The Finishing School (43 page)

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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

BOOK: The Finishing School
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She strode up to the podium in the glare of the spotlight and smiled. She was one of those people who always managed to function as long as she had a goal in mind. Her object now was clear: to avoid getting caught, to stay out of jail. The status quo, which an hour ago she despised as a humiliating second best, already seemed precious to her, lost and irretrievable.

“Members of the Holbrooke community,” she began, and tears welled in her eyes at the thought that she might never utter those words again. She looked out over her audience—so rich, so beautiful, so lavishly attired. If they found out the truth, they would no longer defer to her, no longer count her as a power in their world.

Patricia stopped, overcome, and looked down at her hands twisting wretchedly before her. The audience held its collective breath, and in the long, pregnant pause that followed, Patricia resolved things in her own mind. She wouldn’t give in. She refused to let this happen. She saw a way out. She would reveal the plot, pretend she’d stumbled across it, play the hero safeguarding the school’s millions.

Patricia squared her shoulders and began again. “First let me say that your generosity overwhelms me. This has been a tragic week for our school. All of you—alumnae
and
parents—could have chosen to turn your backs on us in our hour of need, in the wake of these shocking events. But you didn’t. Instead you embraced Holbrooke, with goodwill, with open arms and open checkbooks. Tonight we have raised over one million dollars from the auction alone!”

Applause and cheers roared through the auditorium. “Thank you. Thank you. Thank you,” she intoned, until the din quieted. “I will now read the names of the donors in Miss Holbrooke’s Inner Circle. Every family on this list has contributed at least two hundred and fifty thousand dollars to the endowment campaign. I would ask that each family stand as your name is announced to receive the thanks of the Holbrooke community. You have played a singular role in financing our school’s future, and we acknowledge your generosity tonight with humble gratitude.”

Patricia’s voice rang out calm and commanding as she read the names on the list. She paused for the perfect interval between names to let each family savor its moment of glory. When the last family had been acknowledged, she held up her hand with dramatic effect.

“Now the big moment has arrived, although with an unexpected twist. I ask Roger and Enid Van Allen to please come to the podium.”

The Van Allens rose from their seats of honor in the front row and proceeded to the stage amid thunderous applause. Roger, bent, frail, and in his late seventies, was helped up the stairs by Enid, forty-five and glamorous, a fourth wife. Patricia embraced each of them, then turned back to the microphone.

“As I know you are all aware, Roger and Enid Van Allen have pledged the astonishing sum of ten million dollars to the endowment campaign for the purpose of constructing a new building to house our Upper School.”

The audience rose en masse for a standing ovation. Patricia looked out over the crowd, knowing that this was her last chance to turn back. But she wouldn’t. She’d made her decision.

“Thank you, thank you,” she said, indicating with a downward motion of her palms that they should resume their seats. “Now I would ask our audiovisual coordinator, Mr. Greenblatt, to please open the line to our bankers.”

After a bit of earsplitting feedback, a man’s voice came over the loudspeaker. “Hello? Can you hear me?”

“Yes, this is Mrs. Andover. You’re on air at the Holbrooke gala. Can you please identify yourself for the audience.”

“Kyle Chin with the Private Banking Group.”

“Mr. Chin, you’re aware that ten million dollars is slated to be transferred from the Van Allens’ account into the Holbrooke endowment campaign account.”

“Yes, ma’am. Say the word, and I’ll make the transfer.”

“I’m afraid I can’t do that.”

A collective gasp ripped through the crowd.

“What?” Roger Van Allen exclaimed.

Patricia cast her eyes all the way to the back of the auditorium, to the spot where James stood watching her. He’d guessed what she was about to do. He
must
have, because he immediately turned on his heel and fled. So much for their so-called love affair. Neither one of them had gotten what they bargained for, which made them even.

Patricia resumed her speech without missing a beat.

“I can’t transfer the money tonight as planned for a very good reason. Every Holbrooke family should rest assured that when misfortune threatens our school, I am here to combat it. I stand vigilant to keep the school’s resources, and your daughters’ futures, safe from every foe. Tonight it has come to my attention that an important safeguard put in place to protect Holbrooke’s endowment account may have been compromised. Mr. Chin, I am therefore instructing you to immediately shut down the account so that nobody—repeat, nobody—can access it.”

