Remington Group. And the newspaper account of her disappearance gave the name of her husband, Kelby Lincoln, CEO of a firm called Econium Measures.
I went to Roger’s workstation, took the city directory from its drawer, and looked up both the firm and Lincoln. No listings. Next I called information, asked for listings in the Greater Bay Area. Again, none for Econium Measures, but there was a Kelby Lincoln in Atherton, on the Peninsula. I dialed the number, and the man who answered warily confirmed he was Remington’s husband. But when I explained I would like to talk with him about his wife’s disappearance, his tone hardened.
“I’m not interested, Ms. McCone.”
“Please hear me out. I’m working for Glenn Solomon, the criminal-defense attorney, on an investigation of InSite magazine, one of the firms your wife’s company has invested in—”
“And I suppose they want their funds and are claiming I’ve misappropriated them. Well, the hell with them.”
“I’m not representing the people at the magazine. Quite the opposite, in fact. I’ve discovered some irregularities there, and wonder if they might have a bearing on Ms. Remington’s disappearance.”
A pause. “You say you’re working for Glenn Solomon?”
“Yes. His office will verify—”
“That’s not necessary. I take it you’d like to meet with me in person.”
“If possible.”
“I tell you what: I have a dinner appointment in Marin this evening. I could meet you for drinks in the city—say, around five-thirty.”
“Good. Where?”
“Do you know the Beach Chalet?”
“Yes.”
“It’s on my route to the bridge. I’ll meet you in the bar.”
The Beach Chalet at the western end of Golden Gate Park, facing the Great Highway and the Pacific, is a San Francisco institution that has seen both good times and bad. Designed by noted local architect Willis Polk, and completed in 1925, it was originally conceived of as an elegant watering hole for day-trippers to what was then still the countryside. During the Great Depression, a WPA artist was commissioned to augment the grandeur by decorating the terra-cotta tiled ground floor with murals depicting vivid city scenes. The Chalet, however, never quite became the favored destination the city fathers had hoped it would, and by the time I first began visiting San Francisco, it was not a place where any sane woman would have ventured without a weapon or a strong male escort.
Upstairs, the Veterans of Foreign Wars, who had managed the building since World War II, held infrequent meetings. Downstairs was a dark, smoky bar where men in bikers’ garb swilled drinks, played pool, and often laid one another out with their cues. The murals were coated with grime, the tiles sticky with miscellaneous vile substances. On one occasion my friends from Berkeley and I were forced to flee the patrons’ wrath because one of our party was black. Finally even the bar closed, and the building stood fenced off and vacant; occasionally a rumor would circulate that a restaurant was negotiating a lease with the city, but it wasn’t until the late 1990s that the Chalet reopened. Now it—and the murals—are restored to their former splendor, with a Parks and Recreation Department visitors’ center on the ground floor and a restaurant with sweeping ocean views on the second. Today it’s a favored spot for locals, tourists, beach walkers, and anyone else who enjoys a good meal on the edge of the Pacific.
Kelby Lincoln had described himself to me—tall, blond, tanned, with gold-rimmed glasses—and when I entered the bar area I spotted him on a stool at one of the high tables that take advantage of the view over the diners’ heads. He stood as I approached, nodding gravely; his handshake was weak, as if he feared contamination from another person’s touch.
I slipped onto the opposite stool. Lincoln asked me what I wanted to drink and went to the bar. He was slender and fit looking, and his deep tan appeared to be of the saltwater variety. When he returned he squinted in the glare of the sunpath on the water and replaced his clear lenses with dark glasses.
“Have you found out anything about my wife’s disappearance?” he asked.
“So far, nothing conclusive. But it appears to be linked to the other events I’m investigating, and I was hoping you might be able to shed some light on them.”
“I’ll be glad to help, if you think you can turn up something that may lead to Tessa. But the police and the detectives I hired”—he named a highly respected local firm— “had no success. The police investigation is on hold, and I terminated the detectives’ employment last month. Since then I’ve been more or less waiting for the other shoe to drop.”
“Meaning?”
“Well, whatever word I finally have of Tessa won’t be good.”
“Let’s talk about the day your wife disappeared. You last saw her …”
“At breakfast. She planned to spend the day at her office, then attend a five-thirty meeting of the Committee for Wireless Privacy and come straight home.”
“This committee—it’s a nonprofit?”
