He looked at me. “She didn’t do it, Artie. She didn’t do any of it. I found the people she said she was babysitting for, they confirmed it, but I also got the security tape off of Diaz. She never went into the building at all until we saw her heading for Carver Lennox’s place.”
“What did she say?”
“She’s barely talked to me.”
“Did you already call any of those friends at Homeland Security? Your Harvard houses?”
“I only talked to one guy, didn’t give him many specifics, told him it was hypothetical.”
“He believed you?”
“I don’t know. I almost made the biggest fucking mistake of my life,” he said, rubbing his eyes. “Christ. I hope it doesn’t come back to bite me on the ass.”
“You told him her name?”
Virgil didn’t answer, and I crossed the room to Marie Louise. She answered my questions briefly, her face blank, her eyes full of disappointment. She had trusted me. I tried to say I was sorry and ask if I could help, but she turned her back on me. Her boys stayed close to her, providing protection for their mother.
We left, Virgil and me, and closed the door behind us.
“You think you can fix it for her?” I said to Virgil. “You think you can warn off whoever you talked to?”
“God knows I hope so,” he said. “You get this stuff wrong, you can wreck a whole bunch of people. It’s like some kind of fucking infection. I hope I can fix it.”
In the dim, stinking hallway, Virgil added, “If Marie Louise didn’t kill Hutchison, it doesn’t say she didn’t murder the dog, does it?”
“Why don’t we concentrate on the people first? There’s those people who deal with dog forensics; they’ll come up with something.”
“Right. You have to believe whoever killed Lionel killed Simonova, don’t you?” said Virgil.
“It’s how I make it.”
“I’m going back to the Armstrong. I want to get the rest of those security tapes,” said Virgil.
“I’ll see you.” I wanted time to make some calls. Wanted to do a little thinking. Wanted to call Lily.
Who killed Simonova and Hutchison, and the dog, and who’s next? I wondered, thinking of poor Regina McGee. I wasn’t convinced yet she’d been taken to the hospital because of dehydration, not yet, not at all.
CHAPTER 47
Cold so bad that night it got under your clothes, and into your skin, your soul, too, if you had one. The wind blew tiny slivers of ice, like glass shards, against my face. No one out on Edgecombe Avenue, except Virgil, staring up at the Armstrong, smoking, tip of his smoke glowing.
“You like it out here or something,” I said.
“I know who it is, Artie.” He looked triumphant. “Yeah, I was going to call you, just needed a cigarette.”
I waited to hear, let him tell me about his victory in his own time. He turned to look down at the city. Dark night, ribbons of traffic, red and white lights streaming across the tangle of highway over in the Bronx, people trying to get home. I took a cigarette from the pack of smokes Virgil offered me.
“Diaz is now my pal, also that guy he hangs with.”
“The Goof?”
“No, it’s the other one, Fidel, you remember? Diaz’s other crony?”
“What’d you get?”
“I got the building security tapes. Back and front doors. I got to look at some of them on a DVD player Diaz keeps in the basement. It’s like fucking Best Buy down there. I think when people leave or die, he just helps himself to whatever he can get his hands on. TVs, computers, beds, whatever.”
“What did you say to him?”
“You don’t want to know, I’m not sure it’s exactly kosher.” Virgil tossed his cigarette away.
“So who is it?”
“It’s Carver Lennox. I know it. In my gut.”
“We’ll need more than your gut.”
“I made a timeline, and I think he fits, Artie.”
“Go on.”
“Lennox was in and out of the building a lot, yesterday, last night, after the party, but before Lionel Hutchison was murdered, according to the times I got from the ME. Lennox’s daughter was with him. I saw them on a tape,” said Virgil. “Made it look nice, him with his pretty teenage daughter.”
“You think he’d use her that way?”
“Why not? He was first on the scene after you found Hutchison, right? Made it look like he was distraught. How did he know to show up?”
“I don’t know.”
“Also, he has a good motive, better than good. He wants those apartments.”
Something struck me. “You were here last night?”
