61
EARLY SUNDAY MORNING Don Wells got up, dressed and drove to the Acapulco airport. He handed his car over to a lineman for parking, then got aboard the CitationJet. While they were taxiing, he called Capitán Rodríguez at his office and was told that the capitán didn’t come in on Sundays.
“Please give him a message for me when he comes in tomorrow,” Wells said. “This is Donald Wells. Tell him that I have had to return to Los Angeles unexpectedly, but that if he needs any further information or assistance from me he can reach me at my office any time.” He gave the officer the number and hung up.
As the jet climbed out of Acapulco and turned toward Los Angeles, Wells allowed himself to relax in a fashion he had not known since he had made the phone call to Ed Eagle from Rome. Things had not gone as smoothly as he had planned, but he had met every twist and turn with the right moves, and now he could inherit the nearly one billion from his wife’s estate that was free and clear of other bequests, and with Jack Cato losing himself in Mexico, he could enjoy his new wealth without the nagging presence of his wife and the constant attention demanded by his stepson.
Jack would call him before long and let him know where to send his next payment, and when Jack went to meet the messenger, he would cease being of any concern to Wells. All doors to his past would be closed, and he would be safe.
He accepted a Bloody Mary from the copilot and gazed out the window at the Mexican beaches far below. This would be his last trip to Mexico and his last trip anywhere in anything but the Gulfstream 550 jet he had already ordered.
Life was going to be sweet.
THEY LANDED AT Santa Monica, and his car was waiting as he came down the air stair. He tossed his briefcase into the front passenger seat and waited for a moment while his luggage was loaded into the trunk by the lineman, then drove out of the airport and headed home to Malibu.
He had his eye on a lot in the Malibu Colony, where he would build himself a new house, one designed only for him and not for a meddlesome wife and child with their own needs.
He would finance his own films from now on; he would never again have to make a pitch for studio money. He would move to new offices, too, and the Hollywood community would know that he was a force to be reckoned with. Membership in the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences would follow, maybe even an Oscar or two.
He would get rid of the Acapulco beach house and buy something in the South of France, something close enough to Cannes to allow him to throw major parties every year during the film festival. The new Gulfstream would transport him and his friends effortlessly to and from his new home in France.
Maybe a major house in Aspen, too, a real showplace. Maybe he’d start his own film festival there, become a patron to new directors and writers, people who could make him more money in the future.
He pulled into the garage of his Malibu home, closed the garage door and walked into his kitchen with his bags, then froze. Someone in dark clothes was bending over, looking into his refrigerator.
Wells stood and stared at this rather large ass. Burglar, had to be a burglar; go back to the car, leave the house, call the police.
“Mr. Wells?” a voice said from another direction.
Wells turned and stared at another man, who was wearing a business suit, latex gloves and a badge, hanging from his coat’s breast pocket.
“What’s going on?” Wells asked.
The man walked toward him, holding out two folded pieces of paper. “I am Detective John Ralston, of the Los Angeles Police Department. I have a warrant to search your premises . . .”
“Search my house? Why would you do that?”
“. . . and a warrant for your arrest on two charges of first-degree murder.” The man set the two documents on the kitchen counter and produced a pair of handcuffs. “Turn around, please, and put your hands behind you.”
Wells stood, frozen in place, so the detective spun him around and cuffed him.
“Now listen, please, while I read your rights. You have the right to remain silent . . .”
Wells immediately thought of Tina and Soledad. That’s what this is about, he thought. Keep your mouth shut and call a lawyer.
“Do you understand these rights?”
“Yes,” Wells said. “I want to call my lawyer.”
“Come with me; I’ll get you a telephone.” The detective led him into his study, uncuffed one hand and cuffed him to his chair. “There you go. Make your phone call and just wait here.” He started to leave.
Wells needed to know something. “Detective, whom am I charged with murdering?”
“Why, your wife and son, of course. The extradition process is under way. I’ll be back in a minute.” He left the room.
Wells had to reorient his thinking before he took his address book from an open drawer, looked up Ed Eagle’s home number in Santa Fe and dialed it.
“Hello,” the deep voice said.
“Ed, it’s Don Wells.”
“Good morning, Don. What can I do for you on a Sunday morning?” he asked drily.
