8
EAGLE AND SHEA were having breakfast when Susannah, looking dazed, wandered into the kitchen. Eagle got her into a chair.
“I’m sorry about last night,” Susannah said.
“It’s all right,” Ed said.
“Had to happen,” Dan chimed in. “You can’t go through something like that without it having an effect. How do you feel?”
“Rested but a little dopey. Did you give me something?”
“No,” Dan said. “I didn’t think you needed anything.”
“I’ll make you some eggs,” Eagle said.
She picked up half of his English muffin and spread some marmalade on it. “No, thanks, this will do fine.”
Eagle gave her some juice and, when she had downed it, filled her coffee mug.
“That’s what I need,” she said, sipping the strong liquid.
“Well,” Dan said, rising, “I have appointments this morning; I’d better get going.”
“Can I come and see you?” Susannah asked.
“Of course.” He consulted a pocket diary. “How about two o’clock? I’m usually reading medical publications at that time, but any excuse not to.”
“I’ll see you at two.”
Shea gave her directions.
Eagle got up. “I’ll drop you at your car,” he said. He turned to Susannah. “Will you be all right on your own?”
“Of course. Get out of here, both of you.”
THEY GOT INTO Eagle’s car and drove down the mountain.
“She’ll be okay,” Dan said. “Last night was a good thing for her, a wake-up call.”
“I think you’re right,” Eagle said. “She’s a sturdy person.”
EAGLE SETTLED BEHIND his desk and looked at the messages waiting there. He returned a couple of calls and signed some letters, then sat alone in his office and thought for a long moment about what Dan Shea had said to him the day before. Finally, he picked up the phone and dialed a number in Santa Monica.
“Dalton,” the voice said.
“Cupie, it’s Ed Eagle. How are you?”
“Well, hello there. I’m okay, you?”
“Not bad. I watched your testimony on TV; you did a good job.” Cupie Dalton was one of the two private investigators Eagle had hired to follow his ex-wife to Mexico when she had decamped with a lot of his money.
“I watched yours, too, and so did you.”
“You heard she was acquitted.”
“Yeah. Go figure.”
“A friend has convinced me that I need to know where she is.”
“A good friend,” Cupie said. “I’m surprised you couldn’t figure that out on your own. She’s a dangerous woman.”
“I can’t imagine that she’d come back to Santa Fe, but I’d feel better if you could track her down.”
“I hear she walked on the escape charge, so I guess she’s free as a bird.”
“Yes. I’d feel better if she were reporting to a parole officer every week.”
“Well, yeah. You got any leads for me?”
“Just one: Jimmy Long.”
“He was her alibi for the time of the shooting, right?”
“Right.”
“What do you know about him?”
“He’s a rich kid who always wanted to make movies, and something of a playboy. Surprisingly, he’s produced some pretty good films.”
“So he’s well-known around town?”
“He is. He lives somewhere in Beverly Hills or Bel-Air, I think.”
“It won’t be any trouble to find out.”
“I’m sure he helped her with the escape; she doesn’t have any other friends out there that I know of.”
“You think she might be holed up at his house?”
“I doubt it,” Eagle said. “She was a fugitive for twenty-four hours or so, and that’s the first place the cops would have looked.”
“Last time, she laid low at a high-end spa place in La Jolla,” Cupie said.
“I doubt if she’d go where anyone knows her.”
“Probably not, but I’d be willing to bet she’d go to another place a lot like it.”
“Well, Southern California is riddled with those places; it would be hard to know where to start.”
“Of course,” Cupie said, “but I’ll bet she chose one not that far away. She’d want to get off the roads as soon as possible after her escape, and no later than dinnertime.”
“That’s a good thought. You don’t think she’d go back to Mexico?”
Cupie snorted. “Not while there’s a chief of police down there whose nephew’s dick she and her sister cut off.”
“You’re right.”
“I’ll start with Jimmy Long.”
“I don’t think he’s going to want to talk to you,” Eagle said.
“Does he have an office outside his home?”
“I don’t know.”
“Won’t take long to find out.”
“She’s probably using another name,” Eagle said.
“Probably, but I know where she got her last set of documents. I’ll pay somebody a call.”
“Good man.”
“It’s a thousand a day with a five-thousand minimum, plus expenses.”
“Agreed. She will probably have changed her appearance, too, if her last outing is any indication.”
