This Dog for Hire

This Dog for Hire by Carol Lea Benjamin

Book: This Dog for Hire by Carol Lea Benjamin Read Free Book Online
Authors: Carol Lea Benjamin
experiences.
    I felt as if I were in a fog, too. So when I got home, I went straight up to my office, where I have an oversize blackboard I picked up at the flea market on Greenwich Avenue. I began to list the people in Clifford’s life and to think about what each stood to gain from his death.
    Dennis Mark Keaton, aka Dennis Mark Rosenberg.
    Gain: one champion basenji, Magritte. Will he do anything Clifford didn’t do, e.g., hire him out at stud? How much could you make doing that anyway? Find out. Loss: one best friend with whom he was possibly (hopelessly?) in love.
    Louis Lane, aka Leonard Polski.
    Inherits a previously worthless, now valuable art collection. Could there have been a long-term plan at work here? After all, Louis had hooked Cliff up with Veronica. Were there hard feelings, oops, between the lovers? A desire for revenge? A need lor money? Loss: the love of his life? Or not.
    Veronica Cahill.
    Lots of SoHo galleries had closed and lots of others were in financial difficulties, so . . . Did Louis and Veronica, old buddies, team up? If yes, how could this connect with where the murder took place? If they planned to kill Cliff together, then use the murder to increase the value of his work, how did they know he’d be on the pier that night?
    Why was I doing this? The man was killed at four in the morning on the Christopher Street pier, where he had gone with his dog to get lucky. Boy, did he not get lucky! The best I could hope for was a witness—talk about getting lucky—and one who was sane and sober enough to have gotten the license plate number. Fat fucking chance, as my grandmother would have said if there had been a Yiddish equivalent. Like on top of everything else, the guy would have had to have a pencil and paper.
    I added the next name.
    Morgan Gilmore, Magritte’s handler.
    Gil and Cliff argued about whether or not to breed Magritte, but what could Gil gain from Cliff’s death? He didn’t inherit M. Did he think he would? Is there more to this picture? Would Dennis keep up M’s career, or was Gil now out of a job?
    Adrienne Wynton Cole, Cliff’s mother.
    She gets the dough. But it was probably hers in the first place, and she probably has a ton more. Mothers don’t usually murder their children by running them over. They do it slowly, using guilt and disappointment. Even if she didn’t accept her son or really know him (what else is new?), she lost her son.
    Peter David Cole, Cliff’s brother.
    He would have gotten the dough if Adrienne had kicked off first. If Cliff was in his early thirties, his mother was probably somewhere in her fifties or sixties. Even if she would now leave everything she had to Peter, he’d have a pretty long wait. Not a terrific investment, killing your brother and waiting twenty-plus years for the payoff, unless she prefers a charity of some sort, other than her own son. That probably depends whether she approves of Peter David. Have to meet him. Maybe at the opening? Loss: his brother.
    I began to think about Lillian and all the times I felt like strangling her. But I’d never actually do it. Even though you probably get angrier at your family than at anyone else, they’re your history, too, the people who know every stupid story about you since day one.
    Okay. Check out the lover. And the gallery owner. Hey, what they do is exploit artists, isn’t it? Maybe murder comes under the heading of exploitation, furthering his career. After all, his stuff wasn't worth much when he was alive, was it? Check prices.
    I tacked the photos onto the wall, lonely shots of the pier, Cliff’s art, even his unmade bed, images to haunt me as I tried to make sense of what appeared to be a senseless crime.
    I decided to check the main house before getting ready for the opening. Not bothering with a coat, I grabbed the keys off a hook in the kitchen and ran across the snow-covered garden, Dashiell leading the way straight to the Siegals’ back door.
    I unlocked both locks,

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