“The woman’s a bitch.”
“She’s also the mother of his eight-year-old son and six-year-old daughter, right?”
“What’s your point?”
“I’m simply trying to get a feel for what he would or wouldn’t do for money.”
“Specifically, what?”
The question stuck in my throat, but at this stage of the game I couldn’t be subtle. “Did you know that it was Guillermo who sent my father to Colombia?”
“No. But I don’t see how that matters.”
“This wasn’t a random crime. The kidnappers knew that my father had kidnap-and-ransom insurance, and we think he was targeted for that reason.”
“Are you asking me if my husband set up your father?”
“I’d love you to convince me that he didn’t.”
She took another one of those deep breaths that seemed to help her think. “Seems to me that the issue isn’t whether Guillermo sent your father to Colombia. The key question is: Who knew that your father had insurance?”
“Are you saying that Guillermo didn’t know?”
Her expression turned serious. “I’m telling you that he
“How can you be sure?”
“I was sitting at the same table the day they discussed it.”
“Where?
“Right here in Palm Beach. Back in August we met here for a Sunday brunch. Your poor mother had the worst morning sickness I’ve ever seen. On her third sprint to the bathroom I guessed she was pregnant. Your dad confirmed it but swore us to secrecy, since they hadn’t even told you or Lindsey yet. Anyway, that’s when Guillermo suggested he should look into kidnap-and-ransom insurance. A bit of friendly advice. A good thing for a new family man to have.”
“You mean he bought insurance on Guillermo’s recommendation?”
“Actually, your father said he already had it.”
I did a double take. Technically, my father’s telling anyone was enough to void the policy, but as a practical matter it seemed reasonable for Dad to have shared that information with his own partner. “Did he mention the amount of coverage?”
“A lot. Like three million.”
I looked toward the pool, sorting things out in my own mind. “This doesn’t exactly lower my suspicions about your husband.”
“Did you expect me to lie for him, stand by my man?”
“Maybe.”
“I’m through coming to his defense. I know he was sleeping with your sister.”
My eyes shifted toward the lifeguard she’d pointed out earlier, the one who got the great “back rubs.”
She said, “He’s a symptom of my marital problems, not the cause. I was faithful to Guillermo.”
I sensed genuine anger in her tone. I hadn’t planned to be so blunt, but I saw an opportunity. “Do you think Guillermo set up my father?”
“We all have our theories about what happened.”
“What’s yours?”
“A married, fifty-year-old Casanova’s obsession with his business partner’s twenty-something-year-old daughter. Two people were standing in the way of their getting together. Guillermo sends me to Palm Beach and sends your father to Colombia. So long as the shops are open on Worth Avenue, he knows I won’t be headed back to Nicaragua anytime soon. Getting rid of your father was a little more complicated.”
“I’ve talked to Lindsey. I think you’re reading way too much into her and Guillermo.”
“Are you sure?” she said, challenging me.
I looked her in the eye but didn’t answer. She smiled thinly, seemingly satisfied that she’d made her point.
“Neither of us can be sure of anything, can we, Nick? We weren’t there.”
I was staring blankly, not really watching as she applied more suntan lotion to her thighs. “I suppose not,” I replied.
She capped the tube of lotion and said, “Anything else I can help you with, honey?”
“Not unless you have three million dollars you can loan me.”
She leaned back and closed her eyes to the burning sun. “You’re so funny.”
“Yeah,” I said with a sardonic smile. “I kill myself.”
54
“You and Alex shared the same apartment?” asked Jenna.We were having dinner together, our first opportunity to regroup since my return from Colombia. Over a glass of red wine and an appetizer of steamed mussels, I’d told her all about the trip, and she’d asked intelligent questions. This last one had seemed to leap from her lips, as if she’d finally figured out the sleeping arrangements.
“It’s a big place, owned by one of her friends,” I said. “Alex had one room, I had another.”
“You don’t have to explain.”
“I feel like I do. You asked.”
“I’m sorry, I shouldn’t have. I’m your cocounsel, not your. . whatever.”
The waitress brought us more baguettes, then smiled and said something in French as she left. Le Bouchon in Coconut Grove was one of my favorite bistros. It was a cozy place with wooden tables and chairs, Tour de France posters on the walls, and tasty French food at prices that even a guy who was hard up for three million dollars could afford.
“Does she ever ask about me?” asked Jenna.
“Who, Alex?”
“Yes. She must think it’s strange, your ex-fiancee helping you.”
“Mmm. She’s never really said anything.”
Jenna smiled knowingly. “You’re such a bad liar.”
I smiled back. “Okay, it might have come up.”
“What’s her take on it?”
I sipped my wine, tore off a piece of bread, brushed the crumbs away. Basically I was stalling, wondering how she’d feel if I were to tell her that Alex’s first take on Jenna and me was that I’d never really loved her.
“She definitely had the wrong idea about us at first,” I said vaguely, knowing how completely wrong Alex had been. “But she has a much better understanding now.”
“What does that mean?”
“She thinks it takes a pretty special person to step up and help me the way you have. And so do I.”
Our eyes locked for a moment, then a moment longer. It had been months since I’d looked so deeply inside her. It could have been awkward, but it wasn’t.
The waitress politely interrupted and took our plates. Jenna looked away, and by the time the waitress had left, so had the moment.
“Tell me about Guillermo’s wife,” she said.
“Uh, sure,” I said, stumbling as I shifted gears. Once I’d refocused, it took only a few minutes to fill her in.
When I’d finished, she asked, “Are you going to go after him?”
“How do you mean?”
“You were suspicious of Guillermo before you met his wife. The only missing piece in the puzzle was whether Guillermo knew for a fact that your father had kidnap-and-ransom insurance when he sent him on that trip to Colombia. Now you know.”