Read The Finishing School Online

Authors: Michele Martinez

Tags: #Detective and Mystery Stories, #Preparatory schools, #Manhattan (New York; N.Y.), #Mystery & Detective, #Women Lawyers, #Legal, #General, #Mystery Fiction, #Vargas; Melanie (Fictitious character), #Suspense, #Women Sleuths, #Public Prosecutors, #Legal Stories, #Fiction

The Finishing School (32 page)

“Isn’t she…?”

“The headmistress of Holbrooke, yes. Apparently Seward’s having an affair with her. Reyes has seen Patricia in the Sewards’ building at odd hours.”

“I don’t buy that. Why hang around the love nest a minute longer than you need to in the middle of a crisis like that? Only makes it more likely you’ll get found out.”

“I agree. Anyway, the bottom line is, we need to interview Charlotte Seward and confront her husband. I almost did it last night, but I figured they’d refuse to speak to me without a subpoena.”

“With everybody working on Expo as the top priority, I don’t see how we can talk to them right now. Don’t get me wrong, I hate to back-burner it as much as you do. Seward raises me up big time. He reminds me of that guy, you know, that rich guy in that movie with Jeremy Irons.”


Reversal of Fortune
? Where Claus von Bülow was tried for poisoning his wife?”

“Yeah, that’s it. That’s it exactly. Guy’s guilty as sin, and he walks. Liberal fucking defense attorneys for ya.”

“Great movie, though,” she said.

“You know why I like you? You always get what I’m talking about.”

She tried not to lose it, looking into his eyes. Work, work. Think about work. “Expo is definitely the top priority,” Melanie repeated. “Lulu Reyes told me last night that Carmen even mentioned him. Carmen knew about the drug running and may have spilled the beans to someone. And if that’s why Carmen is missing…”

“I know. You don’t have to spell it out. This guy takes care of witnesses.”

“Which makes me very worried,” Melanie said. “For
Trevor
.”

 

43

 

BUD HAD the logistics worked out with split-second timing, but he was concerned the relevant players would refuse to go along with the plan. Turned out he was worrying for nothing. It was candy from a baby with these idiots.

First he convinced Jay that it would be stupid for him to show his face in San Juan with the feds watching. Piece a’ cake. Jay was only too happy to delegate the shipment and get busy making the scene around town. Covering his own ass was the dickhead’s primary concern. Little did he know that he was setting himself up to look like the perpetrator of a particularly gruesome crime that hadn’t been committed yet.
Sweet
.

The next part was even easier, if that was possible. Once Jay told Pavel that Bud was temporarily running the show, it took no convincing whatsoever to get Pavel to follow his somewhat unexpected instructions. He should’ve known. Anything that required violence, the Russian was only too happy to do. With relish, no questions asked.

“Where you want I should take him?” was the only thing Pavel had inquired about when Bud called him that morning. Bud was relatively confident the communication was secure, since his own cell phone was brand spanking new and Pavel wasn’t a big enough fish for the feds to bother wiretapping.

“Pick the kid up just like Jay told you,” Bud instructed. “You drive, the kid sits in the front passenger seat, Lamar sits behind him. Take him to that warehouse Jay owns. You know where I mean?”

“Sure, sure. Williamsburg, right?”

“Right.”

“What do I say when he notice we not going JFK?” Pavel asked.

“Tell him you need to take a leak. Or just hit him over the head. Who gives a shit?”

“Oh. Is okay, then, if he show up damage?”

“I’d like to get some information out of him first, is all,” Bud said.

“So he need to be able to talk still.”

“Yes.”

“Wery good, I understand,” Pavel said, and hung up.

 

44

 

IT WAS eighty-seven degrees with a beating sun, but Melanie rolled the taxi window all the way down as they sped through the Isla Verde section of San Juan. Screw air-conditioning. She’d drink in the hot, wet breeze. Brightly colored houses and palm trees flashed by in a blur. She was a New Yorker born and bred, had rarely been to Puerto Rico, but something in her blood remembered this island like she’d lived a lifetime here. She craned her neck and caught a flash of aqua sea glittering in the bright sunlight. Bridget sat beside her, Dan in the front seat next to the taxi driver. He turned, glancing over his shoulder, and gave her one of those million-dollar smiles as the wind ruffled his dark hair. In that moment Melanie felt so happy she could’ve died right then and there.

