Authors: Lynda La Plante
‘Jesus Christ, you can be so fucking crude,’ Decker said huffily.
Lorraine leaned on his desk, and grinned. ‘He was in love with Harry Nathan himself Then she gestured towards her office. ‘Come in and chat to me. I want to discuss a few things that came up this morning.’
Decker collected his notebook, and asked her whether she was doing all this work
pro bono
or if they were going to be paid.
Lorraine sighed. ‘Oh, shit, I forgot. I have to go talk to Feinstein.’
Vallance drove out of the garage, unaware that the smiling, bowing valet had given his car a thorough going-over. He was on his way now to play Prince Charming to Verna Montgomery, to get his rent money out of her. She had to be sixty years old, though she insisted she was no more than forty-four. He hadn’t even bothered to rearrange the white wisps of his hair because he knew that if Nathan’s videos ever got out any last shred of hope he had of resurrecting his career was gone. As he drove onto Sunset he was crying, his white hair blowing in the wind – Raymond Vallance, the most beautiful man in the world.
D
ECKER GO’I Lorraine an appointment with Feinstein almost immediately. His address in Century City was certainly impressive, on one of the smartest blocks of the Avenue of the Stars. The building had only recently been opened, and Lorraine had to concede that it was a truly handsome piece of modern architecture, a soaring tower of golden granite and blue glass that seemed to cut the sky.
Lorraine went up the steps and into a lobby whose sheer moneyed lustre exceeded anything she had seen, even in Los Angeles. The commissionaire directed her to the forty-third floor, and she made her way to the bank of elevators.
She emerged from the elevator car into another lobby bathed in light, streaming in through semi-transparent blinds of fine white cloth. Feinstein’s receptionist was a beautiful, long-limbed girl, wearing a straight tunic dress in mint green crêpe-de-chine and a pair of transparent plastic court shoes, whose four-inch heels made her well over six feet tall. She introduced herself as Pamela, with a charming smile, and asked her if she would mind waiting a moment. Lorraine sat down in one of four low armchairs with curving black backs and white leather upholstery ranged round a table of quaking-leaf fern.
Feinstein kept Lorraine waiting only a minute, then she was shown into an enormous office carpeted in a smooth silver grey like whaleskin, full of beautifully crafted wooden furniture whose dignity and majestic scale jarred with the bald, weasel-like lawyer. He only bothered to rise a couple of inches from his chair and motioned Lorraine to a lower seat placed in front of his huge desk. She began to thank him for seeing her, but his intercom blinked and his voice rasped loudly, making her jump: she had not noticed the transparent plastic speaker plugged into his right ear or the mouthpiece at the corner of his lips.
‘Just tell her I’m in conference, Pamela, and that goes for the rest of the week!’ He listened to whatever Pamela said in reply, then snapped, ‘I am not talking to her, Pamela!’ and detached the headset. He began to shuffle files on his desk, avoiding Lorraine’s eye as he asked what she wanted to see him about and reminded her that he was a busy man. He opened a drawer and took out a foot-long cigar, sniffed it before unwrapping it, then sniffed again and clipped the end.
‘I’m a private investigator,’ Lorraine began, and Feinstein sighed, sucking on the unlit cigar end.
‘Yes, Mrs Page, I know who you are.’ He patted his pockets, looking for his lighter.
‘I was acting for Mrs Nathan,’ she said. He ran his lips around the fat cigar and puffed it alight, the smoke forming a blue halo round his head.
‘Just get to the point. I’m inundated with calls from Kendall Nathan, and so I’ll tell you what I’ve told her – and keep on telling her. Until I’ve had time to assess the Nathan estate, I can’t give any personal or financial information to anyone.’
‘I wanted to discuss Cindy Nathan’s—’
Feinstein cut her off. ‘Suicide? Well, I’m sorry, obviously. Is that why you wanted to see me? Or - don’t tell me - you, like everyone else concerned with Nathan, want a pay-off? Worried you won’t get your fee, is that it?’
‘I wanted to ask you for some details about the art gallery, and specifically Mr Nathan’s art collection,’ Lorraine said, controlling her temper - she would have liked to punch the cigar down his throat.
‘I’m not prepared to discuss anything with you, Mrs Page. Like I said, I’m sorry about Cindy, but it doesn’t come as a shock. I mean, you threaten to do something often enough, kinda takes away the element of surprise.’ He gestured in the air, one hand clutching the cigar.
