Authors: John Donohue
to have little plastic ID cards around their necks to show that
they were bona fide conference participants. Presenters like me
had a little red star on their card. After my performance I was
wondering whether they’d yank the star off.
I glanced at my watch. It was too early to call Sarah. I fig-
ured I’d get changed and visit the health center at the hotel.
Traveling always makes my leg and back muscles tight and,
after all this time, you get addicted to the regularity of some
sort of training.
I noticed some people moving down the hallway. They
didn’t look like conference members. For one thing, they
were missing their little plastic ID cards. And they were better
dressed. The man was young and professional looking and was
wearing a blue blazer with the hotel crest on it.
The woman with him was a little older, but still on the
young side of middle age. Frosted blonde hair. Blue eyes. She
wore some sort of linen suit that fell around her in a way that
made you think it was expensive. The guy with the blazer was
gesturing toward me.
Uh-oh. There goes my star.
The woman walked right up to me and extended a hand.
She moved with a smooth, controlled quality that betrayed
toned muscle. She was good-looking, and you got the impres-
sion that she knew it and had practiced moving so that you
would know it, too. It was a little too studied for my taste, but
it didn’t make her any less attractive.
“Dr. Burke?” It was a rhetorical question and she didn’t even
wait for a reply. “I’m Lori Westmann, the general manager.”
I shook her hand and smiled. She didn’t even bother to
introduce the guy in the hotel blazer. His nametag identified
him as “Roy.” As far as Westmann was concerned, Roy was
invisible. Being in charge means you get to pretty much treat
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John Donohue
people any way you want. Or at least that’s what I hear. Roy
didn’t seem offended by the omission and just stood respect-
fully at a slight distance from us, ready to serve.
Lori Westmann smiled back at me with even white teeth. It
was a practiced smile that didn’t really communicate much—
just a standard visual cue in the conversational sequence.
“What can I do for you?” I said.
She glanced about her at the guests. “I have a business
proposition for you. Perhaps you’d care to join me for an early
lunch?” She leaned in slightly toward me, cocking her head as if
listening for my silent agreement. Then she moved off without
waiting to see whether I was following or not.
We were seated with a bit of understated hysteria by the
restaurant staff. It was clear that they were all pretty intimi-
dated by their hotel manager. It suggested to me that her looks
were probably deceiving. The blue-eyed blond with the long
legs who was sitting across from me was easy on the eye in the
same way a statue was: hard and cold.
The restaurant was hacienda themed; fake adobe partitions
with rounded timbers jutting from little tile roof sections that
were meant to create a pattern of cozy little nooks for custom-
ers. The focus of the place was inward, to the table and the
meal, but you could look out through the tinted windows that
ran across one end of the restaurant. Inside it was cool and dim,
but out there you could see the hard light pounding down on
the sere landscape in the distance.
The restaurant manager materialized to take our drink
orders. He was almost quivering with attention. Lori West-
mann ordered a chardonnay. I quickly perused the beer list and
ordered a Sierra Nevada Pale Ale. I’m on a personal mission to
try every beer ever made. Some varieties merit multiple tastings.
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The drinks arrived. “Are you enjoying the conference?’ she
asked. “The accommodations appropriate?” She was running
down a mental checklist. Ms. Westmann didn’t look like some-
one deeply concerned about other people’s enjoyment. She did
seem focused on efficiency, however.
“It’s fine,” I assured her.
She smiled. A flash of white teeth and a tight motion of the
lips. Then back to business.
“I was surprised to see someone like you at this type of con-
ference, Dr. Burke.”
I wondered whether this woman would ever get to the
point and why she was so obviously engaging in small talk. She
didn’t seem the type. But I was in no rush. I shrugged at her
statement and took a sip of the Sierra Nevada. Looked out the
window into the shimmering hills and wondered idly how hot
it was out there. “The accommodations are nice. The beer is
even better,” I said.
She frowned slightly at that—a small crease at the bridge of
her nose. Lori Westmann probably was not exposed to a great
deal of levity from underlings. She gave her head a little shake
as if dislodging a troublesome fly. “I would expect someone like
you at a conference of academics, not mystery writers.”
She was overestimating my place in the scholarly commu-
nity, but I let it go, and explained how I got here.
“And how are you enjoying this group?” she asked when I
had finished.
“Not a question of how I’m enjoying them,” I replied.
“Mostly, I don’t think I’m what they expected.”
She eyed me over the rim of her wine glass. “How so?”
I thought for a minute. “I’m too… reality based.”
She sat up a little straighter. “Excellent. So am I.” The
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John Donohue
waiter came and we contemplated lunch. Westmann didn’t
even look at the menu when she ordered. I had a chicken sand-
wich. Burke, culinary adventurer. When the help had gone,
Westmann got back to business.
“I’m looking for someone with your research expertise to
assist me,” she began. I raised my eyebrows questioningly to
encourage her to continue. Lori Westmann took a deep breath
as if preparing herself for something unpleasant. “A month ago,
my father was found dead at home.”
“I’m sorry.”
She waved the sympathy away as irrelevant. “The cause of
death was listed as an accidental fall. I disagree.”
I thought I saw where this was going. “Ms. Westmann, I’m
sorry for your loss,” I started, “but this is probably something
you need to take to the police. I’m not a trained investigator.”
