by John Lutz
Pearl casually turned around and began to follow the woman.
Victor graciously lent the woman his umbrella. Of course, Victor went with it.
He and the woman shared the large black umbrella until the cool drizzle that had been falling all morning became a fine mist and then stopped altogether.
“We’re here,” he said, folding his umbrella and smiling at the woman. Not that they’d had a common destination.
They and the rain had happened to stop simultaneously near a Village restaurant that had outside tables beneath a canvas awning. The metal tables and chairs were dry. Only a few of them were occupied.
The woman, a theatrical costume designer named Ruth Malpass, smoothed back her bouncy short brown hairdo, now limp from the rain and humidity, and took a closer look at the man with the umbrella. He appeared to be somewhere in his thirties and had regular, handsome features, eyes of an almost indeterminate color that seemed to reflect surrounding hues, and was nicely dressed in obviously expensive pleated brown slacks and a lighter tan pullover shirt with a collar. His medium-length brown hair was neatly combed. His wristwatch, she noticed, was a stylish and expensive Movado, and his shoes were rich-looking brown loafers.
Look at their wristwatch and shoes. That’s what Ruth’s mother had always told her. That was the way to judge a man’s wealth and style.
Ruth had taken the advice to heart and it had served her well during her year in New York. A small, slender woman with large brown eyes and a long neck, she looked like a scaled-down high-fashion model. Ruth attracted plenty of men, and she preferred them to be at least solvent. If their watch and shoes were of good quality, usually so was their bank account. Not that Ruth was in it only for the money. But there were so many men to choose from, why not make money one of the criteria?
“Two of you?” a smiling waiter with a towel over one arm and a pad and pencil was asking.
“Definitely,” the handsome man said. He really did have a charming smile.
“Why not?” Ruth said, trying to match the smile.
The waiter ushered them to a table near the black iron railing that defined the outdoor section of the café and took their drink orders. Handsome asked for a Jack Daniel’s on the rocks. It was early for alcohol, but Ruth again asked herself, why not? She ordered a whiskey sour.
“I’m Vlad Novak,” Victor said, offering his hand.
Ruth noticed the gold ring (not a wedding ring) and manicured nails. She shook his hand and smiled. “Ruth,” she said.
“Got a last name?”
“We’ll see.”
The charming smile again. She had to admit it got to her. The light was such that she could see her twin reflections in his eyes.
“Vlad’s an unusual name,” she said.
“Short for Vladimir. It’s an old family name, from when my grandfather emigrated here from Yugoslavia.”
“Isn’t there a baseball player named Vladimir?”
“There is,” Vlad said. “And a good one. Vladimir Guerrero.”
The waiter arrived with their drinks, and two vastly oversized menus in black leather folders.
“It’s not too early,” Vlad said. “Should we make it lunch?”
“We’ll see,” Ruth said again. Trying to hit the right note and not sound too coy. She didn’t want to signal any kind of a turnoff here. Testing, testing. She fully intended to have lunch with this prize that had fallen into her lap.
The waiter glanced at Vlad.
“Leave the menus,” Vlad told him.
Ruth’s heart grew a few sizes.
“I’ll give you time to decide,” the waiter said. He laid the menus on the table and retreated. Ruth got the definite impression he was rooting for Vlad.
Vlad lifted his glass, and Ruth mirrored his action.
They drank. Smiled at each other.
Ruth found herself flushed with a desire she hoped didn’t show. She searched uneasily for words. “Funny how things can just happen. I mean, you politely offered the use of your umbrella, and here we are.”
“Into each life…,” Vlad said.
“…A little rain must fall,” she finished.
Vlad widened his smile.
“And then,” he said, “the sunshine.”
43
Pearl followed the new Madeline toward Columbus Avenue. The clouds that had produced rain were in the distance now, and the sun shone brightly. The day was beginning to heat up to summer intensity, New York becoming a concrete kiln.
