13
EAGLE WAS FINISHING a sandwich at his desk the following day when his secretary buzzed him. He picked up the phone. “Yes?”
“Mr. Eagle, there’s a gentleman on the phone who says he’s calling from Rome, Italy, and he says he needs to speak to you urgently. His name is Donald Wells.”
“Never heard of him.”
“You want me to get rid of him?”
Eagle sighed. “No, I’ll speak to him.” He pressed the flashing button. “This is Ed Eagle.”
“Mr. Eagle,” the man said, “my name is Don Wells.” His accent was American.
“Yes, Mr. Wells, how can I help you?” He tried to convey that he was very busy and that the man should hurry up and get to the point.
“I’m in Rome, at the Hassler Villa Medici Hotel, and I received a phone call a few minutes ago saying that my wife and son have been kidnapped.”
“Mr. Wells, I think you want the FBI, not an attorney.”
“Yes, of course, but I’m a rather well-known figure in the film industry, and I don’t want to be on record as having called the police, if this should turn out to be a hoax. These things have a way of finding their way into the press, and that would be embarrassing for my wife and me.”
“What would you like me to do, Mr. Wells?”
“I have homes in Santa Fe and in Malibu, but neither phone answers. Could you possibly go to my Santa Fe home and take a look around and call me if you find anything that might indicate that something untoward has occurred? And could you arrange to have someone in L.A. check the Malibu house?”
“Mr. Wells, it would be a lot cheaper just to call the police in Santa Fe and Malibu.”
“I’m not concerned about your fees, Mr. Eagle. I know your reputation, and I would very much appreciate it if you would handle this for me.”
Eagle took a deep breath and let it out. “All right, Mr. Wells. Please give me your Santa Fe address and tell me how to get into the house.”
“The address is 180 Tano Norte. Do you know the road?”
The place was out past Susannah’s house. “Yes, I know it. If no one answers the bell, how will I get in?”
“There’s a rack holding half a cord of firewood to the right of the front door. There’s a key under the left end of the rack.”
“How about Malibu?”
“The house is in the Malibu Colony. You know it?”
“Yes.”
“Your people should just ask for the Wells house at the gate and give the guard the password, which is Featherweight.”
“Featherweight, all right.”
“And the key is in a window box to the left of the front door.”
“And how do I reach you?”
“You can call me at the Hassler, or you can reach me on my international cell phone.” He recited the number.
“Mr. Wells, where would you expect your wife and son to be on this date?”
“I haven’t spoken to them for a couple of days, but my wife had planned to fly from L.A. to Santa Fe for a few days. She just wasn’t sure yet when she could get away.”
“And to which address should I send my bill?”
“Please send that to my business manager, whose office is in Century City.” He gave Eagle the address.
“One more thing, Mr. Wells: How would your wife and son be traveling from L.A. to Santa Fe?”
“I’m in a fractional jet program call NetJets, and we fly out of Santa Monica.”
“Have you called them?”
“Not yet; I’d like to hear your report first.”
“Can you give me a physical description of your wife and son?”
“My wife—her name is Donna—is forty-nine years old, five-seven, a hundred and forty pounds, blonde hair; my son is fourteen, about the same height as his mother, dark hair, a hundred and thirty pounds. His name is Eric. He’s autistic.”
“Is he in school somewhere?”
“No, his mother has home-tutored him, with the help of various teachers, since he was nine.”
“How functional is he?”
“He doesn’t talk much, but most people wouldn’t know he was autistic on meeting him in our home, but he becomes anxious, if he’s away from his mother or me, and then he can be difficult to deal with.”
“I’ll call you back when I know more,” Eagle said. “Good-bye.”
“Good-bye.”
Eagle hung up and called Cupie Dalton’s cell number.
“This is Dalton.”
“Cupie, this is Ed Eagle. Are you still in L.A.?”
“Vittorio and I are on the way to the airport for a flight to San Francisco.”
“I’ve got a detour for you,” Eagle said, then explained what he wanted.
“Okay, we’ll get a later flight to San Francisco.” Cupie hung up.
Eagle looked at his watch, then got his coat and hat and walked out of his office. “I have to run an errand,” he said to his secretary. “I’ll be back in an hour or so.”
14
CUPIE CLOSED HIS cell phone and turned to Vittorio, who was driving. "U-turn, pal.”
“What’s going on?”
“That was Eagle on the phone. He got a call from Rome from some guy named Wells, who says his wife and son may have been kidnapped. We have to go and check out his Malibu house for any evidence of same.”
