Fifth Avenue wst-1

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Fifth Avenue wst-1 Page 34

by Christopher Smith


  The man who stormed inside was not Timothy Parker. This man was tall and dark, his features chiseled, black hair gleaming.

  As Jack rushed forward to help Diana, the intruder shut the door behind him and removed a gun from his inside jacket pocket. He pressed it against Jack’s forehead.

  As cool steel met flesh, their eyes met.

  Vincent Spocatti cocked the trigger.

  Recognition flashed across Jack Douglas' face.

  This man was Celina’s murderer.

  CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR

  The secretary tried, but couldn’t stop Leana as she sailed past the woman’s desk and stepped into Louis Ryan’s office. Her hair and clothes were wet from the rain now beating the streets.

  Startled, Ryan turned from the windows he was standing at, faced Leana and waved away the secretary as she rushed inside. “It’s all right, Judy,” he said. “Leana’s always welcome.”

  The secretary looked with annoyance at Leana, then closed the door on her way out.

  Louis began moving across the room, toward his private bath that was behind one of the doors to his left. “You’re soaking wet”” he said. “Let me get you a towel so you can dry off.”

  Leana ran a hand through her hair as she watched him go. She was still trying to forget the argument she had with her father, but it was impossible. She had gone to see her parents with the best intentions and in spite of her mother’s surprising embrace, she left with them shattered.

  We’ll never be close, she kept thinking. He hates me.

  But that didn’t mean she couldn’t help find Celina’s murderer.

  She knew her father had exhausted his huge network of contacts, applied pressure to where it would be most effective, but he didn’t have the kind of contacts she had. He didn’t have access to the enormous underworld of power that was available to her. Her contacts were among the most powerful men in New York.

  “I’m sorry for barging in like this,” she called. “But I need to talk to you.”

  Ryan emerged from the bathroom with a thick, pale blue towel draped over his arm. With a sympathetic face, he came over to where she was standing and handed it to her. “I’ve been trying to reach you since I learned the news,” he said. “There’s been no answer at your apartment or on your cell. I’m sorry for what happened to your sister, Leana.”

  Leana patted her face with the towel. Later, she would tell him that he couldn’t reach her because had been in Monte Carlo, marrying Michael Archer. Now, there was something more important she had to discuss with him.

  “Celina is why I’m here,” she said. “I want you to help me find the man who murdered her. You’ve got power, Louis. You’ve got contacts. Together, with my father, we’ll find out who did this.”

  Ryan looked at her, but made no move to speak.

  “I need you,” Leana said. “Please help me.”

  Louis sighed. “You’re asking me to help George Redman.”

  She expected resistance and was prepared for it. “In a way, I am,” she said. “But I’m really asking you to help me and to help my sister. If you won’t, Louis, then I’m afraid I can’t work for you. I won’t be at the opening of The Hotel Fifth.”

  She handed him the towel, which he tossed into the bathroom. He shut the door.

  “We both know that’s what you want,” she said. “I’m not stupid. I understand the situation. You want my presence recorded by the press. You want to make my father a laughingstock. Right now, a part of me wants the same. If you still want this to happen, then I’m asking you to help me.”

  Louis’ eyes softened. “Leana,” he said, “regardless of how I feel toward your father, I would never have wanted this to happen to him or to you. What happened to your sister is a tragedy. Whoever’s responsible should pay with his own life.”

  He was sincere. She could hear it in his voice, see it on his face and it surprised her. “Then you’ll help me?” she said. “You’ll do what you can?”

  Ryan raised his head as if to study her. “Of course, I’ll help you.”

  Leana thanked him and turned to leave.

  “Before you leave, I’d like to talk to you about opening night. It’s only two days from now and we haven’t discussed it yet. I know this isn’t a good time, but can you give me a minute?”

  Leana hesitated. “Of course,” she said.

  “The invitations were sent out last week,” Louis said. “And we’ve had a tremendous response. Everyone who matters in Manhattan and various parts of the world will be there-along with the press. They’ll be expecting a speech of some sort.”

