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Authors: John Lutz

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Twist (7 page)

BOOK: Twist
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14
New York City, the present
I
t was odd the way she met the guy.
Connie Mason was drinking alone in Jill’s Joint, a Village club with a sixties theme. Jefferson Airplane was doing background music from the big Bose speakers angled downward around the walls where they met the ceiling. Grace Slick, singing her heart out. Not loudly, though, which was a shame. Grace was made for loud.
The fact was that many of Jill’s Joint patrons had actually lived the sixties and now were in the country of the old, where softer music often prevailed.
As for Connie, she was twenty-six and barely noticed the music, and thought Grace Slick was some kind of television sitcom or reality star who was branching out.
A man at the bar, younger than many of the drinkers, caught Connie’s attention. She was mildly interested. Not that he looked like a winner. It was more that he didn’t look like an obvious loser. At best he was average looking.
She reassessed with a mind dulled by vodka.
Well, no, he was better than average looking. Why was that?
She openly scrutinized the man, which didn’t seem to affect him. He returned her stare with a sort of neutral one of his own.
There was nothing you could say was wrong with him. He had regular features, was average height and weight. He had brown hair with a part on the left, and was dressed well enough in gray slacks and a black blazer. Not a memorable-looking guy, but one you didn’t immediately look away from. If he were a tune he’d be Muzak.
But there was something else about him that had snagged Connie’s attention. The woman he was with at the bar was blond, like Connie, and not overweight but kind of on the plump side. Plump in the right places, that is. Connie automatically compared: she, Connie, had a better turn of ankle than the woman at the bar, a slimmer waist, lusher hair—and she wouldn’t have been caught dead in the green dress the woman was wearing. Green did nothing for her color other than make her look like a zombie.
All of this in a glance.
Connie decided she and the woman might be the same type, but it was Connie who won every comparison. The other woman looked like her frumpy country cousin.
Not that Connie actually
had
a frumpy country—or city—cousin.
As she watched, the man smiled at the woman he was with, touched the back of her hand, then seemed to excuse himself.
Uh-oh.
He was walking directly toward Connie.
Connie wished she were somewhere else.
I was too obvious. Made an ass of myself.
She was glad she’d had enough vodka to dull her embarrassment somewhat.
While she stared, he sat down easily across from her at her table, as if she’d invited him. She resisted smiling back at him. It wasn’t easy. This was such an obvious trade-up from the woman at the bar, who now was pointedly facing away and paying no attention to either of them.
“You invited me over,” he said.
Connie kept a straight face. “I don’t remember that.”
He gave her the same smile he’d given the woman at the bar just before leaving her. It was a smile that said he could do pretty much what he pleased, and she wouldn’t mind. He leaned slightly toward Connie. “When two people like us meet, we should discuss it.”
“Discuss what?”
“Why we’re meeting.”
She grinned. “That would be because you’ve got the chutzpah to walk over here and pretend fate has drawn us to each other.”
“If fate hasn’t provided us with each other, what am I doing here?”
“I would say it’s because I appeal to you more than the woman you were chatting up at the bar.”
He laughed. “Talk about chutzpah! She happens to be my sister.”
“Is that the truth?”
“Of course not. What are you drinking?”
“Vodka and water on the rocks.”
“Enjoy it while you can. I hear this place is soon going to become a health drink oasis.”
“You gotta be kidding.”
“Nope. A lot of bars are going to convert. They’ll get a big tax rebate. It’s part of some pet project of the mayor’s. He wants New Yorkers to be healthier.”
“Than who?”
“I don’t know. The Russians? The Chinese? Texans? It’s not a bad idea. For the public good. Your glass is almost empty. May I buy you another?”
“My glass is one quarter full.”
“Such incredible optimism.” He signaled to the bartender for another round. Connie saw that he was drinking what looked like scotch or bourbon on the rocks.
“I didn’t say you may,” Connie told him.
“I read your mind.”
“You can do that?”
“Yes, but I don’t want to embarrass you.”
The bartender came out from behind the bar and delivered their fresh drinks. She left his half-full glass and removed Connie’s nearly empty one.
He raised his drink as if in toast and said, “My name is Brad.”
“Your name is bullshit,” Connie said. But she touched her glass to his. “I’m Connie.”