Vittorio shrugged. “Okay.” He whipped the car around and gunned it.
“And let’s not get arrested on the way.”
“Aren’t you carrying tin?”
“Yeah, but I don’t like to use it with a cop for something as light as a speeding ticket.”
Traffic was easy for L.A., and soon they were on the Pacific Coast Highway, heading north.
“You ever been out here?” Cupie asked, as they came to the long string of cheek-by-jowl beach houses that composed most of Malibu.
“No,” Vittorio said. “With these houses jammed together like this, how does anybody get to the beach?”
“That’s the idea,” Cupie replied. “Nobody does, unless he has the keys to a house. Keeps out the riffraff. It’s a long walk from the nearest public beach to out here.”
“I thought all the beaches in California were public.”
“There’s public, and there’s public.”
They passed the turnoff for the little shopping center that passed for Downtown Malibu and soon turned off the highway into a driveway blocked by a guard shack and a bar across the drive. A uniformed guard stepped out of the shack and waited for them to come to a halt. For a moment he eyed the odd pair: a cherubic man in a seersucker suit and an Indian dressed in black. “Can I help you?” he asked.
Cupie flashed his LAPD badge, the slightly smaller version that retired cops toted. “We’re here at Mr. Don Wells’s request to inspect his property. The password is Featherweight.”
The guard went back into the shack, checked something on a clipboard and pressed the button that raised the bar. He waved them on.
Vittorio followed Cupie’s directions. “You been out to this place before?”
“A few times. These are some of the most expensive houses in the United States. Over there,” he said, pointing at a large house that backed up onto the beach. “See the sign? Wells.”
Vittorio pulled into the driveway. Cupie’s car was a gray Ford Crown Victoria, chosen because it looked like an unmarked police car, just for occasions like this. Nobody was going to call the cops, if they thought the cops were already there.
Cupie found the key in the window box. He pulled a wad of latex gloves from a coat pocket and handed a pair to Vittorio. “Don’t touch anything, even with these, unless you have to. We don’t know what we’re going to find, and if it’s bad, we want to be investigators, not suspects.”
Vittorio nodded.
Cupie unlocked the door and tapped the alarm code into the keypad. “Alarm was armed; that’s a good sign.” He led the way down a long entrance hall, more of a gallery, really, hung with a collection of abstract paintings. “Let’s stick together,” Cupie said, “and be careful.”
“Come on, Cupie, you think I don’t know how to deal with a crime scene?”
“Four eyes are better than two.” Cupie produced a flashlight about four inches long. They walked into a large living room with glass sliding doors overlooking a porch and the beach at one end. The room was a good forty feet long, Cupie reckoned. “Great for entertaining a hundred and fifty of your closest friends, huh?”
“I could get my closest friends into a jail cell,” Vittorio remarked. “This place looks like a platoon of maids just left.”
Cupie used his flashlight to illuminate corners of the spotless room. He looked under sofas and chairs, too. Nothing in the living room. They moved into the next room, a library, with a spacious home office off one end. Nothing.
They retraced their footsteps and crossed the hall into a large dining room, then through a swinging door into a kitchen, appropriate for a large restaurant. The block holding all the kitchen knives was full—no empty spaces—and everything was perfectly neat.
“Upstairs,” Cupie said. “Stay close to the wall, behind me, and don’t touch the banister.” There was a huge master suite upstairs that included two dressing rooms and two baths. Vittorio looked in the closets. They crossed the hall and walked into another bedroom.
“The kid’s room,” Cupie said, “but weird. No rock posters, no sports-team pennants. I’ve never seen a kid’s room this neat.”
Vittorio checked the closets, too. “This place is untouched by human hands,” he said.
Cupie led him back downstairs and to the kitchen. “Guesthouse at the other end of the pool,” he said. He opened a sliding glass door and walked the length of the fifty-foot pool. The front-door key worked in the guesthouse door, too. They found two bedrooms and a sitting room, and the place smelled a little musty, as if unused for a while. “Let’s walk the perimeter of the property,” Cupie said.
They did so, finding no footprints outside ground-level windows, no sign of forced entry. They reentered the house through the kitchen sliding door. Cupie called Ed Eagle’s office.
“He’s out for an hour or so,” the secretary said.
Cupie thanked her, hung up and called Eagle’s cell phone.
“Eagle,” he said.
“We’re in Malibu,” Cupie said. “The house is clean as a whistle. Any criminals operating here had a lot of house-cleaning experience.”
“Lock up and wait in your car to hear from me,” Eagle said. “I’m almost to the Tano Norte house.”
