"That's him," Billie answered after consulting the photograph that Benjamin Kellogg had sent her.
"Okay, now I've got him. Arnold, yeah. He was at my apartment. You say he was murdered?"
"Yes, sir. What can you tell me about the meeting?"
"Arnold bought one of my photographs from the Pitzer-Kraft Gallery. Fran works there. She called and told me that Arnold almost fainted while he was looking at it. She thought he was having a heart attack. Then he insisted on seeing me."
"What did he want?"
"He wanted to know everything about the couple in the photograph. That was the subject of the show, couples. This one was from Portland."
"What did you tell him?"
"Nothing much. They're all candid shots. I'd see a couple and snap them without them knowing I'd done it. I never got any names."
"Can you describe the couple in the shot that Arnold purchased?"
"It was a man and woman walking across that big open square you've got in the middle of the city."
"Pioneer Square?"
"That's it."
"Anything else you can tell me about them?"
"Arnold was pretty upset about that picture. He got more upset when I couldn't help him."
"Can you send me a print?"
"I think so. I'll have to look for the negative. I moved recently and everything's still a mess."
"Try hard, Mr. Bernier. That picture may show the person who murdered Gene Arnold."
Chapter Seventeen.
"Brock wanted you to know that everyone is in the conference room," Renee Gilchrist said.
Arthur Briggs's mouth was set in a grim line and Renee noticed dark circles under his eyes. "Tell Brock I'll be right down," he said.
One of the lines on his phone rang. Renee headed for the phone, but Briggs waved her away.
"Briggs," the senior partner answered absently. Then he straightened up. "Put him through."
Briggs turned to Renee. "I want my calls held. Tell Newbauer and the others to go ahead without me. Shut the door on your way out."
Renee crossed the room as Briggs turned back to the phone.
"Dr. Kaidanov, there are a lot of people who are very anxious to speak with you," she heard Briggs say as she pulled the door shut.
Thirty minutes later Arthur Briggs entered a small conference room. Brock Newbauer and Susan Webster were seated on one side of a polished oak table. Facing them were Isaac Geller, the chairman of the board of Geller Pharmaceuticals, and Byron McFall, the company's president.
Geller was a medical-school dropout in his late forties who had made a fortune in commercial real estate when he met McFall, a powerfully built man ten years his junior, at a golf resort. The men hit it off immediately. By the time Geller was ready to return to Chicago and McFall to his investment firm in Seattle, they had agreed to talk about a possible investment by Geller in a financially troubled Oregon pharmaceutical company that was doing some interesting research. Both men had made millions as the result of their chance meeting.
"How bad is this thing, Arthur?" Geller asked as Briggs took his place at the head of the table.
"What's your take, Brock?" Briggs asked, addressing his junior partner.
Newbauer was surprised to be called on since Briggs was rarely interested in his opinion.
"Well, we've all heard the news. They're saying that man was set on fire and the monkeys, too," Newbauer said, stumbling. "It's terrible publicity. The Oregonian had an editorial this morning." Newbauer glanced across the table at Geller and McFall, then looked away quickly. "They're implying that the company had something to do with the murder."
"Which is utter hogwash," McFall said. "I want you to look into suing that rag for libel. And I want to find out who leaked that report to the press."
"I'm already on top of it, Byron," Briggs assured the irate executive. "What should we advise Geller Pharmaceuticals to do about the lawsuit, Brock?"
"I don't think we have a choice. Susan tells me there's a good chance that Judge Norris will let the Kaidanov letter in, and now it looks like Flynn has a copy of the study, too. If a jury hears evidence about the murder and the dead monkeys . . ." He shook his head despondently. "I think we have to seriously consider making a settlement offer."
Briggs nodded in a manner that made it appear that he valued Newbauer's advice before focusing his attention on Susan Webster.
"What do you think we should do?" he asked.
"I agree with Brock," Susan said firmly. "My research leads me to believe that Judge Norris will let Flynn use the Kaidanov documents at trial. If he convinces a jury that Geller Pharmaceuticals covered up Kaidanov's study, we'll lose the case and the damages will be astronomical. If Flynn convinces the jury that someone connected with Geller murdered Kaidanov and set fire to those monkeys, we'll need the world's biggest computer to figure the damages."
"This is bullshit, Arthur," McFall exploded. "I've talked with all our top people. No one knows anything about that damn lab or those fucking monkeys."
"Susan isn't suggesting you do. She's talking about a hypothetical situation so we can try to decide our best course of action."
"Which is?" Geller asked.
"I'd rather not say just yet," Briggs replied.
"Well, I insist that you do," McFall ordered angrily. "I'm the president of a company that pays your firm several million dollars a year. This is the biggest challenge Geller Pharmaceuticals has ever faced and we need your advice."
During McFall's tirade, Isaac Geller had been coolly appraising his corporate counsel. Briggs was calm and composed, completely unruffled by a verbal assault under which Geller had seen many strong men and women wilt.
"You're onto something, aren't you, Arthur?"
Briggs smiled noncommittally.
Geller turned to McFall. "Maybe we shouldn't press Arthur," Geller suggested quietly. "His representation has always been top-notch. I'm certain that there must be something very important afoot if he is playing his cards so close to the vest."
"I still don't appreciate our attorney keeping secrets from us, Isaac," McFall insisted to save face.
"I respect Arthur's judgment."
"Very well," McFall grumbled, "but this better be good."
Briggs stood. "Thank you, gentlemen. I'll be in contact shortly, and I don't think you'll be disappointed."
Chapter Eighteen.
As soon as he got up, Daniel called Amanda Jaffe's office, but Amanda was in Washington County for three days handling pretrial motions in a murder case. After breakfast, Daniel went downtown and spent the day job hunting. He returned to his apartment, tired and discouraged, to find the light on his answering machine blinking. He pressed the play button, hoping that the caller was Kate or Amanda Jaffe.
"Ames, this is Arthur Briggs. I was wrong about you and I need your help. There's been a development in the Insufort case and you are the only one I can trust. Meet me tonight at eight."
The rest of the message told him how to get to a country cottage near the Columbia Gorge. Daniel's first reaction was that the message was a hoax engineered by Joe Molinari, but Daniel had heard Briggs's voice enough to know that it was his ex-boss on the phone. Only the message did not make sense. Briggs hated him, and even if he didn't, why would he need his help? He had partners, associates, and investigators galore. Daniel was a disgraced, disgruntled ex-employee-not exactly the person Briggs would be expected to call in an emergency. And why would Briggs want to meet miles out of town instead of in his office?
Daniel decided that there was only one way to discover if the call was genuine. He dialed Briggs's office.
"Renee, it's Daniel Ames."
"Oh, Daniel, I am so sorry. Are you okay?"
"I'm fine, thanks. Is Mr. Briggs in?"
"No. He's gone for the day. He'll be here in the morning."