He smiled at her. “Nice name. And mine really
is
Brad. I won’t tell you my last name, though. It’s too early in our relationship for that.”
“True,” Connie said. “We wouldn’t want to be able to look each other up in the phone book.”
“Or on Facebook.”
They both sipped. He looked at her with eyes she’d thought were blue but in the reflected light of an illuminated beer sign might be brown.
Connie didn’t look away.
“Chutzpah and fate,” she said. “They’re pretty much the same thing.”
“Very often,” Brad said.
They stared at each other for a few minutes more in frank appraisal.
“Yours,” he said, finally. “Mine’s a mess.”
“We talking places?”
“Places.”
“Mine’s a mess, too.”
“I knew that. I was too polite to mention it. We thinking of the same solution to our problem?”
“Yes.”
“That would involve leaving here together,” he said.
“We just got fresh drinks.”
“Two sips, then we’ll go.”
So obvious
. “Will the lady at the bar who isn’t your sister be miffed?” she asked.
“I see no lady. I see no bar. I see only you.”
“Do I look . . . healthy?”
“Oh, yeah.”
 
 
She let him register them at the Barrington Hotel. It was a decent enough place, not far off Times Square. There were lots of potted palms in the lobby, and a huge chandelier that looked like the one in
Phantom of the Opera
.
Connie, who had finished her third only slightly watered down vodka at Jill’s Joint, stood silently nearby and let him register at the desk. She watched and listened.
One night. Brad Wilson and wife.
Connie had to smile.
Brad Wilson
. She hoped he’d have a better imagination than that when they got upstairs. She watched as he filled in his “wife’s” name on the registration card.
Mildred.
That made her think of the famous bitch in that old movie,
Mildred Pierce
.
As they ascended in the elevator, she thought he could have at least made it “Millie.”
15
F
edderman had a boring assignment, but he knew from experience that he’d better not be bored.
He had no trouble staying close to Carlie Clark when she left her apartment and subwayed and walked to work. But he was careful. He didn’t want Quinn’s niece—or whatever she was—to glance back, not recognize him, and suspect that he, Fedderman, might be stalking her. Also, if she didn’t know he was watching over her, she’d be less likely to give him away and prevent him from latching on to the real stalker. If there was a real stalker.
Fedderman watched Carlie enter an office building near the Flatiron Building. It was an old building with a red granite face. Two white marble steps led to a tinted glass entry beneath an art deco fresco. The building had a clean, ordered look, as if it had just been rehabbed but had chosen to return to the thirties rather than be up to date. Inside the building was Carlie’s employer, Bold Designs Ltd.
In the increasing heat, Fedderman stood on the sunlit sidewalk across the street for a while and watched to see if anyone else was hanging around who might have tailed Carlie to work. He tried to pinpoint someone average looking. It seemed that all the years he’d been a cop he’d been searching for suspects who were “average” in every respect, because that’s the way witnesses often described them. Fedderman had long ago come to the conclusion that your average person didn’t appear at all average.
The thought made him smile. He would have to mention it to his wife, Penny, this evening, see if he could get a yuk out of her. Yuks didn’t come so easy these days.
When he decided he’d seen enough of the average comings and goings in front of the building entrance, Fedderman walked across the street and pushed through the revolving door into the refreshingly cool lobby. As he did so, he noted a brass plaque informing him that he was entering the Mangor Building.
The lobby was spacious and high ceilinged, with lots of veined gray marble that probably dated back to the thirties, or maybe the twenties, when the building had been constructed. There were slowly revolving paddle fans here and there, dangling from the ceiling like lazy spiders, not moving much air but adding a lot to the ambience. Off to the left was an office directory beneath glass, in a narrow silver frame. To the right of the directory were three polished steel elevator doors. Above each door was an art deco arrow that indicated what floor the elevator was on. Nothing digitalized here. Fedderman wouldn’t have been surprised if Sam Spade and Kasper Gutman appeared. The elevators were busy, under the heavy usage of men and women in office attire. There was no sign of a doorman or security guard.
Or Carlie.
Fedderman checked the directory and saw that Bold Designs Ltd., was on the twelfth floor. He walked over, pressed an already glowing UP button, and waited.
