Authors: Sam Bourne
Maggie remembered another of Nick’s rules: better to hunt in packs, at least if you’re a novice. She needed to tag along with someone, so it might as well be someone eager.
She got to her feet, accepting the table’s collective gratitude for getting the round in – including a mouthed thank you from Francesco – and followed Tim out. As she left she looked back at the thin-faced man, to see that he was staring straight at her.
They headed down Iberville Street, hearing the jazz riffs that curled like cigarette smoke from each doorway. Eventually they reached the Acme Oyster House: she had a plate of chargrilled oysters, so fresh they made her tingle, while he gobbled up a pound of spicy boiled crawfish.
Over dinner, she listened politely as Telegraph Tim told the story of his life: Eton, Oxford, then straight to Kabul as a stringer, impressing the foreign desk, becoming a favourite of the new editor and eventually earning a transfer to Washington. His father, a retired general; his life, one of seamless privilege. Maggie nodded and laughed in the right places and did the
occasional shake of the head, thereby exhibiting the full length of her hair, a move which tended to elicit an almost Pavlovian response in most heterosexual men.
After dinner they walked along Bourbon Street, continuing to trade speculation on the Forbes case as they watched frat boys lurch out of the multiple bars. Was Forbes a Southerner? Was he a native of New Orleans? If not, had he come here pre- or post-Katrina?
‘Can we go there?’ Maggie said suddenly.
‘Where?’ Tim replied, looking for whatever it was that had caught Maggie’s eye.
‘The house. Forbes’s house.’
‘It’s sealed off, Maggie. Crime scene and all that. No media access.’
‘I don’t mean to go in. Just to look from the outside.’
Tim, who had visited earlier that day, was only too happy to play tour guide, leading Maggie a few blocks east, turning right, then heading into the crush of antique shops, restaurants and hotels on Royal Street before they finally reached the tree-lined and residential Spain Street.
The homes were decent enough, timber-clad in pastel colours, but they were small, many of them single-storey, and without the ornate, wrought-iron balustrades that made the heart of the French Quarter as alluring as a subtropical Paris. It suggested that Forbes had been anything but wealthy.
‘There it is,’ said Tim, gesturing ahead. Ribbons of yellow-and-black police tape still barred the front porch and the three-step walk-up; there were a couple of TV satellite trucks parked outside.
Maggie gazed at it, trying to imagine the life of the man who had lived there. Who he had been and what he had wanted. Just then, she spotted some activity. A policeman was approaching and behind him what appeared
to be a colleague in plain clothes. She turned to Tim – ‘Isn’t that…?’ – but he was off chatting to one of the technicians by the TV truck, asking if there had been any developments.
Maggie took another look. It was him: the thin-faced man from the Monteleone bar, now being ushered into Vic Forbes’s house, a place that was off-limits to the press. And yet he had been there, among the journalists, in what was, in effect, the media hotel. What was going on?
Tim was back at her side and Maggie said nothing. She scribbled a few lines in her notebook, then agreed that they stroll back to the Monteleone together. They re-entered the pedestrian throng of Royal Street, full of shops open to the heady spring evening. As they passed a display of scented candles and an array of gothic masks for Mardi Gras, Tim launched into a long story about the cricket club he had founded in New York, allowing Maggie to stop listening and to think.
The simplest explanation for what she had just seen was that the man was indeed a plain-clothes cop who had earlier been at the bar of the Monteleone undercover. But why? Surely he hadn’t been eavesdropping on the hacks: of what possible value could that be?
They were back at the hotel now, Maggie reluctantly agreeing to return to the Carousel Bar, where the table of international journalists had reformed, albeit with a slightly different cast list. This time, though, she insisted on whisky.
Within twenty minutes, the thin-faced man was back, once again taking a table on his own, once again pulling out his laptop as if to begin journalistic work.
Maggie excused herself from the group and, with no clear plan, strode right over to the man. ‘Excuse me,’ she began, hoping she was looming over him.
‘What is it?’ he said. American, the accent rougher than she was expecting. Not Southern; closer to New Jersey.
‘Who are you?’
‘I’ll tell you if you tell me.’ He cracked a smile, showing bad teeth.
‘My name is Liz Costello.
Irish Times
.’
‘Lewis Rigby. I write for the
National Enquirer
. Freelance.’
That was not what she was expecting. ‘As in the supermarket tabloid?’
‘Yeah, the supermarket tabloid that broke the biggest political story of the last year, thank you very much.’
