“I didn’t kick it. I used my shoulder.”
“Don’t bullshit me, Bolitar. You didn’t come here to talk business. And you didn’t kick down the door just because no one answered.”
The coroner tapped Dimonte on the shoulder. “Bullet to the heart. Clean shot. Death was instantaneous.”
“Time of death?” Rolly asked.
“He’s been dead six, maybe seven hours.”
Dimonte looked at his watch. “It’s seven now. That would mean he was killed between midnight and one.”
Myron turned to Krinsky. “And he didn’t even see you use his fingers.”
Krinsky almost smiled.
Dimonte tossed out another glare. “You got an alibi, Bolitar?”
“I was with a lady friend.”
“That Jessica Culver?”
“Correct.” Myron waited for Krinsky to look up. When he did, Myron said, “Her number is 555-8420.”
Krinsky wrote it down.
“All right, Bolitar, now stop busting my balls. Why did you kick down the door?”
Myron hesitated. He looked at Dimonte. Dimonte looked back and said, “Well?”
“Come with me,” Myron said in a quiet voice. He began to leave the room.
“Hey, where the fuck do you think you’re going?”
“For once, Rolly, don’t be an ass. Just shut up and follow me.”
To Myron’s surprise Dimonte kept quiet. They went down the corridor in silence. Krinsky stayed at the crime scene. Myron stopped in front of a door, took out a key, and opened it. Janet Koffman was sitting on the bed. She was wearing a hotel bathrobe. If she realized they were there, she didn’t show it. Janet rocked back and forth, humming to herself.
Dimonte looked a question at Myron.
“Her name is Janet Koffman.”
“The tennis player?”
Myron nodded. “The killer locked her in the bathroom before he shot Menansi. I heard her crying when I knocked on the door. That’s why I kicked it in.”
Dimonte looked at Myron. “You mean she and Menansi were …?”
Myron nodded.
“Christ, how old is she?”
“Fourteen, I think.”
Dimonte closed his eyes. “We have someone down at the precinct,” he said softly. “A doctor. She’s good with this stuff. I’ll talk to the Manhattan cop in charge about sneaking her out, see if he can keep the press away. I’ll try to keep the victim’s name out of the papers for a while.”
“Thank you.”
“I’ve seen this kinda thing before, Bolitar. The girl is going to need help.”
“I know.”
“Any chance she offed him herself? Frankly I wouldn’t give a shit but …”
Myron shook his head. “She was locked in from the outside with a chair. It couldn’t have been her.”
Dimonte gave the toothpick a little chew. “Thoughtful killer,” he said.
“What do you mean?”
“He didn’t want the girl to see what happened. He made sure she had an alibi by locking her in with the chair. And most of all he saved her from going through any more of Menansi’s hell.” He looked at Myron. “I’d probably pin a medal on the guy if he hadn’t also killed Valerie Simpson.”
Myron said, “Me too.” It made him wonder.
38
The office was only about ten blocks away. Myron decided to walk it. Cars sat completely still on Sixth Avenue, though the lights were green and there was no visible construction. Everyone honked their horns. Like this ever does any good. A well-groomed man got out of a taxi. He wore a pin-striped suit, a gold Tag Heuer watch, and Gucci shoes. He also wore a green pinwheel hat and plastic Spock ears. New York—my kind of town.
Myron ignored the fumes and tried to think the whole thing through. The popular theory—the main theory, if you will—had gone something like this: Valerie Simpson had been abused by Pavel Menansi. Regaining her mental strength, she had decided to expose him. This exposure would have been detrimental to the financial well-being of TruPro and the Ache brothers. So they eliminated her before she could do any damage. It all added up. It all made sense.
Until this morning.
A major monkey wrench had been tossed into the main theory: Pavel Menansi had been murdered too, in a fashion similar to Valerie Simpson. Under the main theory, the murders of Valerie Simpson and Pavel Menansi were at cross-purposes. Why kill Valerie Simpson to protect Pavel Menansi, only to go ahead and kill Pavel Menansi? It didn’t mesh. It wasn’t profitable for TruPro or the Aches.
