Page 12 of Murder List (Buchanan-Renard 4)
âThis isnât a vacation,â Sophie said.
âIt is for me,â Cordie countered.
âShields could be dangerous. If he did send his bodyguards to Mary Coolidgeâs houseââ
Sophie interrupted. âI know, but Iâm not going to back away from this. Iâm going to nail him, one way or another.â
âI donât like the sound of that,â Regan said. âDonât do anything illegal. And please be careful.â
Sophie shrugged. âHe stood me up, you know.â
âExcuse me?â Regan said.
âThe last day of the seminar, he asked me out ⦠to dinner,â she said. âAnd I agreed. We were supposed to meet at the top of the Hyatt, and I waited for over an hour. He never showed.â
âYou agreed to go out with that creep?â Regan asked.
âI didnât agree to go to bed with him, so stop looking so horrified. We hadnât been able to get into his computer or find any records at the seminar. I just wanted to get close to him so I couldââ
âGet to his records?â Cordie asked. âSophie, you need to start thinking things through.â
âHave you got any better ideas?â
âWhat will you do when you find him in the Caymans?â Regan asked.
âI donât know yet,â Sophie answered, âbut Iâll think of something.â
Chapter Sixteen
IT WAS REGANâS FIRST FULL DAY BACK AT WORK AND HENRY WAS DRIVing her nuts trying to pamper her. He hovered like a doting grandmother. He wouldnât even let her reach for a pencil. Fortunately, he had a full schedule and several errands to run that morning. As he was leaving, she asked him to stop by the parking garage and get her cell phone from her car. She was sure thatâs where she had left it.
The second the door closed behind him, Regan turned back to her desk. She was determined to clear her e-mails as quickly as possible. Sheâd finished thirty without interruption, took a break to answer phone calls and eat lunch, and then went back to her task.
The next e-mail was from Henry. Whenever he received anything he thought Regan would be interested in, he forwarded it to her computer. The subject line was blank, and when she scrolled down, there was just an attachment, but no typed message from Henry. That was a bit peculiar. She assumed heâd been in a hurry.
She clicked on the paper clip icon and waited.
Henry walked into her office just as the picture appeared on the screen.
âYour phone wasnât in your car. I looked under the seats, between them ⦠hey, Regan, whatâs the matter. Are you sick?â
âOh, my God â¦â She was so repulsed by what she was looking at she couldnât go on.
Henry ran around the desk. He stopped short when he saw the screen. In front of him was a picture of a dead man, hanging by a thick rope from a beam in a basement somewhere, his face grotesquely swollen. His eyes were wide open, and his flabby skin was a chalky gray.
âGross,â Henry whispered. âWhat kind of pervert would send â¦â
âThe e-mail came from you,â she said.
âNo way would I send anything like this.â
She nodded. âSomeone must have gotten hold of our private e-mail addresses.â
Henry pointed to the screen. âItâs not real,â he said. âSomeoneâs just playing a sick joke on you. Get rid of it,â he added as he reached for the delete key.
She pushed his hand away. âI know this man.â
âWhat?â
âI know him.â
âPeople can do a lot of things with a photo and a computer,â he said.
âSo he might not really be dead?â
âMaybe not,â he said. âI think we ought to call the police and let them figure it out.â
She pointed to the screen. âHe is the police.â
Chapter Seventeen
ALEC HEADED OVER TO THE HAMILTON HOTEL TO TALK TO Regan Madison, the nutcase who had called the office and asked to speak to Detective Benjamin Sweeney. When told by the operator that Sweeney wasnât available, sheâd asked if that was a permanent or a temporary situation. And thatâs when Detective John Wincott and Detective Alec Buchanan got involved.
The operator had told him that either the woman whoâd called or her assistant would meet Alec in front of the elevators on the south side of the lobby. He spotted a young man dressed in khaki pants and a navy blue blazer shifting from foot to foot in the elevator alcove and headed toward him. He looked like a bodyguard, maybe even a former linebacker with the Bears, or some other pro football team, but when Alec got closer to him, he saw how very young he was. Hell, he was just a teenager.
