Immortal in Death (In Death #3)(72)



You agreed to it because you don’t have a choice, she thought, but kept her face bland. “Your cooperation is noted, Mr. Redford. You have stated that you were acquainted with Pandora, that you had a casual and intimate relationship.”

“That’s correct.”

“Were you also involved in any business dealings with her?”

“I produced two direct-to-home screen videos in which Pandora played a part. Another was under consideration.”

“Were these projects successful?”

“Moderately.”

“And outside of these projects, did you have any other business dealings with the deceased?”

“None.” A faint smile touched his mouth. “Other than a small speculative investment.”

“A small speculative investment?”

“She claimed to have been laying groundwork for her own fashion and beauty line. Of course, she needed backers and I was intrigued enough to invest.”

“You gave her money?”

“Yes, over the course of the last year and a half, I invested just over three hundred thousand.”

Found a way to cover your ass, Eve noted, and leaned back in her chair. “What’s the status of this fashion and beauty line you claim the deceased was implementing?”

“It has no status, Lieutenant.” He lifted his hands, let them fall. “I was duped. It wasn’t until after her death that I discovered there was no line, no other backers, no product.”

“I see. You’re a successful producer, a money man. You must have asked her for a prospectus, figures, expenses, projected earnings. Perhaps a sample of the products.”

“No.” His mouth tightened as he looked down at his hands. “I did not.”

“You expect me to believe that you just handed her money for a projected line you had no information on?”

“It’s embarrassing.” He lifted his eyes again. “I have a reputation in the business, and if this information gets out, that reputation would certainly suffer.”

“Lieutenant,” the counselor interrupted. “My client’s reputation is a valuable asset. This asset will be damaged if this data goes beyond the parameters of this investigation. I can and will secure a gag order on this portion of his statement to protect his interests.”

“Go right ahead. This is quite a story, Mr. Redford. Now, do you want to tell me why a man with your reputation, your assets, would commit three hundred thousand dollars to an investment that didn’t exist?”

“Pandora was a persuasive woman, a beautiful one. She was also clever. She skirted around my request for projections and figures. I justified the continued payments because I felt she was an expert in the field.”

“And you didn’t learn of her duplicity until after her death.”

“I made some inquiries — contacted her business agent, her representative.” He puffed out his cheeks and nearly succeeded in looking sheepish. “No one knew anything about the line.”

“When did you make these inquiries?”

He hesitated for a heartbeat. “This afternoon.”

“After our interview? After I questioned you on the payments?”

“That’s correct. I wanted to insure there was no mix-up of any kind before I answered your questions. On advice of counsel, I contacted Pandora’s people and discovered I’d been conned.”

“Your timing is… very skillful. Do you have any hobbies, Mr. Redford?”

“Hobbies?”

“A man with your type of high-pressure job, your… assets, must need some sort of release. Stamp collecting, computer doodling, gardening.”

“Lieutenant,” the counselor said with weariness. “The relevance?”

“I’m interested in your client’s leisure time. We’ve established how he spends his business time. Perhaps you speculate on investments as a release valve.”

“No, Pandora was my first mistake and will be my last. I don’t have time for hobbies, or the inclination for them.”

“I know what you mean. I had someone tell me today that more people should plant petunias. I can’t imagine spending time digging in dirt and fussing with flowers. Not that I don’t like them. You like flowers?”

“They have their place. That’s why I have a staff to deal with them.”

“But you’re a licensed horticulturist.”

“I — “

“You applied for a license and were granted one three months ago. Just about the time you made a payment to Jerry Fitzgerald in the amount of a hundred and twenty-five thousand. And two days before, you placed an order for an Immortal Blossom from the Eden Colony.”

“My client’s interest in flora has no relevance in this matter.”

“It has plenty,” Eve shot back, “and this is an interview, not a trial. I don’t need relevance. Why did you want an Immortal?”

“I — it was a gift. For Pandora.”

“You went to the considerable time, trouble, and expense to secure a license, then purchased a controlled species at considerably more expense, as a gift for a woman you occasionally had sex with. A woman who over the last eighteen months bled you for over three hundred thousand dollars.”

“That was an investment. This was a gift.”

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