  Leana balked. “Louis, I’ll be frank with you. I’ll go to the opening party, as promised, and I’ll mingle with the crowd as you want me to, but I really doubt I’ll have the time or the concentration to write a speech-let alone the energy to deliver one. My sister is dead. Someone is out to destroy my family.”

  “The speech already is written,” Louis said. “Zack Anderson wrote it. It’s brief. It stays on point. People will sympathize with you. It strikes just the right tone. I’ve already approved it. Zack is preparing a final copy for your inspection.”

  Leana cringed at the idea of having to deal with her assistant, Zack Anderson. One of her first duties as manager would be to fire him. “And if I don’t like it?” she asked.

  “Then make whatever changes you want. You’re the manager of this hotel, Leana. The floor is yours.”

  “All right,” Leana said. “I’ll do it. But one other thing. I’m going to need security. Can you provide me with that? There’s no telling who will be in that crowd, or who might slip in. I want to be protected.”

  “I’ve already taken care of that,” Louis said. “The building will be covered in surveillance. There will be men and women in evening wear who are there to trail you and protect you. You’ll note guards around the room and at all entrances-and so will everyone else.” He paused. “But beyond that, one of my best men has been assigned to you. He will be with you the entire night.”

  When she left Ryan’s office, she stood beneath a canopy on 47th Street, removed her cell phone from her handbag and punched numbers.

  Curtains of rain were billowing down the avenue, lashing the cars and the crowds on the sidewalk, striking the buildings with peppered force. Finally, a man answered. “Mario’s,” the voice said.

  “This is Leana Archer,” she said. “I need to speak to Mario.”

  “Who is this?”

  He didn’t recognize her married name. “Leana Redman,” she said, shouting above the howling wind. “I need to speak to Mario. Is he in?”

  “Mario’s out,” the man said. “You missed him.”

  “This is important,” Leana said. “Do you know where he went?”

  But the man knew nothing.

  As the limousine slowed in front of the brick warehouse, Harold Baines finished injecting the last bit of heroin into the exhausted flesh of his left forearm. He removed the needle from the scarred, swollen vein, and noticed that not one drop of blood leaked to stain his wax-like skin. Although the vein was plump, it was as though it had dried up, becoming nothing more than a purplish cord.

  It was pouring, the rain literally beating against the roof of the car. As the drug gradually began turning his world into the illusion in which he found peace, Harold looked through the side window and up at the decrepit warehouse.

  Glimmering in the rain, it seemed to beckon to him, this building with its rotting bricks and broken facade. Shining, it seemed to offer him some solace within its crumbling walls.

  Along the street, several other limousines were parked, their engines idling. Harold checked his watch, squinted to see the time and reached for the briefcase on the seat beside him. He tapped a knuckle against the tinted glass that separated passenger from driver and the glass receded. “I’ll be a while,” he said. “But I want you to wait. I may leave early.”

  The driver nodded.

  Bracing himself for the rain, Harold fled the car
and began racing across the slick pavement. The water splashed at his feet. It drenched his shoes. By the time he reached the building’s entrance, his clothes were soaked and he was out of breath, the nests of veins at his temples beating as rapidly as the wings of small birds.

  The door he now stood before was parted slightly, revealing a darkness that was occasionally interrupted by flashes of blue light. Threading through the music that hammered down to him from the floors above, he could hear what sounded like crowds of people. Harold looked behind him, through the tumultuous rain, aware that Louis Ryan might have had him followed again, but not caring. No harm could befall him now. Harold was invincible.

  Inside, his briefcase was accepted by a man in a gorilla suit, who then handed it to a naked woman sheathed in plastic wrap, who then placed it on the floor alongside several other briefcases. A man in leather chaps and nothing else checked the contents and nodded at the gorilla.

