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Authors: Jeffery Deaver

BOOK: Manhattan Is My Beat
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He found a cassette labeled
Manhattan Is My Beat
and picked it up, set it down.

Then: footsteps.

Shit. Who the hell was
this?

Giggling. A woman’s voice: “Not here, come on. No, wait!”

He reached into his pocket and wrapped his hand around his pistol.

A twentyish woman, in a white bra and dress bunched around her waist, stopped at the top of the stairs. She looked at him. He looked at her tits.

“Who the fuck are you?” she demanded. Pulling the cloth halfheartedly up to her chest.

“Who’re
you?
“ he asked.

The way he asked it she said, “Sandra,” immediately.

“You’re her roommate?”

“Rune? Yeah, I guess.”

He laughed. “You
guess?
How long you known her?”

“Not, you know, long.”

He took in this information carefully, noted her body language. If she was dangerous, innocent. If she’d ever killed anyone. “How long is ‘you know long’?”

“Huh?”

“How the fuck long’ve you known her?”

“A couple of months is all. What the hell’re you doing here?”

A man, late twenties, blond, jockish, came up the stairs. He squinted, then stepped up beside Sandra.

The Meter Man ignored him.

She said, “Like, what’re you doing here?”

He finished looking through the bookcase. Jesus, he didn’t want to have to flip through every book. There must’ve been five hundred of them.

“Hey,” the blond man called, “the lady asked you a question.”

Sounded like a line from a really bad movie. The Meter Man loved movies. He lived alone and spent every Saturday afternoon at the Quadriplex near him.

He squinted. “What was it? The question?”

“What’re you doing here?” she asked uneasily.

He pointed to his chest. “I read meters.”

“You can’t just come in here,” the young man said. Sandra tried to shush him—not concerned so much about the words themselves as the attitude. But the boy waved her off. “You can’t enter without permission. It’s trespassing. That’s actionable.”

“Oh. Actionable. What’s that mean?”

“That she can sue your ass.”

“Oh. Actionable. Well, we had reports of a leak.”

“Yeah, what leak?” Sandra asked. “Who reported it?”

The Meter Man grinned at her, looked at her chest again. Nice tits. And she wasn’t ugly. Just needed some color and to get rid of that punky makeup. And why a white bra like old ladies wear? He shrugged. “I dunno. Somebody downstairs complained.”

“Well, I don’t see a leak,” she said. “So why don’t you leave?”

“You haven’t had any water damage lately?”

“Why’s a meter reader interested in repairs and leaks?” From Sandra’s horny companion.

The Meter Man glanced out the window. It really was one fucking incredible view. He looked back. “When there’s a leak you can tell by looking at the meter. That makes sense, don’tcha think?”

“Were you looking through Rune’s stuff?”

“Naw, I was looking for the meter.”

Sandra said, “Well, it’s not up here. So why don’t you leave?”

“Why don’t you say please?”

The blond jock did it just like Redford or Steve McQueen or Stallone would’ve. He stepped in front of Sandra. Crossed his arms in his Polo shirt and said, “The lady wants you to leave.”

Professional or not? The meter man debated.
That
side gave in, the way it usually did. He said, “If she’s a lady why’s she fucking an asshole like you?”

The blond smiled, shaking his head, stepping forward. Tensing the muscles that came from the magic of Nautilus machines. “You’re outa here.”

It turned out not to be that much fun and the Meter Man decided it hadn’t been worth the unprofessional part. Oh, mixing it up with a guy who knew what he was doing … that would’ve been one thing. Going a few rounds. Really getting a chance to trade knuckles. But this fucking yuppie … Christ.

They did a little scuffling, a little push-pull. Saying that stuff you said in street fights “Why, you motherfucker …” That sort of thing.

Then the Meter Man got bored and decided he couldn’t risk being there any longer, and who knew who this pair had called. He broke free and got Blondie once in the solar plexus, then once in the jaw.

Zap, that was it. Two silent punches. The guy went to his knees. More nauseated than hurt, which is what gut punches do. Probably the first fight the guy had been in ever.

Shit, he’s going to—

The guy puked all over the floor.

“Jesus, Andy,” Sandra said. “That’s gross.”

Meter Man helped Andy to his feet. Eased him down on the bed.

Okay, enough fun, he thought. Time to get professional again. He said to Sandra, “Here’s the deal—I’m from a collection agency. Your friend owes a couple thousand
on her credit card and she’s been dodging us for a year. We’re tired of it.”

“That sounds like Rune, sure. Look, I don’t know where she is. I haven’t heard—”

He held up his hand. “You fucking tell anybody you saw me here, I’ll do the same thing to you.” He nodded at the young man, who lay on his back, moaning, his arm over his eyes.

Sandra shook her head. “I won’t say anything.”

As he walked out, Sandra said, “You fight good.” She let the dress slip, revealing her breasts again. The Meter Man tugged the dress back up, smiled, said, “Tell your boyfriend he should always keep his left up. He’s a defense kinda guy.”

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

“Ms. Rune?”

She turned, paused, as she was walking through the door of Washington Square Video.

