Read Killer Summer Online

Authors: Ridley Pearson

Killer Summer (6 page)

“There were several calls back and forth,” Remy said. “A good deal of concern.”
“So, in theory, Branson has photographs that could prove helpful to the investigation.” Walt couldn’t take his eyes off the case.
“If they exist, I will have them make them available to you.” Remy caught Walt staring. “Go ahead, Sheriff. Be my guest. They’re a piece of history.”
Walt opened the lid.
Inside, packed in custom-molded gray foam, were three dark green bottles of wine.
11
C
antell’s team boarded Sun Valley’s River Run high-speed quad chairlift at five-minute intervals so as not to be seen sitting together. The views behind them were spectacular: the town of Ketchum in the foreground, then, farther east, the Sun Valley resort, with its hotels and golf course. A second chairlift carried them to the very top, from which one could see for a hundred miles in all directions: craggy mountaintops north, east, and west, and, to the south, a vast expanse of high-altitude desert.
Cantell avoided the busy mountaintop ski lodge. Mountain bikers and parasailors prepared for descent, while day hikers huddled in groups, trail maps in hand. The grid of Ketchum’s streets spread out three thousand feet below, the buildings and vehicles looking like toy models.
Cantell’s team hiked down to a location that offered a view both east and south. In late July, the ski slopes were a vivid green broken by flecks of yellow columbine and red Indian paintbrush that swayed in the constant breeze.
The four hoisted binoculars as Cantell spoke.
“First: the bridge,” he said. Highway 75’s only bridge was a formed-concrete, three-lane span crossing the Big Wood River. “Roger, placement is everything.”
“No problem.”
“Salvo,” Cantell said, “the power pole, to the east, will block the bike path.”
“Sure,” Matt said, “got it.”
“Roger,” Cantell said, “you can make out the roof of the new symphony pavilion behind the lodge.”
“Yeah.”
“The golf course is just to the north,” Cantell said, “the row of golf carts.”
“Okay.”
“That’s you . . .
before
the truck. It should look like an overcharged battery or a short. Nothing too spectacular.”
Roger smirked. “Can do.”
“After setting the charge, you’ll meet up with Matt and we enter phase two. You guys will be picked up on the other side by Lorraine, and we’ll meet in the Albertson’s parking lot north of Hailey.”
“Sounds good.”
“Lorraine, you’ll pick them up in the Starweather subdivision. There’s a private bridge there that crosses to a ranch. That’s the rendezvous.”
Lorraine nodded.
Cantell trained his binoculars well south to his prize, the asphalt shimmering in the heat. “Any questions?”
“What if I can’t get the keys?” Lorraine asked. “Has that been considered?”
“Then you need to get yourself invited back to his room,” Cantell explained. “Matt will shadow you, as planned. He’ll call Roger in if necessary. We need that key, and nothing, no way, can raise suspicion.”
Cantell addressed the three. “Remember Fort Lauderdale,” he warned. “Timing is everything. These wine bottles fell into our lap. We’ve done what’s necessary. We chummed the water.”
“But we screwed it up,” Salvo said.
“We can live with that,” Cantell said. “It may actually play to our advantage.” He considered his next words carefully. “A word of caution to each of you.” He looked directly at Salvo. “No screw-ups. Matt, if I hear you’re hanging around the hotel pools or trolling the skate parks, I’ll cut you out.
“Our success depends on our anonymity,” he continued. “None of us can afford to be remembered. And Matt, just for your information, sixteen- and seventeen-year-old girls remember
everything.