“I’ll take that into consideration.”
“Just remember that she knows what you look like, Cupie, so she’ll have the advantage of you. Don’t let it get you hurt, like last time.”
“Yes, she does have a tendency to shoot first and not bother with questions, doesn’t she?”
“She does.”
“Well, you can bet I’ll be more careful than I was in Mexico,” Cupie said. “Listen, are you sure that all you want is to know where she is?”
“That’s all, Cupie, nothing else. Let’s be clear about that. Once you’ve found her, though, I may want you to keep tabs on her location.”
“When we get to that point, I can hire somebody cheaper just to watch her movements.”
“There’s something else, Cupie.”
“What’s that?”
“She’s good at using men. The last time you went after her she never had time to get next to anybody, but she’s been on the loose for a few days, and I wouldn’t be surprised if she has probably already latched onto somebody.”
“The poor bastard,” Cupie said.
9
BARBARA/ELEANOR HAD NOW spent two days in the company of Walter Keeler, and she had played her cards very carefully. She had listened rather than talked, and, eventually, he had poured his heart out. As she had suspected, his marriage to his late wife hadn’t been all he had wanted it to be, and there was an element of relief as well as guilt in his feelings about being a newly minted widower.
She had talked about herself only when he had asked her questions, and she had always been brief, sticking to a story that would be easy for her to remember. She had never made any allusion to any future after their time together at the spa, not even “Let’s have dinner sometime.” She would make it her business to make him want to see her again, and often.
She had her chance as they were finishing dinner in the spa’s restaurant.
“You know,” he said, “I like this place, but there’s something unnatural about not having an occasional drink, and I was stupid enough not to bring something with me.”
“Well,” she said, smiling, “I guess I’m smarter than you are.”
His eyebrows went up. “Oh, yeah?”
“If you’d like some very fine bourbon, let’s part company now, then meet in my suite in fifteen minutes.”
“What a grand idea!” he said.
“And be stealthy; we wouldn’t want to give the staff something to talk about.”
“I’ll do better than that,” he said. “I’ll be sneaky.”
Barbara stood up and offered her hand. “Thank you so much for dinner, Walt. I enjoyed it.”
“So did I,” he said. He sat down and waved for the check.
BARBARA WENT BACK to her suite, stripped naked and slipped into a cotton shift with a zipper down the back. She freshened her body with a damp facecloth and sprayed her crotch with something both scented and flavored.
When his knock came, she let him in and waved him to the large comfortable sofa. “How would you like it?” she asked.
“What?”
“Your drink,” she said, laughing.
“Oh, on the rocks, please.”
She poured two generous drinks and set them on the coffee table, then sat down—not too close to him—and faced him, pulling her knees onto the sofa.
Keeler sipped his drink. “That’s wonderful! What is it?”
“Knob Creek, a boutique bourbon. I’ll never drink anything else; it’s my only real legacy from my late husband.” Good to plant that thought now.
“This is the best I’ve felt for a long time,” he said.
“Must be the bourbon.”
He smiled and shook his head. “No, it’s a lot more than that.”
“Oh?”
“Come on, you feel this, too.”
“I certainly feel something,” she said.
“You’re sure it’s not the bourbon?”
“Fairly sure.”
He put his hand on her cheek and kissed her, sweetly, no tongue.
She returned the kiss in the spirit in which it was offered. He sighed. “It’s been a long time.”
“Yes, it has been for me, too.”
“I have a feeling that empty period of my life has come to a close.”
“That’s what I’d like to feel,” she said.
He kissed her again, this time more passionately.
She flicked her tongue in and out of his mouth and ran her fingers through his thick hair.
He took hold of her, turned her around and laid her across his lap, her head on his shoulder.
She put an arm around his neck and played with an ear. She could feel him hardening under the weight of her body.
“Does this suite have a bedroom?” he asked.
“It does.”
“Why don’t we continue this conversation there, before I explode?”
“I think that’s a good idea,” she said. “I wouldn’t want you to explode—not just yet, anyway.”
He scooped her up in his arms and carried her into the bedroom, laying her on the bed.
She turned her back to him. “Zipper, please?”
He complied, and she heard his own zipper working. A moment later they were fully embracing.
“Easy,” she said. “Be tender.”
He was, and so was she.
Somewhat to her surprise and much to her delight, he did not immediately enter her. Instead, he parted her vulva with his tongue and lingered there until she insisted he mount her.
