Read The Gentlemen's Hour Online

Authors: Don Winslow

The Gentlemen's Hour (25 page)

BOOK: The Gentlemen's Hour
10.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

It's humiliating.

Completely, totally, utterly humiliating.

She feels like the second lead in a bad romance novel, or a modern, sexually loose Jane Austen character, vainly waiting for a man to come and take her away from her mundane existence. Pity the apartment lacks a harpsichord. A hovering mother, a dotty father, an earnest sister in whom to confide her heartbreak.

Heartbreak? she thinks.

Over
Boone Daniels
?

Please.

She is furious, though. I invited him here, she thinks, for what was obviously going to be our first sexual encounter, and the man
forgets
, doesn't even have the common courtesy to ring and apologize? A flaw in character or a failure of nerve? she wonders. Either way it doesn't bode well for a relationship. Do you really want a man who's afraid to have sex with you?

Or, she thinks, does he just not fancy you? Not in “that way,” as they say. Fair enough, but what about that kiss? That took you totally unprepared. He certainly seemed to fancy you then, didn't he?

A bottle of good red wine sits open on the coffee table, flanked by two long-stemmed glasses. She picks up one, pours herself a long drink, then changes her mind and goes to her liquor cabinet for some whiskey. God, she thinks, first I make myself into a slut—albeit rejected—for him, now he's turning me into an alcoholic.

She takes her Scotch neat, sits down, and turns on the television.

Damn
Boone Daniels.

87

Johnny Banzai is not exactly crazy about Boone either when he walks into the precinct house with Dan and Donna Nichols in tow.

Not to mention Alan Burke.

It's sort of like giving with one hand and taking back with the other. Here, Johnny my bro, here's a suspect for you. And, oh, here's someone who won't let the suspect talk to you.

Thanks, Boone,
por nada.

“Are these the clients you were protecting?” Johnny asks Boone.

“Pretty much, yeah.”

“Swell.”

“Indeed.”

“Don't say anything more, Boone,” Alan Burke says. He doesn't look his usual dapper self, in a pair of jeans and an old sweatshirt that he pulled on when he got Boone's call. His hair is tousled and he's unshaved.

“Are you representing Mr. Daniels?” Johnny asks him.

“No.”

“Then don't instruct him,” Johnny says.

“Am I out of here?” Boone asks.

“For now,” Johnny answers.

“I never thought I'd hear myself say this,” Harrington says, “but Daniels, don't leave town.”

Boone nods and walks out the door. Technically, they could still jam him up on obstruction charges but it won't go far, seeing as how he brought Dan Nichols in to be interviewed. So he's free and clear. As for Dan and Donna, their problems are their problems. You got Dan a good lawyer, you're out of this.

Forget about it.

Forget . . .

Oh, shit.

Petra.

He gets on his phone.

It rings and rings and rings.

Clearly, she has caller ID.

88

Yeah, but he has one of the all-time great excuses, right?

“Honey, I was detained on suspicion of murder.” Has
to be good for a hall pass, doesn't it? Has to be, Boone thinks, if I can get her to listen to it.

He debates with himself what to do next. Part of him says to let it slide until morning—he looks at his watch, okay,
later
in the morning—and let her cool down. Another part of him says he should drive over there right now and ring her doorbell.

What to do, what to do?

He calls Dave.

Who is, after all, the Love God.

“Oh, this better be
prime
,” Dave says when he answers the phone.

“You busy?”

“I was getting busy,” Dave answers. “What is it, you forgot the lyrics to
The Jetsons
? For the last time, it's ‘His boy, Elroy. Jane, his wife.' ”

Boone explains his situation, without specific reference to the Nicholses. Dave just lets it slide that Boone was picked up on suspicion of homicide and that Johnny B was the picker-upper. He gets right to the problem at hand.

“Go over there.”

“Really?”


Hell
, yes,” Dave says. “Dude, do you have any idea how pissed she is? Chick sets up a booty call and you don't get your booty over there?”

“Uhh, murder charge?”

“Doesn't matter to a woman,” Dave says.

“Has to. Come on.”

