I reached for the silverware drawer for a knife to cut my bagel, but I stopped before opening it.
“Do I want to open this drawer?” I asked.
“It depends what you’re looking for.”
“A knife would be nice,” I said. “Actually, how about any silverware at all?”
Monk shifted in his chair. “You don’t want to open the drawer.”
“You can add silverware to the list of things you’re buying me today,” I said, and went to the refrigerator. I picked up the carton of orange juice and took a drink from it.
Monk cringed, as I knew he would. “You really shouldn’t drink from the carton.”
“Fine.” I turned and pinned him with the coldest, cruelest, most accusatory glare I could muster. “Do I still own a glass I can drink from instead?”
He shifted in his seat.
“I didn’t think so.” I took the carton with me and slammed the refrigerator door shut. “I hope your credit card is paid up, Mr. Monk, because it’s going to get a real workout today.”
I stomped back to my bedroom with my bagel and orange juice and left Monk alone in my dish-less, knifeless, cupless kitchen.
The streets were damp, and fog completely obscured the skyline on that Monday morning, but the city was bustling. The downtown sidewalks were jammed with young professionals wearing the latest fashion accessory—something electronic in the ear.
There wasn’t a naked ear in sight.
Everyone except us seemed to be wearing either a pair of white iPod earphones or one of those Bluetooth cell phone units that looked like the radio Q-tip that stuck out of Lieutenant Uhura’s ear on the original Star Trek.
It was after twelve by the time we finished shopping for dishes, silverware, and glasses at Pottery Barn.
I’ll never admit this to Monk, but once I got past my initial anger, I was glad he threw my stuff out. I’d been ashamed to have people over to eat because we had chipped dishes and silverware that had been mangled in the disposal. But I couldn’t afford to replace any of it. Now Monk was buying me new kitchenware, and I was thrilled. (It wasn’t until he suggested we browse the cookware that I discovered he’d thrown out my pots and pans, too.) Here’s how awful I am: I actually began to toy with the idea of “accidentally” letting him see the mess in my closet so he’d buy me a new wardrobe, too.
To make shopping as painless as possible for both of us, I picked solid colors for the dishes and let him open all the boxes in the store to inspect each piece for imperfections. Every so often while this was going on, I’d feel a pang of guilt, like I was taking advantage of him or something. But then I’d remind myself that he was the one who went into my kitchen and threw out all of my dishes. And then my anger would come back and beat the crap out of my guilt and I was fine with myself all over again.
We’d just finished loading up the back of my Cherokee with all my goodies when Stottlemeyer called. The captain was on his way to interview Lucas Breen, the developer who planned to demolish Esther Stoval’s block, and asked if we wanted to join him. We did.
Breen Development Corporation was in a thirty-five-story Rubik’s Cube that had shouldered its way between two other buildings in the Financial District for a view of the bay. The lobby was a glass atrium that had its own florist, chocolatier, and a small outpost of the Boudin Bakery, which makes the best sourdough bread in the city, maybe even the world.
Stottlemeyer, sipping a cup of coffee from Boudin, was waiting for us in front of Flo’s Floral Designs. The smell of fresh sourdough was making me swoon.
“Morning, Natalie. Monk. I heard you talked to everybody in Esther’s neighborhood. You come up with any clues we missed?”
“No,” Monk said.
“That’s depressing,” Stottlemeyer said. “What about your other case, the one with the dog; how’s that going?”
“I think I’m on to something,” Monk asked.
That was news to me. But Monk doesn’t always share with me what’s going on in his mind, and, I have to say, most of time I’m deeply thankful for that.
“Want to trade cases?” Stottlemeyer said.
“I don’t think so,” Monk said. “Though you could do me a favor. Could you ask Lieutenant Disher to find out everything he can about a notorious robber named Roderick Turlock?”
“It’s the least I can do. What’s Turlock notorious for?”
“Robbing trains,” I said.
“Do people still do that?”
I didn’t think it would help our cause to mention that Turlock was captured in 1906. Apparently Monk agreed with me, since we both treated Stottlemeyer’s question as a rhetorical one. We must have been right, because Stottlemeyer didn’t wait for an answer.
“So, Monk, you ready for this?” Stottlemeyer tipped his head up.
Monk looked up, searching for whatever it was the captain was talking about. “For what?”
“To see Breen,” Stottlemeyer said. “He’s a rich, powerful man. He’s not going to appreciate either one of us suggesting he might have been involved in Esther Stoval’s murder.”
“He’s up there?”