They both came that way, then rested for a while. Then she began bringing him back, stroking him first with her fingers, then with her tongue. She would not let go, until he had climaxed again.
They lay under the covers, panting, gradually recovering themselves.
“Did I mention that I have my airplane at Palm Springs Airport?”
“I don’t remember,” she lied.
“Why don’t you and I fly to San Francisco tomorrow for a few days?”
“What a sweet thought,” she said. “Don’t you think it might be a little early in our acquaintance for that sort of trip?”
“I think we just settled that,” he replied.
“But what would I do with my car?”
“Ditch it, if you like; I’ll buy you a new one.”
“Nonsense,” she said. “Perhaps I can get someone from the hotel to drive it to Los Angeles, to a friend’s house.”
“That’s good, clear thinking,” he said.
“But you don’t have a place in San Francisco, do you?”
“Not yet, but I know a good hotel.”
“I didn’t bring San Francisco clothes, I’m afraid. I don’t think I can get by with a couple of cotton dresses and a bikini.”
“That’s what shops are for. I think I’d enjoy watching you shop.”
“I think I’d enjoy watching you watching me shop,” she said.
“You’re game, then?”
“That’s the nice thing about being free again,” she said, with more depth of feeling than he knew. “You can do anything you want to.”
“That’s right,” he said. “You can, and so can I.”
“I think doing it together will be fun,” she said.
“I will make it so,” he replied.
BARBARA/ELEANOR DRIFTED OFF to sleep, physically satisfied but very, very curious. She woke up in the middle of the night to the sound of his regular breathing.
She got up, got online and Googled the name Walter Keeler. It took only a moment to find a news report of the sale of his electronics business. She gave a little gasp. His share of the deal had been $2.7 billion!
She was going to have to play this very, very carefully.
10
CUPIE DALTON DROVE over to Venice and, lucky him, found a parking spot. He strolled along the beachfront, taking the sun, his straw porkpie hat keeping the heat off his bald spot. He caught sight of the sign for the photographer’s shop a hundred yards away, knowing from his past encounter with Barbara Eagle that the place was a hotbed of counterfeit document sales. Then he was startled to see the owner, the man he wanted to see, walk out of the shop and start down the sidewalk toward him.
Cupie stepped off the sidewalk and found a spot on a bench, his back to the foot traffic. He waited for a few moments, then hazarded a glance to his right. The photographer was walking briskly, a package under his arm. Cupie watched as he stopped at a mailbox, dropped in the package and started back toward his shop.
Cupie waited until he was certain the man had walked behind him, then he caught sight of him turning into his shop. Good.
Cupie got up, walked down the sidewalk toward the shop and had a peek through the window. The owner’s pretty teenaged daughter was the only person in view. Cupie walked in, straight past the counter, toward the rear office.
“Hey,” the girl shouted, “you can’t go back there. It’s private!”
But Cupie was already back there. He pushed the curtain aside and stepped into the surprisingly large office, filled with computers and copying machines. The owner sat behind his desk. He looked up, registered Cupie and started to get up.
“Relax, my friend,” Cupie said, taking the chair across from him. “This is going to be short and sweet.”
The man said nothing, just glared at Cupie. It was obvious that his memory of their last meeting was an unpleasant memory.
“Now, my friend,” Cupie said, in his most avuncular voice. “All I want is her new name.”
The man stared at him and said nothing.
“Come on, you and I both know that holding out on me is not going to be good for business. Tell you what: I’ll sweeten it just a little.” He reached into a pocket for a wad of bills, peeled off two hundreds and tossed them onto the desk. “For your trouble.”
Finally, the man spoke. “Five hundred.”
Cupie sighed and tossed three more C-notes onto the desk. "I know it’s not really necessary to mention this,” he said, “but if you give me a wrong name, I won’t even need to come back. You’ll be raided before you can spend the five hundred—LAPD or the Feds, take your pick.”
“The name is Eleanor Wright,” he said.
Cupie stared at him.
“And I colored her hair auburn, photographically. It was a good job, even if I do say so.”
“Did you give her the whole package: passport, driver’s license, Social Security, credit cards?”
The man nodded. “And they’ll all stand up. Now, that’s all you get for your five hundred.”