This point was, in fact, a huge understatement. I’ve blundered
around a few crime scenes to help my brother Micky, but, as he
reminds me, my major talent is that I know obscure things that
most people don’t care about. I also have a knack for getting in
way over my head and clawing my way back out again.
“I’m well aware of your background and qualifications,”
Westmann commented. “I have a number of people working
on this from the forensic angle.”
“And?”
“You know as well as I do that if a murder isn’t solved within
forty-eight hours it’s probably not going to happen.” She waved
a hand. “The police are overworked. They feel the evidence for
a crime is shaky at best and that I’m a typical grieving child
incapable of accepting the sudden death of a parent.”
She didn’t look all that broken up to me, but she did seem
like someone who didn’t take no for an answer. Our lunches
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Kage
came and I ordered another beer. Lori Westmann had been
sipping at her wine since it arrived, but the glass seemed as full
as ever.
“And are the cops right?” I asked. “About you, I mean.”
She looked at me directly. I didn’t think the cops were right.
Her eyes had a hard glint to them. “I have very good reasons
to think that my father’s death was not accidental, Dr. Burke.”
“Such as?”
I had picked up my glass to take a drink. Lori Westmann
leaned across the table toward me. “Dr Burke,” she said
intensely, “my father was Eliot Westmann.”
I put down my beer.
Eliot Westmann was a lunatic of the first order. He was
notorious in Asian Studies circles for writing a series of books
about his alleged adventures studying with a mysterious sect
in Hokkaido, far to the north in Japan. Westmann and his
publisher maintained that the books were true accounts; most
scholars considered them a blend of personal fantasy and faulty
scholarship.
Westmann had been awarded a doctoral degree by an
obscure little Midwestern university. As an undergraduate he
had a double major in marketing and theater. Everyone should
have seen it coming. His book,
Inari-sama: Tales of a Warrior
Mystic
, hit the stands in the late sixties and made him a cult
favorite. I had looked at it years ago. It seemed a weird first-
person journey through a confusing mix of Tantric Buddhism,
recycled Asian stereotypes, and fragments of martial arts sto-
ries about
ninja
and
samurai
masters. He eventually published
another five or so books on the same subject. Specialists scoffed
and the public devoured them.
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John Donohue
Westmann had always maintained that by writing about the
secret community of
Inari-sama
, the Fox Lord, he had put his
life at risk. He claimed that the members of the sect vowed
a horrible revenge on anyone who revealed their secrets. Spe-
cial assassins, marked with a mystic diamond tattoo at the base
of the neck, would be dispatched from the cold mountains of
Japan’s remote north country to hunt him down.
The only people who hunted him down, it turned out, were
fans. Nothing annoys scholars like popularity, but, Westmann,
true to his theatrical penchant, reveled in the spotlight. He
eventually dropped any pretense of connection to the academic
establishment. He and his considerable royalty payments sim-
ply moved on. The last I had heard, he was dabbling in Native
American mysticism, ostensibly still vigilant against assassins,
still reclusive and as controversial as ever.
Westmann’s daughter Lori watched me as I reacted to the
mention of her father.
“So,” I finally said trying to tone down my disbelief, “you
think Inari-sama’s people got him?”
Her mouth tightened with displeasure. “It’s not a joke, Dr.
Burke. We’re talking about a man’s life here.”
I took a breath. She had a point. “OK. What do you want
from me?”
“I never knew my father as a child. My late mother was
his first wife. In the last five years we had reconnected and he
told me about his experiences in Japan.” She saw my skeptical
look. “Never at any time did I get the sense that he was being
anything but truthful.” She tapped the table for emphasis. Her
nails were short but manicured, professional. “I’m in a business
where I have to read people constantly, Dr. Burke. My father
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Kage
was not lying.”
“OK,” I said. I wasn’t going to argue. “How do I fit in?”
“My father was killed. I’m sure of it. I’ve got investigators
looking into the crime. What I need is someone to do an objec-
tive assessment of his works.” Her words came more quickly,
fueled by an unexpected emotion. “Someone,” she continued,
“with a background as a scholar who can vouch for his integrity
and rehabilitate his reputation after all these years…”
Oh boy.
“And,” I concluded, “someone to provide a motive
for his killing.”
Lori Westmann sat back in her chair, eyes bright. “Exactly.”
I took a sip of beer. “Ms. Westmann, I’ve got to be honest
with you. I read some of your father’s stuff years ago. I thought
it was entertaining, but I never took it seriously. All I could pro-
vide you would be an honest assessment of your father’s work
from a scholarly perspective…”
“That’s exactly what I want.”
“You’ll want it unless it comes back with an unfavorable
conclusion,” I pointed out.
“I’m convinced an objective evaluation will clear his rep-
utation and lead the authorities to his killer. And you’re just
the type of well-credentialed skeptic I need,” she concluded
briskly. She looked at me with a firm, almost clenched-jaw
expression: woman of action brooking no resistance. Then
she looked around into the dim recesses of the restaurant and
made a motion with her hand. Roy appeared almost magically
and placed a leather portfolio on the table. She opened it and
pulled out a slim golden Montblanc. “I’m proposing that you
spend approximately a month going through my father’s notes
and manuscripts, evaluating his work, and providing me with a
confidential written report. Shall we talk about compensation?”
43
John Donohue
I have an obscure research specialty and a genius for alien-
ating potential academic employers. I spend most of my time
and energy training with Yamashita. As a result, I cobble a liv-
ing together in the most unlikely of ways. I looked at the lady