“I was working the other homicides, like I said, but I stopped by, just to see who I could see while most everyone was over at the club. People in the building, especially the help, feel more like talking when Lennox isn’t around. I thought I might hear something about Simonova.”
“Diaz?”
“Him. Others.”
“You want to pick him up?” I said. “It’s your case.”
“Not yet,” Virgil said, putting his notebook away. “I want it solid, Artie. I don’t want any fancy lawyers finding a nice little well-greased legal loophole. I want to get Lennox in a place where we have the goods to lock him up for life. I know it’s him. He has access to pretty much all of the building, the roof, the basement, all of it. I think he even fucking killed the dog.”
“What for?”
“Maybe he did it to make Marie Louise look guilty. Everybody knew how scared she was of that dog.”
“You want to take a look in his place?”
“Without a warrant?”
“You on for that?”
“It so happens that he’s out with his daughter at this very time,” said Virgil. “Nice, right?”
“You know that?”
“Not for nothing that I’m a detective,” said Virgil. “I managed to have a pleasant conversation with Lennox about life and the holidays and children. I believe he thinks I’m up to his standard, thinks because he went to fucking Princeton and they let him join one of their eating clubs, he’s somebody. But deep down he thinks I come from class while he only learned it. What an ass,” Virgil said. “Snobs are such easy prey.”
In spite of myself, I liked Virgil more and more. I liked working with him. He was smart. Sharp. He was a detective with balls, who didn’t wait around for the bureaucrats to give him permission, and he had a brain and a sense of humor. I would like him even more if I got Lily away from him. Anyway, for now it looked like she didn’t want either one of us.
Virgil had told her what had happened with Marie Louise, or most of it—I wasn’t sure he’d told her about his pal in Homeland Security—and Lily was furious with both of us. I’d already had a couple of angry messages, her voice icy and unyielding. I’d called back. She didn’t pick up.
“You must have loved hearing Lionel’s stories about people who lived up here, all those jazz musicians, right?” said Virgil as we got to the Armstrong’s front door.
“Sure. Not your music, though, is it?”
“Not really. More my father’s thing.” He held the front door open for me.
“I should tell you I sent some pills I found in Huchison’s apartment to an old pal. Same type of meds as I found in Simonova’s.”
“What kind of pal?”
“A good friend in forensics. She knows people who can take a look at what’s in them fast. It’s just a hunch, OK? But I figured, what the hell. OK with you?”
“Your friend has a name?”
“Gloria Lopez.”
“That’s good for me, Artie. I know Gloria,” he said, as we went into the lobby. “How long will she take to see if there’s anything that shouldn’t be there? I don’t really make Carver Lennox for a guy who offs people with bad meds. You?”
“Gloria said by tomorrow. She can put the nicest kind of pressure on her contacts.”
“Good. Listen, Artie, could you bel
ieve Carver beat you up in the basement?”
“No. If it went back to him, it must have been somebody he hired. I think I heard somebody speak Russian, or maybe he wanted me to think he was a fucking Russki.”
“Or a Cuban who spoke some Russian? Carver could find himself a Cuban, right?” said Virgil, just as Diaz opened the inside door for us. Tipped his hat at Virgil. Looked at him nervously. Wished him Feliz Navidad.
CHAPTER 48
You any good at picking locks?” I said to Virgil as he looked at Carver Lennox’s apartment door.
“You mean because of my bad black childhood in the mean streets of Cambridge, and Greenwich Village?” He smiled. “Actually, I am pretty fucking fine at it.” He got down and inspected the lock. From his jacket he took a Leatherman, one of those little tool kits.
The doors on the floor were all shut, but you could feel the people inside, feel them waiting, alert, listening. People had heard the sirens this morning. Some had gone downstairs to see what had happened, had seen the cops, and the body on the ground. They would have seen the seal on the Hutchisons’ door. The news about Lionel Hutchison, and about Celestina’s dog, would have traveled through the building. Everyone on this floor would know by now.