“Hold on,” Dave says. Boone hears him talking softly to someone, then Dave gets back on and says, “No. Doesn't matter.”

“Shit.”

“Shit indeed,” Dave says. “Listen to your Uncle Dave, who has himself been in this same doleful situation . . . . I just said that to make him feel like a little less of an idiot, babe . . . . What you do is, you go over there, ring her bell, and beg forgiveness over the intercom. She won't let you in, but she'll feel better that you made the effort.”

“Then flowers . . . candy?”

“A little cliché,” Dave says, “and knowing the woman in question, she'd be happier with a DVD of your ritual disembowelment. No, this goes to Defcon four—you might be looking at jewelry.”

“Yikes.”

“You fucked up, bro.”

“I was detained for—”

“Again . . .”

“Doesn't matter?”

“The beginning of wisdom, Boone.”

Dave hangs up.

Boone drives over to Petra's building.

89

Nichols admits everything.

Except the murder.

Johnny Banzai sits and listens as Dan Nichols, closely monitored by Alan Burke, admits that his wife was having an affair with Phil Schering, admits that he hired Boone Daniels to uncover the infidelity, even admits that he shared part of the responsibility for his wife's adultery.

“I work so many hours,” he says.

Johnny isn't buying it. Hell, he and his wife each have full-time jobs, and kids, and they don't play around on each other. You make time for what's important to you. It's the simplest way of learning what really matters to a person—just look at how he spends his time.

Besides, Johnny doesn't give a stale tortilla
why
Donna Nichols cheated, only
that
Donna Nichols cheated, and he wouldn't care about that either except that the guy she cheated with turned up dead. He wouldn't really care about that either, except he turned up dead on Johnny's shift.

So now Johnny has two high-profile cases—the Kelly Kuhio murder, with all its tourist and surf culture implications, and now a billionaire socialite adultery/murder that will have the media coming in its collective shorts and the chief buzzing around his head like an annoying but powerful fly.

And his ex-buddy Boone has managed to turn up in both cases.

“Where were you last night?” Johnny asks.

Burke nods to his client, allowing him to answer.

“Home with my wife,” Nichols says, with a trace of self-righteousness that annoys Johnny. “We talked. About everything. Our thoughts, our feelings . . .”

“That's fine,” Burke says.

Beautiful, Johnny thinks. The cuckolded husband's alibi is his cheating wife. You have to love the symmetry. “And did you confront her with your knowledge of her infidelity?”

“I wouldn't call it exactly a confrontation,” Nichols says. “I just told her that I knew she was having an affair and asked her—”

“That's enough,” says Burke.

“What did you ask her?” Johnny says.

Burke shoots his client an I-told-you-so look.

“How could she do that to me?” Nichols says.

“And what did she say?”

“Don't answer that,” Burke snaps. “Irrelevant.”

“This isn't a courtroom, counselor,” Johnny says.

“But it could end up in one, couldn't it?” Burke asks. “Her response to him regarding her motivation is immaterial. What you want to know—”

“Don't tell me what I want to know.”

“What you
should
want to know—”

“Ditto,” Johnny says, realizing that he's falling into Burke's game. The lawyer is distracting him, breaking up his rhythm, turning his interrogation of the witness into a skirmish between cop and lawyer. He leans across the table to focus on Nichols. “How long did the conversation last?”

“I don't know,” Nichols says. “I didn't look at my watch. Until we went to bed. Eleven o'clock?”

“Are you asking me or telling me?”

“He told you he didn't know, Detective,” Burke says, “and I'm not going to allow him to speculate.”

Of course you're not, Johnny thinks, because it's a critical issue.

The 911 call from the neighbor had come in at eight-seventeen; the black-and-white responding to a “shot fired” called at eight twenty-four. The responding officers kicked in the door and found Schering, in a bathrobe, already dead on his living-room floor.

Johnny got the call at eight thirty-one; logged on to the scene at eight forty-seven. He interviewed the neighbor and had Boone's van at the scene, but the neighbor couldn't recall if it left before or after he heard the shot, just that this van had been “lurking” around the neighborhood recently.

