“The question is why Blake came to Las Vegas,” Stride said.
“To kill people.”
“I know, but why? Why him? Why now? I suppose his address was a fake?”
“A house in Boulder City,” Serena said. “Mormon family, five kids, a beagle. They never heard of Blake Wilde.”
“How about his SSN?”
“It traces to a boy in Chicago who died at age five.”
“He had to get paid,” Stride said.
“He cashed his checks at local pawnshops. A different one each time. It cost him ten percent, but no cameras and no questions asked.”
Stride stared through the door of the hangar at the rain falling outside. “So this guy was with Karyn Westermark on Saturday afternoon?” he asked. “He was running her security?”
“Nice, huh?” Serena replied. “It explains the disguise that night. He didn’t care about hiding from us, but he didn’t want Karyn recognizing him.”
“How about Tierney Dargon?”
“Yes, Kamen says he worked with her, too. No problem getting her to open the door in Lake Las Vegas.”
Stride couldn’t believe they were this close, and it still felt like they had nothing.
“There’s got to be something more,” he said. “What about expense vouchers, something with a credit card number or a bank account?”
“Zip,” Serena said. “Everything he gave them was faked. Nice jobs, too. I called Nick Humphrey’s next-door neighbor, Harvey Washington. Call a forger to find a forger, right? He had some names for me. Other local con men. Cordy’s checking with some of his snitches on the street, too. But this guy’s smart. I’m betting he didn’t have it done locally.”
“He probably has a backup identity ready as well,” Stride said.
“We’re getting in touch with all of the people that he did security for. We’re warning them to take care in case he shows up, and we’re interviewing them to see if Blake tipped anything about his personal life while he was with them. Where he shopped, where he ate, anything that might narrow down the area for us.”
“The sketch is on TV?”
“Yeah. We’re getting calls, but nothing solid so far. What did you get from Walker Lane?”
Stride quickly reviewed his day with Walker and what Walker had told him about the connections between Amira’s death and Boni Fisso.
“Do you believe him?” Serena asked.
“It plays either way,” Stride said. “Either Walker really did kill Amira, and Boni had him worked over as punishment, or Boni took it out on both of them because Amira and Walker were trying to run away. That’s what Walker says, and I think he’s telling the truth. The man has more money than God, and he still looks afraid of Boni.”
“There’s more,” Serena said. “Boni owns Premium Security.”
Stride shook his head. Boni Fisso had his tentacles wrapped around the neck of every person in the investigation. “So that means David Kamen has already told Boni everything that’s going on.”
“Count on it,” Serena said. “I wonder if our perp, Blake Wilde, knew that the company had Boni’s fingerprints on it. Maybe that was part of the game, worming his way into one of Boni’s shadow companies.”
“I think Blake Wilde knows Boni a hell of a lot better than we do,” Stride said. He added, “We’ve got to talk to Boni. He must know what the hell is going on. This all gets back to him. Maybe to his Orient project, too.”
“Sawhill says he tried to get us in to see him,” Serena said. “He even asked his dad to call Boni. No luck. The most we can get is an interview with Boni’s lawyer.”
“Goddamn it,” Stride swore. “I’m not going to arrest the son of a bitch. I’d love to, but I can’t. He’s not a suspect in any of these murders, so why the hell won’t he talk to us? The one murder we think he did commit was forty years ago, and we won’t be able to touch him for that.”
“Boni keeps his hands far away from the dirt,” Serena said.
“There’s only one way in. You’ve got to talk to Claire again.”
Serena was silent for a surprisingly long time. Finally, she said, “I don’t think that will work. She won’t talk to him.”
“You said she didn’t close the door entirely. We need her help.”
“It’s a waste of time,” Serena insisted.
Stride didn’t understand. “You can talk anybody into anything. What’s the problem?”
“Claire made a pass at me,” she said.
He almost laughed. “Well, so what’s the big deal? Guys make passes at you all the time. If she gets fresh, you have my permission to deck her.” He tried to understand what he was missing, why this had knocked Serena off her feet. Finally light dawned. “Unless it was a completed pass,” he said.
“No,” she told him. Then, embarrassed: “Not really.”
“Not really? That sounds like being a little pregnant.”
“Nothing happened,” Serena insisted. Then she went on. “But I wanted it to happen. I mean, it came out of nowhere for me. I was ready to jump into bed with her. That’s what scared me. Shit, I can’t believe I’m telling you this.”
Stride was at a loss for words. He tried to let his brain catch up with his emotions, but he had no idea what he felt. Betrayed. Jealous. Aroused. All of those things.
“Just what are you telling me, Serena?”
He had stumbled into a conversation for which he wasn’t prepared, and the last thing he wanted to do was have it by cell phone, a thousand miles apart.
“I don’t know what I’m telling you.” Her voice was becoming part of the static. He strained to hear her. “There’s a lot you don’t know about me. There’s a lot I don’t know about myself.”
“You’re making too much of this. You got caught off guard. You’re not made of ice.”
“It was easier when I was,” she said.
“So tell me this, do you love me?” he asked. He held his breath, because he was suddenly not sure what she would say.
“Yes.”
“Has Claire changed that?”
“No, no, that’s not it. But now I have to see her again.”
Stride thought about it. “You know you can use her attraction to you as a way to get her to call Boni.”
“Of course. That’s what I have to do. But I’m worried about getting in over my head,”
“The attraction is that strong?”
“Yeah, it is.”
Stride stared into the mist that hung like halos around the lights of the airport. His sense of homelessness had never been keener. He wanted to leave, start walking into the downpour, and disappear somewhere.
“Look, I can’t tell you what to do,” he said.
He was talking to air. The signal was gone, lost in the rain. For the time being, they were in different universes. He knew it was going to be a long wait and a long flight home through the dark sky.
TWENTY-EIGHT
Hello, Serena,” Claire said. “I’m glad you called.” Serena slipped past her into the one-bedroom apartment, passing through the honeysuckle fragrance of Claire’s perfume. Their eyes met.
“I’m sorry to come so late,” Serena said. “They told me at the Limelight this was your night off.”
“You’re not interrupting anything,” Claire said. “Just me and some chick lit.”
The lights in the apartment were dimmed, and several candles were lit, giving off a vanilla aroma. There was an indentation on the sofa and a blanket where Claire had been sitting with her book. A Tiffany lamp on the end table gave her light to read. There was a glass of white wine, half filled, on the coffee table. Soft jazz played from speakers discreetly hidden around the room.
“I love your apartment,” Serena told her. It was small but warm, with an oldfashioned feel, nothing metal or modern. The wood furniture looked antique but beautifully kept, and Serena wondered if Claire had done the restoration herself. There were collectibles everywhere, inlaid wooden boxes, glass angels, and stone animals.