Authors: Charles Atkins
âAnd it's all legal? She signed everything she had to?'
âYeah, and if she hadn't?'
He smirked. âWhat do you think?'
âRight. The tents arrive later this morning and we'll work through the night to get them set up. So we've got Tolliver and the other two wannabes to film, we've got to do the deliberation scene, pick one, get him or her to appraise the goods, tag it, set it out ⦠I need a Valium ⦠maybe some coke. I wonder if Carrie has any more of her son's Adderall.'
âJust delegate but, you know, don't trust anyone. This is our shot. If we don't take it â¦'
âI know, we won't have jobs come Monday.'
âWe may still not, but if we can pull this off â¦'
âWho
wouldn't
watch it?'
âThat one,' Barry said. He was pointing at Tolliver. âHe's the one we need for this.'
âSome eye candy.'
âYeah. Get some footage of the other two. If they're any decent tell them we'll give them spots in future episodes.'
âOf course we will.' She winked. âWe'll be sure to do that.'
His cell vibrated; it was Jeanine. âHey babe.'
âHey back. Shooting's going good?'
âIt's going,' he said. âHow's my best girl and my second best girl?'
Jeanine chuckled. âI'm not going to ask who gets top billing. Ashley, say hello to Daddy.'
âHi Daddy, will you be home tonight? We're looking at houses, and with two acres you can have a horse.'
He heard Jeanine in the back. âHoney, don't scare Daddy.'
âAnd for every acre and a half extra you can have an extra horse,' Ashley informed him. âAlthough Mommy says a pony is a good way to start. Am I going to get a pony?'
It threw Barry back to those wonderful memories of
Model Behavior
. Jeanine on that stallion, hair flying, limbs free â breathtaking stuff, and why she should have won.
Jeanine came back on the phone. âYes, apparently both Grenville and Shiloh have laws on the books that go back to the seventeen hundreds. The size of your parcel determines how many horses and various other livestock you can own.'
In spite of the crazy production schedules and his jangled nerves, he needed this call. âYou know, I'm not saying no.'
âI'm kidding about the horses,' she said.
âI'm not. You told me how much you loved to ride as a kid. Wouldn't that be something, if you could teach Ashley, if you could teach me?'
âStep at a time, baby,' she said. âSomehow I can't see you mucking out stalls. You do your thing, I'll do mine. I'm telling the realtor we'll want a rental property for a year, but that it could change. I heard something strange, though.'
âWhat's that?'
âSomeone said Rachel Parks is missing, as in maybe dead.'
âThe girl's a nut job,' Barry said.
âBut you need her for the show.'
âJeanine, I'm going to make this work. Tell that realtor that we're buying, not renting. If LPP is too stupid to pick up this show, I know half a dozen studios that would jump for this concept.'
âBarry, I can wait. You don't have to do this for me.'
âJeanine, I do it all for you, for us. Tell that realtor nothing less than five acres; if I got the math right then we can each have a horse. I'll get a nag and call her Lenore.'
She snorted. âOK, any other requests?'
He paused and thought of what he might like in a country home. He laughed. âI don't need to give this a second thought,' he said.
âWhy's that?'
âBecause you've never once let me down.' He thought back through their years together. âNot once. You get whatever house you want. Buy us a shack; if you and Ashley are in it that's all I care about.'
There was silence on the line.
âYou OK?' he asked.
âI am, and Barry ⦠some day, if I do let you down, you need to know that everything I do is out of love for you and Ashley.'
âThat just made me nervous.'
Her tone lightened. âDon't be. I think you put me on too high a pedestal. It's bound to crack.'
âNever.'