‘Cindy had threatened suicide before?’
Feinstein looked at his watch. ‘She made it public knowledge often enough, and I got enough faxes and notes from her, threatening the same thing, to paper the walls with. She was . . .’ He twisted his finger at the side of his temple.
Would it be possible for me to see them?’
‘No, it would not. If however, the police require them, that is a different matter.’
‘And I suppose Harry Nathan had nothing to do with Cindy’s previous suicide attempts?’
‘Maybe, maybe not. I don’t know the ins and outs of my clients’ domestic set-ups - it’s tough enough getting the business side of their lives sorted out.’ He sighed. ‘I know she was young, but she’d been around and, to be honest, I couldn’t stand the girl. Never could understand why my client put up with her hysterics, but then, once a man gets involved with these bimbos, what can you expect? Money’s all they’re after. I see a lot of greed in my profession. I’ve even got Harry’s goddamned domestics calling, plus his entire family, all like vultures, all wanting to know how much. I have to protect my clients.’
‘But not all your clients are murdered, I hope,’ Lorraine said quietly.
Feinstein examined his manicured hands. The cigar stuck in his wet lips as he dragged heavily on it and blew a wide ring of smoke behind his head, his voice halting with false emotion. ‘Harry Nathan was my client, and he was also a man I admired and respected. Whatever he did in his private life was none of my concern. If you submit your account to my assistant, I will endeavour to see that it’s paid. Now, as I said, I’m a very busy man, Mrs Page, so if there’s nothing else . . .’
‘What will Kendall Nathan inherit now under the will?’ Lorraine asked.
Feinstein started at her, his gaze studiedly blank. ‘I don’t see that that is any concern of yours, Mrs Page. Do I have to repeat myself about client confidentiality?’
Lorraine persisted, ‘Does she get anything now that might have gone to Cindy – like the art or anything?’
Feinstein wagged his finger. ‘Listen, honey, you just lost one client, so this, I presume, is a fishing trip for another. You wanna work for Kendall Nathan, go talk to her. Now, please, I’d like you to leave.’
Lorraine got up and picked up her briefcase, smoothing down her skirt. ‘Is that one of the Nathan gallery paintings?’ She indicated a massive canvas on the wall, and Feinstein moved round his desk, impatient to show her out. ‘I notice you had one similar in Reception.’
The lawyer was now opening the office door. ‘Mrs Page,’ he said curtly, sweeping one hand in a mock-gallant gesture towards the door, but Lorraine had moved closer to the painting, a huge composition of brightly coloured, but somehow warlike shapes, and saw a small gold plaque on the wall underneath that named Frank Stella as the artist.
‘Very impressive,’ Lorraine murmured, then walked towards him. ‘Are you a collector?’
Feinstein turned away from her as Pamela appeared outside the open door. ‘Kendall Nathan has called again – she’s on the phone now,’ she said in a low voice. ‘She says it’s very urgent, Mr Feinstein.’
‘Get rid of her, and show Mrs Page out.’
Lorraine was now close to the attorney, who reached to just below her shoulder. What little hair he had left was dyed black and slicked backwards, making his weasel’s eyes, under arched – and, if Lorraine was not mistaken, plucked – brows, seem even smaller and beadier. With his silk suit and Gucci shoes, Feinstein smelt of money as strongly as of his overpowering cologne, but no amount of polish could disguise the coarseness of the personality underneath.
‘Is it an original?’ she asked sweetly.
‘What?’ He blinked.
‘The painting. Did you buy it from Nathan’s gallery? It’s just that the real reason I came to see you was that I had a conversation with Cindy, shortly before she died, and she seemed to think that her husband, and probably his ex-wife, Kendall Nathan, were involved in some sort of art fraud.’ Feinstein frowned, and looked past her to the painting as Lorraine continued in the same saccharine tone. ‘But, then, as you’re a collector, I’m sure you would have had any work you purchased properly authenticated.’ The false sweetness of her smile matched her voice as she walked past him out into Reception.
Feinstein followed. ‘Cindy Nathan told you about a fraud. What fraud?’
Lorraine paused at a canvas that covered most of one wall, and tapped the frame. ‘Well, it appears that a lot of the paintings, not only in Nathan’s house but also sold through the gallery, were probably only copies. This must have cost a fortune, it’s a . . .’ She leaned to read another small gold plaque. ‘Ah, a de Kooning. I mean, I’m no connoisseur, but I know his work is sought after and commands a high price – if it’s an original, that is.’