“Ed, my house is full of cops, searching it.”
“What for?”
“I don’t know, but they also have an arrest warrant.”
“On what charge?”
“Murder of my wife and son. This is crazy, Ed! They’re extraditing me to Santa Fe, and I need you to represent me again.”
“Well, first of all, Don, it’s not crazy. I had a call a few minutes ago from Bob Martínez—you remember him—the district attorney here?”
“Yes, of course.”
“And Bob tells me they’ve got Jack Cato in jail here in Santa Fe, and he’s singing like a bird.”
“But that’s not possible; Jack’s in . . .”
“Mexico? I’m afraid not, Don. There was some sort of kerfuffle at the border, and Cato made the mistake of reentering the United States, where an arrest warrant was waiting for him. They flew him back here overnight.”
“Ed, will you represent me?”
“No, Don, I’ve already resigned from that job, remember?”
“But I need the best possible Santa Fe lawyer, Ed, and that’s you.”
“Don, let me give you some free advice, something your next lawyer may not be too anxious to explain to you, since he will want to milk as much money as possible out of you before he does the deal.”
“Deal?”
“That’s my advice, Don. Make the best deal you can. Martínez is not unreasonable; he’ll take the death penalty off the table, if you give him a complete confession.”
“You’re advising me to send myself to prison?”
“It’s that or send yourself to death row for a few years until your appeals are exhausted and they execute you. You’re done, Don. Cato has cooked your goose to a fine turn. He even has you on tape. Now, if you want me to represent you just to make the deal, I’ll do that, but I won’t stand up in a courtroom and plead you not guilty. You’ve already lied to me repeatedly, and I don’t like clients who lie to me, even if a lot of them do.”
“I don’t want to take a deal,” Wells said.
“Then I suggest you call Raoul Samora, who is the second-best trial lawyer in Santa Fe, or James Parnell, who is nearly as good. You can get their numbers from Information. Anything else I can do for you, Don?”
“No,” Wells said, “there isn’t.” He hung up the phone and slumped in his chair. He looked around the room at the beautiful elm paneling in his study, at the books and papers that the police had scattered in their search, at the picture that had covered his safe, which stood exposed. He fought nausea.
With a trembling hand, Wells dialed 411 and got the usual recorded message. “Santa Fe, New Mexico,” he said, “residence of Raoul Samora.”
62
ED EAGLE HUNG up the phone just as Susannah entered the bedroom bearing a tray for him containing eggs Benedict. A moment later, she was back with her own tray and adjusting the rake of the electric bed. “Who was that, calling on a Sunday morning?”
“Don Wells,” Eagle said. “They’ve arrested him, and he’s looking for a lawyer again.”
“Not you, I hope.”
“That’s what I told him. I gave him a couple of names. With Cato’s testimony facing him he’s going to have to plead guilty to save his life.”
“Which is pretty much over.”
“Who knows, maybe they’ll let him do a prison film.”
They both dug into their eggs.
“It really is over, isn’t it? Confirm that for me just once more.”
“It really is over. Barbara’s in a Mexican jail, Don Wells will soon be in a New Mexican jail, and Jack Cato, the man who shot you already is.”
“Nobody’s ever going to shoot me again,” Susannah said.
“I sincerely hope not.”
The front doorbell rang the bedside phone intercom.
“Who the hell would be here on a Sunday morning?” Susannah asked.
Eagle pressed the speaker button on the phone. “Yes?”
“Flowers for Mr. Eagle and Ms. Wilde,” a woman’s voice said.
“Flowers?” Susannah asked. “Who would send us flowers?”
“Just leave them on the front doorstep,” Eagle said.
“I’m sorry, sir. I need a signature.”
“Who are they from?”
“I’m sorry; I’m not allowed to read the card.”
“Hang on a minute,” Eagle said. He switched off the speakerphone, set his tray aside and got out of bed, naked.
“Just tell her to go away,” Susannah said.
“This will just take a minute,” Eagle said, getting into a robe and slippers. He walked through the house to the front door and opened it. A small woman stood there, mostly hidden by an elaborate bouquet of flowers.
“Where would you like me to put them?” the woman asked.
