So About the Money (28 page)

Read So About the Money Online

Authors: Cathy Perkins

There was also Marcy’s mystery letter’s contents, but Holly had her own ideas about discovering those details. She retrieved her pen and drew a rectangle above Yessica’s name, then added the shallow V of an envelope’s flap. “I do have a question.”

“Why am I not surprised?” Amusement was back in JC’s tone.

She added some warmth to her voice. “I was thinking about the necklace. The one Marcy was wearing.”

“And?”

“It was a custom piece. Maybe one of the jewelry stores would remember it.” She drew intertwined hearts below Yessica’s name and added another question mark.

“Amazingly enough, we already thought of that. We’ve talked to every jeweler in Richland, Kennewick, Pasco, Benton City, Sunnyside, and Yakima.”

She’d suspected as much from her earlier attempt to locate the vendor. “You don’t have to be snide. What about Seattle? Alders lives there. He could—”

“Holly,” JC interrupted. “We know how to conduct an investigation. Now, do you know something? Something
useful
?”

“Well…” She gave the word multiple syllables. “Maybe if you’d returned my earlier call…”

Should she tell him what she’d learned about Tim and Marcy at the casino now, or after she had more facts? That maybe they were having an affair? That maybe she’d seen Frank? That maybe Creepy Security Guy was Frank and maybe he’d been dating Marcy right before she died?

That was a lot of maybes.
 

“I didn’t have a chance to call,” he said. “And as fascinating as I find this conversation, I have actual work to do. Or was there something else you wanted?”

The man could be so infuriating. “There are lots of things I want. Not all of them are good for me.”

“I’ll keep that in mind.” Laughter rippled through his voice. “I’m hanging up now.”

She gave it one last try. “So you aren’t going to deny Marcy’s pregnancy.”

“Good-bye, Holly.”

Chapter Twenty-six

Still smiling over JC’s responses, Holly punched in a Seattle number.
 

“Devon Edwards.”

Like JC, just a name. She used to answer the phone the same way. No “hello.” No “good morning.” At the time she’d thought it was professional, but today it simply seemed abrupt. “I got your message.”

“How’s my favorite shark?”

The nickname made her smile. It carried a hundred memories of analysis, deals and late night strategy sessions, and most important, the buzz of success.
 

“Alive and chomping.” In an instant, she was transported three hundred miles over the Cascades and into her old life. She could almost hear the hum of financial engines, the crash of multimillion-dollar deals, and the nonstop drone of the billing department. She felt a rush of pleasure, craving the adrenaline high. It was an environment she hungered after, as addictive as any drug. She shook her head to clear it. “How’s William?”

“Lazy slug was still in bed when I left this morning.”

“Yeah, but he’ll have dinner on the table this evening.”

“True.”
 

She heard the satisfaction in Devon’s voice and abruptly wished there was someone waiting for her at her house. Brushing the wistful thought aside, she asked, “What did you find out about Lee Alders?”
 

“I take it your interest in the guy is personal rather than professional.”

“Good boy. Never assume.”

He laughed. “I saw Alders’ name in the
Post
earlier this week. Dead woman, person of interest, any info, yada, yada. Should I be a concerned citizen and call the Seattle PD?”

Habit kicked in. Holly picked up the handset. Potentially sensitive information was transferred over a landline, never a cell or speakerphone.
 

“I know the lead investigator with the local sheriff’s department. I’ll pass it along.” She couldn’t keep the smile out of her voice. She imagined JC either getting pissy about her having information he didn’t or delighting in telling her he already knew. She actually hoped it would be the former. Sparring with him could become her favorite activity.
 

“Is the personal interest Alders or the cop?”

“Neither.” She’d called Devon because he knew everybody, but the downside was anything personal she told him might end up on the gossip circuit. “Alders was married to a friend of mine. I’m trying to understand what kind of person he is.”

“Hope she got a good settlement.”

Settlement? It took a second for the term to register. Devon had interpreted “was married” as
divorced
rather than
dead
.
 

Holly listened to Devon shuffle papers and wondered if that was what the mystery envelope contained—a proposed settlement offer. She traced a curly circle around Yessica’s name. What else did Marcy’s sister know?
 

Devon said, “Here it is. Alders made his money in the tech market. He developed a message caching system that he sold to Telnex. The process made a splash. Telnex stock surged after the acquisition. Then Telnex was snapped up by a bigger fish.”

“I read about the sale. Looks like he sold during that boomlet we had a couple of years ago.” The tech market’s irrational exuberance bubble burst long ago, but solid companies, products, or processes continued to attract buyers. If Alders’ message system worked well, it wasn’t surprising a bigger player bought it.
 

“The tech market’s made a great comeback—it’s been a crazy year with deals. Now we have to ride out this yo-yo market and see what the international markets do. ”

She wanted information on Alders, not Devon’s commentary on the economy. “Give me the inside scoop. What’d you find out about Alders’ deal?”

Devon filled in the details. Holly recognized several of the participants. She added another doodle to her paper, doubtful the money people would—or could—answer her real question. Could Lee Alders kill his wife?

“We didn’t handle the transaction, but I heard it was an outright sale. Cash, not stock.”