Feinstein continued to follow in Lorraine’s wake, glancing at the painting as he passed it. ‘What else did Mrs Nathan tell you?’ he asked nervously.
Lorraine had her hand on the door to the lobby, and tilted her head to one side. ‘Well, Mr Feinstein, my client Mrs Nathan may, sadly, no longer be with us, but nevertheless she is still my client, and as you have pointed out, I must continue to respect the confidentiality of her affairs. Thank you for your time, and if you should wish to see me again, please call.’ She proffered one of her cards, then breezed out of the door, which swung closed behind her.
Feinstein glanced at her card, then hurried into the boardroom. There were two canvases at either end of the twenty-five-foot room, and he almost ran to the one further away, then stopped in his tracks and turned to look at the other. He had nothing like the expertise necessary to tell whether his so-called investments were genuine or not, and panic began to rise like bile in his gullet. Then he yelled at the top of his voice. ‘P
AMELA!
PAMELA!’
The girl hurried into the room, notebook at the ready, to find Feinstein sitting at the centre of the boardroom table. ‘Your next appointment is here, Mr Feinstein. Mr . . . are you all right?’
He was pulling at his collar, loosening his tie. ‘I need a glass of water, an’ get that guy, the art historian, the one who went with me to Harry Nathan’s gallery.’
‘Yes, Mr Feinstein. Do you want him to meet you there, as usual?’
‘No.’ His voice was harsh. ‘Get him here. I want him fucking here.’
Pamela scuttled out. As Harry Nathan’s lawyer, Feinstein knew not only what a mess the Nathan estate was in, but that the outstanding claims against it far exceeded its worth. The only thing Feinstein had been sure about was Nathan’s private art collection, whose value had yet to be assessed, but he had been depending on it to cover the majority of the debts and, most importantly, his own fees. He was sure Harry wouldn’t have pulled a fast one on him. He was his lawyer, for Chrissakes. He’d been his friend, hadn’t he? But as he calculated how much he had paid for the canvases, a sinking feeling engulfed him. He had always known that Harry Nathan was a thieving, conniving, two-faced bastard. It took one to know one.
Kendall hung up the telephone, shaking with impotent rage, as Feinstein’s secretary informed her yet again that her boss was in conference. She had been calling him every half an hour since she had spoken to the insurance company and disovered that Cindy had indeed been telling the truth – Nathan hadn’t paid the premiums on the art collection for two years.
In an effort to calm her nerves, she’d had three brandies, but they hadn’t helped. If anything they had made her feel worse. Part of her was still refusing to believe what had happened, sure there was some mistake – but it was pretty clear what the explanation was: Harry had not bothered to insure the paintings because they were worthless. As soon as she had got a closer look at them she had known that they were fakes. She and Harry had had the brilliant idea of selling valuable original paintings to various ditzy members of the film community, arranging for copies to be painted, and then, after the buyers had had their purchases authenticated, delivering the fakes. No one had noticed; no one had bothered to get the paintings checked a second time.
Now, however, it seemed that Harry had pulled the same scam on her, and switched the originals hanging at the house for a second set of copies. The reason, too, was obvious: he was cutting her out of the proceeds of the fraud and intended to keep the approximately twenty million dollars they had reckoned on netting. Harry wouldn’t have done that to
her
, would he?
She was almost panting with hysteria, and her outrage rose the more she thought about it: her role in the whole thing had required months of preparation, negotiation and unremitting stress.
Kendall poured herself more brandy, forced herself to try to think logically: what if Harry Nathan hadn’t been shot? It had happened only weeks before they had intended to move all the paintings. What if he had carried into effect what they had so carefully arranged, that the paintings would be moved one by one to private buyers in Europe? Harry had even been in Germany arranging the deals. Kendall’s head throbbed with trying to think straight. She had paid good money for two false passports for him, covered his periods away from LA by saying he was filming, and made calls on his behalf to ensure that no one, not even Feinstein, knew where he was. Maybe Feinstein didn’t know about their scam. But what had happened to the original paintings and sculptures:
She had yet another drink, calmer now, her thin face pinched as she tried to piece together the events of the last weeks, thinking about what Cindy had told her. There was no other explanation, other than that Harry had been concealing the treasures somewhere outside the house for two years. She started to shake: he had been lying to her for two years and had intended to cut her out.