Of course, there was the possibility that Frank Ache had decided Menansi was too big a risk, that exposure was imminent and losses might as well be cut right now. But if Frank had wanted Pavel dead, he would have had Aaron do it. Pavel had been murdered between midnight and one. Aaron was dead by midnight. Myron mulled this over a bit and decided that Aaron’s being dead made it extremely unlikely he was the killer. And moreover, if Frank had intended to kill Pavel, there would have been no reason to scare Myron off with the attack on Jessica.
On the street in front of him a pale woman with a bullhorn screamed that she had recently met Jesus face-to-face. She stuffed a pamphlet into Myron’s hand.
“Jesus sent me back with this message,” she said.
Myron nodded, glanced down at the ink smears on the pamphlet. “Too bad he didn’t give you a decent printer.”
She gave him a funny look and went back to her bullhorn. Myron stuffed the pamphlet into his pocket and continued walking. His mind returned to the problem at hand.
Frank Ache wasn’t behind Pavel’s murder, he thought. To the contrary, Frank Ache wanted Pavel saved because Pavel meant mucho dinero to TruPro. Frank Ache had even brought Aaron in to protect Pavel. He had ordered Aaron to harm Jessica and to protect Pavel. Killing TruPro’s main tennis drawing card would make no sense.
So what did that leave us?
Two possibilities. One, we were dealing with two separate killers with two separate agendas. Seeing an opportunity, Pavel’s killer had left behind a Feron’s bag to put the blame on Valerie’s killer. Or two, there was some other linkage between Valerie and Pavel, one that was not readily apparent. Myron favored this possibility, and of course it led back to Myron’s earlier obsession:
The murder of Alexander Cross.
Both Valerie Simpson and Pavel Menansi had been at the Old Oaks tennis club that night six years ago. Both had been attending the party for Alexander Cross. But so what? Let’s suppose Jessica had been right this morning. Suppose Valerie Simpson had seen something that night, maybe even the identity of the real murderer. Suppose she’d been about to reveal the truth. Suppose that was why she’d been killed. How would that tie in to Pavel Menansi? Even if he had seen the same thing, he hadn’t opened his mouth in years. Why would Pavel start now? It’s not as though he’d come forward to help poor Valerie. So what is the connection? And what about Duane Richwood? How did he fit into this equation, if at all? And Deanna Yeller? And where was Errol Swade? Was he still alive?
“Don’t bullshit me, Bolitar. You didn’t come here to talk business. And you didn’t kick down the door just because no one answered.”
The coroner tapped Dimonte on the shoulder. “Bullet to the heart. Clean shot. Death was instantaneous.”
“Time of death?” Rolly asked.
“He’s been dead six, maybe seven hours.”
Dimonte looked at his watch. “It’s seven now. That would mean he was killed between midnight and one.”
Myron turned to Krinsky. “And he didn’t even see you use his fingers.”
Krinsky almost smiled.
Dimonte tossed out another glare. “You got an alibi, Bolitar?”
“I was with a lady friend.”
“That Jessica Culver?”
“Correct.” Myron waited for Krinsky to look up. When he did, Myron said, “Her number is 555-8420.”
Krinsky wrote it down.
“All right, Bolitar, now stop busting my balls. Why did you kick down the door?”
Myron hesitated. He looked at Dimonte. Dimonte looked back and said, “Well?”
“Come with me,” Myron said in a quiet voice. He began to leave the room.
“Hey, where the fuck do you think you’re going?”
“For once, Rolly, don’t be an ass. Just shut up and follow me.”
To Myron’s surprise Dimonte kept quiet. They went down the corridor in silence. Krinsky stayed at the crime scene. Myron stopped in front of a door, took out a key, and opened it. Janet Koffman was sitting on the bed. She was wearing a hotel bathrobe. If she realized they were there, she didn’t show it. Janet rocked back and forth, humming to herself.
Dimonte looked a question at Myron.
“Her name is Janet Koffman.”
“The tennis player?”
Myron nodded. “The killer locked her in the bathroom before he shot Menansi. I heard her crying when I knocked on the door. That’s why I kicked it in.”
Dimonte looked at Myron. “You mean she and Menansi were …?”
Myron nodded.
“Christ, how old is she?”
“Fourteen, I think.”
Dimonte closed his eyes. “We have someone down at the precinct,” he said softly. “A doctor. She’s good with this stuff. I’ll talk to the Manhattan cop in charge about sneaking her out, see if he can keep the press away. I’ll try to keep the victim’s name out of the papers for a while.”