“On the table over there,” Eagle said, “to your right.” He stepped back and allowed the woman to enter. As she passed, he snagged a small envelope hanging from the bouquet, opened it and read the card:
Thanks for everything, Ed. You deserve this.
Barbara
“When did you take this order?” Eagle asked the woman, who had set down the bouquet and was turning to face him. He heard the noise before he saw the gun in her hand. He flinched as something struck his left ear, then he ran for the front door, hoping to close it between them before she could get off another round.
“Susannah, get out of the house!” he yelled as another shot struck the doorjamb.
Then he heard another, louder noise, just once, and everything went quiet.
“Ed?” Susannah called.
“She’s got a gun!” Eagle yelled, flattening himself against the outer wall of the house.
“Not anymore,” Susannah said. “You can come back in.”
Eagle peeked through the front door. The flower woman was lying, spread-eagled on her back, her chest pumping blood. Susannah still stood in a combat stance, holding the .45 that he kept in his bedside drawer.
“Who is she?” Susannah asked.
“I have no idea, except that she delivered a message.” He picked up the card from where he had dropped it and handed it to Susannah.
She glanced at it but kept the pistol pointed at the flower woman. “She’s still bleeding, so she must still be alive. You’d better call an ambulance and the police. Make that two ambulances; you’re bleeding like a stuck pig.”
Eagle put a hand to his ear and walked over to the flower woman, kicking her small pistol away from her. “She’s stopped bleeding,” he said, bending over and putting two fingers to her throat. “She’s dead.”
Susannah walked to the nearest phone, called 911, and spoke to the operator, then she went to the fridge in the kitchen and came back with some ice wrapped in a dish towel and applied it to Eagle’s ear.
“You’ve got a nice, clean notch there,” she said. “A battle scar in the Barbara wars.”
“Which are now, officially, over,” he said.
“That’s what you said five minutes ago,” she replied, kissing him. “I’m going to keep going around armed for a while.”
“So am I,” he said, putting an arm around her and leading her back to the bedroom. “We’d better dress for the police.”
“When they’re gone, I’ll start over with the eggs Benedict,” she said.
“When they’re gone, we’ll start over with everything,” Eagle replied.
Epilogue
LEE HIGHT SAT at her desk in Joe Wilen’s old office, drafting a document in connection with his charitable foundation. Margie, Joe’s old secretary and now Lee’s, walked into the room, holding a newspaper.
“Did you see this?” she asked, placing the San Francisco morning paper on her desk. She tapped a story at the bottom of the front page.
Lee looked up to see the headline:
WALTER KEELER’S WIDOW CONVICTED IN MEXICO |
Acapulco (AP) Barbara Eagle Keeler, widow of Palo Alto billionaire Walter Keeler, was convicted today in an Acapulco court of three counts of attempted murder. In spite of a brigade of expensive Mexican lawyers, the testimony of the three victims, Cupie Dalton of Los Angeles, Vittorio (only one name) of Santa Fe, New Mexico, both private investigators, and Ernesto Rodríguez, the nephew of the chief of police of Acapulco, proved convincing to the all-male jury. |
Mrs. Keeler’s attorneys moved for a stay of sentencing, pending appeal, but the judge rejected their motion and immediately sentenced her to a term of twenty-five years to life and ordered her to prison. |
A two-attorney delegation from the Palo Alto district attorney’s office presented an extradition request and arrest warrant on one count of murder, that of Joe Wilen, a business associate of and attorney for Walter Keeler, but the judge told them they would have to wait at least twenty-five years to serve the papers. |
A man, Jack Cato, who alleges that Mrs. Keeler hired him to kill Mr. Wilen, has been giving testimony in another murder trial in a Santa Fe, New Mexico, court, that of film producer, Donald Wells, who is charged with arranging the murders of his wife, a pharmaceuticals heiress, and her son. |
The article continued inside the paper, but Lee stopped reading. “This is all I need,” she said. “Margie, I’ll dictate a letter to our bank, cutting off the woman’s monthly payments, then you get hold of a San Francisco realtor and put the apartment on the market. Tell them to clean out her clothes and personal belongings and give them to some charity.”
“Love to,” Margie replied, sitting down, steno pad in hand.