by Leslie Glass
"Remy Banks?" one queried.
"Yes. Could I see your identification?" she said with more determination than she felt.
She looked down the long empty hall behind them and considered bolting as they reached for their gold shields. She wondered if they would shoot her in the Plaza. Too late, the shields appeared, and they blocked her escape route as she studied them. "No one's here," she said meekly, as if there were the slightest chance they hadn't come for her.
"That's okay, little lady. We're going for a ride."
That was all they said. They herded her between them, like a criminal, downstairs and through the hotel lobby. She got into the backseat of a black sedan, and they drove. away with her as their hostage, not telling her where they were going or anything else. Rage and rebellion coursed through her. She wanted to kill them. At a police station on East Fifty-fourth Street, they marched her upstairs, through a space full of people, to a small room with a mirror that she knew was a viewing window. Her heart thudded as she thought of all the men outside watching her and making the kind of remarks she knew men made when they could get away with it. She didn't feel safe there at all. Since she'd found Maddy's body, time had slowed down. When she was left in the interrogation room, it stopped altogether. It seemed as if a week had passed before an angry guy who looked like a mobster opened the door.
"I'm Detective Tommy Piccaterra," he said.
"I'm Remy Banks. I want a lawyer," she replied. It was the only thing she could think of to say. If Wayne could have one, she should have one, too.
"What do you need a lawyer for?" Tommy Pic-caterra was a wiry guy with a broken nose and a sheen to his skin.
Remy glanced at his big-knuckled hands and guessed that he'd done some fighting in his time. She had another scary thought—that he was there to rough her up before the other guys came back in. "So you don't hurt me," she said.
He laughed. "We don't hurt people here," he replied, walked out, and shut the door, leaving her alone again.
After about an hour, she heard a commotion outside, and Piccaterra returned.
"Someone's coming in. We have to move," he said.
He didn't say who was coming. When she reached for her purse and backpack, he said, "Don't worry about it. Someone bring it to you."
She got up with a sinking feeling that she-would never see her things again, suddenly realizing that this was probably how people felt when they went to prison. She was that afraid of these detectives. No one looked at her as she moved through a bunch of them, talking on their cell phones. Out in the hall Piccaterra opened the door to another, smaller room that had no windows or ventilation or two-way mirror. When he put her in there and closed the door, she remembered her mother locking her in a closet as a child for her own protection against her father when he was on a drinking binge. Like then, she couldn't calm down as she listened to the activity in the hallway outside. She could hear people talking, their footsteps going up and down the stairs. Her purse with her cell phone in it was gone. No one brought that or her backpack to her, and no one came to ask her questions.
By late afternoon she was hungry and thirsty and worse than that, she was exhausted but too frightened to close her eyes to sleep. She'd been up late the night before and hadn't had anything to eat or drink since the bagel and coffee at seven. She didn't know what was happening. She wondered if the detectives were too busy with other things and had forgotten her, or if they were getting her the lawyer she'd asked for. She doubted that. More likely they were trying to scare her, and it was working really well. She was terrified.
Finally, just after four thirty, the Chinese lieutenant opened the door and walked into the room. April Woo Sanchez didn't look as good as she had the day before. Her suit was wrinkled, and her face was pale. "How are you doing?" she asked.
Remy exhaled with relief. "I would have called you, but those cops took my phone," she said quickly.
"Is that so? Why would you call me?"
"You said you would help me. This is very scary," she blurted out.
"Not as scary as it was for Maddy and Alison," the detective snapped.
Remy looked at her hands. She'd expected a little more sympathy than this.
"You know Alison was murdered this morning after you met with Lynn?" Woo said.
"Yes. 1 saw it on "TV. At least you can't pin that one on me."
"That's not a smart response. You want to tell me why you had a meeting with Lynn this morning?" she said sharply.
"It wasn't a meeting. Can 1 go to the bathroom?"
