He knew I’d fixed a drink for Kayla, and giving someone a drink is the standard way to roofie somebody. So I wanted to make sure he could rule me out as a suspect. “You’ve got the contents of the hotel wastebasket,” I said. “Run a tox assay on the remnants.”
“Already did,” Balakian said. “Trust but verify, right?”
“Absolutely.”
“You said she called you and asked for your help, the night of her death. Why’d she ask for you?”
We’d already been over this. Was he trying to catch me in an inconsistency? “We met after I tracked her down. She decided she trusted me. She knew I was an outsider, not with the people who were kidnaping her.”
“That was the only time you two had met?”
“Right.”
“You said she was being taken somewhere against her will. You don’t know where?”
“Right.”
“She didn’t know?”
“She didn’t.”
“And you don’t know who her would-be kidnappers were?”
“I have a pretty good idea. The tail number on their plane traces to a company called Centurion Associates of Langley, Virginia.”
“The security firm.”
“Is that what they are?”
He ignored my question. “Why didn’t you tell me this when we spoke at the hotel?”
“I didn’t know. We just found out.”
He said nothing.
“Can I ask a question or two?”
“Go ahead,” he said unenthusiastically.
“Have you looked at the hotel’s surveillance tapes?”
“Closely. There’s not a lot of them. Nothing in the elevators, nothing on the guest floors. This is a hotel that values its guests’ privacy more than their safety. You can enter the hotel and head right for the elevator bank without being captured on video.”
“What about the service entrance?”
“There’s cameras there. But we don’t find anyone entering there and taking the elevators up during that time period.”
“What about the call she placed at eight forty-seven?”
“That went to a disposable cell phone. Which doesn’t help us at all.”
“Look, can we speak frankly?” I said.
“That’s not what we’ve been doing?”
“You said it yourself, this looked like a ‘textbook’ suicide. The slit wrists and throat, the bathtub, the hesitation marks. Then there’s the Rohypnol. Did she take it as a recreational drug? Most likely she was given a roofie to make her cooperate when they killed her, while she bled out.”
He nodded.
“Whoever did this knows what a homicide investigator looks for.”
He said nothing.
“This was a ‘suicide’ staged by a former cop, maybe even a former homicide detective.”
“That’s a wild allegation.”
“No, it’s a theory. One you should take seriously.”
“Let’s say I did. How does this help solve her murder?”
“It points to Centurion Associates. Apparently Centurion is staffed by ex-MPD cops.”
“And you think one of them killed Kayla Pitts.”
“Like I said, it’s a theory.”
“Huh,” Balakian said. For the first time he didn’t bat my suggestion away. “You may have something here.”
64
Ellen Wiley’s pied-à-terre in Washington was on N Street in Georgetown, a handsome Federal-style town house, redbrick with black shutters. The door was answered by a maid in a uniform of gray dress and white cuffs and bib apron. She took me to Ellen, who was sitting in a high-back tufted wing chair in her library, just off the front hallway. The room was lined with books, floor to ceiling. She was talking on a landline phone. She was wearing a black skirt with a white silk blouse cut low enough to show the cleft of her tanned bosom, and a string of pearls.
“But that’s just it,” she was saying, “he has no idea.” She let out a whooping laugh. “Exactly.” She saw me, smiled, and waved me into a nearby chair. “Sweetie, I have to go, I have a visitor.” She paused. “Yes, a gentleman caller.” She laughed again and hung up.
“There he is, Nick Heller!” she announced. “You’re here a full hour early. He’s not coming until eleven.”
We had arranged for me to come by her house at ten, so I just nodded and said, “This shouldn’t take more than ten minutes, then I’ll be gone.”
“Jorge,” she called out, “can you bring this gentleman some coffee?” To me she said, “He makes the best sticky buns.”
“Not for me, thanks.”
“Are you sure? They’re still warm. If I can’t have them, at least my visitors can.”
“Do you plan to meet him in here?”
“Sure, here or in the front sitting room.”
“I’m going to need you to decide now where you’ll meet him.”
“Oh, heavens, then right here.”
“Okay.” I took out from my pocket an infinity transmitter, a small black GSM bug a couple of inches square. I’d already inserted a cell phone SIM card into it. “It would help if you decided now where you’re going to sit.”
“Ooh, spy stuff. I’ll sit right here. He can sit where you’re sitting.”
“Okay, great.” I looked around. The closest power outlet was some distance away. On the table between the two chairs was a brass lamp. I lifted it up. No room under the base. No drawer in the table. “I’m going to put it under the cushion in your chair. You’ll sit there, right?”
“Honey, I don’t even have to move. Do I have to do anything with it?”
“Ignore it. I’ll call into it just before he arrives, and it’ll go right into transmission mode. I’ll be listening in from my cell phone in my car.”
“Anything you want me to ask him?”
“All I care about is that you seem genuinely interested in hiring Centurion Associates. That you have serious security concerns. The more complicated, the better. Maybe you have a stalker who won’t go away. They pride themselves on being able to handle difficult cases. Just be a tough customer.”
“Oh, that I can do,” she said. There was a flash in her eyes, and she gave a fierce smile, and I realized that I wouldn’t want to negotiate a contract with her.
I’d rented a silver Chrysler 200 because it was the most inconspicuous, anonymous-looking car I could find. I’d parked it across the street from Ellen Wiley’s town house and about a hundred feet down the block.
I sat there and waited. The traffic on N Street was two-way, but it was light. At ten minutes before eleven, a white Cadillac Escalade pulled up to the curb in front of Wiley’s house, slowed, and then moved ahead seventy-five feet or so and parallel parked. I took out my binoculars and focused on the vehicle. I saw two men in the Escalade, the driver and a passenger.
This had to be Thomas Vogel, accompanied by someone from Centurion Associates.
They were early. They knew who Ellen Wiley was and knew she represented an excellent business opportunity.
I continued to watch them through the binoculars. I could see the passenger talking to the driver. The body language indicated that Thomas Vogel was the passenger, talking to a subordinate.
At eleven o’clock exactly, Vogel got out of the Escalade, slammed the door behind him, and walked along the sidewalk to Ellen Wiley’s town house. As he walked, facing me, I could finally see him clearly.
Vogel was tall, but not a giant, maybe around my height, six-four. He was wearing a good navy suit, white shirt, and red tie — very patriotic colors — and appeared to be powerfully built. He had salt-and-pepper black hair and a mustache. He walked with a confident stride. He was a man who was used to physically dominating those around him. I recognized his face from the fishing picture in Curtis Schmidt’s house.