“Do they all reek of money, power, connections? Yes. CEOs, major politicians, newspaper publishers, even a goddamn bishop.”

For the next ten minutes, the stream of privileged overachievers flowed into Scott Ashton’s backyard botanical garden. None appeared out of place in the rarefied environment. But none appeared particularly thrilled to be there.

“We’re getting to the end of the line,” said Hardwick. “Next we have the bride’s parents: Dr. Withrow Perry, world-famous neurosurgeon, and Val Perry, his trophy wife.”

The doctor looked to be in his early sixties. He had a fleshy, contemptuous mouth, the double chin of a gourmand, and sharp eyes. He moved with a surprising quickness and grace-like a former fencing instructor, thought Gurney, remembering the lessons he and Madeleine had taken together in the second or third year of their marriage, when they were still actively searching for things they might enjoy doing together.

The Val Perry standing beside the doctor on the screen like a film fantasy of Cleopatra radiated a satisfaction missing from the Val Perry who’d visited Gurney that morning.

“And now,” said Hardwick, “the groom and his soon-to-be-headless bride.”

“Jesus,” murmured Gurney. There were times when Hardwick’s lack of feeling seemed to go far enough beyond routine cop cynicism to qualify him as a marginal sociopath. But this was neither the time nor the place to… to what? To tell the man he was a sick prick?

Gurney took a deep breath and refocused his attention on the video-on Dr. Scott Ashton and Jillian Perry Ashton walking together toward the camera, smiling-a smattering of applause, a few shouts of “Bravo!” and a joyful baroque crescendo in the background.

Gurney was staring in amazement at the bride.

“The hell is wrong?” asked Hardwick.

“She’s not quite what I imagined.”

“The hell did you expect?”

“From what her mother told me, I wasn’t expecting her to look like a cover shot on Brides magazine.”

Hardwick studied the image of the beaming young beauty in a floor-length white satin gown, the modest neckline dotted with tiny sequins, her white-gloved hands holding a bouquet of pink tea roses, her golden hair swept up in a tight swirl topped by a glittering tiara, her almond eyes accented with a touch of eyeliner, her perfect mouth enlivened with a lipstick that matched the pink of the tea roses.

Hardwick shrugged. “Don’t they all want to look like that?”

Gurney frowned, troubled by the conventionality of Jillian’s appearance.

“It’s in their goddamn genes,” Hardwick insisted.

“Yeah, maybe,” said Gurney, unconvinced.

Hardwick fast-forwarded through scenes of bride and groom moving through the crowd, the string quartet attacking their instruments with great gusto, the catering staff gliding among the sipping and munching throng. “We’re going to cut to the chase,” he said, “straight to the segment where everything happens.”

“You mean the actual murder?”

“Plus some interesting stuff just before and just after.”

After a few seconds of digital artifacts, the screen was filled with a medium shot of three people conversing in a triangle. Some words were more audible than others, partly buried in the buzz of other conversations, partly overwhelmed by the exuberance of Vivaldi.

Hardwick pulled another folded sheet of paper from his pocket, opened it, and handed it to Gurney, who recognized the familiar format: the typed transcript of a recorded conversation.

“Watch the video and listen to the sound track,” said Hardwick. “I’ll tell you when you can start following it on the transcript, in case you can’t make out the audio. The three speakers are Chief Luntz and his wife, Carol, both facing you, and Ashton, with his back to you.” The Luntzes were holding tall drinks topped with lime wedges. The chief was balancing a couple of canapes on the palm of his free hand. Whatever Ashton was drinking he was holding in front of him, out of the fixed camera’s line of sight. The audible snippets of dialogue seemed thoroughly trite and came entirely from Mrs. Luntz.

“Yes, yes… day for it… fortunate that the forecast, which was very… flowers… the time of year that makes living in the Catskills worthwhile… music, very different, perfect for the occasion… mosquito, not a single… altitude makes it impossible, thank God, because mosquitoes down on Long Island… ticks, no ticks at all, thank God… had Lyme disease, absolutely horrible… wrong diagnosis… nauseous, aching, absolutely in despair, wanted to kill herself, the pain…”

As Gurney glanced sideways at Hardwick on the couch, a raised eyebrow questioning the point of all this, he heard the chief’s louder voice for the first time. “Carol, it’s no time to be talking about ticks. It’s a happy day-right, Doctor?”

Hardwick pointed a forefinger at the top line of the typed page on Gurney’s lap.

Gurney looked down at it, finding it a useful supplement to the hubbub on the sound track.

SCOTT ASHTON:

Very happy, indeed, Chief.

CAROL LUNTZ:

I was just trying to say how perfect everything is today-no bugs, no rain, no problems at all. And what a lovely affair, the music, handsome men everywhere…

CHIEF LUNTZ:

How you doing with your Mexican genius?

SCOTT ASHTON:

I wish I knew, Chief. Sometimes…

C AROL L UNTZ:

I heard there were some… strange… I don’t know, I don’t like repeating…

S COTT A SHTON:

Hector is going through some sort of emotional difficulty. His behavior has been different lately. I guess it’s been noticed. I’d be very interested in anything you’ve witnessed, anything that caught your attention.

C AROL L UNTZ:

Well, not witnessed by me, not directly, I only… rumors, but I try not to listen to rumors.

S COTT A SHTON:

Oh. Oh, just one second. Excuse me just one minute. Jillian seems to be waving at me.

Hardwick pushed the “pause” button. “See?” he said. “On the far left side of the picture?” Frozen in the pause frame was Jillian, looking in Ashton’s direction, holding up the gold watch on her left wrist and pointing to it. Hardwick pushed “play” again, and the action resumed. As Ashton made his way across the lawn through a scattering of guests to Jillian, the Luntzes continued their conversation without him, most of which was clear enough to Gurney with only an occasional glance at the transcript.

C HIEF L UNTZ:

You planning to tell him about that business with Kiki Muller?

C AROL L UNTZ:

Don’t you think he has a right to know?

C HIEF L UNTZ:

Вы читаете Shut Your Eyes Tight
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