Behind those doors, people were talking, making calls, angry at the intrusions into their lives, sorry about the deaths, scared for their own safety. There had been two deaths on this floor, not to mention the dog. The little fortress high above the city had been invaded.
I held my breath. I didn’t want anyone to see us, least of all Lily.
“Virgil?”
“Just don’t talk for a minute; I have to concentrate,” he said, working at the lock. A few seconds later, the door snapped open, and we were in.
From Lennox’s terrace came a noise, like somebody tapping on glass. Instinctively, both of us reached for our guns. What we were doing was illegal and probably dangerous. If Lennox had hired somebody to kill Hutchison and trash a dog, he probably had a thug on his payroll who would be happy to work over a couple of detectives like us.
“I’ll go,” I said.
Turned out the noise was only a piece of glass blowing around. But I saw how easy it would be to get from Lennox’s terrace to the Hutchisons. The terraces were adjacent. Three in a row I thought: Simonova, Hutchison, Lennox.
“Anything?” I said to Virgil who was combing the apartment.
It was a rich man’s apartment: the old oak floors, wide deep planks, covered with antique kilims; the furniture was 1950s; pictures on the wall so famous you had to blink, including an Andy Warhol silk screen of Mohammad Ali. The kind of place you see in a magazine.
As Virgil worked, he talked, softly, in a low voice, with plenty of irony. “The New Harlem, they call it.” He snorted. “New and for rich people,” Virgil said. “Who might not have any taste but sure know how to hire a decorator who has some. You know how old this prick Carver is?”
“Forty?”
“He’s thirty-six, Artie, two years younger than me,” said Virgil. “You know why I think he wants this building? I think he wants it for the history. He doesn’t have any. He’s the kind of guy who invents himself. I mean, I looked him up, it wasn’t hard, he’s been written up, young, black, hedge-fund guy, Goldman Sachs.” Virgil took some art books from a shelf. “He’s also a liar, even about his own past. He didn’t come up from the streets like he tells people, didn’t grow up in Harlem. His mom and dad are just middle-class folk who adopted him. He grew up in Queens, a bright, ugly suburban kid who made it to prep school and then Princeton on a scholarship. His mom was a secretary, his dad worked for Con Ed.” Virgil put the books back.
“Not for Clinton?”
“Sure, maybe the dad helped on Clinton’s campaign. But so what? Lennox didn’t grow up rich, or poor. Ordinary. No story. So he’s fixated on the Armstrong,” said Virgil, flipping some silk pillows on a low sofa. “I’ve been thinking a lot the past day or so, you know, you can read the whole history of this part of the city in this building,” he added. “First it was the glamorous heart of the Harlem Renaissance, then it went downhill in the Depression, got bad in the 1950s. By the seventies, it was a mess, the taxes hadn’t been paid. Bad times all over Harlem, even up here on Sugar Hill. It was not sweet, not then. People stayed on of course. Most had no choice.” Virgil examined an antique breakfront. “Marie Louise said Carver Lennox kept guns, right?” He opened the doors, peering inside. He pressed a strip of wood and a hidden drawer popped open. “Shit, Artie, look at this.”
“What’s that?”
“The guns.”
“How many?”
“Six,” he said. “But this is all collector’s stuff. Old West shit, pearl-handled revolvers. Look.”
The drawer was lined with velvet. The pistols were handmade, beautifully polished and cared for. These weren’t weapons Carver killed with.
“Maybe Lennox sees himself as a cowboy,” said Virgil. “Blazing Saddles, right?” He chuckled. “God, I love that movie. That scene with Count Basie always cracks me up.”
“Let’s see if there’s any kind of documents, stuff we can nail him with.”
“Right,” said Virgil, following me to the study.
“Go on with what you were saying about Lennox.” I began sifting through folders piled onto the steel and glass desk.
