Page 46
Story: The 24th Hour
I was asked for an update and I was eager to share with the team. I briefed Chi and Cappy on what I’d learned that day about Jamie’s financial manager, his house manager, his driver, and his cook—all of whom they knew—and that Jamie had been in the process of revising his will.
“How’d you know that?” Cappy asked.
“Bevaqua showed us the new draft Jamie left out in the office.”
I told them about Arthur making a reluctant admission to Brady that Rae Bergen had been seeing Jamie Fricke romantically, both while Holly was alive and after she’d been buried.
Chi raised an eyebrow.
“That’s new.”
Cappy pushed a tin of sugar cookies toward me and I helped myself to one and then another.
After I’d downed some coffee, I said, “Patty Delaney told me to look at the pictures Bevaqua took at Holly’s funeral. You guys were there. Did anyone make it into your notebook?”
“There was a lot going on,” Chi said. “Retired Olympians breaking down, gut-wrenching eulogies, but when it came time to lower the casket, no one was allowed to stand by the grave except family.”
Cappy said, “Rae was there with her twenty-year-old son, Brock Picard. College kid. She’s been divorced from her husband for ten years. It’s all in the file.”
Chi said, “Brock gave a pretty moving eulogy about his aunt Holly. Jamie choked out something heartbreaking about losing his soulmate. He was so sincere. If you didn’t know better …”
“And Rae?” I asked.
“Rae was a mess. All she could get out was, ‘I’ll always love you, Holly.’”
Chi looked pensive, and to me that always meant a big idea was coming up. “Paul,” I said. “What are you thinking?”
“That a few of us should go to Jamie’s funeral.”
“Which is when?”
“Friday. Private service at the family chapel in Pacific Heights.”
“Volunteers?” I asked.
Chi and Cappy raised their hands.
“Good. You’ve got it.”
“What was in the will?” Cappy asked.
“I’ll show you if you give me half your sandwich.”
“You like pastrami? I didn’t know,” he said.
“Deal or no deal?”
Cappy laughed and pushed half a pastrami on rye with mustard across the table.
“Looks, uh, yum,” I said. “Can you spare the pickle?”
He gave it to me. When I’d finished my half of Cappy’s sandwich and my past-dead coffee, Chi handed me the whole Fricke family file: two thumb drives and a three-hole binder of tabloid clippings. I gave him the draft of Jamie’s will and took the files down the hall to begin reading up on Holly Bergen Fricke’s family.
CHAPTER 59
I WAS DETERMINED to find a hook, a clue, something that looked wrong that would lead me to a double murderer. But the material in the files was meant for popular consumption. Party photos, award ceremonies, the material all fell under the heading of “Enquiring Minds Want to Know.”
Cappy’s notes were on one of the thumb drives, Chi’s on the other. I’d seen most of this information before, when we’d been working daily on Holly Fricke’s murder, but some of Chi’s notes were new to me: Holly and Rae’s parents, Bill and Susanne “Sassy” Bergen, had both come from old money going back three generations in New York. They served on a number of not-for-profit boards, had a few hospital wings named for them, but also were rumored to party in shades of gray.
“How’d you know that?” Cappy asked.
“Bevaqua showed us the new draft Jamie left out in the office.”
I told them about Arthur making a reluctant admission to Brady that Rae Bergen had been seeing Jamie Fricke romantically, both while Holly was alive and after she’d been buried.
Chi raised an eyebrow.
“That’s new.”
Cappy pushed a tin of sugar cookies toward me and I helped myself to one and then another.
After I’d downed some coffee, I said, “Patty Delaney told me to look at the pictures Bevaqua took at Holly’s funeral. You guys were there. Did anyone make it into your notebook?”
“There was a lot going on,” Chi said. “Retired Olympians breaking down, gut-wrenching eulogies, but when it came time to lower the casket, no one was allowed to stand by the grave except family.”
Cappy said, “Rae was there with her twenty-year-old son, Brock Picard. College kid. She’s been divorced from her husband for ten years. It’s all in the file.”
Chi said, “Brock gave a pretty moving eulogy about his aunt Holly. Jamie choked out something heartbreaking about losing his soulmate. He was so sincere. If you didn’t know better …”
“And Rae?” I asked.
“Rae was a mess. All she could get out was, ‘I’ll always love you, Holly.’”
Chi looked pensive, and to me that always meant a big idea was coming up. “Paul,” I said. “What are you thinking?”
“That a few of us should go to Jamie’s funeral.”
“Which is when?”
“Friday. Private service at the family chapel in Pacific Heights.”
“Volunteers?” I asked.
Chi and Cappy raised their hands.
“Good. You’ve got it.”
“What was in the will?” Cappy asked.
“I’ll show you if you give me half your sandwich.”
“You like pastrami? I didn’t know,” he said.
“Deal or no deal?”
Cappy laughed and pushed half a pastrami on rye with mustard across the table.
“Looks, uh, yum,” I said. “Can you spare the pickle?”
He gave it to me. When I’d finished my half of Cappy’s sandwich and my past-dead coffee, Chi handed me the whole Fricke family file: two thumb drives and a three-hole binder of tabloid clippings. I gave him the draft of Jamie’s will and took the files down the hall to begin reading up on Holly Bergen Fricke’s family.
CHAPTER 59
I WAS DETERMINED to find a hook, a clue, something that looked wrong that would lead me to a double murderer. But the material in the files was meant for popular consumption. Party photos, award ceremonies, the material all fell under the heading of “Enquiring Minds Want to Know.”
Cappy’s notes were on one of the thumb drives, Chi’s on the other. I’d seen most of this information before, when we’d been working daily on Holly Fricke’s murder, but some of Chi’s notes were new to me: Holly and Rae’s parents, Bill and Susanne “Sassy” Bergen, had both come from old money going back three generations in New York. They served on a number of not-for-profit boards, had a few hospital wings named for them, but also were rumored to party in shades of gray.
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