âDetective Buchanan?â
âThatâs right.â
The young man stepped forward and thrust out his hand as he introduced himself. âMy nameâs Henry Portman, and Iâm Reganâs ⦠I mean, Iâm Regan Madisonâs assistant.â
The kid was nervous. Alec didnât make any attempt to put him at ease. âSo whereâs â¦â he began, and then stopped. Heâd almost called Henryâs employer a nutcase. Not too diplomatic, he decided. âWhereâs Mrs. Madison?â he began again.
âOh, sheâs Miss Madison,â he corrected. âShe isnât married. I thought she might get engaged a while back, but it didnât work out, and I was real happy about that.â He grinned and added, âI guess that isnât important, is it?â
âProbably not,â Alec said. âSo tell me. Why were you happy she didnât get engaged?â He thought maybe Henry had a crush on his employer and wondered if heâd admit it.
âThe guy was only after her money.â
âShe has lots of money?â
Henry realized he was speaking out of school. âYouâll have to ask her about that. Sheâs waiting for us in her office on the third floor. Sheâs making sure no one touches her computer. If youâll accompany meââ
âSheâs guarding her computer?â
âYes, sir.â
Henry was wearing a key on a long silver chain. As soon as theyâd stepped inside the brass-plated elevator, he inserted the key into a lock and pushed the button for the third floor.
âAll the offices are on three,â he explained. âAnd no one can get off on that floor without a key. Itâs for security purposes. Thereâs a lot of expensive equipment up there.â
Alec filed the information away. At six foot three inches, he stood shoulder to shoulder with the kid, but he felt dwarfed by him. Alec had the muscles in his shoulders and upper arms, but Henry had about fifty pounds on him. Still, Alec felt he could take him down if he had to.
Something was making Henry nervous.
âHow old are you?â Alec asked.
âNineteen.â
âYou still in high school?â
âNo, sir. I go to Loyola here in Chicago.â
âLoyola doesnât have a football team.â He spoke the thought out loud.
Henry smiled. âI get asked what position I play and for what team all the time. A big African-American man with a twenty-inch neck. People make assumptions, like Iâm a football player or sometimes even a rapper. My sheetâs clean now, by the way.â
Ah, there it was. Alec didnât smile, but he came close. âYeah?â he said as the elevator doors opened on the third floor.
âYouâll probably find out anyway,â Henry blurted. He stepped off the elevator and turned to face Alec. âEven though my file is sealed, youâll figure out a way to read it like they do on those cop shows, so Iâll save you the trouble and just tell you. I had a couple of problems when I was a kid, and I spent some time in juvie. I was hanging with the wrong people. Thatâs not an excuse. Just fact.â
âOkay,â he said. âSo how come youâre so nervous?â
âYou,â he stammered. âWell, not exactly you. Cops make me nervous. Thatâs not so unusual. They make my friend Kevin nervous too. And he doesnât have a record.â
âYour boss called us,â he reminded Henry. âSo stop sweating it.â
Henry smiled. They had stopped and were now standing in the ha
llway. âOur offices are down that corridor and around the corner.â
Alec took his time following. He paused at each office door along the way to look inside. When Henry realized what he was doing, he backtracked.
âThat office belongs to Reganâs brother Spencer. Heâs rarely here, though.â
âThat one?â Alec asked nodding toward the office on the opposite side of the corridor.
âThat one belongs to Walker.â
Alec made the connection. âWalker Madison, the race car driver?â
âYes, thatâs right.â
They continued on, turned the corner, and then Alec stopped again in front of another suite.
âThat oneâs Aidenâs office. Heâs the oldest brother. Thereâs four in all. Three boys and one girl.â
The hall was as luxurious as the lobby. There were fresh flowers in beautiful vases on each table along the corridor. The carpet was a deep red, the walls a white damask.