The hotel sat on a broad tropical boulevard lined with high-rise condos and hotels. When she walked into the lobby, her excitement only grew. An enormous tinkling chandelier hung from a blue dome as ornately frescoed as a Fabergé egg, and under it was a gorgeous mahogany bar shaped like an oval. Even at this early hour, people sat at the tiny tables scattered around the cool marble floor, sipping their cocktails and talking a mile a minute. With how grim her life had been lately, Melanie felt more like joining in than judging. Hey, it’s five o’clock somewhere—why
not
have a rum punch? To her right the lobby opened onto a cheery casino full of slot machines and flashing lights.

Jay Esposito didn’t stint; you could say
that
for him, and Melanie was thrilled to be along for the ride. The government would never have shelled out the bucks to put them up
here
if not for the need to keep Expo under surveillance. Okay, she was working a harrowing case; she was distraught at leaving her vomiting daughter; her personal life was in a shambles. She knew she shouldn’t be so elated. But she couldn’t help it. She felt like some Park Avenue femme fatale on a sexy tropical jaunt with the guy of her dreams.

Once they checked in and changed into casual clothes so as not to stand out in the touristy crowd, reality reared its ugly head. The flight carrying Trevor and the bodyguard wasn’t scheduled to land until late that afternoon, and they had work to do in the meantime. Bridget set off for local DEA headquarters to pick up a G-car. Dan went to scout surveillance locations. And Melanie started canvassing hotel employees, looking for anyone who might have seen anything during last weekend’s drug-smuggling trip, showing photos of Brianna Meyers, Whitney Seward, and Jay Esposito. But this was a risky proposition. Rich drug dealers had
mucho
friends. Someone like Expo, who oozed criminal cachet and threw tips around like nobody’s business, was expert at wooing hotel employees. Anybody Melanie and Dan questioned might be a double agent who’d turn right around and snitch to Expo and his thugs that the feds were on the premises. So Melanie had her cover story ready, though she knew she was chasing the horse after it got out of the barn. After all, she held a special distinction: Expo’s people already recognized her on sight.

Melanie talked to whoever would talk to her, but nearly two hours of canvassing left her coming up empty and getting discouraged. Either Expo had already paid everybody off or else the El San Juan was just too big and too jam-packed on weekends for its employees to notice particular guests. Nobody remembered anything about her subjects. Her thong sandals were giving her blisters; her bare arms, exposed to hotel air-conditioning in a skimpy sundress, were all goosefleshy. She was sorely tempted to call it quits, track down that Dan O’Reilly, and entice him into taking a dip in the glorious azure swimming pool beckoning through the hotel windows.

She decided to compromise with the devil, since he was whispering so insistently in her ear. She’d head out to the pool area, interview people there. At least then she’d get a little sun,
por supuesto
. No point in flying all the way to San Juan and coming home without a tan, right?

It was lunchtime. The casual poolside restaurant was overflowing with glamorous revelers nibbling tropical salads, the men as well as the women with buff bods, skin oiled to luscious shades of bronze and cocoa, wearing the teeniest, trendiest bathing suits. Who gave a damn about sun damage when you were young, wealthy, and had your own pool cabana? Melanie put on her sunglasses and turned her face to the sky as she waited to be seated.

The waitress who eventually came to take her order was named Nelly, and by the looks of her she was a veteran. In her fifties probably, with thick ankles, leathery skin, and a plump, benevolent face, Nelly was working half the restaurant with efficiency and good cheer while two younger, hotter waitresses skulked in a corner gossiping and ignoring their tables. Melanie smiled and exchanged pleasantries with Nelly in Spanish, deciding to wait for a moment when the woman was less obviously burdened before asking any questions.

When Melanie had eaten about half of her Caesar salad, Nelly gave her the perfect opening.

“Are you with that fashion-industry convention?” Nelly asked, in Spanish, when she came over to check if Melanie needed anything else.

“No, but thank you for thinking I might be,” Melanie replied with a laugh.

“Ah, you’re pretty enough, but maybe not snotty enough,” Nelly said, smiling in return, showing a gold tooth.

“I’m actually here trying to find someone. You look like a lady who pays attention to people. Maybe you could help me.”

“Sure. Me, I never forget a face. Is important in this business. You need to remember who’s a good tipper, who ditches their check. That kind of thing.”

Melanie reached into the straw beach bag she’d brought along and pulled out several photographs. “My little cousin,” she said, flashing Brianna Meyers’s yearbook photo, “got herself into big trouble. Drugs.”


Ay
, so terrible. My niece, same thing! Such a beautiful, religious girl, and now she’s walking the streets!”

