“What sort of problems? I’m certainly not one of them. I think she’s very attractive.”
“She’s my client, and she’s the girlfriend of another client, for a start.”
“And where in the canon of legal ethics does it say you can’t sleep with a client?”
“I, ah, can’t quote you chapter and verse, but believe me, it’s inadvisable.”
“Come on, Stone, what’s the real reason? You’re a red-blooded American boy. You must harbor the fantasy of two women in bed with you- and with each other.”
“I can’t deny that,” Stone said, reaching the gangplank and helping her aboard. “I suppose the main reason is that I wouldn’t want to share you with anybody, not even another beautiful woman.”
“Now, that was the politic thing to say,” she said, smiling at him. “But is there some other reason?”
“Apart from what I’ve already said, it just doesn’t feel right,” he replied.
“Now, that’s the best reason you’ve given me,” she said. “Maybe another time.”
“You never know,” Stone replied.
“I can tell you’re interested,” Callie said.
“How?”
She rubbed the back of her hand across the front of his trousers. “Let’s just say, it shows.”
Stone laughed and pulled her to him. “Think you could be satisfied with just me?”
“I expect so,” she replied, leading him toward his cabin.
20
Stone had a late breakfast the following morning and was finishing his coffee, when Juanito came aboard from the house with a Federal Express package for Stone. He ripped it open.
Joan wrote in a note: “Bob Berman brought this by for you. He said you’d know what it is.”
Stone lifted a four-inch-thick stack of computer paper out of the box and looked at the first page. It was a computerized registration form for the Brooke Hotel in Manhattan. The fanfold paper opened to reveal what appeared to be the entire guest list for the Brooke on the previous Friday.
Liz came on deck looking fresh and new in a short linen dress. “Good morning,” she said. “What’s that?”
“I had some phone calls from a Manhattan hotel last week; fellow asked for me and wouldn’t leave a number.”
“You think it might have been Paul?”
“Maybe. It would be a big help if you would go through these registration forms and see if any of the names seems familiar to you-not just people you know, but names that Paul might have chosen for a new identity.”
“Sure, I’ll be glad to.”
“When you’ve done that, I’d like you to take a ride with me.”
“Where?”
“I met a man last night who could possibly be Paul, but I couldn’t be sure. The nose was different, as you said, and that seemed to change everything. Anyway, I haven’t seen him for some years, and I’m not sure how good I’d be at identifying him. I’d like to see if we can spot him around his hotel and let you get a look at him.”
“Okay, and I can tell you that when I saw him in Easthampton he looked very different from his old self. I spotted him as much by his walk and his body language as by his appearance.”
“What sort of hair did he have?”
“His natural dark, going gray; that hadn’t changed.”
“How long?”
“Not too long; longer than yours, though.”
“Does the name Paul Bartlett ring any bells?”
“Just the Paul. But if Paul were hiding out, I don’t think he’d use his real first name. He’s a lot smarter than that.”
“Sit down, and let’s go through this hotel list together.”
“Okay. Can I have some coffee first?”
Stone rang for Juanito and ordered the coffee, then they started through the stack of fanfold paper. They had gone through only a dozen or so names when Liz stopped. “Garland,” she said. “Donald Garland.”
“Familiar?”
“Garland was Paul’s mother’s maiden name. Donald was his father’s first name.”
“Do you know how to contact them? Maybe he’s been in touch.”
“Both dead,” Liz said.
“Mr. Garland is from San Francisco,” Stone read from the document. “Says here he’s with Golden Gate Publishing, and he lives in Pacific Heights. When it’s opening time out there, I’ll check him out.”
They continued to read through the list for a while, then Juanito appeared with the telephone. “For you, Mr. Barrington.”
“Yes?”
“It’s Dan Griggs.”
“Morning, Dan. I expect Dave Riley briefed you on last night’s events.”
“Yes, and we’ve checked out Mr. Bartlett. He’s from Minneapolis, as he said, and he did sell his design firm last year.”
“Oh,” Stone said. “I guess that lets him out.”
“Not necessarily,” Griggs said. “He had owned the firm for only two years when he sold it, and I haven’t been able to find out anything about him before that, which is unusual.”
“I thought I’d take Mrs. Harding over to his hotel this morning and see if we can spot him. She thinks she can identify Paul Manning.”
“It’s a nice thought, but he checked out this morning; said he was going back to Minneapolis on business.”
“He doesn’t have a business,” Stone pointed out.
“I’m checking with the airlines to see if he was on any outbound flight this morning,” Griggs said. “I’ll let you know if I come up with anything.”
“Thanks, Dan,” Stone said and hung up.
Liz was still going through the guest list. “I haven’t come across anything else yet,” she said.
“Paul Bartlett has checked out of his hotel,” Stone said. “Said he was returning to Minneapolis on business. Did Paul Manning have any connection with Minneapolis?”
“No, but he wouldn’t have settled in a place where anybody knew him.”
“How recognizable would he have been to his readers? Did he do a lot of book signings? Have his photograph on the book jackets?”
“The only photograph of Paul that ever appeared on a book jacket or in a press release from his publishers would have been one taken when he was very heavy and had a full beard. He would be completely unrecognizable to any reader now.”
“Bartlett recently sold a graphic design business. Did Paul have any design inclinations?”
“He was a fine arts major at Syracuse,” Liz said. “He drew and painted quite well.”
“Did he take any design courses? Anything that would give him the skills he would need for graphic design?”
“I don’t really know,” she said. “He didn’t talk about college all that much.”
Callie appeared on deck. “What are you two doing?” she asked.
Stone explained the stack of paper.
“And how did you get the guest list of a New York hotel?”
“You don’t want to know.”
Juanito came back with the phone for Stone.
“Hello.”
“It’s Dan Griggs. Paul Bartlett didn’t take any flight out this morning, and he didn’t charter any aircraft on the field, but he did turn in his rental car at Hertz, at the airport.”
“That doesn’t make any sense,” Stone said. “Why would he drive to the airport and turn in his car, then not fly out? How would he leave the airport without transportation?”
“I’ll check the local cab companies and see if a driver picked up anyone answering his description,” Griggs said.
“You might check if he rented a car from another company, too, and if so, what kind and what license number. Might be nice to get his driver’s license info from Hertz, too.”
“I got that. It lists a Minneapolis address.”
“Issued when?”
“Two years, three months ago.”
“Can you check with the Minnesota motor vehicle department and find out if it was a renewal or a new license, and if he turned in a license from another state?”
“Sure, that’s pretty easy.”
“Oh, and what’s his date of birth on the license?”
Griggs told him, and he repeated it to Liz.
“Eighteen months younger than Paul,” she said.
“Keep me posted,” Stone said to Griggs, and hung up.
Liz was still going through the hotel list.
“Anything at all?” Stone asked.
“Just Garland so far," she said. ”Pity the hotel doesn’t photograph its guests.“