“One of Tessa’s causes. She feels strongly about abuse of the new technology. That night we were to meet friends for dinner at our club at eight, so when she wasn’t home by seven-thirty I contacted the committee chairman. She said Tessa never arrived for the meeting. I called around to a number of her friends and associates, but none had seen or heard from her. In the morning I notified the police.”
“Were any of her possessions missing?”
“None that I
could tell. The police made me look through them thoroughly.”
“I’m sure you’ve been asked this before, but was there trouble in the marriage?”
“… Well, it was … a marriage. It had its ups and downs, but what marriage hasn’t?”
“And you had no reason to suspect she might be seeing someone else?”
“… No.”
Interesting hesitations there. “Did anyone report anything unusual happening to Ms. Remington before she disappeared? Annoying phone calls, or someone following her, perhaps?”
“Nothing like that.”
“Has anyone contacted you concerning her?”
He sighed wearily. “Oh, yes, people have contacted me. That’s why initially I was reluctant to talk with you. I’d categorize them either as sickos or clairvoyants. The sickos claim they’ve seen her in such locations as a drug den in Seattle, an S and M club in Los Angeles, a lesbian bar in New Orleans. One of them—a cocaine dealer—asked for a million dollars to lead me to her body; I brought in the police and they had me set up a meeting, but he didn’t show. The clairvoyants throw out hints—she’s near water, she’s being held in a cold, dark place—and want to collect a retainer before they’ll reveal more. This experience has taught me a great deal about human nature, Ms. McCone.”
“I imagine so. What about activity on her credit cards or bank accounts? Anything there?”
“Nothing at all. Originally that led me to believe she was dead. My wife is not a woman who can do without her creature comforts.”
“You say ‘originally.’ Has something happened to make you think otherwise?”
“Yes, just today. Something I don’t want to tell the police about.” He swiveled his head, scanning the room from behind the dark glasses. It was cocktail-time crowded, and no one was paying any attention to us. “I don’t know if I should be telling you this,” he went on. “If Tessa turns up unharmed, it could ruin her professionally.”
“I can keep a confidence.”
“Legally?”
“I don’t have the same status as an attorney when it comes to confidentiality, but if the occasion merits it, I can have an extremely bad memory.”
He thought about that for a moment, and it seemed to satisfy him. “Nominally I’m head of a corporation called Econium Measures. It’s really Tessa’s company. She uses it to hold and disburse investors’ funds. I’m only a figurehead, don’t know much about its operations, and only sign documents when she tells me to.”
“Why is your name on it, then?”
“Legal reasons, she tells me. I’ve always suspected it’s because she’s more comfortable being able to introduce her husband as the CEO of something, rather than as a man who does nothing.”
“Nothing at all?”
His face grew melancholy. “Nothing, according to her. I’m a classical pianist, although I’ve long ago lost my passion for performing. But I still compose, and a number of my works have been performed by others, both here and on the East Coast. Unfortunately, I’m not financially successful, so Tessa refers to music as my ‘little hobby.’ You asked earlier if there was trouble in the marriage. There is, and it stems from my lack of appropriate ambition.”
And his wife’s lack of appreciation for a pursuit that didn’t bring in large sums of money.
When I didn’t respond immediately, Lincoln knocked back what was left of his drink and took our glasses to the bar—buying time to get himself under control. I waited, looking out at the sea over the heads of early diners. The sun was sinking, orange now, and there wasn’t a wisp of fog on the horizon. It would be beautiful at Touchstone tonight: daffodils and wildflowers blooming in the meadow that sloped to the cliff, the sunset gilding the pines. I hadn’t been up there since early in March, and I was anxious to get back and begin putting the final touches to the new home Hy and I had built… .
Kelby Lincoln returned with fresh drinks. He’d taken off his dark glasses and without them his eyes looked deeply shadowed and vulnerable. He rubbed them before he replaced the lenses and said, “I’m sorry for unloading on you like that.”
“No problem. Sometimes it’s easier to confide your problems to a total stranger.”
“Perhaps. Anyway, I was about to tell you about Econium Measures. It doesn’t actually do anything except act as a clearinghouse for investors’ funds, and its accounts can contain anywhere from a few dollars to eight figures; the amounts fluctuate weekly. Tessa handles every transaction herself, doesn’t even have a staff.”
“Isn’t that unusual?”
“I wouldn’t know. As I indicated, I don’t really understand how she operates. But I do feel a certain responsibility to oversee things in her … absence, so a week after she disappeared I checked the account balances; they were huge, a total slightly over twenty-two million dollars. Her administrative assistant at the Remington Group, Steffi Robertson, explained that the week before she vanished Tessa had received a large influx of cash from the limited partners in three of her funds. It was sitting there, and the firms she was funding were waiting for her to disburse it.”
