Teresa and the two somewhat eccentric twins spoke of what they’d discovered. Costa listened.
When they were finished, Teresa said, “We thought you ought to know.”
He took a deep breath, smiled, and said, “It’s a good theory.”
“That’s it?” Teresa asked, incensed. “That’s all you have to say?”
“You can’t base a case on some information you’ve picked up on Google.”
“Nothing else fits,” insisted one of the brothers. “Does it?”
“Just because it fits doesn’t make it true. Without some evidence, or a confession, which seems just as unlikely, we’ve nothing.”
“A confession of murder,” the other brother said. “Sure. No one’s going to own up to that easily. But … am I really the only one who sees this?”
“Yes, Hank,” Teresa said. “I believe you are.”
“You don’t need to get someone to own up to killing one of these people,” Hank said. “All you need is to get them to own up to the deal. The insurance scheme. The tontine. If he — or she — does that and gives you the names of the members, you’ve got a short list. Someone on it has to be your man.”
Teresa stared at him. “Why on earth would anyone confess to that?”
“Because they can’t all be murdering bastards. This was an accidental tontine, right?” Hank looked at Costa. “Tom Black told you that himself, didn’t he? They surely didn’t start out to kill people. Why would they? Just to get a movie made? Someone somewhere’s got to have a conscience. Even in the movie business. Either that or they’ve got to be scared. Looking around at the others wondering, ‘Was it him? Am I next?’ No sane human being’s happy in that kind of situation.”
“Know anyone who fits the bill?” Teresa asked Costa.
“I’m not sure,” he replied. “Thanks for your time.”
Then he threw some money on the table and left.
6
Costa walked out onto chestnut and looked west, towards the flat green that fronted Fort Mason. The temperature seemed to have fallen a few degrees in the brief time he’d been inside the café. Gerald Kelly was right about the weather.
In the early days after they’d arrived in San Francisco, he’d checked the whereabouts of everyone involved in Inferno. Everyone except Maggie, since that felt somehow prurient. Roberto Tonti lived just a few hundred yards away in his bleached white mansion opposite the Palace of Fine Arts. Dino Bonetti usually took a suite in the Four Seasons on Market.
And Simon Harvey had a rented apartment on Marina Boulevard, not far from the Lukatmi building.
Someone somewhere’s got to have a conscience.
So how do you prick it?
He phoned Maggie. She was trying on some clothes for the premiere in a downtown store, surrounded, she complained, by plainclothes police. The two of them made small talk, then she asked, “Why did you really call, Nic? It wasn’t to check what I was going to wear tonight, was it?”
“I need to know something. A straight answer, Maggie. It’s important and it’s not what it sounds.”
“That has an ominous ring to it.” He heard her move somewhere more private.
“Was your relationship with Simon Harvey ever more than professional? If so, is it over? And if it is, how does he feel about that?”
He could hear the sharp, disappointed intake of breath down the phone. He could imagine the pain this question caused.
“Oh, Nic. You’re not going to do this to me all the time, are you? Ask about the past? There are a lot of questions and not many answers you’re going to like.”
“It’s never going to happen again. And I wish I didn’t have to ask now. But I do. It’s important.”
“To you?”
“In the sense that it concerns your safety … yes. Someone tried to harm you.”
“Not Simon, never Simon. That’s ludicrous …”
He hesitated. He really didn’t want to know. “You’re certain of that?”
“Yes. I am. We had an affair five years ago while we were filming that pirate nonsense. It lasted a few months. Then he joined the long line of ex-lovers who couldn’t take my behaviour any longer. I hurt him, Nic. A lot. I know because he’s told me more than once. He thought … Simon thought he could save me from myself. Some men do. It still pains him. From time to time he tries to pick up the pieces. Why do you think he was there in the sanatorium that day? Why do you think he gets so awkward when you’re around?”
“I’m sorry I had to ask.”
“I’m sorry, too. Don’t ever do it again.”
The phone went dead.
7
Simon Harvey’s apartment was on the ground floor of a Spanish-style block close to the yacht moorings that adjoined the eastern face of Fort Mason. The fog was now rolling in from the Bay with a steady momentum. There were three uniformed SFPD cops outside the door. They didn’t give him any trouble once they saw Costa’s ID. Kelly must have put round the word.
Harvey didn’t answer the bell straightaway. When he did, he didn’t look like a man preparing for the movie event of his career.
“What the hell did I do to deserve this?” He kept the door half open, blocking Costa’s way.
“I thought perhaps I’d need a publicist, now you’re setting the paparazzi on me.”
Harvey’s hair was shorter, freshly cut. The vaguely hip, student-like appearance was gone. He was trying on a tuxedo over a pair of jeans and a white dress shirt.
“Does this look like a good time to you? I’m getting dressed.”
“It’s a good time for me …” Costa began.
Harvey swore and began to close the door. Costa slipped his foot in the gap and his arm up against the wood.
“What the hell is this?” Harvey yelled. “Some Roman punk can’t just come here and start harassing me.” He glared at the three uniforms by the front gate, beyond the small, immaculate lawn of the garden. “Hey. Hey. Do I get some protection here? Well? Do I?”
One of the men turned briefly and shrugged.
Costa leaned forward and said, “Just a minute of your time, sir …”
“You don’t deserve a second of my time—”
“Simon,” Costa interrupted, “I know.”
The pressure on the door relaxed a little. Harvey’s bright, intelligent eyes narrowed. “What’s that supposed to mean? You know what?”
“I know about the scam. The tontine that Roberto Tonti had you and Dino Bonetti run up. The one that got Inferno made even though you didn’t have the money. Just a treasure chest offshore, one part Lukatmi, one part Inferno. All under-the-counter, half of it worthless, half—”
“—worth what? Worth killing for? That’s crap.” Harvey scowled at him. “You really are something else. You mess with one of my stars. You almost get her killed. And now you stand on my doorstep accusing me of murder. Get the hell out of here.”
Costa launched himself forward, pushed Simon Harvey hard back through the entrance, kicked the door shut behind, and held him tight against the wall, elbow to his throat. This close he could smell some rank, harsh spirit on Harvey’s breath. It seemed rather early in the day for vodka.
“I don’t care about you,” Costa murmured. “Not for one moment. I don’t care who it was turned murderous. Or that he may still have your name on the list of people standing between him and the pot of gold waiting in Grand Cayman.”
“Get out of my home—” Harvey began. Then he shut up.