Keeping well back from the figure ahead in the white raincoat, Pearl dug her cell phone from her pocket as she walked. She felt rather than looked at the keypad as she punched out Quinn’s number.
He answered after the third ring. “Yeah, Pearl?”
“I’m following the new Madeline along West Eighty-third Street, headed west toward Columbus.”
“Say again.”
“You heard me.”
“How’d that come to be?” Quinn asked.
“Long story. Short version is I was on my way to her apartment to look around then check again with the neighbors. I saw her coming out of the building, and I’m on her.”
“She see you?”
“Not since I started following her; we passed on the sidewalk before I turned around and began the tail.”
“Since she’s seen you once, she might make you,” Quinn said. “We can’t have that. I’ll get Feds to take up the tail.”
“She’s wearing a long white raincoat made out of some kind of lightweight material. Got on white jogging shoes, fairly new looking.”
“Hold on a minute.”
Pearl continued walking, the cell phone still in her hand, keeping her gaze fixed on the figure in white half a block ahead. The new Madeline had slowed to a relaxed kind of saunter. Pearl, who usually walked fast, had to make herself slow to the pace. Still, with her eyes and her mind trained on the woman ahead, she tended to graze people coming from the other direction if they didn’t veer away from her.
She bumped into a woman who said “Scuse you.” Pearl didn’t bother to answer. No time for smart-asses.
The white raincoat slowed, then broke away from the cluster of pedestrians it had been moving with along the sidewalk. The new Madeline entered a building with a white-trimmed green canopy shielding stalls of what looked like bunches of cut flowers.
Pearl crossed the street to get a better angle of vision, then drifted down the block about a hundred feet and stood near the doorway of an electronics shop. She saw that there was produce as well as flowers in the stalls across the street. The new Madeline had entered a deli. It was two doors up from the corner, and it didn’t look as if there’d be a side door she might slip out of unseen.
Pearl realized she was sweating heavily, from the rising temperature and from the tension of tailing the new Madeline.
Some business. Not like guarding a bank that was last robbed sixteen years ago.
She raised her cell phone to her ear.
“She just went into a deli on West Eighty-third near Columbus,” Pearl said.
“Stay on her,” Quinn’s voice said on the phone. “Feds is on the way. If she stays in the deli a while, maybe he can pick her up there.”
Pearl moved back a few feet and leaned against a show window displaying various kinds of DVD players on sale. She began to breathe easier.
“Pearl?” Quinn’s voice came over the phone.
“Yeah?”
“Stay on the phone.”
“’Kay.”
Within a few minutes, the figure in white emerged from the deli. The new Madeline fidgeted with an object held in both hands, then tossed something small into a trash receptacle and raised whatever she was holding to her mouth. It was obviously a container of some kind of drink.
After two sips, the new Madeline began to walk.
“She’s moving,” Pearl said. “Still west toward Columbus. Looks like she bought some sort of drink. She’s sipping as she goes. Not walking nearly as fa
st.” Watching the woman she was tailing take another drink, Pearl realized she was thirsty herself.
“Stay on her. Be careful.”
“I’ve got both those things going,” Pearl said.
“She must have been visiting her old apartment,” Quinn said. “Maybe she forgot something.”
“Whatever,” Pearl said. “Let’s hope she’s going to where she lives now.”
“She will sooner or later,” Quinn said.
The new Madeline began to slow and gaze into shop windows as she sipped her drink. Pearl swallowed dryly and dropped farther back. She didn’t want to be glimpsed as a reflection in a window.
“Uh-oh,” Pearl said.
“What?” Quinn’s voice.
“She just went into a jewelry shop. Doesn’t look like the kind of place that’d have another exit, but maybe I should get closer.”
“If you—”
“No. Wait. She’s out. She’s moving. I guess she just ducked in to check on the price of something that caught her eye.”
“Just make sure what catches her eye isn’t you,” Quinn said.
Pearl kept the cell phone stuck to her ear, but neither she nor Quinn spoke for the next few minutes.
