: Chapter 20
IN HIS KEEPING: CLAIMED
Sylvie was fighting the urge to throw her laptop. All that work down the toilet! Sheâd been trying to uncover something in Connorâs friendsâ backgrounds to indicate one of them was capable of murder. No such luck! Sheâd gone back and taken another look at all the research sheâd done on them and foundâ¦zilch! The only fact sheâd discovered was that all his friends had been legacy students at Collegiate. All the male members of their respective families had attended the school. Fathers, grandfathers, brothers. The same was true of Jameson and the Frommer boys. Connor was the only exception. His dad had attended a less prestigious prep school in the city. By his friendsâ standards, Connorâs family wasnât wealthy at all. They were just getting by. Their lifestyle was hardly opulent. They only owned two houses and didnât even have a yacht. His friends came from old money; their families filthy rich for generations. It must have been difficult for them to see this interloper come into a school their families had endowed for years and best them. And best them he didâ¦at everything! Especially as they got older. Drakeâs elder brothers, father, and grandfather had all been captains of the high school basketball and track teams or class presidents in their time. Drake didnât get that opportunity. Connor took those positions, all of them. Sean had a similar experience when he lost out to Connor for Lacrosse team captain and student council president, a position his father had once held. Jameson also lost the position to Connor. Which probably infuriated him, since he was a senior and Connor was only a junior. Connor vied with him for captain and high scorer on the basketball and lacrosse teams too. Connor won handily. The only thing Jameson was better at was baseball. By all accounts, his friends were superior athletes too, but it was Connor who was moved up to the varsity teams while still a sophomore. The rest of them languished on the schoolâs JV squads another year before moving up. Connor excelled academically too. He was the valedictorian of his class with an overall average of 96.5 and gave a speech at their commencement. Heâd squeaked by Nathan, whose father, and his father before him, had held that honor. Poor Nathan, second best with an average of 96.1, became the salutatorian and sat through his graduation without being allowed to speak.
Sylvie could see why theyâd be jealous of Connorâs prowess and accomplishments back then. She also realized that was likely the source of their continuing rivalry today. But nothing that happened years ago could be construed as a valid motive for murder. Hell, it was only high school. Everybody knows high school doesnât matter!
Sheâd managed to unearth some interesting tidbits, however.
Good old Nathan had been accused of possible date rape while in college. A female classmate of his had gone to a kegger at his fraternity. Sheâd gotten shitfaced and passed out. The following morning sheâd awakened to find herself in bed naked with Nathan. He said the sex had been consensual. She said it was rape. Campus security investigated, but he was never charged.
Thereâd been two similar allegations lodged against Sean while he was in college. But nothing ever came of them either. Three years ago a female employee of his accused him of sexual harassment. Sylvie didnât know the specifics; just that it was settled out of court. Another woman accused him of attempted rape five years ago. She found the initial article, but nothing more. Sylvie had no idea what the outcome was.
Jameson had a wrongful termination suit brought against him. Seems heâd been sleeping with one of his underlings and when she decided to end it, heâd fired her. That one was settled out of court too.
These guys all seemed to have problems keeping their peckers in their pants!
Sylvie wasnât sure if these were legitimate accusations, or whether the men had been targeted and accused simply because they were rich. The women involved might have been trying to shake them down, figuring they and their families wouldnât want a scandal. None of the accusations resulted in criminal charges.
She also came upon two very interesting pieces of information she hadnât previously been aware of. The first was that Alex and his family were estranged. Heâd fought his father and brothers for control of his old manâs billion dollar real estate empire and had callously thrown them out of the business. His dad died shortly thereafter. One of the articles she read said his father had suffered a fatal heart attack while meeting with members of the corporationâs board of directors. Heâd been attempting to win their support to take back his company. With a son like that, who needs enemies? Alex was a real snake! Heâd always given her the creeps. Now she knew why.