“Whose idea was that?” Tech companies used stock whenever they could—as compensation, to pay the bills, to buy other companies. Going public, and cashing in, was still the Holy Grail.
 

“I heard Alders wasn’t willing to hold stock in a company he didn’t control. Bottom line, your friend’s hubby walked away with roughly forty million.”

Forty million might not make him the next Bill Gates, but it wasn’t exactly chump change. “What did he do when Telnex stock took off—and he couldn’t cash in on it?”

“Something disagreeable, I’m sure.”

Hmm. Devon didn’t like the guy. “What’s Alders doing now?”

“He fancies himself a mini-mogul.”

She laughed at the catty tone. “Tell me how you really feel.”

“Okay, Alders knows his stuff,” he said grudgingly. “You might not have found his name because he’s hiding behind a holding company. No one would touch him otherwise. Did you hear about Nyland?”

“I read a couple of articles that implied Alders helped himself to Nyland’s ideas.”

“Nyland conveniently died. Convenient for Alders, that is. Alders would’ve been out millions if Nyland had won. And paid another million in legal fees. I wouldn’t trust Alders with my company, but his firm’s played angel—and I use that term strictly in the financial sense—to a couple of startup firms.”
 

That surprised her. “He doesn’t seem the altruistic type.”

“Trust me, he’s only in it for the money.”

No doubt. Had Alders considered the possible financial loss from a divorce sufficient motive for murder? People had definitely killed for far less.
 

“What did you think about him, personally?” she asked.

“He spends a lot of time on his sailboat. Goes heli-skiing, glacier climbing. You know, compensating. You knew Alders was climbing with Nyland when the guy died, right?”

“I thought that was strange. If the guy sued Alders, why were they together?”
 

“They were competing in a climb. A fundraiser for that charity that arranges sporting events for disabled vets. I’m sure they weren’t doing it out of the goodness of their hearts. They both wanted to win. Showing each other up added bonus points. Or it did until Nyland died.”

Holly looked out the office window, idly watching the cars lined up to turn left into the mall. Alders had gotten under Devon’s skin—not an easy thing to do. “I get the impression you don’t like him.”

There was a pause. “If I was talking to anyone else, we wouldn’t be having this conversation.”

Holly sat up straight. “I understand.”

“We were involved in a transaction with one of his new companies earlier this year. I can’t tell you any more than that.”

That hurt. She wasn’t sure which stung more, that Devon thought he had to explain his reluctance to discuss the deal or that he considered her one of “them” instead of “us,” no longer privy to inside information. “Okay.”

“A lot of tech guys don’t have the world’s greatest social skills. Alders… He seems like a nice enough guy at first.”

“Sounds like there’s a great big ‘but’ in there.”

She visualized Devon’s grimace and half-shrug and wondered which way the story would go. Yessica had said Alders was violent, but from what she’d read, psychopaths—or was the guy a sociopath?—understood how to cover their tendency to take whatever they wanted. To be successful, instead of having actual feelings or caring about society’s definition of right and wrong, they learned to react to appropriate social cues.
 

“The deal closed right after Nyland died,” Devon said. “There were serious rumors Nyland’s death was deliberate. I heard Alders paid big money to ‘experts’ to make sure it was labeled accidental. Alders walked away—was never charged—but most people think there’s blood on his hands. And the deal we worked with him? In the boardroom, he was pure charisma. Smooth. Always said the right thing. But what I initially saw as unrealistic expectations were actually demands. It was subtle, but the manipulation was definitely there. He thought he was smarter than everyone in the room. I was glad we weren’t working for his firm.”

Holly wound the phone cord through her fingers. “You think he killed Nyland?”
 

“Alders is a complete a-hole. Totally ruthless—and I don’t mean in the good business sense. You said he was married to a friend of yours?”

“I never met him.” If Devon wanted gossip, she didn’t have any to offer. She hadn’t even known there
was
a marriage until two days ago.

“I hope your friend invested the proceeds in something besides the tech market.”

Had Marcy gotten any money from Lee? She considered Lillian’s description of the confrontation at the office. Alders couldn’t serve divorce papers himself
,
but he would’ve enjoyed the power play of throwing a copy—the mysterious envelope?—on Marcy’s desk.
 

“I’m not sure what she would’ve done with the settlement money.” She jotted another note.
Check court records for marriage dissolution papers and a settlement agreement
. “Would you do one more thing for me?”

“Keep this up and I’ll have to turn the meter on.”

“Come on, Devon. Desert Accounting doesn’t have the databases you use. And you have the best network. I knew you could find out what this guy’s doing.”
 

When all else fails, lay it on thick.

“You gotta live in the big city to know what’s going on. How’s life in the eastside wilds? Got a horse and buggy yet? Or should I send a haz-mat suit?”

Holly bristled. Eastern Washington wasn’t exactly a technical or radiological wasteland. a“If I need either, I can probably find somebody who has one.” She kept her tone cool but changed the subject. “I ran across something interesting the other day. One of my clients has four companies, all registered in Wyoming, with the same person listed as the sole officer.”

“This officer isn’t a Washington local?”

“No. That was the second thing that pinged my radar. The owner, who
is
a Washington local, isn’t mentioned on the registration papers at all.”

“What business are the companies in?”
 

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