“I hope you find who killed Jordan, but I didn’t know him well enough to help you. I’m sorry, but I do have another meeting.”
When she rose, Eve and Peabody followed suit.
“Do you know your husband’s family?”
“Many of them. Hugo’s not like most of them, actually. His grandfather, ‘The General,’ said to me on our wedding day that I’d be the making of Hugo.”
Her mouth twisted into a tight, bitter smile. “He was wrong.”
“Is he close to any of them?”
“It’s hard to say. If someone can be useful, Hugo is clever at exploiting a relationship. Until they’re no longer useful.”
“Okay, thanks for your time. Do you know if the party hosts are in residence today?”
“No, they’re not. It was a bon voyage party. Delvinia and Thad left the next day for Turks and Caicos. They’ll be yachting through the spring.”
14
“‘Yachting through the spring.’” Eve just shook her head as they rode the elevator down to the garage.
“Does Roarke have a yacht?” Peabody wondered. “Not that either of you would yacht through the spring or whatever.”
“No to both. He’s not big on boats.”
“A yacht’s kind of a super boat. Anyway, Hugo’s kind of a shit.”
“He’s a complete shit. And he still checks off a lot of boxes. He doesn’t give a rat’s ass about anybody but Hugo, enjoyed putting his wife in an awkward position with the cops during a murder investigation. Let’s check out his travel over the weekend. Convenient he got back in time for the party, one Jordan went to. I never like convenient. It brushes close to coincidence.”
“I think she was being straight when she said he is too lazy to kill somebody.”
“As she sees it,” Eve said. “Which doesn’t mean he wouldn’t be an accessory. He didn’t snap anybody’s neck, but I bet he wouldn’t mind watching it done. I bet he wouldn’t mind setting some family up, using somebody to blow up a bunch of people, if he got some juice out of it. Pleasure and greed—I think he lives by both.”
“And he’s a shit,” Peabody said as they crossed to the car.
“Exactly. We’re going to track down the couple yachting till spring. Maybe both killers partied first. I don’t think so, but maybe.”
She drove out. Then, as it was on the way, stopped at Banks’s art gallery.
“Let’s see if we have anything here.”
She double-parked, ignored the outrage of horns and shouted expletives as she flipped up the On Duty sign.
“Shouldn’t be long.”
The Banks Gallery was a glossy little place tucked amid glossy little boutiques and glossy little cafés.
A sign on the door said Ferme, but the lights shined. Eve gave the glass door a few good raps.
Trueheart strode into view, spotted them, came straight to the door. He unlocked it, pulled it open.
“Lieutenant. We weren’t expecting you.”
“In the neighborhood. What have you got?”
“Maisie’s—ah, Ms. Kelsi’s still stuck on three possibles. In fact, she’s leaning toward a fourth now that she’s looking at her notes and checking artists’ web pages.”
“Let me talk to her.”
He guided them through—a lot of movable walls covered with art. Some of it incomprehensible to her, some she thought nice enough. Banks had definitely favored naked people, but he’d displayed landscapes, cityscapes, seascapes, still lifes.
She didn’t get the still-life tag. Weren’t all paintings still?
Trueheart led the way into an office. It hit glossy, too. Obviously Banks had liked his fancy comforts. The big sofa, the big chair, the big desk. Lots of naked people on the walls here, and a full-size AutoChef.
Baxter sat on a rolling chair hip to hip with the iced artist chick.
At the length of bare leg showing under the desk, Eve judged her as tall, and clearly thin as a whip. Her hair had that just-out-of-bed tousle in cool, cool blond, and her eyes held an emerald pop of green.
She spoke in a breathy, I’m-so-aroused voice Eve imagined had Baxter’s blood simmering.
“I really think . . . maybe.”
She looked up, blinked those emerald eyes. “Oh, I’m so sorry. We’re closed.”
“Maisie, this is Lieutenant Dallas. And Detective Peabody.”
“I see.” She rose—and yes, a lot of long leg in a short, tight black skirt. “I’m really sorry I can’t be sure about the artwork. Jordan . . .”
“It’s not speaking ill of the dead, Maisie,” Baxter said gently. “It’s helping find out who made him dead.”
“You’re right. He just took artwork when he felt like it. He usually brought them back every few weeks. A rotation. He should have recorded it all—he excused it by calling it marketing. Having guests over, potential clients, showing off the work in his home. But that wasn’t the reason, and he didn’t care about excusing it.”
Maybe she spoke in a breathy baby-doll voice, Eve thought, but she wasn’t anyone’s idiot.
“Your work?”
“Mine, too. I could’ve objected, but I needed the job here, and wanted the exposure. Most of the artists displayed here feel—felt—the same. He took a steeper commission than the standard, but he also took a lot of new artists who couldn’t get into other galleries. It was a trade-off.”
“He piss anyone off?”
“Routinely.” She smiled a little. “Not enough to kill him. With him gone, the gallery’s going to close. That doesn’t do any of us any good.”
“Okay. Can you show me the art you think might be the one?”
“What I did was dig up some old files—mine,” she added. “I minored in office management, which is how I got the job here as gallery manager. Anyway, sorry. I tried keeping my own files, and I’ve been trying to coordinate them with what I can pull from the web pages of artists we’ve featured.”
“That’s good,” Eve told her.
“It’s been nagging at me. I just couldn’t let it go, so I remembered the files I’d stored at home. I was just about to tag David when he tagged me because I thought, maybe . . .”
She lifted her hands. “I can’t get it below these three—and now there’s another I think . . . maybe. Not all artists are good at the business and marketing sides, so their web pages aren’t well organized and updated, so there’s that issue. The other problem is, I haven’t been in Jordan’s place for months, and I know he switched things out since. A few times since. But these . . .”
She brought one up on the wall screen from her tablet. “This is Selma’s. Selma Witt. It’s her Woman at Rest. Selma’s very good. She works primarily in acrylics, but does some excellent charcoals and pastels. I know Jordan took this one out, but that was last fall—maybe even the end of last summer. There’s no record of him bringing it back, or of it being sold. It’s not in the gallery. The thing is, he didn’t usually keep anything as long as that.”
Eve studied the work—the drawing of a woman in bed, reclining against a mound of pillows and on tangled sheets.
Eve closed her eyes, put herself back in Banks’s apartment, tried to bring back the black-and-white art on his walls.
Should’ve paid more attention, she thought. They all looked so much the same.
“Give me another.”
“This is Simon Fent’s work. He’s . . . Well, he’s not as good as Selma, but he does show promise. There’s still a student’s hesitancy in his work, a failure to commit to the vision, but Jordan liked it. It’s the only one of Simon’s we took on.”
“Keep going.”
She brought another up, and Eve lifted a hand. “This one. Wait.”
She turned away for a minute, tried to bring those damn walls back, the black frames, the black-and-white figures in them.
Turned back.
“This one. Third from the entrance door.”
“This is Angelo Richie, one of his early sketches. He actually gave this one to Jordan—or Jordan said he did. As a thank-you for giving him his first gallery sale. Even this earlier work? You can see the talent. His people move, they breathe. These are lovers, and you see the joy. Reunited, it’s called. They’ve come together again after being separated, and—”