‘Mark Chester’s love-child? That was you?’
‘Not me personally. But yeah. You wanna sit down?’
Maggie pulled up a chair, forming a new strategy in light of this fresh information. ‘So,’ she said, her voice friendly and collegiate now. ‘You here on the Forbes story?’
He smiled, as if licking his lips at the prospect. ‘You bet.’
‘Right,’ Maggie said slowly. ‘It’s just I had a tip that earlier today a reporter for “the
Enquirer
” bribed a serving officer of the New Orleans Police Department in order to gain access to a crime scene. It didn’t sound like the kind of thing the
Philadelphia Enquirer
would get up to, so it must have been you. You know that’s a felony in all fifty states, with very heavy penalties.’
He turned ashen.
‘Yep. My source has hard evidence.’ The bluff was the oldest trick in the negotiator’s book. Through years of talks, Maggie had discovered that even the wiliest operators would fall for it.
‘Jesus Christ.’
‘Don’t worry. I’m not going to blab. Not to the police, not to the
Enquirer
.’
‘You’re not?’
‘We’ve all got a job to do.’
He let out a long gulp of air.
Maggie continued. ‘Just so long as you share whatever you’ve got with me.’
‘You gotta be kidding. There’s no way the
Nat
—’
‘—
National Enquirer
is going to want to face charges of corrupting a police officer. Too serious. Which is why you’re going to get on the phone to your friend and ask him to arrange another visit to the house. With me as your pal.’
It took him approximately five seconds to compute what he’d heard. ‘But no photographs, all right? Those are my exclusive. Otherwise I’m screwed.’
‘Deal.’
His brow remained furrowed. ‘How can I trust you not to take it somewhere else?’
‘You can’t.’ Maggie smiled. ‘But you don’t have much choice.’
He gave a short, glum nod.
‘So,’ Maggie said, gesturing for them to leave the bar. ‘When shall we do this?’
‘There’s only one time we
can
do this. He’s only on duty tonight. We’ll go there right now.’
New Orleans, Wednesday March 22, 23.03 CST
The TV trucks were still there but, Rigby counselled, one was local and, at this hour, off the air while the other was Japanese: nothing to worry about. Yesterday there had been two dozen. The New Orleans Police Department had been repetitive in its consistency, drilling away at the message that they were looking for no one else in connection with the death of Victor Forbes, that the admittedly bizarre circumstances of his demise all but confirmed that it was death at his own hand, whether deliberate or not was hard to determine and might never be known.
The message had seemed to penetrate. Maggie had clicked on the TV the instant she got into her hotel room after checkin: hopping channels, she had detected a change in tone. True, Fox, and the nutjobs, were still crying murder, but the mainstream voices were calmer. ‘A personal tragedy for Mr Forbes seems to have brought to an end what threatened to be a political calamity for President Baker,’ said some precociously serious twenty-something talking head from
The New Republic
.
Rigby insisted on waiting across the street, standing in the shadows where he would not be seen. Eventually the
policeman Maggie had seen earlier – African-American and at least six foot two – came into view. Rigby stepped out to meet him. He nodded his head towards Maggie and uttered the single, reluctant word, ‘colleague’. The cop shrugged, as if to say ‘Like I give a shit’.
In silence he led them under the tape and up the stairs. No furtive looks over his shoulder, he acted as if this were perfectly normal police procedure. Anyone watching would assume they were witnessing nothing more than a police officer opening up a crime scene to, say, two senior detectives.
Once inside, with the front door closed, he handed them each a pair of latex gloves, produced from a box. He put on a pair too, then turned on the lights. ‘You know the rules, but I’ll say it again. You don’t move anything, you don’t take anything. You got five minutes, max.’
Maggie’s eyes swept over the room, trying to capture as much information as she could. Hardwood floors. Minimal furniture. Paintings on the wall: Holiday Inn prints rather than art. A coffee table bearing two large books: aerial shots of the earth and an atlas. No photos anywhere. It looked unlived in, like a corporate rental. It felt empty.
‘Is this how it was, officer?’ Maggie asked. ‘Or have you taken anything away?’
The policeman turned around, his bulk seeming to fill the room. Unsmiling, he seemed offended, not so much by the content of the question as at the very idea that he had to talk at all. ‘Nothing has been removed from this area, as far as I’m aware. Some items were taken from the bedroom for further forensic examination.’ He concluded with a glare. ‘No more questions.’