  Harold caught the nod and the woman in plastic wrap motioned to the stairs behind him. “There’s a great crowd,” she said, her voice unnaturally deep. “One of the best I’ve seen.”

  Harold climbed the stairs as quickly as he could, wanting to put distance between them. He rarely spoke to anyone at these clubs. He usually just chose to watch, sometimes electing to perform. Although he felt sure some of the members recognized him from cocktail parties on Fifth or Park, it was better to assume they didn’t-and remain one of the anonymous shadows that moved along the darkened walls.

  Winded, he reached the main floor. As he stepped through an arched doorway and entered the cavernous room, his very essence breathing in the dim surroundings, he joined the line of people removing their clothes at the clothes check.

  He listened. Executives from Wall Street were talking about which firms to avoid. Somebody was talking about the bargains available now in real estate. A woman in a Dior suit and thigh-high trucker boots was talking about her recent marriage and saying to a friend that her new husband knew nothing of this. “He has his sports, I have my water sports.” They laughed.

  Harold heard it all, but none of it really registered. He was removing his shirt when he spotted the young man.

  Tall and dark, his body hardened by what must have been ruthless workouts, the man looked twice at Harold as he strolled past him. Harold caught his gaze, held it for an instant, and thought that he was beautiful.

  The man leaned against a metal cage. Dark eyes gleaming, penis stiffening, he looked hard at Harold and enticed him with a half-smile. Watching him now and admiring his physique, Harold became painfully aware of his own body-so thin now, such a vague shadow of his former youth-as his clothes dropped from him like dead skin from an aged snake. He gave his clothes to the clothes check, held out the back of his hand, and the number “258” was promptly written on it in black Magic Marker.

  “Now have some fun,” the clothes check said with a smile. And yet for her, it was a smile that reflected desperation and loneliness. It was a smile life and drugs had eaten away.

  Harold knew that smile and put his own face to it. He thought fleetingly of Celina then, knew that because of his own cowardice she was dead, and he was struck once again by a wave of self-hatred.

  Shoving the thought to the back of his mind, determined not to deal with it because, in reality, it would kill his high, he approached the young man leaning against the metal cage. Music pounded through every pore of his body. The young man’s smile broadened as Harold neared him.

  And then Harold was being kissed by him. A tongue ran along the curve of his lips, and slipped between them. He felt a hand grasp his hand and lead it to the hardness between the man’s legs. Harold opened his eyes and saw that the young man’s eyes were closed. He could tell he was caught up in the moment and so he kissed him back. He squeezed the man’s cock harder and was delighted by its size. Wrist thick and uncut. Harold dropped to his knees and put it in his mouth.

  But it was too big. Harold pressed his hands on the man’s thighs and shook his head. He couldn’t breathe. The man was becoming violent in his thrusts. Harold was frightened and turned on at the same time. He was on the verge of passing out when the man stopped and lifted Harold to his feet.

  His face was wet with saliva. The room spun.

  “Why don’t we get out of here?” the man said in Harold’s ear. “Why don’t we go to my place, where it’s more private? I have a room filled with toys this place hasn’t even heard of yet.”

  The limousine hurtled through traffic.

  As time passed and the city sped by, Harold’s mind became clear. No longer were his senses cushioned by the heroin he injected earlier; no longer was his conscience quieted by the torrent of drugs.

  Tomorrow morning, he would be expected to attend his best friend’s daughter’s funeral. Tomorrow afternoon, he would be expected to board a plane that would leave for Iran-a country that, because of him, held no future for Redman International.

  How many other funerals would he have to attend in the coming weeks? How many other people would die because he had refused to speak up?

  The need struck him then.

  He opened the liquor cabinet, removed the black leather satchel and unzipped it, exposing the used syringe, the half-empty vial of heroin. He glanced at the young man seated beside him, looked briefly at that beautiful face and saw a world of promise shining in the liquid blue eyes. What was his name? Derrick?

  “You want some of this?” he said. “You want-”

  The man gripped his arm. “Don’t do it,” he said. “That shit killed a friend of mine. It’ll fuck you up.”