“Thirtieth floor,” he said. “Rich guys love to look down on everybody.”
Stottlemeyer approached the security guard, a beefy guy with a boxer’s nose who manned a marble-topped counter in front of the elevators. Stottlemeyer flashed his badge, introduced us, and said we were there to see Lucas Breen. The guard called up to Breen’s office, then nodded to the captain.
“Mr. Breen will see you now,” the guard said.
“Great,” Monk said. “When’s he coming down?”
“He’s not,” Stottlemeyer said. “We’re going up.”
“It would be better if he came down.”
Stottlemeyer groaned and turned to the guard. “Could you ask Mr. Breen if he’d mind meeting us for a cup of coffee in the lobby? My treat.”
The guard made the call, spoke for a moment, then hung up. “Mr. Breen is very busy and can’t leave the office at this time. If you want to see him, you need to go to his office.”
“I tried, Monk,” Stottlemeyer said. “So let’s go.”
We headed for the elevators, but Monk dragged behind. “I have an idea. Let’s take the stairs.”
“Thirty floors?” I said.
“It’ll be fun.”
“It’ll be fatal,” Stottlemeyer said. “I can talk to Breen without you. You really don’t need to be there.”
“I want to be there,” Monk said.
“I’m taking the elevator,” Stottlemeyer said. “Are you coming or not?”
I looked at Monk. He looked at the elevator, took a deep breath, and nodded.
“Okay,” he said.
The three of us got into the elevator. Stottlemeyer hit the button for the thirtieth floor. The doors closed. Monk covered his finger with his sleeve and hit the button for the second floor. And then the fourth. And then the sixth. He hit the button for every other floor all the way up to the thirtieth.
Stottlemeyer rolled his eyes and sighed.
The instant the doors opened on the second floor, Monk stepped out, took several deep breaths, then came back in.
“I think this is going very well,” he said.
On the fourth floor he burst out with a cry, startling the people in the waiting room at the Crocker Advertising Agency.
“It’s a living hell,” he told them.
Monk took several hungry breaths of air and then leaped back into the elevator as if he were plunging into deep water.
The instant the elevator reached the sixth floor, he threw himself out into the lobby of Ernst, Throck, and Fillburton, Attorneys at Law, and screamed something about the “injustice and inhumanity” of it all.
By the eighth, Stottlemeyer and I were resigned to our fate, leaning against the handrails and doing our best to relax. We played Tetris on Stottlemeyer’s cell phone screen while Monk paced, and groaned, and cried, and pulled at the imaginary leeches in his hair.
Stopping at every other floor, it took us forty minutes to reach Breen’s office on the thirtieth. I won six games and Stottlemeyer won eight, but he’s had a lot more practice, working on his technique during stakeouts. When the elevator doors opened, Monk staggered out, gasping for air, his face drenched with sweat, and collapsed onto the black leather couch in the waiting room.
“Sweet Mother of God,” he whined. “It’s finally over.”
I gave him a bottle of Sierra Springs water from my purse—which, by the way, is about the size of the baby bag I lugged around when Julie was an infant. It’s full of water, Wet Ones, Baggies, even some Wheat Thins in case he gets hungry. The only thing I’m not carrying with me that I carried then are diapers.
Stottlemeyer went up to the receptionist, a disarmingly attractive Asian woman who sat behind a sweeping desk that made her look like the anchorwoman on the eleven-o’clock news. Except that the breathtaking view of the city behind her wasn’t a backdrop; it was the real thing.
“Captain Stottlemeyer, Adrian Monk, and Natalie Teeger to see Mr. Breen,” he said.
“We were expecting you to be here almost an hour ago,” she said.
“So were we,” he said.
Monk guzzled the water and tossed the empty bottle over his shoulder. The color was beginning to return to his cheeks. He mopped his forehead with his handkerchief and then tossed that, too.
“Going down will be much easier,” I said reassuringly.
“Yeah, because I’ll be taking the stairs.”
The receptionist spoke up. “Mr. Breen will see you now.”
She gestured toward a massive set of double doors that reminded me of the gates to the Emerald City of Oz, only without the munchkin guard. Breen had an Asian supermodel instead, which I’m pretty sure the wizard also would have preferred.
The doors slid open on their own as we approached, which was intimidating. Sure, the doors at Wal-Mart do the same thing, but somehow it’s different when you aren’t pushing a shopping cart.
And there, in a cavernous office of glass and mahogany and stainless steel, stood real-estate developer Lucas Breen, his arms outstretched, a welcoming smile on his face, his capped teeth gleaming like polished ivory.