The ME hasn't established time of death yet, and it would be nice to pin Nichols down to a time after which his wife's testimony won't help him. Personally, Johnny thinks Nichols shot his wife's lover
before
this heart-to-heart talk ever happened, if it happened at all, but it's possible that he slipped out afterward, and wants to leave that door open.

Burke isn't going to let him narrow it down, so Johnny has to press the offensive a little harder. “Is this possible, Mr. Nichols? Let me run this
scenario for you, and you tell me if it's possible. Daniels calls you, tells you he has definitive proof that your wife is sleeping with Schering. You go over to confront your wife's lover. I get it, I totally get how you'd be angry . . . hell, furious . . . the guy has been doing your wife—”

“That's enough, Detective,” Burke says.

“And you get into an argument. I mean, who wouldn't? I know I would, Harrington here certainly would.”

Harrington nods sympathetically. “Hell, yes.”

“Any man who calls himself a man would, and you argue and things get out of hand and maybe you pull the gun. Just to threaten him, scare him, I don't know, mess with his head. Maybe he reaches for it and it goes off.”

“Don't respond to this fiction,” Burke says.

Which pisses Johnny off, because he's using the “fiction” to lure Nichols into putting himself at the scene. Once he does that, Johnny will use the gunshot forensics to jerk the “self-defense” rug out from under him.

He keeps at it.

“You're freaked out,” Johnny says. “You never meant for anything like this to happen. You panic and drive away. You drive straight home and when you get there you're so shook up you can't hide it from your wife. She asks you what's going on and you tell her. Just like you said, you tell her you know about the affair. You tell her about the terrible thing that happened when you went to Schering's house. She says it's going to be all right, you'll both say you were home the whole evening, working on saving your marriage. Is that possible, Dan? Is it just possible it happened that way?”

He looks closely into Nichols's eyes to see if he can discern the flicker of recognition. “No,” Nichols says. “It didn't happen that way.”

“How
did
it happen?” Johnny asks. Softly. Empathetically. Like a therapist instead of a cop.

“I don't know,” Nichols says. “I wasn't there. I was home with my wife.”

Burke looks at Johnny and smiles.

90

“Boone who?”

It's a little scratchy over the cheap intercom speaker, but clear enough.

“I'm sorr——”

The intercom clicks off.

He hits the button again.

“I'm about to call the police.”

“Funny thing,” Boone says. “Speaking of the police—”

Dead.

He hits it again.

“Go away, Boone.”

“I was picked up on suspicion of murder.”

A pause, then she buzzes him in.

91

The wife's story matches.

Almost too well.

Her husband came home, she doesn't remember the time, and was clearly upset. He told her he knew about her affair with Philip Schering. She admitted it. They sat and talked for hours, but she doesn't recall what time it was when they went to bed. The next thing she remembers is hearing
a discussion and going downstairs to find Mr. Daniels there. That's when she learned about Phil's death.

“This is awkward, Mrs. Nichols,” says Johnny, “but were you seeing Mr. Schering?”

“You already know that I was.”

“I'm asking you.”

“Yes,” she says. “I was.”

“And did you have sexual relations?”

“We did.”

“When was the last time you saw him?”

“Last night,” Donna says. “No, I guess it was the night before. I don't know, what time is it now?”

“It's early in the morning,” Johnny answers. “Where were you last night?”

“At home.”

“Alone?”

“No, my husband was with me.”

Johnny asks, “When did he get home?”

“Early,” Donna says. “Seven, maybe?”

Nice, Johnny thinks. She has him home by seven, the shot isn't heard until shortly before eight-seventeen. While someone is pumping a bullet into Schering's head, the Nicholses are at home doing Dr. Phil's Relationship Rescue. Funny how life works.

“You said your husband confronted you with the evidence of your infidelity,” Johnny says.

BOOK: The Gentlemen's Hour
10.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Dropped Names by Frank Langella
Love in Our Time by Norman Collins
The Relatives by Christina Dodd
In the Rearview by Maria Ann Green
Bred by Her Cowboy by Jillian Cumming
IK2 by t
Book of Life by Abra Ebner