âTell me about your boss.â
âWhat do you want to know?â
âWhatâs she like to work for?â
âOh, sheâs great.â
âHow did you get this job?â
âA teacher in my high school had me fill out some forms for an intern program here at the hotel, working with computers. I thought it was a joke because I didnât know much of anything about computers back then, didnât even know how to do e-mail. We had computers in my high school, but they didnât work half the time. Anyway, Miss Madison chose me and had me working day and night all summer long. I even slept at the hotel while I trained, until she found me a family that had an extra bedroom and didnât mind having an extra kid around. Iâve worked here ever since.â
It sounded to Alec as though the teacher and Regan Madison had worked together to save the kidâs ass.
âAre you still living with that family?â
âYes, sir, I am.â
There was a set of double glass doors directly ahead. âThatâs my office,â Henry said, pride radiating in his voice. âMiss Madisonâs office is behind mine.â
âSo anyone wanting to see her has to go through you.â
âThatâs right. Except when Iâm in class. Then she fends for herself. We do okay.â
âWhat is it you do for her?â
âOh, just about everything.â
âOkay. And what is it she does?â
Henry flashed a smile. âShe gives money away.â Then he laughed, a deep belly laugh. âI love saying that.â
âYeah?â
âAnd itâs true. She really does give money away. Miss Madison runs the familyâs charitable foundation.â
Alec opened the door and motioned for Henry to go first. The kid rushed ahead to stand behind his desk. âThis is my work area, my domain,â he said proudly. âItâs kind of a mess now. I was reorganizing.â
There were papers strewn all over the top of the desk. Henry pushed one stack aside and picked up a clipping from the newspaper.
âHereâs a photo of the Madisons,â he said. âI cut this out of the newspaper a while back, and I was going to frame it.â
He continued to hold onto the clipping as he said, âIt was taken at a dedication of Conrad Park. You know where that is?â He didnât wait for a response but continued. âThe Madisons donated all the land and paid for a new jogging trail. Well, actually, it was an old trail that they repaved and expanded,â he said. âThey also paid for a beautiful playground with all sorts of equipment for the little kids to climb on. Like it says in the article, Miss Madison used to go running there all the time, rain or shine, but now that the hotel has a track upstairs, she doesnât have to leave the building.â He nodded toward the article and photo and said, âIt was a nice profile of the brothers. Iâm saving it because itâs kind of rare for all of them to be together.â
Alec barely glanced at the article. The fact that the Madisons were do-gooders wasnât relevant now.
There was another set of French doors about fifteen feet behind Henryâs desk. Alec could see a young woman through the glass. She was on the phone, her back to the door. She ended the call and turned around, then hurriedly walked toward him.
Son of a gun, he thought. He recognized those long, gorgeous legs. She opened the door and stood there, the worry evident in her amazing eyes, her face flushed. Oh, yes. Same beautiful woman, all right.
Henry made the introductions as Regan walked forward and offered her hand. Her handshake was firm, no-nonsense, her smile disarming. He smiled back. Might as well start out charming, he decided. If she was a nutcase, which, after meeting Henry, he sincerely doubted, then being charming might make the difference in her continued cooperation. Noah Clayborne, a family friend also involved in law enforcement, once said that you could catch more crazies with sugar than vinegar. Of course, Noah, a true bull in a china store, had never bothered to test that theory. Like Alec, he much preferred clobbering male suspects who gave him trouble to chatting it up with them.
Apparently Regan didnât remember him. Alec thought about it and decided not to mention the fact that heâd nearly run her down on the street last week. If she had remembered the incident, she surely would have said something. He obviously wasnât memorable; she definitely was.
âYou probably donât recall, Detective, but we ran into each other last week just outside the police station.â
What do you know? She did remember.
âYou know him?â Henry asked Regan.