EAGLE PULLED INTO the driveway and stopped in front of the house. It was a typical Santa Fe home for an affluent family, he thought. Looked to be seven or eight thousand square feet, richly landscaped with native plants, guesthouse fifty yards down a flagstone path. He walked around the house and found nothing more surprising than a four-car garage, then he went back to the front door and found the house key under the firewood rack.
He rang the bell a couple of times and, getting no response, tried the front door, which turned out to be unlocked. The alarm system was not armed, either. “Hello!” he shouted, but got no answer. He turned right and came to the kitchen, a big room, with all the usual top-end appliances: SubZero fridge, Viking range, two Miele dishwashers. Not very different from his own kitchen, he thought.
He checked the dining room next door, then walked into the living room, which seemed to be in perfect order. He walked across a hallway to a large study, with many books on the shelves, then left it through another door and came to what seemed to be a wing of bedrooms. Directly ahead of him was a set of large double doors. He opened one of the doors and stepped into the master suite. Immediately, he detected a familiar odor, but he couldn’t place it. He stopped and thought about it, then it came to him.
It smelled like a butcher shop.
15
EAGLE TRIED NOT to move his feet. He leaned over and looked into the bedroom. He could see the corner of the bed and a pair of feet, a woman’s, with one shoe missing. He took a deep breath and walked into the room, keeping near the wall.
He stared at the bed for a long moment, until he was sure he had seen enough, then he retraced his steps and stood in the hall, taking deep breaths. When he had calmed himself, he went to his cell phone’s address book and called the district attorney’s direct office line.
“Bob Martínez.”
“Bob, it’s Ed Eagle. Write this down: I’m at 180 Tano Norte, that’s the old County Road 85, renamed a few years ago, runs off Tano Road.”
“I know it. What’s up?”
“I had a phone call an hour or so ago from a man named Donald Wells, calling from Rome. He said he had had a phone call saying that his wife and son had been kidnapped, and he asked me to check it out.”
“Did you call the police?”
“No, he didn’t want that, unless something was confirmed.”
“And . . . ?”
“And I’m at the house, and his wife and son are dead in the master suite. There’s a lot of blood.”
Martínez was not fazed. “Okay, call nine-one-one right now, and let’s get this on the record. I’ll be there soon.” He hung up.
Eagle called 911 and answered the operator’s list of questions, then he went outside and sat in a rocking chair on the front porch to wait for the police. His cell phone vibrated.
“Ed Eagle.”
“Mr. Eagle, it’s Don Wells. Your office gave me your cell phone number. I wanted you to know that I went downstairs and spoke with the manager, who spoke with the hotel telephone operator on duty. The call I got about the kidnapping came from my Santa Fe house.”
“Tell me about the call.”
“The phone rang, and I picked it up. There was a kind of click and I heard some sort of computer-generated voice, a recording, I guess. It said something like, ‘We have your wife and son. Start raising five million dollars, and we will contact you about arranging payment. If you tell anyone about this, your wife and son will be killed.’ Then there was another click, and the line went dead.”
“Mr. Wells, are you sitting down?”
“Yes, I’m at the desk in my sitting room.”
“I’m at your house now, and I’m sorry to tell you that your wife and son are dead.”
There was a long silence, and when Wells spoke again his voice was unsteady and his breathing audibly shallow. “Are you sure about this?”
“I’m sorry, I am sure. I’ve called the police and the district attorney, and I’m waiting for them to arrive.” Eagle heard the sound of a police whooper from somewhere up the road. “I can hear them coming.”
“But why?” Wells said. “Why didn’t they wait for the money? I would have given it to them.”
Eagle thought he knew why, but he said, “I don’t know at this point. It’s important that you stay right where you are; the police will want to speak to you. Please don’t leave your suite until you hear from me or the police, but you might ask the concierge to arrange travel for you to Santa Fe as soon as possible. I’ll speak to you later to get your arrival time.”
“All right,” Wells said, sounding dejected but in control of himself. “Mr. Eagle, I want to retain you to represent me in all this.”
“You have already done so, Mr. Wells. I’m very, very sorry for your loss. When you feel up to it, you might give some thought to any arrangements you want to make. My office will assist you.”
“Thank you,” Wells said softly, then hung up.
Eagle looked up to see two police cars and a van pull into the drive. He stood up to greet them. Before he could speak to the first officer, the district attorney’s car drove in behind the other vehicles, and Bob Martínez got out.