“And as CEO, you can’t do that?”
“No. The documents I sign have to be countersigned by my wife.”
“So the funds’re still in the accounts, and the companies’re still waiting.”
“The companies are still waiting. InSite magazine is on the verge of bankruptcy. But …”
“Yes?”
“The funds are gone. Apparently Steffi Robertson became worried that I might help myself to them. Somehow she obtained Tessa’s passwords, and has been monitoring the balances. This morning she came to my home and accused me of looting the accounts over the weekend.”
“Twenty-two million dollars, gone? How?”
“Electronically.”
“Are you sure this Steffi Robertson isn’t responsible?”
“I doubt it. She’s one of those people with few aspirations of their own. And she’s been with Tessa since she first formed the Remington Group. Besides, she immediately brought in a technician who so far has been unable to trace the funds, and she wanted to go to the police.”
“I gather you persuaded her not to.”
“Yes. Given her extreme loyalty to my wife, it hadn’t occurred to her that Tessa herself may have emptied the accounts. When I mentioned that, she agreed to wait until the technician had exhausted all hope of tracing the funds.”
“And how long will that take?”
“A few days, anyway.”
I studied Kelby Lincoln; he looked weary and dejected— a man who had lost even his passion for his music. Not a man who could, or would, pull off a twenty-two-million-dollar scam.
“Tell me,” I said, “do you have any reason to believe your wife disappeared voluntarily and has now moved those funds?”
He was silent for quite some time, toying with his empty glass. “I have reason to believe,” he finally replied, “that when it comes to money, my wife is capable of anything.”
A chilling assessment from one’s husband. But, as he’d said, Remington was a woman who required her creature comforts. Twenty-two million dollars was enough money to live well for several lifetimes. Or one lifetime, depending on what those particular comforts were.
Kelby Lincoln added, “So you see, Ms. McCone, the other shoe has already dropped.”
“About time you turned your phone on, McCone.” Adah Joslyn, sounding mightily irritated. “I’ve been trying to get you all afternoon.”
“It was off ?” I could have sworn that I’d left it on after I checked my office machine for messages while still parked in the lot at the Beach Chalet.
“Damn right it was off.”
Not good. At some point I must’ve unconsciously silenced the cell. I resisted it, a birthday gift from my staff that I interpreted as their attempt to tether me. “Sorry,” I told Adah.
“No skin off my pretty nose. But I finally got hold of Deputy Gil Martini at SFSD—he’s handling this end of the Smith i
nvestigation. You can call him any time.”
“Thanks. By the way, do you know anything about the Tessa Remington disappearance?”
“Officially that’s in Missing Persons’ bailiwick, but Homicide’s keeping an eye on it. Why?”
“I just talked with her husband in connection with a job I’m doing for Glenn Solomon. Any chance Lincoln’s responsible?”
“Doubtful. I read the reports, and he sounded pretty straightforward. Admitted the marriage wasn’t all it should’ve been, even offered to take a lie-detector test.”
“Well, if you hear of any new developments, will you let me know?”
“If it’s something I can give out, yes.”
“By the way, how’re you getting along with your star boarder?”
“What?”
“How’re you getting along with Ted?”
“Don’t mention that name to me. Just don’t you mention it.”
Adah hung up.
Now what was that about?
I continued driving along Folsom Street, Golden Gate Park to my right and the tidy expanse of the Outer Richmond to my left. I’d wait till I was back at the apartment to phone the local sheriff’s deputy. Then I’d plan the evening’s course of action—
The phone buzzed again. Damn tether. I glared at it before I answered.
“Sharon, it’s Glenn. Where are you?”
“In my car, on the way back to where I’m staying. Why—?”
“Give me the address, and I’ll meet you there.”
His tone was urgent; I gave it to him without any questions.
“I’ll be there in half an hour. Don’t talk with anyone till I arrive.” The line went dead.
More trouble. Of that I could be certain.
Glenn sampled the single-malt Scotch I’d set in front of him and nodded approval. “I needed that. Today has been hellish.”
“You came from the Nagasawas’?”
“Yes.”
“How’re Margaret and Daniel bearing up?”
“In their usual stoical manner. Of course, they’re caught up in making arrangements for getting proper care for Harry. Afterward, who knows? Margaret asked me to tell you they intend to call and thank you for pulling him off that cliff. And I thank you too.”