Rigby had already moved across the ground floor and was on the first step of the spiral staircase to the bedroom, apparently grateful for the chance to take a second look around, even if it had cost him an extra few hundred dollars.
Maggie followed, peering into the kitchen/diner area, which stood at the rear of the open-plan living room. The breakfast bar’s surface was spotless. She flipped open the oven: apparently unused.
By now, she was lagging behind. She could hear Rigby’s footsteps through the ceiling. He was doubtless standing at the spot where Forbes had been found dead.
She clanked her way round the wrought-iron staircase, emerging onto a small landing giving onto three rooms: bathroom, bedroom and a small study.
She remembered another tip from Nick du Caines. ‘First place any profile-writer heads to is the bathroom,’ he had said during their rapid-fire tutorial. ‘Bloody goldmine in there. Ask to go to the loo and then check the meds cabinet. Viagra? You can then saunter out and ask your interviewee sensitive questions about impotence. Rogaine? Very nice, especially if you’re doing an actor. But the motherlode is Xanax. Or Prozac. Or Lithium. That’s very heaven. You put on your most caring face and ask if the rumours are true: “Are you currently being treated for depression?” Jack-bloody-pot.’
Maggie darted in, noted the cleanest shower curtain she’d ever seen, and opened the medicine cabinet: empty, save for one tube of toothpaste and a can of shaving foam. No brush, no razor.
Across the landing, she could see Rigby standing in the centre of the bedroom, apparently photographing every surface he hadn’t caught last time.
She looked into the study. Even through the doorway she could see that it was as full as the downstairs was empty. Side on was a glass desk, dominated by a vast computer screen. It was flanked by two others, each angled into the other. As she got nearer, she saw shelves packed with what looked at first like the toys of an adolescent boy: a remote-control helicopter on one, a couple of miniature cars on
another. Only after a few seconds did she see that both carried small cameras.
She looked towards the bedroom, anxious that she not waste time: the officer would declare the visit over at any moment and she needed to have seen it all. She looked under the desk to see a curtain of cables, dangling in space, connected to nothing. So those were just monitors on the desk; the police must have taken the machines.
She heard a creak, the sound of Rigby leaving the bedroom.
She passed him on the landing. ‘I’ll just take a quick peek.’
‘You want to focus on the beam by the window,’ he said, in a show of helpfulness. ‘That’s where it happened,’ he said, miming the shape of a noose. Then he headed, camera in hand, for the study.
She stepped in, bracing herself. But there was no need. This room was as soulless and empty as the one downstairs. A bed, a side table, an old-fashioned armoire. No photographs anywhere.
Knowing the futility of the move in advance, she pulled open the drawer of the bedside table: empty. If there had ever been anything in this place that might have shed light on Vic Forbes, the police had clearly removed it. What Maggie had assumed was going to be a crucial first step – not a breakthrough, but a start – was turning out to be a dead end.
A raised voice from half-way up the staircase. The cop: ‘We need to clear this premises in the next ninety seconds.’
It was then that she heard it.
The first sound came so soon after the policeman had spoken that she assumed that it must somehow be connected to him: perhaps an alarm he had triggered, or a Taser being warmed up.
But when the second buzz came, she could tell that it was much closer. It was inside this room.
No longer moving gingerly, she yanked open the armoire. A row of suits: mostly grey, some dark blue. She rifled through them, each one revealing precisely nothing. (And not, she noticed, a dress or garter belt to be seen. Police must have taken those too.)
She wheeled around, looking first at the bed, then staring up at the beam where Rigby had told her Forbes had been found dangling. Nothing.
She squatted, checking the floor of the closet, her hand patting furiously in the dark, feeling for anything that might explain that noise. Straightening up, and on tiptoes, she checked the top shelf, again using crude touch to do the searching. Nothing.
Then it came once more, a low buzz, lasting no more than two seconds.
She patted her own pocket, feeling for her phone. She pulled it out, but she knew that was pointless: her phone was set to sound, not to vibrate.
‘Come on.’ Rigby was at the door. ‘We’re leaving.’
The cupboard door was still open, standing as a barrier between them, preventing him from seeing her hands. And it was her hands that realized what had been slow to reach her conscious brain. They began groping at the pockets of the suits, one after another until, at last, inside a jacket whose scent was different from the others, they found what they were looking for.
Turning to face the man from the
Enquirer
, she shone what she hoped was her warmest, most engaging smile – even as she closed the cupboard door with one hand while the other took the small device and, without daring to look at it, slid it into her own pocket.