EAGLE TOOK THEM through the house, following his original path, then he went back to the front porch and sat down again. A few minutes passed, then Martínez and a Detective Reese joined him, pulling up chairs.
“Take us through it from the first phone call,” the detective said.
Eagle explained himself. “Right after I spoke to you, Bob, Wells called me on my cell phone. He checked with the hotel operator and learned that the kidnap threat call had come from this house. He said the voice was electronically altered and he was told to raise five million dollars. He was also told that if he called anybody, his wife and son would be killed. It occurs to me that, somehow, the perpetrators may have known that he made the call to me, and that’s why the murders took place. I didn’t mention this to him. I told him to stay in his suite and that the Santa Fe police would be in touch with him. I also told him to have his hotel make travel arrangements for him to come to Santa Fe.”
“Please call him back, Mr. Eagle, and find out when he’s due here, then let me speak to him,” Detective Reese said.
“We’d better call from inside the house, so we can each be on an extension,” Eagle said. “He’s retained me to represent him, and I have to be present for any questioning.”
“There are two phones in the study,” Martínez said, “and we’ve already processed them and the one in the living room.”
“Then let me speak to him first, and I’ll tell you when he’s ready to talk to you.”
“All right,” the detective said. “We’ll wait in the living room.”
Eagle went into the study, sat down at Wells’s desk and got connected with Wells. “Mr. Wells, have you made travel arrangements?”
“Yes, I’ll fly to New York tomorrow morning, change for Dallas, then for Albuquerque. My plane gets in at seven tomorrow evening.” He gave Eagle the flight number.
“I’ll have you met and brought to a hotel in Santa Fe.”
“Can’t I stay in my own home?”
“I’ll try, but I doubt it. The police have a lot of work to do here, and the master suite is not habitable at the moment.”
“Is that where they were killed?”
“Yes. The police want to speak with you now, but before I put them on the phone, I want you to think carefully: Is there anything you’ve failed to tell me that I might need to know?”
Wells seemed to reflect. “No, I don’t think so.”
“Mr. Wells, I must tell you that you will be the first suspect, until the police have been able to eliminate you as such.”
“But how could I have anything to do with this? I’m in Rome!”
“Of course you are, but they will suspect you anyway; it’s how they work, and you shouldn’t be upset by it. Now, tell me, what was the state of your marriage?”
“We’ve been married for eight years,” Wells said. “We are . . . were both very content with things, I think.”
“You say ‘content,’ instead of ‘happy.’”
“We were settled in for the long haul,” Wells said.
“You said your son was fourteen.”
“That’s right.”
“Then I take it, he was your stepson.”
“Yes, but I loved the boy; it was no different than being his real father.”
“I should contact the boy’s biological father. Can you give me his name and number?”
“He’s dead. He was killed in a street robbery in New York.”
“How long ago?”
“About a year and a half before Donna and I were married, so between nine and ten years ago.”
“Was the perpetrator caught?”
“No, I don’t think so. The police said it was an ordinary mugging, gone wrong.”
“Anything else you can tell me?”
“I can’t think of anything.”
“All right, I’m going to put a Detective Reese on the line. The district attorney will be listening on an extension, and so will I. If I interrupt you, shut up immediately, is that clear?”
“Yes, I understand.”
“Confine your answers strictly to the questions asked; don’t volunteer anything or any theories until you and I have discussed them privately first. I’ll call the detective now.” Eagle shouted for Reese to come in, then he listened on the extension while the detective questioned his client thoroughly. He did not find it necessary to interrupt.
When the phone call was over, Martínez came into the room. “Okay,” he said, “we’re done, I think.”
“When can Mr. Wells have his house back?”
Reese spoke up. “We’ll seal the master suite, and he can stay in another bedroom, if he wants.”
“I’ll ask him.”
Reese left the room, and Martínez and Eagle were alone.
“You know who she was, don’t you?” Martínez asked.
“Mrs. Wells?”
“She was Donna Worth. Worth Pharmaceuticals?”
“Ah,” Eagle said.
“Five or six years ago, her father, the founder died, and she was his only heir.”
“How much?
“Billions,” Martínez said.
“I see.”
“Do you?”
“Speak plainly, Bob.”
“The boy was her only child. That means Wells is going to get the bulk of her estate. I mean, I’m sure there are charitable trusts and bequests, but Mr. Wells is going to be a very rich man.”
“That’s plain enough, Bob,” Eagle said.
Reese came back into the room. “We found an open wall safe in Mr. Wells’s dressing room, empty. I’d like to know what was in it when you speak to your client.”
“I’ll let you know,” Eagle said.