Then Quinn said, “Feds just called on the landline. He’s got her. Get out of there and go back to being Jewel.”
“’Kay.” Pearl broke the connection and slid the phone back into her pocket. She didn’t see Fedderman anywhere around and didn’t expect to. She turned around and headed back the way she’d come.
Pearl knew that if the new Madeline stayed on the move for any length of time, an undercover cop would take Fedderman’s place as her tail. Or they would tail her in twos. Whenever and wherever the new Madeline finally lighted, someone would be there to watch her.
Pearl decided to walk to a nearby subway stop, return to her apartment in Jill’s building, and resume being Jewel, as Quinn had instructed.
So intent had she been on following the new Madeline, she hadn’t noticed that she herself was being followed.
Ruth Malpass regretted drinking the second whiskey sour with the sandwiches they’d ordered. Vlad seemed unaffected by his drinks, but Ruth knew she was on the verge of slurring her words. She was sure she was thinking okay, and making sensible if somewhat flighty conversation, but she needed another fifteen minutes or so and some strong black coffee before she wanted to get up from her chair and try to walk steadily.
The rain seemed to be finished for the day. The sun brightened the street, but where Ruth and Vlad sat, at one of the metal tables beneath the restaurant’s green awning, they were in shade. A set of steel wind chimes dangled about ten feet away, near where the awning met the brick wall. A slight summer breeze roused the chimes from time to time to gentle notes that sounded almost like the lazy strumming of a harp.
“You mentioned you were on your way home,” Vlad said. “Do you live nearby?”
“No, I was going to take the subway. I came down here to shop at the stalls on Canal Street.”
Victor knew where she was talking about, several blocks of stalls, mostly run by Chinese merchants, that sold knockoffs of famous brand names in clothing, jewelry, and other accessories. It was a teeming cauldron of commerce, where for ten dollars tourists could buy hundred-dollar items worth five.
“I was going to buy a knockoff designer purse there for my cousin in Michigan,” Ruth said. “I never got there because of the rain.”
“Isn’t that illegal?”
“Technically, I guess so. You’re not a cop, are you?”
“No, but I try to stay on the right side of the law.” Vlad flashed her a mischievous grin. “But I’m probably no more legal than you are. You still want to go to Canal Street?”
She smiled. “No. I think I’m out of the mood now.” She came down hard on her consonants, enunciating quite clearly. Few people would guess she was on the verge of having drunk a little too much.
“Shame you came all that way for nothing.”
“It isn’t that far,” Ruth said. “Besides, I like to ride the subway. And I wouldn’t say it was for nothing. You’re hardly that. If I’d happened to buy an umbrella before you showed up with yours, we wouldn’t have met.”
“Destiny in the rain.”
“Sounds like a romantic novel.”
“Maybe it is.”
Ruth felt her heart race. “Might we have some coffee in the rain’s aftermath?”
Now I’m talking like we’re in a romantic novel.
Vlad grinned. “I appreciate the invitation, Ruth. But we won’t have to ride the subway. I can drive us to your place.”
Ruth tried to clear her mind. It was hard to keep ahead of this guy. “I didn’t exactly mean…”
“Oh? Now you’re disinviting me?” He was smiling earnestly. He reached across the table and touched her hand.
She shook her head. “Vlad—”
“I’m joking, of course. I wouldn’t presume. But we can have some coffee, and then I’ll drive you home so you won’t have to take the subway.”
“I didn’t notice you had a car.”
“It’s parked up the street from where we met. I was running some errands, but nothing that can’t wait. I’d rather drive you home anytime.”
Before she could say anything more, he summoned the waiter and ordered two coffees.
“There, it’s settled,” he said when the waiter had gone.
Ruth didn’t really want to argue with him. She debated with herself as to whether she should invite him in when they got to her apartment. The place was a mess, with dirty dishes in the sink and her bed unmade. Better to wait for some other time. Neaten up the place and make a good impression. But it would be nice to ride uptown and not battle the subway. It wasn’t true that she enjoyed the subway. That had been only a convenient lie. She wondered if he’d told her any lies.