When the elevator arrived it was empty. Fedderman stepped aside for a woman who’d been waiting close behind him. He seemed to have lost his place in some kind of pecking order. Immediately half a dozen other people, most of them no doubt employed in offices above, stepped around him and filed into the elevator. Fedderman edged back into the herd, sneaked an arm between two fellow elevator passengers, and pressed the twelve button.
He was the only one who got out on twelve. Another, smaller directory on the wall indicated the offices on that floor. Bold Designs was the third one on his right.
Here Fedderman got lucky. Visible through a large lettered glass door was Carlie, standing and talking to a man and a woman who were behind the long, curved surface of a reception desk. He was looking at her from behind but was reasonably sure she was Carlie. When she turned slightly, laughing at something the man said, Fedderman got a clear look at her profile and was positive.
Safe in your nest.
He returned to the lobby and went back outside. The sidewalks were still crowded, and the morning was heating up robustly, as if trying for some kind of record. Fedderman crossed at the corner and entered a pastry shop he’d noticed. It was reasonably cool in there.
Though he’d already had breakfast, he went to the counter and ordered a cheese Danish and a cup of coffee. He found a booth by the window from which he could keep an eye on the Mangor Building entrance. The lobby didn’t go through to the next block, so if Carlie left the building he’d see her. Quinn had told him that, once inside, she probably wouldn’t emerge until lunchtime.
Still, there was always a chance things would change. That the unexpected would happen. He wanted to be ready. So he sat patiently, a cup of coffee before him that he barely sipped, along with an uneaten Danish. Like a hunter intent on his snare.
 
 
At ten-thirty, Fedderman gave up. It had been unlikely anyway that Carlie would leave and be followed by her stalker.
Yet not all
that
unlikely, he told himself. If she actually was being stalked, the sicko would most likely latch on to her either leaving her apartment or her place of employment.
Or he might be waiting and watching somewhere, just like Fedderman.
Fedderman slid out of the booth and stood up. His body was stiff, his back slightly sore. He reflected that stakeouts were a younger man’s game.
The suspicion was beginning to sneak in that the same might be said of life in general.
He left a generous tip, then paid at the register and went back outside to cross the street and enter the Mangor Building.
It was time to make his presence known to Carlie.
It would be good to instill some confidence in her, surprising her with the fact that he’d provided security for her from her apartment and had staked out her office building. She hadn’t noticed him, even though they’d briefly met. She would be impressed, and would comply all the easier with any request.
As before, the Mangor Building lobby was refreshingly cool by contrast. The rush to occupy offices and cubicles was over. There was an elevator waiting at lobby level with open door. Fedderman stepped inside and pressed the button for twelve.
As he was doing this, the elevator alongside his reached the lobby and three passengers emerged. One of them was a man in a neat gray suit, white shirt, pink and gray tie. His black shoes were buffed to a high gloss. He looked like a mid-level management guy. A typical executive.
Very average.
The door to Fedderman’s elevator slid closed before the man became visible to him.
Oddly, Carlie was back at the reception desk, where she could be seen from the twelfth-floor hall. The same man and woman were behind the desk. The man was African American, beefy, in a sharply tailored chalk-stripe blue suit. The woman was petite, with spectacularly piled brown hair that, with her high-heeled shoes, added about a foot to her height. They were all staring at something on the reception desk. As Fedderman watched, Carlie pointed at the object of their concentration. The woman behind the desk shook her head no. The man placed his fists on his hips.
Fedderman opened the heavy glass door and entered the anteroom. Behind the curved desk was a doorway open to a hall leading to more offices. On the wall, too high to have been visible from the hall, were neat block letters reading
Bold Designs Limited
.
All three people at the desk stopped what they were doing and stared at Fedderman. He was glad to see the glimmer of recognition in Carlie’s eyes. And puzzled to see that all three Bold Designs employees seemed upset.
Fedderman tried a reassuring smile. It seemed to reassure no one. He flashed the shield that the NYPD gave Q&A detectives when they were working for hire.
“You must be here about this,” the man behind the desk said.
“This?” Fedderman asked.
“You
are
the police?” He had a slight accent, maybe Jamaican.
“He’s the police,” Carlie said. “We’ve met.” She gave Fedderman a smile.
“Good as,” Fedderman said. “Detective Larry Fedderman.”
