He was careful not to touch most things and not to leave a fingerprint.
An hour later, he still hadn’t found where Candice kept the password to get online at her desk computer. Her word processor was accessible and contained mostly legal documents or letters. Boooring. And yet they showed a side of Candice that was organized and precise. It was a side that would soon die like all her other sides. She existed now only because he let her.
When he was ready to go, he glanced around. He’d been sufficiently careful. She wouldn’t suspect that anyone had been here in her absence.
But did he want that?
He’d have a key next time he visited, so what did it matter if she had something to think about? To worry about? Something she’d recall, when the time came, as a portent she shouldn’t have ignored?
He returned to the bedroom and flopped down on his back in the middle of the white duvet on her king-size bed. He stayed there a few minutes, not moving, and then got up carefully and looked at the bed, at the impression he’d made in the duvet. Candice would notice it and realize someone had lain there in her absence. Someone larger than herself. Certainly the impression described the outline of a man. In her bedroom. On her otherwise pristine white bed.
Let her think about that.
He’d leave the door unlocked when he left, but replace the key precisely where he’d found it. When she realized the door was unlocked, Candice would assume she’d forgotten to lock it when she’d left for work that morning. She wouldn’t be too concerned. Not until she went into the bedroom and noticed his impression on her bed.
He smiled, picturing the expression on her face, imagining the fear that would lance through her.
He knew what she’d do next. She’d steel herself and search through each room to make sure no one was there. To reassure herself that she was alone.
But she’ll know someone has been here.
Let her think about that.
And think and think…
28
“I don’t like pressuring you,” Harley Renz told Quinn, “but you know how it works, how it gets passed along like stomach gas.”
Quinn thought that was one of Renz’s most memorable analogies.
“So who up near the esophagus is pressuring you?”
“Seems like everybody in the goddamned city who wears a suit and tie.” Renz sat opposite Quinn’s desk, hunched low in one of the client chairs, his pink jowls spilling over his white collar. “Think way up where the food is chewed, Quinn, and that’s where it all starts.” Renz wagged a pudgy, manicured finger. “Nobody, but nobody, wants another Skinner victim.”
“Especially the victim,” Quinn said.
“Don’t be difficult, Quinn. I’m only doing what I’ve always done, prying the monkey loose from my back so it can ride yours for a while.”
“Heavy monkey.”
“That’s the idea. In order to get rid of it, you’ll lean hard on your people.”
“On Pearl?”
“Maybe not on Pearl.”
Quinn thought of things to say, but he reminded himself that the killer’s first victim, Millie Graff, had been someone Harley and a lot of other cops shared a special bond with; and now they shared a special desire for justice.
“We’re doing everything possible,” he said, “following every lead, talking to everyone.”
“Such as?”
“The victims’ friends, colleagues, neighbors, relatives. People who for whatever reason might be able to put victim with killer. William Turner. Remember him?”
“Jog my memory.”
“Whips and orgasms, about thirty years ago.”
“The Socrates’s Cavern guy? That was longer ago than that. Jesus! Black leather. People in cages, or tied up, or both. You’re wasting your time there. Millie didn’t have anything to do with that kinda bullshit.”
“We’ve gotta touch the bases as we make the turns,” Quinn said.
“You gotta hit the ball first. In fact, I gotta convince people above me that you’re friggin’ A-Rod. That you’re returning the investment. I’m telling you, Quinn, for both our sakes, you better come up with something to show.”
Quinn leaned back in his chair and crossed his arms. “Or what? The NYPD’s gonna fire me? Again? Or try to prosecute me? Again? Or they’re not gonna pay me?”
“Ha! You think that’s an idle threat?”
“Which one?”
“You think this city’s actually paid everyone it owes? Read the papers, Quinn. You’re in line somewhere behind Roach Control.”
Quinn sighed and dropped forward in his chair so he was sitting up straight. “What I think, Harley, is you’ve got some pressure, but it’s mainly you where the pressure on me starts.”
Renz stood up and moved to the door. He looked back at Quinn.
“Pressure’s pressure,” he said. “Wherever it comes from. And pressure crushes things. And people.”
Quinn sat silently and watched him go out the door.
Okay, Harley, play the tough guy. Maybe in your place that’s what I’d be doing.
And you’re right about pressure.
Vitali and Mishkin were approaching the door to Andy Drubb’s walk-up apartment building in the Village when they saw a thin, dark-haired guy in his forties bound up the steps toward the entrance. He was moving fast, giving the impression he was racing his shadow neck-and-neck. He was fishing in his pocket as he climbed, as if for a door key. Every smooth and familiar move he made suggested he lived in the building.
“Might we be so blessed, Sal?” Mishkin asked Vitali.
“We deserve to be,” Sal said. “And there are only six units in the building.”
“Five to one,” Mishkin said.
“I’ve bet on horses running at those odds.”
“Have they ever finished in the money, Sal?”
“Never.”
“Then that’s probably Drubb going into the building,” Mishkin said. “You can’t finish out of the money every time at those odds. It’s the law of percentages.”
That was what Vitali liked about Harold. He actually thought there was a law of percentages.
This time, of course, Mishkin was right. The law of percentages asserted itself.
He and Sal simply followed Drubb into the building, waited while he looked in vain to see if he had any mail, then tailed him straight to his door.
He looked frightened when he saw the two of them standing so close to him and realized they hadn’t simply been going in the same direction. They’d been following him.
“If you’re looking for money…” he said, his eyes wide. People were mugged in the city every day. Maybe it was his turn.
They showed him their identification.
“If we’re looking for money, what?” Mishkin asked.
Vitali stared at him.
“Then you came to the wrong place,” Drubb said.
“I figured you’d say that,” Mishkin said. “The law of percentages.”
Vitali gave Mishkin his back-off look. “If you’ll invite us in, Mr. Drubb, we’d like to talk with you for a few minutes.”
Drubb finished unlocking his door and opened it, then stood aside so they could enter first. Vitali led the way, while Mishkin hung back and entered after Drubb.
“It’s about Nora Noon,” Drubb said.
“How’d you know that?” Mishkin asked.
“Law of-”
“Let’s just sit down and get this over with,” Sal interrupted in his gravelly voice. It was an incongruously commanding tone for such a short man, like a truck air horn on a sports car.
Drubb sat in a worn-out wing chair, Vitali on a wooden chair with curlicue arms that looked as if it belonged in a dining room. Drubb sat in a corner of a cream-colored sofa that could use a good cleaning. The place was a mess, with a pile of newspapers on the floor alongside the sofa, a half-full coffee cup on a table where it would leave a ring, one of the wooden slat blinds hanging crookedly. It was reasonably cool in there, though. A new-looking window air conditioner was humming along efficiently. On the floor directly beneath the air conditioner was a pair of well-worn jogging shoes, one of them lying on its side.