She valued honesty in a relationship, and this looked as if it might become a relationship. She hoped.
“Malpass,” she said.
“Pardon?”
“That’s my name. Ruth Malpass.”
He raised his coffee cup in her direction. “My great pleasure, Ruth Malpass.”
When they’d finished their coffees, Ruth was confident she could walk a straight line. In fact, she felt confident about everything right now.
Perhaps sensing some unsteadiness, Vlad took her arm as they left the restaurant. She didn’t in the slightest resist. During the ten-minute walk to where his car was parked, she laughed at something he said and squeezed his arm, letting him know they’d reached the point in their brief relationship where casual touching was okay. Step by step. Something about him. He’d been around. She was sure he knew the ritual, and where it would lead.
He hadn’t mentioned his car was a newer model black Chrysler with darkly tinted windows. Beaded raindrops glistened in the sun like fine crystal on its waxed roof and long hood.
“Very impressive wheels,” she said.
“It’s a company car.”
She decided not to ask him what kind of company, what he did for a living, or where he worked. She’d find out eventually.
He unlocked the car with his key fob and held open the passenger-side door for Ruth. When she was seated, he closed the heavy door and hurried around the front of the car to get in on the driver’s side.
He was already seated behind the steering wheel fastening his seat belt when Ruth heard a soft sound behind her, glanced over her shoulder, and gasped.
Because of the tinted windows, and her attention fixed on Vlad striding around the front of the car, she hadn’t noticed the black-haired woman sitting on the wide backseat. She had a severe hairdo and penetrating dark eyes. She was grinning.
Vlad laughed and patted Ruth’s knee.
“Sorry to startle you,” he said. “I should have said something. This is my sister, Ivana. We have to drop her someplace; then we’ll be on our way.”
44
She was a snap to follow. F
edderman stayed back about half a block behind the new Madeline, sometimes crossing to the other side of the street in case she might glance behind her. But she never did. It seemed not to have entered her mind that she might be followed. Either that or she was damned good at looking unsuspecting. Fedderman had seen it both ways. He thought she was simply unaware.
It had been twenty minutes since Fedderman had seen Pearl reverse direction and get off the new Madeline’s tail, just after Quinn’s phone call to her after Fedderman had talked to him. Fedderman didn’t think Pearl had spotted him, either. That pleased him. He’d thought Florida might have spoiled him, that he might be out of practice at being invisible, but tailing, once learned, you didn’t forget. It was like riding a bicycle but not like hitting a golf ball.
Fedderman was getting uncomfortably warm in the hot sticky air that followed the rain. Feeling the dampness under his arms, he took off his suit coat and slung it over his shoulder. It wasn’t that he had to work hard to keep up with the woman in the white raincoat. She walked slowly, and she liked to window shop. Every now and then she’d enter one of the shops, but usually she didn’t stay long. Fickle, Fedderman thought.
She turned the corner at West Eighty-fifth and walked a while, then went up the concrete steps of one of a row of three six-story brownstones that were in disrepair. The middle building looked vacant and had scaffolding along its front, but there was no sign of anyone working. The new Madeline entered through the oversized, green-enameled wood door of the third building.
Fedderman thought the way she’d taken the steps, kind of bounding up them, suggested she was a young woman, or in damned good condition.
He waited five minutes, then crossed the street, sidestepped around pigeon shit, and entered the building. He found himself in a small vestibule with yellow-stained green tile walls and a painted gray concrete floor. The place was stifling and smelled strongly of bleach overpowered by the acrid scent of urine. There were bits of tinfoil on the floor. They looked like Hershey’s Kisses wrappers.
Fedderman glanced around and saw no sign of an elevator. The building was a walk-up. A TV was playing loudly in one of the units, tuned to the financial channel. He heard a man’s voice proclaim that the bulls were in charge.