“You can talk in front of them,” Carlie said to Fedderman. “They know my problem.”
“I’ve been tailing you since you left your apartment this morning,” Fedderman said. “Looking out for you.”
“I know,” Carlie said. “If anyone was stalking me, you probably scared him away.”
“Not a bad thing,” Fedderman said, a little hurt by the fact that she’d noticed him.
“But
this
is a bad thing,” the woman behind the desk said, pointing again with a tapered, painted fingernail at whatever was on the desk. All of her nails were painted the same bright red color and had a tiny silver star pattern on them. Like many petite women, it was her diminutive size that triggered an assumption of youth. She looked older close up. Maybe even in her fifties.
“What the hell is
this
?” Fedderman asked, getting a little irritated.
Carlie picked up three eight-by-ten color photographs and handed them to him. One photo was of Carlie leaving her apartment building. Another of her walking along the street near her subway stop. The third photo showed her entering the Mangor Building.
Fedderman looked at Carlie. She was wearing the same clothes she had on in the photographs.
“They had to have been taken this morning,” she said.
“Did they arrive in that?” Fedderman asked, nodding toward a ten-by-twelve yellow envelope.
Carlie nodded.
Fedderman used a fingertip and lifted the envelope partway off the desk. It was blank on the other side, too, except for
Carlie
in neat blue printed letters.
“A guy came in about ten minutes ago and laid this in front of me on the desk,” the woman with the nails and high hair said. “Then he turned around and walked out.”
Fedderman felt a stirring of hope. “You see his face?”
“For about a half a second, just before he turned around.”
“Would you recognize him?”
“I doubt it. There was a bandage on his face, near his nose. That’s about all I can recall about how he looked.”
“The way he planned it,” Fedderman said. “How was he built? Tall, short?”
“Neither. He was average height and weight.”
“What was he wearing?”
“A gray suit. White shirt. And a pink tie, I think.”
“Did he say anything?”
“Nothing. He seemed to be in a hurry.”
“I’ll bet. Was there anything else in the envelope?”
“Nothing.” The woman automatically reached for the envelope to demonstrate to Fedderman.
“Don’t touch it,” Fedderman said. “Or the photos.”
She drew back a talon-like hand. Fedderman wondered what she did when she had to use a keyboard with those nails.
“He must have taken the photos this morning,” Carlie said, “then printed them and brought them here. There might be copies.”
She was too diplomatic to suggest that Fedderman should have noticed someone taking pictures of her. Fedderman realized that and blushed.
That bastard with his camera! How good he must be at his craft. My craft.
“Copies would be his problem,” Fedderman said.
“Evidence,” Carlie said.
Fedderman winked at her, this young woman with pigtails already looking ahead to her day in court.
He picked up the phone and asked the petite woman with the designer nails for an outside line. She used a knuckle to press the button for him.
He talked briefly with Quinn, describing the events of the morning.
“Make sure nobody touches those photos or envelope again,” Quinn said. “I’ll have Renz send a radio car over and pick them up so they can be handed over to the lab. Not that we’ll find any useful prints. The envelope flap wasn’t licked, right?”
“Right,” Fedderman said. “It’s one of those where you peel a little strip back and the flap has its own adhesive. It won’t yield any DNA.”
“Well,” Quinn said, sighing in a way Fedderman didn’t like, “we’ll do the dance, just like this bastard intended.”
“Nothing else to do,” Fedderman said. He knew Quinn was right: this scene they were playing out had been intended by the killer.
“Stay with the envelope and photos,” Quinn said again, and broke the connection.
“Was that Uncle Frank?” Carlie asked.
“You know it,” Fedderman said.
“How’d he sound?”
“Unhappy. He’ll be even more unhappy if anyone handles the envelope and those photos again.”
As he spoke, Fedderman glanced at the photos, lying fanned out near the bottom of the envelope, where they had slid when he’d peeked at the opposite side and seen Carlie’s penned name. The top photo was the one of Carlie entering the building this morning. It had been taken at a diagonal angle from across the street. In the foreground was a tall man facing away from the camera, his long arms at his sides. He was slightly out of focus but obviously observing Carlie. There was a blur of white near his right hand, barely distinguishable.
Fedderman looked down and buttoned his shirt cuff.
BOOK: Twist
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