It was the information on Drake that surprised her the most. Sheâd thought he was a hard charger like the rest of his friends, but nothing could be further from the truth. Heâd inherited tens of millions from his grandparents and other relatives. His net worth was estimated at a half billion dollars. Drake was related by blood to 25 of the richest and most prominent families in the country. Money that was passed down from generation to generation. There were presidents, vice presidents, governors, senators, and ambassadors in his family tree. With all his wealth and education, youâd think heâd be involved in the day-to-day operation of his familyâs corporation. But he wasnât. His father and brothers ran it. Heâd been sidelined after a short stint as a corporate vice president, and given the dubious honor of running the familyâs charitable foundations. Like Sean, heâd sowed a lot of wild oats in his time. Problem was he was still sowing them. Drake had been cited for speeding on numerous occasions, making frequent appearances in traffic court, and had lost his license at least twice. The accident heâd had on the LIE when he was a teen was nothing compared to those he had later on. Heâd totaled Maseratis and Porsches, Lamborghinis and Ferraris. One of the accidents had paralyzed a woman for life. Not to be outdone by his skeevy friends, heâd also been accused of sexual assaultâ¦inappropriate touching. It happened on wet T-shirt night at an off-campus bar while he was in college. Drake had gotten drunk and tried to feel up one of the contestants. The cops were called, but nothing was done. Five years ago he was accused of attempted rape. Sylvie didnât like Drake; but after reading the account that appeared in the paper, even she had to admit it sounded like a setup. The woman was most likely trying to extort money from him. The cops must have felt that way too, because he was never charged. Aside from fast cars and fast women, Drakeâs main pursuits seemed to be golf, skiing, running 5K races and marathons, attending yachting events, and horses. He owned and bred both race and show horses.
Sylvie had to admit, for all their faults and shortcomings; it was unlikely that any of them was the serial killer. Assholes? Yes! Murderers? Probably not!
Still, she had a gut feeling about this that wouldnât go away. Then again, maybe she was just a freaking lunatic, grasping at straws! Sheâd spent the last two days sniffing soap until she was so nauseous she nearly puked. Were these the actions of a rational woman? Connor might be right. He said her obsession with the case had taken over her life. He accused her of conducting a vendetta against his friends and old classmates. All her research, all her suspicions, focused solely on them and no one else. âIt isnât fair and it isnât right,â he lectured her, hoping to appeal to her better angels. âI want you to stay out of it and let the experts, the investigators do their jobs!â heâd warned. He told her he was on the verge of taking away her laptop and forbidding her from doing anymore internet snooping. He was also planning to beat her ass if she didnât cut it out!
The thing he didnât seem to grasp, the thing no one seemed to understand, was that she had a stake in the case. The biggest stake of all! Sylvie wasnât doing it to be mean or vindictive. Or because she was jealous of their wealth or position. She was just trying to unmask a murderer! It wasnât him or the cops, or the FBI, or the private detectives this maniac tried to kill. It was her! She had every right to want to get this motherfucker; and if that was obsession, so be it!
Sheâd promised Connor sheâd be on her best behavior when they arrived. Theyâd be here for dinner at 7 tonight. She wasnât looking forward to it. Sylvie thought theyâd be coming Wednesday morning. She hadnât realized theyâd show up today. Sylvie could only tolerate these guys in small doses. The last thing she wanted was to have those idiots underfoot, bending her ear, bragging and boasting, acting like a bunch of drunken frat boys! If these were the best and brightest America had to offer, our titans of industry and commerceâ¦we were screwed!
Tomorrow morning theyâd be here at the crack of dawn for a big breakfast before they set out to hook, torture, and maim their limit of fish. Theyâd return in the evening to gorge on broiled trout and then theyâd leave. It couldnât happen soon enough for Sylvie. As it was, sheâd better get used to having them around. They were Connorâs best friends, after all, and he was loyal to them. Sylvie didnât have any friends, only family. Maybe thatâs why she didnât understand the friendship dynamic at play here. Her suspicions aside, she hoped it wasnât one of his friends for Connors sake. Heâd be devastated.
He was in a really crappy mood today. She was making it a point to stay out of his way. Lettie called to announce that she and Warren had gotten married. Sylvie thought heâd be happy for them, but he was miffed that theyâd married without consulting him. He thought it highly improper that Warren would go ahead with the nuptials without asking his permission first. She would have told him that was a stupid, antiquated, paternalistic notion, harkening back to the bad old days when women were viewed as chattel, except sheâd learned that Connor had done just that. Heâd called her father and asked his permission before proposing to Sylvie. OK so he was old-fashioned. But Sylvie was 26! Lettie was in her 70s and had already been married three times. It was a little different. What was Connor complaining about anyway? He liked Warren. Sylvie advised him to âget over itâ and then called the happy couple to offer her congratulations and wish them well.