 

63

 

“WHAT WAS THAT? What just happened?” Hogan demanded, his words carrying loud and clear through the development office’s door.

“I don’t know. I never got an error message like that before,” came Carmen’s voice, small and tremulous.

“Try again!”

Melanie heard the keyboard clicking.

“Nothing,” Carmen said. “I had it. You saw. But then it like just blipped away.”

“You’re trying to trick me, bitch!”

“No, I swear!”

“Do it right or you’ll be sorry.”

“Let me try again.”

There was menace in Hogan’s tone, pure terror in Carmen’s. Melanie put her hand on the doorknob and glanced back over her shoulder at the empty hall. Where the
fuck
was Detective Leary?

“I don’t understand. The account’s offline for some reason,” Carmen was saying. Then came a muffled cry, followed by the sounds of a struggle. Time had run out.

Melanie twisted the doorknob, but it refused to give. It must’ve locked automatically again. She flipped the safety latch on the Beretta so she didn’t shoot herself by accident and, grasping the gun by its barrel, smashed it hard against the frosted window. Glass shattered, flying everywhere. She reached in to unlock the door, crying out as a knifelike shard sliced into the palm of her right hand.

When she stepped over the broken glass and flipped on the light in the office, the scene that greeted her was bizarrely calm. Carmen sat at the desk in front of the computer. Carmen didn’t know Melanie and so gazed at her uncomprehendingly, neither moving nor calling out. Hogan stood behind Carmen’s chair, acting as if nothing unusual were happening. But his hands were held oddly down and in front of him, concealed by the chair. Either he was hurt somehow or else he had a gun.

“Hey, Melanie, that was some entrance. Are you okay?” And Hogan smiled at her reassuringly.

“Get away from her!
Now
,” Melanie said, raising her gun.
Mierda
! The safety was still on. But Hogan didn’t know that.

“I don’t really see where you’re coming from with this,” Hogan said reasonably. “There must be some misunderstanding. Carmen uncovered a scheme by Patricia Andover to steal money from the school endowment fund. She reported it to me because I’m somebody she trusts, right, Carmen?” And he moved his arm jerkily behind the chair. It was Door Number Two, the gun, for sure.

“Right,” Carmen echoed hollowly.

“I only came here tonight to prevent a crime from occurring,” he said.

Hogan looked Melanie steadily in the eye. He was an attractive man, with his lean face, longish dark hair, and lanky frame, and he had the gift of gab. She definitely got how he’d been able to brainwash Whitney Seward. Hell, she was almost tempted to believe him herself. But then she looked into his gray eyes, and they were cold and lifeless as the ocean in winter.

She raised her gun higher so it pointed directly at his head. “I
know
you’re lying. You were there the night Whitney and Brianna died. You murdered Whitney Seward.”

“That’s not true. I don’t believe in judging others, but those girls had drug problems. They did it to themselves.” He was still standing there with a long-suffering expression on his face, ignoring the gun pointed at his head as if Melanie were some tiresome child. It was a good act, but she wasn’t buying it.

“I have witnesses! Charlotte Seward will testify you stole her Oxy-Contin. And the M.E. will say you mixed it into a nice little heroin cocktail and shot Whitney up between the toes.”

For the first time, anxiety flickered in Hogan’s eyes, and his smooth facade began to splinter. “That’s a crock of shit. Charlotte Seward is a junkie.”

Blood was oozing from the cut on Melanie’s hand, and she was well aware that the gun she struggled to hold steady wouldn’t fire if she pulled the trigger. Yet she couldn’t resist confronting this smug killer, who’d obviously bargained on being smarter than everyone else, on being too smart to get caught. Well, he’d bargained wrong.

“You can’t fool me, because I know too much about you,
Bud
,” Melanie said. Hogan flinched visibly at her use of that name. “That’s right! I know you recruited your students to mule for your pal Jay Esposito. How much did he pay you for that, huh? To ruin those girls’ lives? To
kill
Brianna Meyers? Did you watch her die,
Bud
, with heroin leaking into her stomach?”

In a flash, Hogan grabbed Carmen by the hair and yanked her to her feet, putting a gun to her head. The girl yelped in pain. In the same instant, Melanie lowered the Beretta and tried vainly to flip the safety with her blood-slicked fingers.
Shit
! She couldn’t manage. She raised her gun again instantly, praying Hogan hadn’t noticed. At this point, if he didn’t believe she could fire, he’d surely kill
her
. Then who would rescue Carmen?