“It’s not a problem.” Salvo’s eyes hardened and his jaw muscles knotted.
Addressing Lorraine, Cantell said, “Makeup and wig aside, you can’t be remembered either. And we can’t drug him because that’ll set them onto us. So it’s tricky.”
“I know,” she said. “Trust me, I’ll be careful. I’ll have tattoos in all the right places—temporary, but he won’t know that. And, trust me, he’ll remember them.”
Salvo started to chuckle, but she stared him down.
“You want to switch jobs, Matt?” she asked hotly. “Maybe he’s into boys. Who knows? That would get me off the hook.”
Salvo tried to look confident—a losing effort. “Hey,” he said, “I’m going to be the most exposed of anyone. You want to switch? I’ll switch!”
“Shut up, Matt,” Cantell said. “The risks and responsibilities are as equally distributed as possible.”
“I’m just saying—”
“Well,
don’t
!” Cantell said. “You take care of yourself. That’s enough.”
He looked south of the mountain. “People like this . . .” he said, his voice drifting.
Salvo looked ready to brawl. McGuiness patted him on the back. “We cool?” McGuiness said.
“Cool,” said Salvo. He was anything but.
12
L
orraine Duisit recognized the man from the photo Cantell had showed her, another of those surprises that made Christopher Cantell such an enigma. It was as if he were two people, one of them so deeply buried even a lover could not penetrate. That was part of what attracted her to him, this mysterious quality that constantly surprised her, but it also put her off, worried her. He could be so difficult to read. How could she ever commit to that?
Michel’s Christiania and Olympic Bar and restaurant dated back forty years. It buzzed with conversation and the melodies of a piano man. The split-level layout was divided into a lower-level dining room and upstairs bar. A pair of antique wooden skis was crossed on a wall that rose to a balcony used for private parties.
If walls could talk,
she thought, as she occupied a banquette in the bar close to the piano, with a view of the crowded dining room and out the open French doors to a small patio beyond.
A man belonging to the face in the photo entered and immediately sized up the room, his eyes finding the single women, including Lorraine. She didn’t make eye contact—not yet. He took one of two open stools at the baby grand—
exactly
as Cantell had told her he would. It took several inquisitive glances, three songs, and a white wine until she felt the timing was right. She signaled for the check, and took a moment to pull on a sweater that partially covered her metallic-knit halter top. She left her cleavage showing.
“Not leaving so soon?” he said, materializing in front of her.
“The wine gave me an appetite. I’m famished,” she explained.
“Then let me buy you dinner,” he said. “I have a table for one that’s horribly imbalanced.”
“No,” she said, blatantly cautious. “It’s tempting, but no thank you.”
“Because?”
“Again, the wine. I tend to . . . to get myself into trouble.”
“That doesn’t sound so terrible.”
“Not for you.” She had a guttural, melodious laugh, and she used it to her advantage. “I have to live with myself in the morning.” She looked him directly in the eye.
“I’d love the company,” he said. “But I won’t push you.”
“You just did.”
“I’m William. No strings, I promise.”
“But it’s the strings,” she said softly, “that make it interesting. Why brush and saddle the horse if you’re not going to ride it?” She paused. “Do you like to ride, William?”
“Fly,” he said without missing a beat. “There’s an unclaimed stool at the piano. Yours if you want it.”
“I want it,” said Lorraine. She caught the waiter’s attention. “Leave it open,” she said, following William to the piano.
“Put it on my tab, Gina,” William instructed.
Lorraine glanced over her shoulder catching a glimpse of Salvo. He was sipping a seven-dollar beer at the bar, looking bored.
She ate a big meal: lamb shank with rosemary mashed potatoes and asparagus. Cantell insisted men liked women who ate well. She wanted William to like her.
They skipped dessert for snifters of Grand Marnier.
“Is there dancing?” she asked, knowing the answer. “And I don’t mean rock. Something more . . . You know, standards, that sort of thing?”
“The Duchin Room . . .”
“Do you like to dance, William?”
“Let’s find out,” he said, leaning toward her slightly so the heady scent of alcohol and oranges carried from his breath.
She caught the headlights of the Expedition in the outside mirror of William’s rented Chevy. Salvo had replaced the plates earlier in the day and had been outside waiting for Lorraine when she left.
The Duchin Room’s lights were low, a competent trio working through the theme song to
Titanic.
The small dance floor was crowded with white-haired couples. A few trophy wives went through the motions. Thankfully, this crowd would not distract Salvo. He was inclined toward the pom-pom set.
As William searched for a table, he suggested the dance floor, but she declined, wanting another drink in him first. Business before pleasure.
Halfway through their drinks, a table opened up near the band, and they crammed onto a bench side by side. She warmed him up with some affectionate touching, laying her hand on his arm, pressing her leg against his. With the first strains of a slow song, she looked out at the dance floor and said, “So?”
As the two of them stood, she saw Salvo lay a bill on the bar and move toward the dance floor. She appreciated Salvo’s ability to stay with the plan.
William was a decent dancer. As he pulled her to him, she let him feel all of her, let him know where she was going with this. His arms now surrounded her and his hands gently brushed her backside. She broke free, spun him around, and pressed herself up against him. As she did so, her hands slipped into his pockets. He tensed with the contact, as she continued to playfully slip her hands in and out of his pockets. She gently urged him closer to a post at the edge of the dance floor and, as Salvo appeared there, released a ring of keys into his outstretched hand, William none the wiser.
 
 
 
S
alvo entered the men’s room, surprised by the appointments: marble wainscoting, gleaming brass fixtures, lead-cut mirrors, linen hand towels, classical music, oil paintings on the walls.
He closed himself into a stall and worked quickly to take a wax impression of what proved to be an unusual, complicated key.
He arrived back at the Duchin Room in the middle of an up-tempo “Girl from Ipanema.” Lorraine and the pilot were still on the dance floor. She caught his eye and pointed to the floor. Salvo dropped the keys by the post, made a final loop through the bar as if hunting for a friend, and left.
 
 
 
I
t took William forty-five minutes to notice his keys were missing. The discovery came as he went to pay the check.
“Shit,” he said, patting his pants frantically, explaining his loss.
“I’ll bet it’s my fault,” Lorraine said, allowing another of her provoking laughs. “Your pockets,” she added, wishing she could force herself to blush. “The slow dance.”
They searched the dance floor between songs, interrupted by a waitress. The key chain had been turned in to the bartender.
She accepted a ride back to the Christiania, where they’d started.
“I’m coming off a complicated relationship,” she explained from the passenger’s seat. “I’ve flirted tonight and I’m sure I came on a little too strong, and I apologize for that. I’m here for the wine auction tomorrow. I may or may not stay a day or two more. And if I do stay, I’d like to see you again. And this time with no excuses or apologies. But tonight . . . I need to collect myself and not do something self-destructive. Is this making any sense or are you about to scream?”
“A little of both,” he said.
“I hope it matters to you that I like you. I hope it matters that if I stay after the auction it will be to see you.”
“We’re scheduled out Sunday morning,” he said. “Back to L.A.”
“Oh.”
“So, if you’d like to reconsider, I can be very forgiving.”
She answered with a kiss, knowing she’d just cost him his job. She slid out of the car without another word.
13
Y
ou can pick up the room-service stuff,” Summer Sumner told the woman who’d answered the direct-dial.
Her father had abandoned her after his egg whites with salmon, off to a meeting, though he’d booked a tennis court for the two of them at eleven A.M. She’d had a Belgian waffle with mixed berries, orange juice, and green tea. She felt bloated.
The suite was gi-normous, two bedrooms that shared a living room, a balcony with views of the outdoor skating rink and Dollar Mountain—“the kiddy hill.” She didn’t care one bit about getting rid of the dirty dishes and the rolling cart; it was the room-service boy that interested her. She was crushed when, as it turned out, an older guy with a Russian accent retrieved the breakfast cart.

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