She grabbed the palm-sized tape recorder off her desk. Her witchdoctors had decreed that she needed an hour of fresh air every day. That was all well and good when she was in warm and sunny Belize; but she was in freezing, cold, upstate New York now. They were so worried about her lungs and yet they kicked her out the door every day to freeze her ass off, get frostbite, and possibly catch pneumonia? Where was the sense in that? But Connor insisted. âItâs for your own good!â he said. Oh Please! He also demanded she get to work on a sequel to Intimate Pleasures. âThe readers wonât wait forever you know!â He said it would take her mind off the investigation. As if!
He was also pushing her to make some decisions about the wedding. What decisions? She wanted to elope! But Connor was thinking of a June wedding where theyâd be surrounded by friends and family. Sheâd made the mistake of telling Sara that, and her sister had once again morphed into her wedding planner Nazi persona. âLeave it to me,â sheâd told Sylvie. Wrong! Sylvie didnât want to leave it to her. This was her wedding. She was being hounded day and night by that infuriating woman. Phone calls! Emails! It was driving Sylvie berserk. If she had to have a traditional wedding, then she wanted it to be small and simple. Out on the back lawn here. Or in the meadow on her dadâs farm. She didnât want an extravaganza. The wedding would be low key. Tasteful. Sara originally thought it should be a formal black and white wedding, with men in tuxedos and women in long summer gowns. What part of simple didnât she understand? Sara was upset that Sylvie wasnât sharing her vision. Too frigging bad! Sara had done the same thing to Leonaâjust barged right in and taken over her and her dadâs wedding. Not this time! She wasnât going to be steamrolled by her sister. Sylvie told her thanks, but no thanks! Sheâd pick the wedding colors herself and get back to her.
Sylvie studied the digital voice recorder in her hand. Connor had given it to her, saying the recorder would make her time outdoors more productive. She could dictate ideas, scenes, and dialogue for her new book while her hands stayed warm in her gloves or mittens. What the hell, sheâd give it a shot.
She waved good-bye to Connor as she passed by his office, pointing to the window and the broad expanse of yard outside. He nodded and then returned to his conference call. There was a problem about which actress would be the voice of Fiona the Fumbling Fairy Princess in the new animated movie they were making. Their first choice had upped the ante and was now demanding a percentage of the movieâs gross profits. Second choice wasnât nearly as greedy, but she had a prior commitment and had to complete another movie before beginning work on Fiona. That would delay the movieâs release date. The film company and producers didnât want that, so they were currently considering choice number three.
Sylvie peered out the window. Brrrr! It looked really cold out there today. The wind was blowing, causing the crystalline snow to swirl, forming little whirling funnel clouds around the back yard. Sylvie didnât really want to go out in this weather, but sheâd never hear the end of it if she didnât. She got her coat from the closet; along with her hat, scarf, and mittens, and headed downstairs. She might be nuts, but it always felt colder sitting on the upstairs deck then it did on the downstairs patio. She was sure it must have something to do with the wind. But the way the snow was blowing around, she wouldnât be comfortable sitting anywhere. Maybe sheâd just take a stroll down to the lake and see if anybody was out on the ice today at the fishing huts. Sometimes she could see smoke rising from the outhouse-sized structures, but she never saw actual people around. With the weather being what it was, it would be a couple of weeks before the ice began to melt and the shacks disappeared. The ice was extra thick this year because of the polar vortex that had kept the area in a deep freeze most of the winter.. One of the groundsmen had cleared a path down to the boathouse so she wouldnât have to struggle through the snow. The exercise would keep her warm and she could still dictate while she walked. She was passing through the game room on her way outside when she heard Estelle humming in Connorâs man caveâthe gun and trophy room.
âEstelle, what are you doing in here?â Sylvie inquired, peeking through the doorway. They both avoided the room like the plague. The décor left a lot to be desired. The stuffed animals hanging on the walls and sitting on the floor seemed to stare at you. It gave her the willies! The room held specially made cabinets filled with guns of every caliber and description. Rifles, shotguns, handguns; even antique six-shooters and little one-shot derringers. Aunt Tiz would be green with envy.
