She sat forward, tense once more. “Strange email? No, I didn’t. You asked me that before. Did you get one? You mentioned it talked about details of Sara’s death. What exactly did it say?”
“I think it was just somebody trolling or something,” he said vaguely. “I couldn’t really understand it. It was all over the place. And I have no idea who sent it.”
Stamos didn’t look like she believed him. He decided to change the subject before she pushed him further on it.
“Someone I talked to said there were no suits on the fifty-second floor that morning.”
She stared at him, puzzled. “There should have been.”
“I know. Sara’s office was on that floor. But there was a seminar at the Ritz that morning for the M and A Division. All hands on deck. And the support staff don’t show until nine.”
“What are you saying?” she asked.
“Just that it’s either a coincidence that there was a seminar that morning. Or it wasn’t.”
She processed this and came away looking even more stricken.
He said, “I was in here having lunch on Saturday. Brad Cowl was here with some of his usual posse.”
“I’m surprised you would do that. I’m surprised you’re here now.”
“Hell, I’m probably not going to make the cut. So why not enjoy a few good free meals until they give me the boot?”
“You sound like a prisoner awaiting execution,” she noted.
“And maybe some people would be fine with that.”
She didn’t comment on this jarring statement. “Why did you mention Cowl?”
“Because he gave me a look that I can’t explain. I mean, why would the guy even know who I am?”
“You’re a rookie, Travis. And he knows it, even if you think the guy doesn’t notice the newbies. Brad Cowl lives and breathes this place. And he was probably pissed to see you in here. You’re supposed to be eating crackers at your desk and busting your ass to make him more money. So you got the look.”
“What’s he really like?”
“How should I know?” she said.
“Come on. You’re a star, Jennifer. Don’t sell yourself short. And Cowl is a smart guy. He takes care of his stars. So you must know him better than most at this place.”
Her response was unexpected and chilling. In a lowered voice she said, “You saw us, didn’t you?”
“What!”
“That bullshit explanation about calling me ‘sweet cheeks.’ ” She leaned forward and spoke in an even lower voice. “You were in the building that night. You didn’t leave your phone behind. You went up to the fifty-second floor. And saw us. And you’re here trying to, I don’t know, blackmail me? Or make me feel like shit. Or both.”
“If I knew what the hell you were talking about, I’d answer you. But I don’t.”
She gave him a patronizing look and he answered it with one of bewilderment. He didn’t know if it carried the day or not. He sort of doubted it. Stamos hadn’t gotten to where she was by being thick-headed.
But maybe I’m thicker than a log, since my security card would not only show I entered the building that night at a certain time, it also would show I went to the fifty-second floor at the same time they were doing their thing on the desk. Cowl must have found that out and told Stamos. And she would have told him about my “sweet cheeks” comment. That explains the evil eye from the guy and this confrontation with her.
She stood. “You know, you might want to try the truth for a change.”
Devine felt like saying, Look who’s talking. But what would have been the point?
She walked out, leaving him staring moodily out the window at the bright sky.
Who knew there could be so much resolute darkness in the middle of the day?
Chapter 30
As Devine was leaving that evening a man in a dark suit and a blood-red tie and sporting a self-important demeanor approached him in the lobby of the building.
“Mr. Devine. I’m Willard Paulson, special assistant to Mr. Cowl.”
“Okay.” Devine recognized the man as being part of Cowl’s official harem. He was thin, narrow-shouldered, and in his late thirties, already balding, and as bland and innocuous as Cowl was showy and pretentious.
“Mr. Cowl would like to meet with you.”
“Okay, but I’m surprised you’re conveying the message. There’s a chain of command here that rivals what we had in the Army.”
“Normally this would go through your immediate supervisor, but Mr. Cowl preferred to go outside the normal channels.”
“And why is that?”
Paulson bristled at this response, obviously not expecting any reply other than Yes sir, thank you, sir, for this gift from Heaven to meet with Emperor Cowl. “He didn’t say.”
“Where and when?”
“At ten this evening. Here’s the address.” He handed him a slip of paper.
Devine took it but didn’t look at it. “Is this really necessary?”
“You must be joking. It’s Mr. Cowl. Do you like working here?”
“Best job I’ve ever had,” he said with as much sincerity as he could muster, which, granted, wasn’t much.
He headed to the subway, unfolding the piece of paper and reading off the address.
Well, this could be instructive. Or maybe disastrous.
Devine took the train to Mount Kisco and walked quickly home, sucking in the heat and humidity. His mind was going a million miles an hour and still getting him nowhere fast.
Valentine, with his gamer headphones on, was lying on the couch working on his laptop, as always. A beer was on the floor next to him. He looked up as Devine came in, his expression anxious. He had apparently been awaiting Devine’s return.
“So?” said Valentine in a prompting manner as he took off his headphones.
“I talked to the security guard and the guy who found the body. That room was unguarded for maybe a max of ten minutes. But there was no one on the floor because there was a seminar for people like me at an off-site location. And the support staff weren’t in yet.”
“So how did whoever send message get all that info?”
“I don’t know. The killer would have known some of those details when he murdered her. But the person could not have known that Sara had been found hanging in that room by a custodian unless they were around at the time, and either saw it for themselves, which is doubtful, or someone told them shortly thereafter. And that just isn’t likely. And I don’t think anyone else got the message that I got, or if they did, they’re not saying anything.”
“So during those ten minutes maybe person sending email saw the body and stuff?”
“And saw the custodian finding the body. But that’s not certain and I’m still working on it. By the way, I used the info you gave me to access the security logging database, and I’ve got a question.”
Valentine closed his laptop and looked up. “Shoot, dude.”
Devine explained to Valentine about the security logging system at Cowl using the RFID cards. “Can that be manipulated to show that someone was there who really wasn’t there?”
Valentine nodded before Devine was finished. “Sure. Clone card. Then, it like electronic twin walking in place. Easy-peasy. Do it in seconds, depending on what protection they have on card. Let me see yours.”
Devine handed over his security card. Valentine pulled a device out of his backpack on the floor and held it up to the card. “This is one twenty-five. Is bullshit. I have app on phone. I can clone card right now by writing what’s on your card onto clean one I get from Amazon. Is big bullshit just like encryption on your ‘security’ database.”