“It’s a curse,” Melanie said, and she meant it.

“But I’m so sorry,
hija
. I don’t recognize her. And I promise you, if she’d eaten here on my shift, I
would
.”

“Okay, what about either of these people?” she asked, laying down photos of Whitney and Expo. “These are the ones who led her astray.”

“This one, no, definitely not,” Nelly said, pointing to Expo’s photo, “but this one was in here last weekend.
Her
, I’ll never forget.” She tapped Whitney’s picture disapprovingly.

“You saw her? Really?”

“Oh, yes. And I’m not surprised she corrupted a nice girl like your cousin. This one was a little whore.”

“Why do you say that?”

“Okay, during lunch hour last Saturday, just as crowded as it is now, mind you, she comes in here with her boyfriend. A much older guy. Old enough to be her father. Disgusting, if you ask me. Anyway, she’s wearing this little bitty bathing suit, and she decides to change. Not in the ladies’ lounge or back in her room. Not even modestly behind a towel. No. This one has to stand up, make sure all the men are looking at her—which, of course they
were
, since she has long blond hair and a body like a goddess—and take off her top! She bares her chest for the whole world to see, nipples sticking out and everything. Then she puts on a T-shirt that says ‘Boy Crazy’ in Spanish. The man had just bought it for her.” Nelly clucked her tongue in disgust.

“But the man she was with. It wasn’t
him
?” Melanie asked, pointing to Expo’s photo again.

“No.”

“Are you
sure
?”

“Of course I’m sure. It wasn’t nothing like this bald man in the picture. This guy was older, too, but he had hair. One hundred percent I’m sure.”

“Can you describe him?”

“Maybe forties, handsome, but cold-looking. There was something scary about him.”

Pavel?

“Was he a Russian, by any chance?” Melanie asked.

“No. Definitely gringo. I heard them talking, and they mentioned New York. I speak English very good, you know. He sounded rich. Educated.”

Bud, then? Must be.

“Hair? Light, dark, long, short?”

“Dark, I think. Length, I’m not sure. He was wearing a baseball cap, and it stuck out enough that I could see it.”

“Anything else about his appearance?”

“He had some of that colored sunblock on his nose. Pink, it was. Looked foolish. That’s what I’m saying. The only reason this young girl would be with him was if he was buying her.”

“Were they definitely together like
that
?”

“Oh, yes. He tongue-kissed her and put his hands on her chest, almost like he was showing off. Everyone was looking.”

“Would there be any way to find out his name? A credit-card receipt? A reservation book?”

“No. This place doesn’t take reservations. And I remember, he paid cash. He paid me with a hundred on a thirty-dollar tab, which is a pain in the ass. I have to get my manager to write on the bill with a special marker, they’re so worried about counterfeiting around here. You don’t have large bills, do you?” Nelly asked suspiciously.

“No. I promise.”

“Listen, another customer is calling me.”

“Thank you so much, Nelly. You’ve been very helpful.”

“I hope it helps you find your little cousin. Such a waste, a nice girl like that.”

 

45

 

DAN AND BRIDGET were nowhere to be found. With the canvassing done and a few hours still to spare before the real action started, Melanie went back to her room. She checked in with her baby-sitter, who told her Maya was still running a fever but hadn’t vomited all day. Then Melanie opened her suitcase to dig out her white bikini.

But a small, square red envelope sitting on top of her clothes brought her up short. Papi’s Christmas card. She’d placed it there purposely when she’d changed earlier so it would hit her in the face the second she opened the bag. Funny how the brain works. Until she saw it staring back at her, she’d forgotten all about it. Her subconscious, doing her a favor.

She picked it up and looked at it. The devil was back with that whispering campaign again. Why not let sleeping dogs lie? Wasn’t her life difficult enough? Didn’t she come by everything she had the hard way? Why waste these precious moments of luxury on something that was bound to leave her stomach in knots and her heart aching? Put that bathing suit on and lounge by the pool,
chica
. Order yourself a piña colada, forget your troubles for once.

But the pull exerted by her broken relationship with her father was too strong. She found herself moving to the telephone as if in a trance. Picking up the receiver. Calling Information. Before she knew it, her father’s telephone number was written on the notepad on the bedside table. Not that there was anything magical about having it. She could get the same number from the same computer-generated voice by calling Information from her phone back home any day of the week. She could decide to contact her father anytime, even if she didn’t happen to be in his neighborhood.

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