"Of course, you can go to the bathroom. This isn't prison." She opened the door, checking her watch for the time. "The bathroom is right down there, but be quick. I'm running late."
Remy was annoyed by the sharpness of her tone and shocked by the reference to prison. She hadn't expected this from the woman who'd been nice to her yesterday. She moved to the door. The stairs were right in front of her, but the detective was watching her. She couldn't run down the stairs and get away. If this wasn't prison, she thought, it was very close. She went into the bathroom, washed her face, drank some water, and returned to the little room, where the detective quickly ended a conversation on her cell phone.
"Sit down, Remy. You told me a lot of lies yesterday, and now someone else is dead," she said coldly.
"I was scared. 1 didn't want to get anybody in trouble," Remy said defensively.
"Well, you got yourself in trouble. Mr. Wilson told me about your relationship with him. 1 know how many times you spoke with Lynn yesterday, and that you visited her this morning, right before Alison was murdered. You're in this very deep so you better start telling the truth." "I didn't kill anybody." Remy started to cry. After a minute she wiped her eyes on her sleeve. "What do you want me to do?"
"Let's start all over." The detective took out a pen and a black-and-white-speckled pad. "How did you come to be employed at the Wilson house?"
"I already told you this. I got into the institute." Remy looked at the ceiling, then at the door. "It takes a couple of years, and it's expensive. I knew if I worked in a restaurant, the hours would be difficult, plus living expenses in the city would be too much. I was told if I were a live-in chef in someone's house, I could have most days during the week to go to school, and cook in the evening and on weekends."
"Who told you that?"
"The admissions people at the institute suggested I call the Anderson Agency and they would find me a good job."
"Was Mr. Wilson the first interview you did?"
"Yes."
"Did you know Mr. Wilson before you went there?"
"I'd heard of him, of course. He's a legend. I didn't meet him until I interviewed for the job."
"And what happened?"
"I told you this. He promised I could work m his new restaurant." She rolled her eyes.
"What does that mean?"
"I think he only said it so I would take the job. She wanted a nanny for the children, but I never would have done that. He wanted a chef. Turned out, I did both."
"According to him, you did more than that."
"It didn't mean anything," Remy said sullenly. "A good meal is more important to him than anybody. He liked to go out and party; Maddy wanted to go to bed early. I was just his dessert." She said this coolly, as if she were a guy, and it didn't matter.
"How did you feel about that?"
"I liked him until Maddy died." Then she started crying again. "I really did like him, and I never wanted to hurt her."
"Remy, if you or Wayne hurt Maddy, you better tell me now because it's going to come out. You can't keep this thing secret."
"I didn't hurt her that way. Didn't Derek do it?" she asked meekly.
"No, Derek was somewhere else by then. What changed your feeling about Wayne?"
"He was such a creep. He wanted me to tell the kids we were going on vacation to the Plaza. He wouldn't tell them the truth." She shook her head. "I didn't want to stay there. Did you see my picture in all th
e papers? It was horrible. He made me look bad."
"Uh-huh." The cop didn't seem impressed.
"And then he told Andrew to fire Lynn."
"When did he say that?"
"I heard them talking on the phone last night." She focused on the detective, remembering something. "He cooked dinner for you at the restaurant, and Andrew wanted him to get a lawyer. It was all crazy."
"Is that why you went to see Lynn this morning?"
"I wanted her to know what the plan for her was. Jo Ellen loves drama. She likes it when people get in trouble."
The lieutenant got up and went out of the room. She came back a few seconds later. "Do you want something to eat?"
"I'd like a tuna sandwich, but they took my purse. I don't have any money."
"Don't worry. We can afford that much," Woo assured her.
Remy looked at the peeling paint on the ceiling. "It doesn't look like it," she remarked.
"You're a smart-ass," the lieutenant said. "You want to know what happens to people like you? They get caught."
Remy didn't like that. A few minutes later a female uniformed officer came to the door. "What do you need?" she asked.
