He held out a hand. “I’m Jeff Purdue. You’re on.”
“I’m Darlene King. Right this way.”
They fell in with the crowd leaving the café.
“I take it you’re not a New Yorker?” he said.
“I’m a Texan, sugar.”
“Dallas?”
“Sometimes.”
“What do you do down there?”
“My husband’s in the oil business.”
“You have a husband? I hope he’s in Dallas.”
“He sure is. If I know him, he’s in bed with his secretary right this minute.”
His hand dropped from her waist to her ass. “What you need is a little revenge,” he said.
“Believe me, I know the deep satisfactions of revenge,” she replied.
Stone stopped looking. “That’s it. There’s nothing more.”
“There’s a safe in the closet,” Dino said. “I’ll call the manager. We’ll get it opened.”
“It’s late,” Stone said, looking at his watch. “We don’t want her to walk in on us.”
“I need some evidence.”
“She’s obviously carrying the weapon.”
“We don’t even know this is her suite,” Dino said.
“It’s her suite,” Stone said.
“How do you know?”
“Because when I met her the first time, she was wearing a red wig that’s now on the shelf of her closet.”
Dino looked at his watch. “Let’s get out of here and set up surveillance.”
“Okay.”
They let themselves out of the suite and headed for the elevators.
Marie-Thérèse and her new friend had made their way out of the café crowd and into the lobby. As they rounded a corner, headed for the elevators, she stopped and stepped back. She had just seen Stone Barrington and that police lieutenant step off the elevator into the lobby, and they were wearing workmen’s coveralls.
“Something wrong?” Purdue asked.
“I just remembered what a mess my suite is. Where are you staying?”
“At the Waldorf, five minutes from here in a cab.”
“Why don’t we go there?” she asked.
“Fine with me.”
She led him back past the café and out the Madison Avenue exit, where a couple of cabs waited at the curb. In a moment, they were driving away.
He leaned over and kissed her on the neck, cradling a breast in his hand.
She didn’t react, just looked straight ahead, thinking fast. The cab turned onto Fifth Avenue.
He pinched a nipple hard. “What do I have to do to get your attention?” he asked.
“I’m sorry,” she said, patting him on the knee. “My mind was elsewhere for a moment. What do you do, Jeff?”
“I’m with the State Department, on the U.S. delegation to the United Nations. I spend two weeks a month in New York.”
“How very interesting,” she said, turning toward him with new interest. “So your wife’s back in Washington?”
“She usually comes with me, so she keeps some clothes here. But she had some meetings this week.”
“Well, isn’t that convenient,” she said, kissing him.
He ran his fingers through her hair, and it came away in his hand.
“Well, there’s a surprise,” he said, holding the wig in his hand and looking at her short blond hair.
“I’m just full of surprises, sugar,” she said, running her hand up his thigh.
55
Stone and Dino sat in Dino’s car outside the Carlyle, while Dino made a phone call. “Sir, it’s Bacchetti. We’ve found out where the woman is staying. She’s in a suite at the Carlyle. . . . Yes, sir, she certainly has good taste. I’ve ordered in a surveillance team. In very short order I’ll have the place covered and a couple of men in the suite next door with a listening device. . . . No, sir, I don’t want to take her in the street or in the lobby. There’s sure to be weapons fired, and we don’t want a mess. I want to let her come home and go to bed. We’ll know when that happens. Then, when she orders breakfast in the morning or leaves her suite, we’ll be waiting. I think we can take her clean. . . . Yes, sir, I know how important that is. I’ll call you the minute anything happens.” Dino hung up. “He’s not going to get any sleep tonight,” he said.
“I expect not,” Stone replied.
Dino’s driver returned with a paper bag holding coffee.
“We may as well make ourselves comfortable,” Dino said.
“I had a thought,” Stone said. “Suppose she’s in the café, listening to Bobby Short?”
Dino snorted. “Not everybody has your weird taste in music, Stone.”
The ride up in the elevator seemed a long one.
“I’m in the Towers,” Purdue explained. “The government rents an entire floor, where the UN delegation stays, and there are apartments for visiting dignitaries, including a presidential suite.”
“How interesting,” Marie-Thérèse said. “Who’s in residence at the moment?”
“I’m the only one of the delegation in town. Most of the others arrive tomorrow, for the opening of the Security Coucil session. I saw the director of the FBI in the elevator earlier, though, so I guess he’s staying. I’ll bet he’s commandeered the presidential suite.”
Marie-Thérèse laughed aloud.
“What’s so funny?”
“It’s just that I never thought I’d be this close to the director of the FBI.”
The elevator stopped, and they got out. A man in a dark suit holding a clipboard stopped them.
“It’s all right,” Purdue said, “the lady’s with me.”
“I’m afraid I’ll have to see her ID, sir,” the guard said.
“No problem,” Marie-Thérèse said, digging out her wallet and her Texas driver’s license.
The man wrote her name down and noted the time, then returned the license to her. “Sorry for the inconvenience, ma’am,” he said.
“Right this way,” Purdue said, taking her elbow. They walked a few steps and he led them into a suite, tossing his keycard onto a table in the entrance hall.
“Very nice,” she said, looking around. It wasn’t big, but it was certainly elegant. “Where’s the bedroom?”
“A woman after my own heart. Right this way.” He led the way into the bedroom.
She unzipped her dress. “I want to hang this up,” she said, “since I’ll be wearing it tomorrow morning.”
“Right over there,” he said, pointing at a closet, then he went into the bathroom. “Excuse me a second.”
Marie-Thérèse opened the closet door to find a small collection of outfits. She plucked one off the rack and held it up to her. “Not bad,” she said aloud.
“Don’t mess with my wife’s things,” he said, coming out of the bathroom. “She’d notice, believe me.”
“Don’t worry, sugar,” she replied, hanging up the dress. “I won’t disturb a thing. Tell me, have you got an early day tomorrow?”
“Nah, the session doesn’t open until after lunch. We can sleep in, if you like.”
“Oh, good,” she said, hanging her dress in the closet and shedding her underwear. “You ready for me, sugar?”
“Oh, yeah.”
She slid into bed with him. This wouldn’t take long, then she could get a good night’s sleep.
Stone’s cell phone vibrated. “Hello?”
“It’s Carpenter.”
“Hi, there.”
“Turns out we’re in the presidential suite, but I’ve managed to get a room with a lock on the door that opens into the hallway. Why don’t you join me?”
“I can’t, but you’re going to like my news.”
“What’s that?”
“She’s staying at the Carlyle. Dino’s people have got her suite staked out now. They’ll wait for her to come home and go to sleep, then take her in the morning.”