It was not the benefit that worried her. All arrangements had been completed months earlier by a committee of mothers whose party-planning skills were beyond question. These women dominated every museum board in town, and for good reason. They had personal relationships with the best caterers, florists, auctioneers, bandleaders. The theme this year was Christmas in the Alps. Every facet of the evening had been meticulously crafted to fit, down to the authentic lederhosen on the gorgeous young waitstaff and truckloads of evergreen boughs lit with tiny electric candles that looked uncannily real.
The benefit would begin with a live auction held in Holbrooke’s auditorium, where everything from the trendiest ski togs to time-shares in Gstaad would go on the block, called by a prominent auctioneer from Sotheby’s. Then Patricia would get up and read the names of the donors in Miss Holbrooke’s Inner Circle, which was reserved for those who’d given in excess of two hundred fifty thousand dollars to the endowment campaign. Then the main event-and this one Patricia would’ve resisted if she hadn’t feared looking suspicious. Roger and Enid Van Allen would ascend to the stage at precisely seven-thirty, their bankers on standby. In a dramatic live-action PowerPoint presentation projected for the audience’s entertainment, they would transfer ten million dollars into Holbrooke’s account. Patricia would then unveil the architect’s drawing of the new Van Allen Upper School Building.
After the show was over, guests would be ferried by a squadron of horse-drawn carriages hired for the occasion to the grand ballroom of a nearby hotel for a banquet featuring beluga caviar, squab, rack of lamb, and raspberries sabayon paired with appropriate wines and champagnes, followed by dancing and the distribution of lavish Burberry gift bags containing goodies worth hundreds of dollars, provided free of charge by merchants looking to score points with the Holbrooke parent body.
Her own preparations for the big event would take Patricia most of tomorrow. A final fitting of the dress with her tailor scheduled for first thing, followed by facial, manicure, pedicure, retouching of highlights, blow-dry, and makeup at Elizabeth Arden. She should be finished by four. All the financial details had been attended to. The Van Allens’ bank had the requisite codes and account information, and Holbrooke’s bankers stood ready as well. Patricia was not at all concerned about the money’s getting wired in. No. That wasn’t the problem.
What troubled her, what had her positively beside herself, was how in hell to get the money out. The whole scheme had been months, years even, in the planning, and now a key element had gone and failed on her. Had up and, actually, disappeared. Which made her desperately afraid that there was some unknown wrench in the works. The safeguard made so much sense at the time she put it in place. She didn’t want her own fingerprints-literally speaking-on the account. Of course not, that would be foolish. She didn’t expect that the skimming would ever be discovered, but if it were, she needed deniability. She needed a scapegoat, a fall guy. So naturally she chose somebody she believed she could easily manipulate. Carmen Reyes.
Patricia poured herself a scotch and sighed deeply, walking over to look out her window, thirty-three stories above street level. The evening sky was a luminous gray with black clouds like thumbprints scudding across it. Powdery flakes blew sideways in the wind, obscuring the midtown skyline in a cottony veil. She understood there was no way around this problem. If Carmen didn’t turn up by tomorrow, Patricia would simply have to tell James the scheme was off. But not before she asked him where he’d been on Monday night when his daughter died. Because, despite what that prosecutor seemed to think, he hadn’t been with her.
50
MELANIE WAS CLIMBING the walls. She’d been sitting on her butt in the hotel room, supposedly waiting to play switchboard operator, but since the rest of the team was incommunicado, they hadn’t required her services. Dan and Bridget had driven off to El Yunque hours ago with five enormous local cops in mirrored shades and flashy uniforms. By now they should have taken up position around El Baño Grande, a decrepit and overgrown stone swimming pool in El Yunque park where the drug deal was supposed to go down in two hours. They were maintaining radio silence, so Melanie couldn’t exactly call for an update. Nor could she reach Lieutenant Albano or Ray-Ray Wong, who presumably were on a plane to San Juan tailing Trevor Leonard. At least she hoped that’s where they were. Trevor’s safety was her greatest worry right now, and there’d been no news on him since she’d first learned he’d dropped from view.
She decided to check her office voice mail back home in order to have something productive to do.
“You have two new messages.”
The first was left at 1:47 P.M.-Shavonne Washington from the Chief Medical Examiner’s Office.
“Hey, Melanie, we just got the results on that comprehensive tox screen you requested, and they’re pretty interesting. Brianna Meyers’s came out like you’d expect, just heroin. But Whitney’s tox had a little added bonus. Lethal levels of not only heroin but OxyContin-repeat, OxyContin. Oxy’s a powerful prescription painkiller. People do use it recreationally and overdose accidentally. But you should also know it’s the drug of choice for murders made to look like ODs. Whitney had about twenty times the therapeutic dosage in her blood. To get levels that high, you’d have to cook the Oxy and heroin together and shoot up the cocktail, but still, you woulda had to make one huge wrongheaded mistake on the dosage. If you recall, the doc found fresh tracks between her toes, so that looks good for point of entry. But like you said, where’s the syringe? This is all starting to smell kinda funky, you ask me.”
Whitney Seward had been murdered, and somebody had gone to great lengths to make it look like an accidental overdose. Melanie and Dan had suspected this from day one; now there was official confirmation. The obvious explanation was that Esposito had done it, of course. Maybe Whitney had become a liability somehow. Maybe she’d threatened to go to the police, tried to blackmail him. A guy like Esposito hardly needed an excuse to order a hit. But, tempting as it might be to bow to the obvious, that theory just didn’t sit right with Melanie. If Esposito had been responsible, he’d want to keep his name out of it. So why fake an OD using Golpe packets that would lead the cops right back to his operation? Why erase all the numbers but his own from Whitney’s cell phone?
Melanie was already thinking “frame-up.” Then she listened to the next message, and became a hundred percent convinced.
The message had been left on her office voice mail at 7:20 P.M., which, adjusting for the time difference, was less than an hour ago. “Um, hi, it’s Lulu. Look, I said I told you everything I know, but that wasn’t true. Carmen was real upset about something going down in the school office at Holbrooke that didn’t have nothing to do with Jay Esposito. The Esposito thing…well, somebody made me say that, okay? I can explain. Please call me, because I’m real scared and I need to talk to you.”
The school office at Holbrooke? Melanie didn’t know what to make of that one. She listened to that message three times through to get a clearer understanding, and the major thing she came away with was that somebody was out to frame Jay Esposito. Lulu Reyes had been ordered by an unknown individual to implicate him in Carmen’s disappearance. Falsely. That could mean Expo didn’t have Carmen. Beyond that, it could mean he wasn’t responsible for the deaths of Whitney Seward and Brianna Meyers either. So what did that say about the entire direction of their investigation? Or even about this drug deal tonight? Was the hand-to-hand in El Yunque for real but just unrelated to Whitney and Brianna’s deaths? Or was the drug deal orchestrated by the true killer, an elaborate ploy intended to throw off the cops? A hoax, a diversion-God forbid, an ambush?