"A tuna sandwich on rye toast and a Diet Coke for me, please," Remy said meekly.
"I'd like hot water, and would you get several Diet Cokes, please. Thanks." The lieutenant handed her some money, then shut the door. "Tell me about your relationship with Lynn and the Anderson Agency," she said.
"I thought you were in a hurry," Remy said.
"Not anymore."
forty-two
A t seven p.m. April returned to Midtown North Hagedorn and Sergeant Gelo, who'd been due to end their second tour at four, were waiting for her. Three hours into the second shift of the day was a quiet time in the unit. Most of the detectives were out. The secretary was gone. The phones were still, and no one was raving in the holding cell. April collapsed at her desk, took a few minutes to go over the paperwork on her desk, then summoned Eloise. Charlie followed so close on her heels that he could have been her shadow. April stared at him in surprise. The milk white yin of a male for whom she'd had no expectation in the personality department seemed to have acquired an expression overnight. He was smiling.
"Boss," he said with a toothy grin.
"Hey, Charlie, how ya doin'?" she asked.
"Real good," he replied.
The reason for the smile looked like a cocktail waitress in an all-night bar. Wearing tight pants and a clingy sweater, Eloise took a chair and crossed her legs. Woody, the prepster, entered without being invited, passed a mug of hot water over the desk to April, then moved back to hang out by the door as if he were her bodyguard.
"Thanks, Woody." Automatically, April reached into her desk drawer for a tea bag.
In the old days when Lieutenant Iriarte had been the boss, April and Woody had been out; Hagedorn and two monkeys had been in. Now the apes were in counterterror units, and this was the unit's inner circle. April studied her team. If she hadn't been so tired, she would have smiled; they were an odd trio. Hoping for an energy boost, she dumped the tea bag into the hot water. She had seven cups to go for good health. As soon as the tea hit the water the smoky aroma of Lapsang souchong wafted into the air.
"How did it go with Lorna Doone?" she asked.
"Name's Lorna Dome actually and she goes by the name Cherry Red," Eloise said.
"Because she has red hair," Charlie explained.
"No kidding." April glanced at Woody. "You have a photo of her?"
"It can be arranged. Why, do you need one?" Charlie asked.
"Just a fluky thought." April had looked through Woody's photographs from the Wilson house the day before. There were lots of pictures of kids and strollers, reporters, and dog walkers. Old people. One redheaded woman, young, wearing jeans and a peasant shirt, and she had long hair. Someone was checking it out.
"Lorna's twenty-three, looks like she has a heavy habit herself. Real thin with big boobs and lots of long red hair," Eloise said. "She spilled like a fountain. She was all over that Peret kid—she and two other girls. They didn't know who he was, and made him think they really liked him. It won't be a problem giving the chief what he wants. We can keep Peret's name out of it. Maybe," Eloise added. "And she told me they have a private ambulance."
April was startled out of her musings. "What?"
"She said they have a room downstairs where they put ODs. They collect them, then drive them to the ER in their vehicle and drive off. We can catch them at it, no problem. Peret was the kind of customer they don't like. He got out under his own steam, then crashed outside."
"This is great news. I'm really proud of you." April looked from one to the other. "Good work," she said again. Maybe she could go on vacation after all. "Did you copy the Alison tapes and get them over to the task force?" she asked.
"Yeah, no problem there. Sergeant Minnow has it. He's something of a cold fish, isn't he?" Eloise replied.
"They call him Fish for a good reason. Anyway, what did you find out about the nannies?"
"Here's where we stand on that. Charlie—"
Hagedorn cleared his throat, taking over. "There are no priors dn Lynn Papel or Remy Banks. The Anderson file indicates the Wilson house as a first-time placement for Remy. Lynn, however, was fired from her last job."
Eloise took it from there. "We paid a visit to her previous employer this afternoon at five-oh-seven. Anna Currant lives in a town house on Sixty-first Street between Second and Third."