“Thank you.”
“I’ve seen this kinda thing before, Bolitar. The girl is going to need help.”
“I know.”
“Any chance she offed him herself? Frankly I wouldn’t give a shit but …”
Myron shook his head. “She was locked in from the outside with a chair. It couldn’t have been her.”
Dimonte gave the toothpick a little chew. “Thoughtful killer,” he said.
“What do you mean?”
“He didn’t want the girl to see what happened. He made sure she had an alibi by locking her in with the chair. And most of all he saved her from going through any more of Menansi’s hell.” He looked at Myron. “I’d probably pin a medal on the guy if he hadn’t also killed Valerie Simpson.”
Myron said, “Me too.” It made him wonder.
38
The office was only about ten blocks away. Myron decided to walk it. Cars sat completely still on Sixth Avenue, though the lights were green and there was no visible construction. Everyone honked their horns. Like this ever does any good. A well-groomed man got out of a taxi. He wore a pin-striped suit, a gold Tag Heuer watch, and Gucci shoes. He also wore a green pinwheel hat and plastic Spock ears. New York—my kind of town.
Myron ignored the fumes and tried to think the whole thing through. The popular theory—the main theory, if you will—had gone something like this: Valerie Simpson had been abused by Pavel Menansi. Regaining her mental strength, she had decided to expose him. This exposure would have been detrimental to the financial well-being of TruPro and the Ache brothers. So they eliminated her before she could do any damage. It all added up. It all made sense.
Until this morning.
A major monkey wrench had been tossed into the main theory: Pavel Menansi had been murdered too, in a fashion similar to Valerie Simpson. Under the main theory, the murders of Valerie Simpson and Pavel Menansi were at cross-purposes. Why kill Valerie Simpson to protect Pavel Menansi, only to go ahead and kill Pavel Menansi? It didn’t mesh. It wasn’t profitable for TruPro or the Aches.
Of course, there was the possibility that Frank Ache had decided Menansi was too big a risk, that exposure was imminent and losses might as well be cut right now. But if Frank had wanted Pavel dead, he would have had Aaron do it. Pavel had been murdered between midnight and one. Aaron was dead by midnight. Myron mulled this over a bit and decided that Aaron’s being dead made it extremely unlikely he was the killer. And moreover, if Frank had intended to kill Pavel, there would have been no reason to scare Myron off with the attack on Jessica.
On the street in front of him a pale woman with a bullhorn screamed that she had recently met Jesus face-to-face. She stuffed a pamphlet into Myron’s hand.
“Jesus sent me back with this message,” she said.
Myron nodded, glanced down at the ink smears on the pamphlet. “Too bad he didn’t give you a decent printer.”
She gave him a funny look and went back to her bullhorn. Myron stuffed the pamphlet into his pocket and continued walking. His mind returned to the problem at hand.
Frank Ache wasn’t behind Pavel’s murder, he thought. To the contrary, Frank Ache wanted Pavel saved because Pavel meant mucho dinero to TruPro. Frank Ache had even brought Aaron in to protect Pavel. He had ordered Aaron to harm Jessica and to protect Pavel. Killing TruPro’s main tennis drawing card would make no sense.
So what did that leave us?
Two possibilities. One, we were dealing with two separate killers with two separate agendas. Seeing an opportunity, Pavel’s killer had left behind a Feron’s bag to put the blame on Valerie’s killer. Or two, there was some other linkage between Valerie and Pavel, one that was not readily apparent. Myron favored this possibility, and of course it led back to Myron’s earlier obsession:
The murder of Alexander Cross.
Both Valerie Simpson and Pavel Menansi had been at the Old Oaks tennis club that night six years ago. Both had been attending the party for Alexander Cross. But so what? Let’s suppose Jessica had been right this morning. Suppose Valerie Simpson had seen something that night, maybe even the identity of the real murderer. Suppose she’d been about to reveal the truth. Suppose that was why she’d been killed. How would that tie in to Pavel Menansi? Even if he had seen the same thing, he hadn’t opened his mouth in years. Why would Pavel start now? It’s not as though he’d come forward to help poor Valerie. So what is the connection? And what about Duane Richwood? How did he fit into this equation, if at all? And Deanna Yeller? And where was Errol Swade? Was he still alive?