Rune, however, wasn’t looking at the man who’d stopped her. It was the badge and the ID card in the battered wallet that got her attention. He was a U.S. marshal.

Neat, she thought before she decided she ought to be nervous.

“My name’s Dixon.”

He looked just like what a casting director would pick for a federal agent. Tall and craggy. He had a faint Queens accent. She thought about Detective Virgil Manelli and how he’d worn a suit. This guy was wearing jeans and sneakers, a black baseball jacket: bridge-and-tunnel clothes—meaning: from the outer boroughs. He wouldn’t get into Area, her favorite after-hours club,
wearing this kind of outfit. Trimmed brown hair. He looked like a contractor.

“It’s just Rune. Not Ms.”

He put the badge away and she caught a glimpse of a huge gun on his hip.

Awesome … That’s a Schwarzenegger gun, she thought. Man, that would shoot through trucks.

Then remembered she should be nervous again.

He squinted, then gave a faint smile. “You don’t remember me.”

She shook her head. Let the door swing shut.

“I saw you the other day—in the apartment on Tenth Street. I was part of the homicide team.”

“In Mr. Kelly’s apartment?”

“Right.”

She nodded. Thinking back to that terrible morning. But she didn’t remember anything except Manelli’s close-together eyes.

The shot-out TV.

Mr. Kelly’s face.

The blood on his chest.

Dixon looked at a notebook, put it back in his pocket. He asked, “Have you been in touch with a Susan Edelman recently?”

“Susan … Oh, the other witness.” The yuppie with the designer jogging outfit. “I called her yesterday, the day before. She was still in the hospital.”

“I see. Can I ask why you called her?”

Because somebody’s got to find the killer, and the cops couldn’t care less. But she told Dixon, “Just to see how she’s doing. Why?”

Dixon paused for a moment. She didn’t like the way he was looking at her face. Assessing her. He said, “Ms. Edelman was killed an hour ago.”

“What?” she gasped. “No!”

“I’m afraid so.”

“What happened?”

Dixon continued. “She was walking past a construction site. A scaffolding collapsed. It might have been an accident but, of course, we don’t think so.”

“Oh, no …”

“Has anyone threatened you? Or have you noticed anything suspicious since the killing on Tenth Street?”

“No.” She looked down for a moment, uneasy, then back to the marshal.

Dixon examined her face closely. His expression gave away nothing. He said, “For your sake, for a lot of people’s sake, I need you to tell me what your involvement with this whole thing is.”

“There’s no—”

“This’s real serious, miss. It might’ve seemed like a game at first. But it isn’t. Now, I can have you put into protective custody and we’ll sort it out later…. I really don’t think you’d like to spend a week in Women’s Detention? Now, what’s the story?”

There was something about his voice that sounded as if he was really concerned. Sure, he was threatening her in a way but that just seemed to be his style. It probably went with the job. And she felt that he was really worried that she might end up like Kelly or Susan Edelman.

So she told him a few things. About the movie, the stolen bank loot, about the connection between Mr. Kelly and the robbery. Nothing about Symington. Nothing about churches or suitcases. Nothing about Amanda LeClerc.

Dixon nodded slowly and she couldn’t tell what he was thinking. The only thing that seemed to interest him was the old robbery.

Why’d he lift his eyebrow at that? she wondered.

Dixon asked, “Where do you live?”

She gave him the address.

“Phone number?”

“No phone. You can call here, the video store, leave a message.”

Dixon thought for a moment. “I don’t think you’re in danger.”

“I didn’t see anything, I really didn’t. Just this green car. That’s all I remember. No faces, no license plates. There’s no
reason
to kill me.”

This seemed to amuse him. “Well, that’s not really the issue, miss. The reason you’re not dead is that somebody doesn’t want you dead. Not yet. If they did, you’d be gone. If I were you, though, I’d forget about this bank robbery money. Maybe that’s what was behind Mr. Kelly’s shooting. You’re probably safe for now but if you keep poking around … who knows what could happen?”

“I was just—”

Suddenly his face softened and he smiled. “You’re a pretty woman. You’re smart. You’re tough, I can see that. I just wouldn’t want anything to happen to you.”

Rune said, “Thanks. I’ll keep that in mind.” Though she was really only thinking two things: That Dixon wasn’t wearing a wedding ring. And that he was a hell of a lot cuter than she’d thought at first.

“What was that all about? Did that guy have a
badge?
“ Stephanie sounded breathless.

Rune walked behind the counter at Washington Square Video, joining Stephanie at the register. She answered, “He was a U.S. marshal….” Then she shook her head. “The other witness—to Mr. Kelly’s murder?— she was killed.”

“No!”

“It might’ve been an accident. Maybe not.” Rune stared at the monitor. There was no movie in the VCR
and she was looking at silent snow. “Probably not,” she whispered.

“Are you, uhm, safe?” Stephanie asked.

“He thinks so.”


Thinks?

“But there’s one thing funny.”

“What?”

“He was a U.S. marshal?”

“You said that.”

“Why would he be involved in a murder of somebody in the East Village?”

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