Trophy wife. Van Gates had to be close to seventy.
“May I use your restroom? I seem to need one every ten minutes these days.”
For the first time, Bonnie seemed to notice that Rizzoli was pregnant. “Oh, honey! Of course you can. The powder room’s right there.”
Rizzoli had never seen a bathroom painted candy-cane pink. The toilet sat high on a platform, like a throne, with a telephone mounted on the wall beside it. As if anyone would want to conduct business while, well, doing their business. She washed her hands with pink soap in the pink marble basin, dried them with pink towels, and fled the room.
Bonnie had vanished, but Rizzoli could hear the beat of exercise music, and the thumps of feet bouncing upstairs. Bonnie going through her exercise routine. I should get in shape one of these days too, thought Rizzoli. But I refuse to do it in pink spandex.
She headed down the hall in search of Van Gates’s office. She peeked first into a vast living room with a white grand piano and a white rug and white furniture. White room, pink room. What came next? She passed another painting of Bonnie in the hallway, this time posed as a Greek goddess in a white gown, nipples showing through diaphanous fabric. Man, these people belonged in Vegas.
At last she came to an office. “Mr. Van Gates?” she said.
The man sitting behind the cherry desk looked up from his papers, and she saw watery blue eyes, a face gone soft and jowly with age, and hair that was-what
“Detective Rizzoli?” he said, and his gaze fell to her abdomen. Got stuck there, as though he’d never seen a pregnant cop before.
“Sit down, sit down,” he said.
She settled into a slick leather chair. Glancing around the room, she noticed that the decor in here was radically different from the rest of the house. It was done up in Traditional Lawyer, with dark wood and leather. Mahogany shelves were filled with law journals and textbooks. Not a whisper of pink. Clearly this was his domain, a Bonnie-free zone.
“I don’t really know how I can help you, Detective,” he said. “The adoption you’re asking about was forty years ago.”
“Not exactly ancient history.”
He laughed. “I doubt you were even born then.”
Was that a little poke? His way of saying she was too young to be bothering him with these questions?
“You don’t recall the people involved?”
“I’m just saying that it was a long time ago. I would’ve been just out of law school then. Working out of a rented office with rented furniture and no secretary. Answered my own phone. I took every case that came in- divorces, adoptions, drunk driving. Whatever paid the rent.”
“And you still have all those files, of course. From your cases back then.”
“They’d be in storage.”
“Where?”
“File-Safe, out in Quincy. But before we go any further, I have to tell you. The parties involved in this particular case requested absolute privacy. The birth mother did not want her name revealed. Those records were sealed years ago.”
“This is a homicide case, Mr. Van Gates. One of the two adoptees is now dead.”
“Yes, I know. But I fail to see what that has to do with her adoption forty years ago. How is it relevant to your investigation?”
“Why did Anna Leoni call you?”
He looked startled. Nothing he said after that could cover up that initial reaction, that expression of
“The day before she was murdered, Anna Leoni called your law office from her room at the Tremont Hotel. We just got her phone record. The conversation lasted thirty-seven minutes. Now, you two must have talked about
He said nothing.
“Mr. Van Gates?”
“That-that conversation was confidential.”
“Ms. Leoni was your client? You billed her for that call?”
“No, but-”
“So you’re not bound by attorney-client privilege.”
“But I am bound by another client’s confidentiality.”
“The birth mother.”
“Well, she
“That was forty years ago. She may have changed her mind.”
“I have no idea. I don’t know where she is. I don’t even know if she’s still alive.”
“Is that why Anna called you? To ask about her mother?”
He leaned back. “Adoptees are often curious about their origins. For some of them it becomes an obsession. So they go on document hunts. Invest thousands of dollars and a lot of heartache searching for mothers who don’t want to be found. And if they
Rizzoli thought of her own childhood, her own family. She had always known who she was. She could look at her grandparents, her parents, and see her own bloodline engraved on their faces. She was one of them, right down to her DNA, and no matter how much her relatives might annoy her or embarrass her, she knew they were hers.
But Maura Isles had never seen herself in the eyes of a grandparent. When Maura walked down a street, did she study the faces of passing strangers, searching for a hint of her own features? A familiar curve to the mouth or slope of the nose? Rizzoli could perfectly understand the hunger to know your own origins. To know that you’re not just a loose twig, but one branch of a deeply rooted tree.
She looked Van Gates in the eye. “Who is Anna Leoni’s mother?”
He shook his head. “I’ll say it again. This is not relevant to your-”
“Let me decide that. Just give me the name.”
“Why? So you can disrupt the life of a woman who may not want to be reminded of her youthful mistake? What does this have to do with the murder?”
Rizzoli leaned closer, placing both her hands on his desk. Aggressively trespassing on his personal property. Sweet little Bambis might not do this, but girl cops from Revere weren’t afraid to.
“We can subpoena your files. Or I can ask you politely.”
They stared at each other for a moment. Then he released a sigh of capitulation. “Okay, I don’t need to go through this again. I’ll just tell you, okay? The mother’s name was Amalthea Lank. She was twenty-four years old. And she needed money-badly.”
Rizzoli frowned. “Are you telling me she got paid for giving up her babies?”
“Well…”
“How much?”
“It was substantial. Enough for her to get a fresh start in life.”
“How much?”
He blinked. “It was twenty thousand dollars, each.”
“For each
“Two happy families walked away with a child. She walked away with cash. Believe me, adoptive parents pay