After he hung up, he noticed his head was clear; all traces of the gathering migraine were gone. Jeanine's unconditional love was better than any medicine. He nodded at Melanie, who was supervising the shoot. They'd had Rachel and the dealers select a few choice antiques and pieces of Lenore memorabilia to feature on the show. This included one of her Emmys, which Rachel had teared up over as she'd said, âYes, for the children's sake, let's sell it.' And now she'd gone missing, was possibly dead, and the fucking cops were looking at him as a suspect, as if he had time to go around killing people. Although the day Lenore was shot, he remembered that sense of relief, that he could breathe, that maybe he could pull a rabbit out of his hat. It was a feeling that was repeated when Richard turned up dead. Rachel was another story. Yes, she was a nut job, but if she could be managed her instability made her ratings gold. Lost in a daydream of life as an A-list producer, he didn't see the two female detectives.
âMr Stromstein,' the shorter and older one asked. âWe realize you're busy, but we have a few questions we need to run by you; is there someplace private we could go?'
His anger surged. He wanted to scream,
âNot fucking again!'
He didn't. He turned the corners of his lips into a pleasant half smile, a technique he'd learned when attending a meditation seminar. âOf course.' He glanced back at Melanie and Ethan. They had things under control. He paused, noting that one of the other changes since losing Lenore, and then Richard, was that the sense of internal competition in his team was gone. Not even the hangers on who'd descended from LPP, all wanting to attach themselves to
Final Reckoning
, were vying to take his place. There was something else he saw in their eyes â hope. He took a deep breath and turned to the detectives. The last few days had been punctuated with their questions:
âWho might want Lenore dead?'
âEveryone.'
âWho would benefit from her death?'
âNo one, at least not anyone who's still breathing. Rachel, maybe, but is she still breathing?'
He caught the eye of the older one, Mattie something. And it hit him like a brick â
he
, Barry Stromstein, executive producer of
Final Reckoning
, was benefiting from the deaths of Lenore and Richard.
Oh shit!
he thought, realizing that, on this most impossible day, he'd need to find a criminal attorney. If these detectives couldn't find out who killed the bitch and her turkey baster son,
they'll think I did it
.
Mattie hung back in Lenore's elegant conservatory and let Jamie direct this new line of inquiry. She watched as Barry Stromstein glibly fielded the questions. She felt the sun on her back and neck through the beveled glass. The lush foliage and blooming exotic plants barely registered over the knot in her gut. It was the call from Ada Strauss, and her report of her conversation with Peggy Stark â Lenore's dresser and on-again, off-again lover â that had sent her mood spiraling. That Peggy was also the one who found Lenore made the information crucial. It bothered her. Mattie was no prude; years in domestic abuse followed by her current position with the state's major crime squad had exposed her to every shade of human despair and depravity. But this ⦠this was the domain of men. This was what men did to women, not what women did to other women. But it wasn't just that. She felt haunted ⦠ashamed ⦠confused.
âWhat do you know of Lenore's love interests?' Jamie asked.
âI assume you're referring to the girls,' said Barry.
âYes. How many; who were they?'
âI'm not the best person for this,' he admitted. âWe all knew, definitely her masseuse, possibly the Pilates girl; there was always someone. Blonde, pretty and tall, but she'd go for the brunets, too.'
âWould she pay them?' Jamie asked.
âNot in cash, but a job as a spokesmodel, maybe a spot on a design show, more under the heading of giving a struggling actress, director, writer ⦠a needed boost.'
âDid you sleep with Lenore?' Jamie asked bluntly.
âNo, not her type, not her gender.'
Mattie braced for what she knew would be the next question. Proud of how far Jamie had developed as an investigator, and somewhat shocked by how tightly their minds worked in sync.
âWhat about your team?' Jamie asked. âWho on your team has had an affair, or whatever, with Lenore?'
Mattie saw Barry's neutral smile waver. They were on to something.
âMr Stromstein?' Jamie pressed.
âI couldn't say.'
âWon't say,' said Jamie. âYet, when we find out that you did in fact know, you will be judged to have made the decision to obstruct a homicide investigation at this moment. That could be quite ugly, including accessory to murder. After all, who's really benefiting from Lenore's death?' Her gaze was fixed on him. âBe careful here, Mr Stromstein. This is an important decision point. I'll pretend I did not ask the first time: who on your team has had sex with Lenore Parks?'