Cupie stood up. “It’s so much easier talking to me than working for a living, isn’t it?” He gave a little wave and walked out of the office. “Good day, sweetheart,” he said to the daughter as he passed.
He walked on down the sidewalk until he found a bookstore. He located the travel section and found a shelf of books on spas, settling on one that covered Southern California. He paid for his purchase, pocketed the receipt and walked back outside. He found another bench, this one overlooking the sandbox where the muscle boys played. They glistened in the sun, stretching, lifting and assuming poses. Half a dozen gay men were happy spectators.
Cupie began leafing through the spa book. “Now, I’m Eleanor Wright, formerly Barbara Eagle,” he said aloud to himself. “If I had just decamped from a courthouse while the jury in my trial was still deliberating, where would I choose to go and rehabilitate my image?” He took a highlighter from his coat pocket and began marking likely spots. His criteria were luxury, seclusion, exclusivity and easy access from greater L.A.
When he had highlighted twelve spas, he took out his cell phone and began calling them. Each time the phone was answered he asked for Mrs. Eleanor Wright. Surely Barbara would not pretend to be a single girl but rather a divorcée or widow. On the ninth phone call he hit pay dirt.
“Oh,” a woman’s voice said, “you’ve just missed her. She checked out less than half an hour ago.”
“I’m so sorry to miss her,” Cupie said. “This is her father. Did she say where she was going? Back here, to L.A.?”
“No, but I don’t think so, because she hired one of our employees to drive her car there and leave it with a friend.”
“Oh, that would be Jimmy Long,” he said.
“Why, that’s right.”
“It’s rather odd that she would suddenly send her car back but not come back herself. How was she traveling?”
“Well, she left with Mr. Walter Keeler, and I know that he had flown into Palm Springs in his own airplane. He’s from up in Silicon Valley, the electronics entrepreneur.”
“I’m afraid I don’t know the gentleman,” Cupie said. “Do you think she’ll be all right in his company? I worry about my girl.”
“Oh, Mr. Keeler is a very upstanding citizen,” she said. “I know Mrs. Wright would be safe with him.”
“Well, I’m relieved to hear that,” Cupie said. “I’m sure she’ll give me a call when she reaches her destination. Thank you so much for your help.” He hung up.
Cupie walked back to his car and drove home. He couldn’t wait to get to his computer. Once at his desk he Googled “Walter Keeler.” His eyes widened as he read of the sale of Keeler’s company. “Two point seven bil!” he said aloud. He then went straight to the Federal Aviation Agency website, to the page for airplane registrations. He entered the name Walter Keeler and found a CitationJet III registered to him. He made a note of the tail number, then he called up a nifty little program called Flight Aware.
Flight Aware could track the progress and destination of any aircraft, airline or private; all you had to do was enter the flight number or, in this case, the tail number. Cupie did so. Seconds later, a little red airplane symbol appeared on the screen, located over the Central Valley, the farming capital of California, headed northwest. Destination: Hayward, California. “What the hell is in Hayward?” Cupie asked himself.
He got out his road atlas and found Hayward. It was a small city on the eastern shore of San Francisco Bay, just south of Oakland. He picked up the phone and dialed.
“The Eagle Practice,” a woman’s smooth voice said.
“Ed Eagle, please. It’s Cupie Dalton calling.”
“Just a moment, Mr. Dalton.”
“Cupie?”
“Good morning, Ed.”
“News?”
“News. Our girl, as soon as she left the courthouse, drove down to a spa called El Rancho Encantado on a mountaintop overlooking Palm Springs, traveling under the name of Eleanor Wright. She checked in and there met a gentleman named Walter Keeler.”
“I know that name, I think.”
“You ought to; he just sold his electronics conglomerate and pocketed two point seven billion bucks.”
“Are they still at the spa?”
“Nope, she shipped her car back to Jimmy Long’s house and left Palm Springs Airport on Keeler’s CitationJet, bound for Hayward, California, on the eastern shore of San Francisco Bay. What I can’t figure out, at least at the moment, is what the hell anybody would do in Hayward.”
“There’s a general aviation airport there that serves San Francisco. I land there, myself, when I’m going there on business. It’s not like a smaller airplane would want to mix it up with the heavy iron landing at San Francisco International. When did they go there?”
Cupie looked at his computer screen. “They’ll be landing in about ten minutes,” he said. “And it looks like our girl has hooked herself a big one.”