“So, in the 1980s, 1990s, middle-class black people start buying in to Harlem, some because they want a toehold on what they think is their culture—you ever see Spike Lee’s Jungle Fever? Great, great film, Artie. Really, a great look at middle-class black families. Anyhow, the people who bought in then were smart. They bought in to some insanely good real estate, the brownstones, the big apartments,” said Virgil. “My dad wanted us to move up from the Village, where we were at the time. My mother said, No way, it’s dangerous and there’s drugs, and they’d fight like crazy about it. He was pretty tough on her.”
“What about you?”
“In my house, the kids did not have a choice, me and my sister,” said Virgil, bent over a filing cabinet, looking at more of Lennox’s papers. “I think my father wanted us to move because he felt he was raising kids who had no relationship with the black world. Maybe he was right; what the fuck do I know, Artie? Wait a minute.” Virgil knelt down, spreading documents on the floor in front of him. He was excited.
“Artie, listen. It’s all here. There’s copies of tenancy agreements for most of the apartments in this building. Some of them are really half-assed, the kind any lawyer could challenge, agreements where the former tenants bought their apartments for next to nothing. Lennox, fucking predator that he is, knows it. He must have been putting pressure on,” Virgil said, combing through the papers, picking up a document, scanning it. “Oh, man, this is priceless!”
“What?”
“He’s been doing this for a long time, all over Harlem, before the Benneton rainbow nation, the Asians, yuppies, gays, got here, Carver Lennox was in the business, buying condemned buildings, apartments, town houses. He has mortgages you wouldn’t believe.”
“And the market is crashing around him.”
Virgil laughed. “Yeah, with the help of people like him and his pals at Goldman. I don’t think he can afford the mortgages on some of this,” said Virgil. “I think he has to make a go of the Armstrong, which is the best property he has, the one where he bought apartments so cheap, even if he sells them for less than he could have a year ago, it’ll go a long way toward solving some of his financial problems. Either he does that, or he’ll be in very very very deep shit, Artie.”
“How many apartments does he own here?”
“Ten, I think. He’s been warehousing them.” Virgil gathered up the papers and put them back in their original folders.
He went to the living room, and I followed. For a few seconds, he stared at the orange Warhol silk screen.
“Beautiful, isn’t it?” he said, shifting it to one side, then placing it carefully on the floor. Behind it was a wal
l safe. “Presto.”
“How’d you know?”
“For some crazy reason people always put the safe behind a big picture. I swear, it’s true.” Virgil was already spinning the dials on the safe. He looked up. “You think I only do locks? I also do safes, they’re my specialty. I’m serious, Artie, when I was a kid I knew my parents kept walking-around cash in a little safe in their bedroom, behind a picture, and I got so I could steal from it really easy. My parents’ safe was behind the picture by Romare Bearden, which was considered the family treasure. I always loved those English novels about gentlemen crooks, you know, real period stuff. I figured myself for a future in the business. Cary Grant in To Catch a Thief—you know it?”
“You’re kidding.”
“You don’t have any fucking idea,” he said, his ear to the wall as he moved the dial on the safe, peering into the near distance as if the numbers would show up out of thin air. The door to the safe sprang open. He looked in.
“Anything?”
Virgil took out a flashlight and looked inside. From the innards of the safe, he pulled out a shoe box, opened it to reveal a stack of envelopes.
“Cash,” he said, “lots of cash. Envelopes with cash in them and names of people in the building on them, one for Celestina, another one for Regina McGee; there’s some with names of people downstairs on other floors.”
“Put it back,” I said. “We need a warrant now.”
While Virgil closed up the safe, I surveyed the room, made sure everything was in order. “You think he’s still out with his daughter? You don’t think he’ll forget to come home, or just decide to take a vacation somewhere with no extradition?”
“Trust me, his ego is bigger than his brain. He’s invested in this building, this apartment. He’ll be here,” said Virgil. “Anyhow, he thinks we think Marie Louise did it. He thinks the dog makes it credible.”
“I’m not so sure.”
Virgil stood up. “Well, Artie, I’m fucking sure, OK?” he said. “Sorry. But I know it’s Lennox. I know he got to Simonova, then Lionel Hutchison, and maybe Amahl Washington. Right?”
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