âSort of,â she answered. âWe did run into each other, and if he hadnât caught me, I would have been splattered on the sidewalk.â
Alec grinned. âI remember trying to roll over you. You laughed. I remember that too.â
âYes,â she said. âYou reminded me of â¦â
âYes?â
She blushed slightly. âThe zoo. You reminded me of the zoo.â
âThe zoo?â
âYou smell much better today.â
He laughed. âI hope so.â
Henry had a speculative glint in his eyes as he watched his boss. Regan turned to him and asked, âDid you explain to Detective Buchanan â¦â
âI thought Iâd let you explain. I wasnât sure what to say.â
Alecâs stare was locked on Regan. âWhy donât you tell me whatâs going on?â
Before she could answer, Henry blurted out, âWe donât know anything about that detective. Isnât that right, Miss Madison?â
âWhatâs with the âMiss Madisonâ?â she asked.
Henry looked embarrassed. âI didnât think I should call you Regan in front of the police.â
âHow about you sit at your desk while I talk to your employer?â Alec said.
âBut I was hoping â¦â
âYes?â Alec asked impatiently.
âI was hoping I could stay until you look at the photo and tell us if itâs real or computer-generated. I think itâs phony, but Regan thinks it might be real.â
Alec didnât know what the kid was rambling on about. âGo sit,â he repeated. âNow, Miss Madisonââ
âPlease, call me Regan.â
âYeah, okay. Regan, how about you start explaining?â
âI was checking my e-mails,â she said as she walked back to her computer. The screen was dark until she moved the mouse on the pad. âAnd this came up.â
She quickly moved aside so she wouldnât block his view. Alec inwardly winced. The photo wasnât a pretty sight. Regan leaned against the credenza, her back to the computer so she wouldnât have to look at the screen again.
âI wasnât sure how to proceed,â she said. âI was afraid to save it or forward it because I was concerned that whoever sent it might have built in some kind of virus that would destroy it, so I just left it alone.â
âGood decision.â
âWhat do you think, Detective? Is it real or fake?â
âReal,â he said. âDefinitely real.â There wasnât any hesitation or doubt in his voice.
âYou don
ât seem very surprised or ⦠shocked.â
âIâve worked with the violent crime unit. Iâve seen a dead body before,â he said as he moved closer to the monitor to inspect the picture.
âYes, of course you have, but â¦â She pointed to the screen. His casual attitude had rattled her, and she was trying to recover. âBut he was also a detective, one of your own, a â¦â Her voice trailed off.
âYes, he was.â
From what Alec had heard about Sweeney, he was also a nasty son of a bitch who walked around most days in an alcoholic daze. Everyone knew he was on the take and that it was only a matter of time before he got caught.
âDid you know him well?â she asked.
âNo.â
She hoped that explained why he seemed so casual about Detective Sweeneyâs demise. If not, then Detective Buchanan had about as much compassion as a fish. She suddenly felt nervous standing so close to him. She was trapped between the desk and the credenza, and unless she wanted to hike up her skirt and vault over the top, she was going to have to wait until he moved. He did smell a lot better today. In fact he smelled great, like the clean outdoors.
He stepped back from the computer, âWhy do you think it was sent to you?â
âI donât know,â she said wearily. She rubbed her arms as she thought about it. âIf you scroll back up, it shows it came from Henryâs computer, but of course it didnât. Someone has both our e-mail addresses. Iâve been racking my brain trying to make sense out of this. So far, no luck. What is the procedure now?â
âWe need a tech,â he said. He pulled out his cell phone and made the call, walking away from her as he spoke softly into the phone. When he was finished, he motioned for her to join him across the room. Two easy chairs faced a sofa in front of the windows overlooking Michigan Avenue. Regan often curled up on the sofa to do paperwork.
âWhile weâre waiting for the tech, you could tell me about your relationship with Detective Sweeney.â
âThat will take all of five seconds. I didnât have a relationship with him.â