“You’ve got it all figured out, huh, Melanie?” As he spoke, he jabbed his gun hard into Carmen’s head, and she began to whimper.

“Let her go!” Melanie commanded, brandishing the Beretta.

“Why would I do that? She knows too much about me. So do
you
, for that matter. The smartest thing I could do right now would be to kill you both and get out of this place.” He made a movement toward the door. Carmen’s knees buckled, and Hogan dragged her forward a few inches.

“You’d be foolish to kill us, Bud. That’s just two more bodies to your name that you’ll never get away with! The police know all about you.”

“Bullshit.”

“You don’t believe me? We know you went to Puerto Rico with Whitney and Brianna on the drug run last weekend. A witness puts you eating lunch with Whitney at the hotel. You rode shotgun back to New York with them. Your job was to watch them pass the drugs out of their stomachs and then to hand the heroin-filled balloons over to Expo, am I right?”

He looked surprised.

“I
am
right,” Melanie continued. “But you ran into a problem with Brianna. By the time she got back to New York, it was apparent that one of the balloons in her stomach was leaking. She got sick. Terribly, horribly sick. And she died. That’s all in the autopsy report.”

Hogan was watching Melanie steadily, still holding a gun to Carmen’s head.

“Brianna’s death came at a very bad time for you. The day before you left for Puerto Rico, Carmen Reyes had come to you in your capacity as”—Melanie raised her eyebrows in sarcasm—“
trusted adviser
and confided everything she knew about Patricia Andover’s plans to embezzle from the endowment fund. I have that from another witness, a friend of Carmen’s whom she confided in. Ten million dollars was slated to get transferred in tonight at the big gala, and
you
intended to steal it. Your plan was to use Carmen to skim off the money. Then you’d make a break for it, and Patricia Andover would be left holding the bag. She’d be the one the cops would come after. But the dead body of a Holbrooke girl was a major wrench in the works. You needed to come up with some other explanation for Brianna’s death, to buy time until you got your hands on the ten million. What’s more, you couldn’t rely on Whitney the wild child to keep her mouth shut, so you needed to kill her, too. Overdose was the obvious choice. Reckless young girls, from a school with a druggie reputation. Who
wouldn’t
believe it?”

“You can’t prove any of this.”

“The overdose plan got you thinking, though. You saw a way to keep Carmen under wraps until the gala while giving everyone a credible explanation for her absence. You’d make it look like
Carmen
supplied the drugs. You had access to some spare packets from Puerto Rico, and they were unusual, marked in Spanish. You planted some in Whitney’s bedroom and another in Carmen’s locker. People would draw the obvious conclusion when these unusual packets matched, assuming that Carmen had run away to escape the consequences of her crime. They had the extra added benefit of pointing the finger at Jay Esposito. In the meantime you’d gotten Whitney to lure Carmen up to her apartment, and you kidnapped her and held her until tonight.”

“You’ve been working very hard,” Hogan said.

“Naturally, things went wrong, as things often do. There was some unfortunate collateral damage. Deon Green—”

“You’re giving me credit for something Jay did. Jay was a strict disciplinarian when it came to rats.”

“Your use of the past tense is telling, Doctor. You
know
Esposito is dead, because
you
killed him. You tried to make it look like a suicide, but you made a critical mistake. You tracked Expo’s blood out into the alley. We took a perfect lift of the footprint. I’m betting it exactly matches the Nikes you’re wearing.”

Hogan looked startled but then recovered quickly. “Bravo, Melanie. I’m impressed. But let’s see if you can nail the extra-credit question.
Why
kill Jay?”

She thought for a moment. “It was personal. You wanted Whitney. But
she
wanted
him
.”

Hogan’s face went so livid that Melanie’s insides lurched. He looked like he wanted to rip her apart with his bare hands. She raised her useless gun to defend herself.

“You think you’re so fucking
smart
,” Hogan spit. “You don’t know the half of it. I got your boy! That’s right. Trevor Leonard, that fucking freak. I bashed his brains out with Jay’s golf club, so it would look like Jay did the murder. But nobody’s ever gonna know that, because
you
won’t live to tell about it.”

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