âIâm cleaning the glass doors on the gun cabinets. They need to be washed inside and out. Itâs a tradition that the men assemble here the night before opening day for drinks and cigars after dinner. Mr. Hudson is very particular and likes the room to be immaculate when his guests arrive. The glass sparkling, the guns dusted, all the wood surfaces polished and gleaming, the leather wiped down and buffed. He and his friends like to sit and reminisce about their various exploits and adventures. Theyâve done a lot of hunting, fishing, and exploring over the years. You see that brook trout mounted over on the far wall?â she asked pointing in that direction. âIt was taken on opening day four years ago. Mr. Hudson is very proud of it. It weighed over five pounds. Thatâs the biggest fish ever caught by this group on opening day. Where are you off to? Are you sitting or walking today?â
âActually Iâm working. I have my trusty recorder and Iâm going to be dictating thoughts on my new book as I hike down to the lake and back a couple of times.â
âYouâre writing a sequel? Thatâs wonderful!â Estelle gushed. âI love Sara. Sheâs so sweet, patient, and down-to-earth. But that Chase? Heâs a real stinker! I hope he has a change of heart in the next book. Sara deserves better! Mr. Brady and I both agree thatâ¦â
âYou and Brady read my book?â
âWell of course we did. And we both loved it. Although Iâve got to tell you, some of the sexy parts really made me blush. Youâve got quite the imagination.â
Sylvieâs face heated. âYes, youâre right,â she smiled sheepishly. âQuite the imagination!â Unable to look the woman in the eye, Sylvie stared at the cleaning supplies and continued. âThanks so much for buying the book. That was very nice of you. And Brady too.â An image flashed in her head of Brady and Estelle sitting on a couch somewhere, reading and discussing the more erotic, intimate parts of her book. Did they realize she was describing her and Connor? Sylvie blushed. She certainly hoped not. Hold itâ¦Estelle and Brady? Together? Reading dirty books? What was that about?
âNonsense dear. Youâre my employer now. I want to get to know you better and I thought reading your book might help.â
âFirst off Iâm not your employer,â she protested, her eyes focused on Estelle now. âIâm your employerâs fiancé. And furthermore, youâll never be just an employee to me. Youâre my friend. A member of the family. And you always will be. I canât thank you enough for all youâve done for me these last few months. Helping me. Taking care of me. You gave me a comforting shoulder to cry on when I was afraid. A reassuring hand to hold when I felt I had no strength to go on. And a kick in the butt to keep me going when you thought I needed it.â
Tears welling in her eyes, Estelle threw her arms around Sylvie and hugged her tightly. âSomebody else said that very same thing to me once. Mr. Hudsonâs mother Elizabeth. She was a wonderful, kind, gentle woman and she would have loved you to pieces. Youâre very much like her. Iâm so glad Mr. Hudson found you. Heâs had a hard time of it since his parents died. Emotionally I mean. His fiancé being murdered and then those other women. All the tragedy, all the pain, it changed him. For years it seemed like he was cursed. And then you came along. Youâre good for him Sylvie. I see it in the way his eyes light up when you walk into a room. For the first time in years, I think heâs happy. He needs you. Oh he tried to convince himself he didnât, sending you off to New York the way he did. But he was miserable the whole time; dragging himself around, acting like a crabby old bear, growling and grumbling all the time. He knows better now. He loves you very much you know,â Estelle assured her, smiling . âNow be off with you before I get all teary-eyed. Iâve got a million things to do before the men arrive.â
âDid I hear you right? Just men? Seanna and the girls arenât coming?â
âNo it will be just the gentlemen tonight. No ladies. So I will be making only one meal instead of five this evening. As far as I know we have neither vegans, nor anyone gluten intolerant coming to dinner. Neither will there be guests who canât eat carbs or dairy, nor who only eat fresh-caught fish, free-range chickens, grass-fed beef, organic produce, or brown rice. Therefore, weâll be having a Caesar salad, with lots of croutons and parmesan; a juicy, well-marbled prime rib of beef with a tasty Yorkshire pudding; twice-baked potatoes loaded with sour cream and cheddar cheese; plus glazed carrots, Brussel sprouts, and buttermilk biscuits with scads of butter. And for dessert, apple pie and ice cream. What do you think?
âSounds fabulous! No bitches huh? Thatâs a relief.â
âNo bitches!â
Sylvie was turning to leave when she noticed a picture of âthe sixâ hanging on the wall, all shirtless and standing beside the lake. She took a closer look, studying each man. Victor was the tallest. The other five appeared to be the exact same height. They could be clones! The same shaped heads, flat bellies, narrow hips, well-muscled armsâ¦except for one thing. One of them was slightly thinner than the others. Her mind was whirring. Sheâd passed that picture many times. Why hadnât she ever taken the time to look at it before?
âSylvie is something wrong? You look like youâve seen a ghost. Arenât you feeling well?â
âNo itâs nothing. Iâm fine.â Sylvie said as she hurried out of the room
Estelle heard the door bang shut. Sylvie seemed upset. She took the picture down from the wall and examined it.