He stared at the ground. He said nothing. The seconds stretched, the silence of the conservatory wrapped them in a cocoon of warm sun and the sweet and earthy smells of potting soil and orchids. âMelanie,' he said, his voice barely audible. âMy field producer, Melanie Taft, and while I don't know for certain, I'd say Carrie Melville.'
âSo Melanie is a definite and Carrie a possible? What makes her a possible?'
âShe's the only one who didn't come with me from LA. She was with my predecessor at LPP and Lenore specifically requested that I keep her. When people want those kind of favors, there's usually a reason.'
Mattie sensed Jamie's next question.
âI see. So, field producer; that was your title when we first met three days ago. Melanie was an assistant producer.'
âYes.'
âI see. What is your title now, Mr Stromstein?'
He looked up. âExecutive producer.'
âWhat does that mean exactly?'
âIt's just a title, a way of showing the chain of command.'
âAnd an executive producer would be higher than a field producer, and certainly higher than an assistant producer, correct?'
âYes.'
âSo it would be safe to say in the last few days, since the death of Lenore, and then of her son, both you and Melanie Taft have received promotions.'
âYes.'
âInteresting; and this is while hundreds of LPP employees are being laid off. How did that happen?'
âI insisted on it,' he said.
âGutsy move,' Jamie said. âWho approved that?'
âThe CFO, Patty ⦠Patricia Corcoran. I didn't do anything wrong. This show has been all-consuming. I've been doing the work of an executive producer, I'll be damned if I don't get the credit. And Melanie has more than stepped up to the plate. I couldn't do this without her. She deserves the credit.'
âAnd I'm assuming there's more money involved?' Jamie asked.
âYes and no. If the show's a hit I'll get a back-end cut and, yes, Melanie will get a raise. I didn't kill Lenore.' His face was red. âAnd Melanie's time has been dedicated to getting this show off the ground. If you knew her, you'd know she's not the type to hurt anyone.'
Mattie again felt the workings of Jamie's mind and braced for the next line of inquiry.
âBut she is the type to sleep with the boss,' Jamie said. âFrom what we've learned that was standard LPP practice. Was she still sleeping with Lenore?'
âI don't know.'
âIf Lenore asked her to carry her babies, would she do it? You know, be her surrogate?'
Barry looked startled. âWhat? Of course not.'
âAnd Carrie?'
âI have no way of knowing that. Lenore was planning on having another child?'
Jamie stared at him, her expression tight-lipped. She let the silence stretch. â⦠Apparently so. No idea who the surrogate is, Mr Stromstein?'
Barry stared back. âNo ⦠no.'
Jamie looked to Mattie, silently asking if she had any further questions. With twin surges of pride and relief, she realized that Jamie had mined this seam till it was dry, at least for now. She shook her head. âI'm good.'
âG
rueling,' Ada said to Lil, her mother and her grandson, all gathered in their cozy living room. âIt's like being back with Harry when we'd do fifteen-hour days preparing for the big sales.'
âYou like it, though. I can tell,' Aaron said, looking between Ada and Lil seated together on the couch.
Ada smiled and sipped Scotch. âI do. There's a lot of waiting around, and watching.'
âMattie and Jamie were there,' Lil commented.
âYes. I make them nervous,' Ada said.
âAs you should,' Rose interjected. âThe two of you will get yourselves killed one of these days, and what am I going to do with two condos?'
âGet a boyfriend,' Aaron offered.
âAround here?' Rose shook her head. âThere's ten women for every man, and the few there are aren't much to look at.'
âWhat about Stan?' Ada asked.
âJust friends,' Rose said. âI have no interest in taking care of an old man. You two need to be careful.'
Ada looked to Lil. âAnything from your trip to LPP?'
âIt's a ghost town,' Lil said. âYes, it was a Saturday, but apparently that shouldn't matter. The same guard was on, that retired cop, George. He was very philosophical, and quite chatty. He was also wondering if you might be up for a date. I let him know you were taken. At which point he asked me out.'