"Another town house," April remarked quietly. She jotted down the owner's name. "Any other similarities?"
"Well, she has a daughter and son, two and six. Lynn worked for her for nine months."
"Nine months is three months less than a year," April murmured.
"What's the significance?" Eloise asked.
"The fee for placing them in based on a year's salary. The client gets credit on the next one only if the girl leaves, not if she's fired. What did Mrs. Currant tell you?" April asked.
"She told us that Lynn was attractive, competent, and reliable, but she suspected that something was going on between the girl and her husband. Mrs. Currant had a good relationship with Miss Anderson, who had placed other household help with her in the past. She considered Miss Anderson a friend because she seemed to take a personal interest in the household and called from time to time to find out how things were going. On one such call, Mrs. Currant confessed that she was. concerned about Lynn getting too friendly with her husband. According to Mrs. Currant, Miss Anderson said that kind of behavior was totally unacceptable. She advised her to fire Lynn and take a new girl who had just come in with great recommendations. Which Mrs. Currant immediately did."
"Was there any basis to the woman's concern?" April asked.
"Well, Mrs. Currant is not an attractive woman," Charlie said.
"What about Miss Anderson?"
"I hear she's a dog, too," Woody remarked.
"Stop it with the looks thing." Eloise slapped him playfully.
"I meant priors," April said wearily.
"No priors on Jo Ellen Anderson. She doesn't even have a driver's license."
"Okay, this is very good. We have a new angle to work. Something's not right here. We're going to take the agency apart. You mentioned the excessive probing into the girls' lives. I'm wondering if this Anderson woman isn't manipulating delicate domestic situations, so she can move the nannies around to create more business for herself."
Charlie nodded. "It might be a Better Business issue. We can see if there are any complaints there."
"And I want to see the hiring history of both the murdered women. We need names of every single person who has worked in those houses. We can widen it from there. The victims were close friends and shared many of the same sources. Maybe someone worked for both of them."
"You mentioned before that they were users. What about their dealer?" Gelo said.
April shook her head. "The trainer was dealing an
d sleeping with both of them. He loses both ways. The time frame isn't right for Derek, and he hasn't been out today. We'll keep on him. If they want to make something of that later. . . ." She shrugged. It wouldn't be their call.
"What about his supplier?" Eloise asked.
"We'll let Minnow work on that angle. He needs to do something."
They snickered, and April was sorry she'd said it.
"Remy and Lynn?" Charlie said.
"Lynn is a helpful witness. She told me Alison's wedding rings were missing." She shook her head again, remembering Lynn's very real fear the moment she'd walked into the house after she returned from taking the girls to play school.
"But she took Alison's diamond bracelet," Eloise said.
"Alison gave me a different story on that, so someone's lying. Let's see the file," April asked.
Charlie went to get it. April sipped her tea.
Charlie returned in less than thirty seconds with the file. "Here's the note about the bracelet."
April reached for her own notebook and read the page where she'd written what Alison had told her about. a previous nanny's taking her bracelet and how Jo Ellen had convinced her to replace the girl with Lynn. As she spoke, a chill entered the room. She could feel it curl up from the floor and grab hold of the hairs on the back of her neck. For a long moment nobody moved. Then April reached for the phone and called Sergeant Minnow.
"Sergeant," she said when he picked up his cell. "It's April Woo Sanchez."
"Hello, Lieutenant," he said coolly. "We're about to get started over here. Will you be joining us?"
"Yes, and we need to find a place to park Lynn and Remy where they can't be reached for a while."
"We're already working on that. What's up?"
"I'll tell you when I get there." She hung up and smiled apologetically at her team. "You're going to have to give me the files. I'll take them over," she said.
"I already made copies," Charlie replied, and Eloise grimaced at another broken rule.
"Okay, everybody go home and get a good night's sleep and come back in the morning. Looks like you don't get your day off tomorrow."