  Harold couldn’t help laughing. Did this boy know what he was saying? “I’m already fucked up,” he said. “I'm beyond fucked up. Now, let go of my arm.”

  But the man was prying the satchel out of Harold’s hands. He lowered the window beside him and tossed it out.

  Horrified, Harold watched it fade into the driving rain. “What the hell’s wrong with you?” he shouted, more out of fear than anger. “What’s wrong with you!”

  The man bent to his knees and unzipped Harold’s fly. “Let me give you a real high.”

  They arrived at a modest-looking brownstone on 12th Street.

  As the car came to a stop at the curbside, Derrick lifted his head from Harold’s lap and looked out a side window. “We’re here,” he said to Harold. “Come on. We’ll be more comfortable inside.”

  Harold looked at the brownstone in surprise-it was beautiful. Although it was still raining, the sun had broken through the clouds and it now shined against the building’s narrow brick facade. “You live here?” he said.

  “That’s right.”

  “What do you do for work?”

  There was an uncomfortable silence. “Look,” the man said. “I like to be discreet. You don’t know me and I don’t know you. We’ll have a good time-that I can promise-but that’s as far as it’s ever going to go. Is that cool?”

  Harold wanted him. He nodded.

  They left the car.

  Inside, the house was large and warm and smelled of roses in their prime. His interest piqued, Harold stepped further into the spacious foyer and saw vases filled with flowers, side tables by Chippendale, paintings tiling the walls.

  He knew something was wrong even before Derrick locked the door behind them. This man could never afford such opulence, could never afford an original Matisse.

  Turning, about to protest, Harold heard the sound of a door being shut behind him and footsteps clicking on parquet.

  “Nice work, Derrick,” he heard a man say. “Is he clean?”

  “He’s clean,” Derrick said. “I tossed out the heroin myself.”

  “Excellent. See Nicky on your way out and he’ll give you the money we agreed upon.”

  A chill enveloped Harold’s heart. Knowing he had been set up, he looked quickly behind him and came face to face with Mario De Cicco.

  CHAPTER FORTY-FIVE

  Fragrant ribbons of steam curled from the s
ilver coffeepot and lifted into the stale, smoky air. Lucia De Cicco crossed her legs and looked with annoyance at the uniformed maid as she bent over the table and poured the hot liquid into two porcelain cups.

  She wanted to be alone with Mario’s father. She wanted to speak to him in private. She willed this woman to go away.

  “Will there be anything else, Mr. De Cicco?”

  Antonio De Cicco gave the young lady such a surprisingly suggestive smile, that Lucia immediately became suspicious of their relationship.

  “No, Gloria,” he said. “That’s all for now.”

  The woman left the room.

  De Cicco leaned forward in his seat, chose one of the cups from the silver coffee service and lifted it to his lips. They were in the library of his Todt Hill mansion and the smoke from his ever-present cigar was beginning to make Lucia’s eyes burn.

  She looked at the man seated before her. He was amazing, really. Dressed immaculately in a gray suit, his face tanned from hours in the sun, the man was pushing seventy years old-and yet he looked fifty.

  Ashamed of his meager beginnings in Sicily-and as vain as any person could be-Antonio De Cicco worked hard to look as professional and as educated as any man hustling on Wall Street. In repose, the illusion worked. But when he spoke, his fifth-grade education became embarrassingly apparent.

  “You gonna have coffee?” he asked.

  Lucia shook her head. She toyed with the diamond brooch fastened to the lapel of her white jacket and said, “We have to talk.”

  “I gathered that the other night when you called and said we needed to talk.”

  His humor was not lost on her. She smiled even though she was tense.

  “I’m sorry we couldn’t have talked then, but things have been pretty busy around here,” he said. “So, what’s the problem?”

  Lucia gauged her words carefully. “It’s Mario,” she said. “He’s sleeping with Leana Redman again. I’m sure of it.”

 

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