Whiskey’s Gone (A Fina Fitzgibbons Brooklyn Mystery Book 3)

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Whiskey’s Gone (A Fina Fitzgibbons Brooklyn Mystery Book 3) Page 1

by Susan Russo Anderson




  Contents

  Title Page

  Summary

  copyright

  Dedication

  Foreward

  Day 1

  Prologue

  Missing

  The Polar Bear

  Seymour Wolsey

  Lorraine

  The Apartment

  A Cameo Appearance

  Arthur

  Cookie's Snit

  Pressed Against the Sill

  Lighting a Fire

  Meeting Maddie

  Whiskey in Chains

  Denny

  Brandy

  Rhoda the Receptionist

  Finn Trueblood

  The Purse

  Jane and Willoughby

  The Day I Met Arthur

  The Photo

  The Phone Call

  Slashed Tires

  Interviewing Rina

  Whiskey in Chains

  A Visit with Seymour

  The Fight

  Malcolm

  Dumbo

  The Piano Man

  Star Newcomb

  The Mole

  Whiskey in Chains

  Motives for Murder

  Bad News

  A Cold Goddess

  Day 2

  On the Way

  Coney Island

  Sharkey's Car Wash

  Hope Is the Thing with Feathers

  The Landlady

  The Mob

  The Knowns

  Waste Management

  My Sweet Beretta

  Pressing the End Button

  Hit List

  Day 3

  Bridge Lights

  Finding Flossie

  Watching the Silence

  Splintering Light

  Several Weeks Later

  Epilogue

  Characters & Places

  Dear Readers

  About the Author

  Whiskey’s Gone

  A Fina Fitzgibbons Brooklyn Mystery

  by

  Susan Russo Anderson

  Summary:

  Private investigator Fina Fitzgibbons gets a call from Brooklyn Heights lawyer Trisha Liam asking her to find Whiskey Parnell, Trisha’s office manager. During the hunt, Fina steps on the toes of Detective First Grade Jane Templeton and resists falling in love with her boyfriend, NYPD Patrol Officer Denny McDuffy. She interviews named partners, artists and painters. Her quest for the missing single mom takes Fina and her friends to Dumbo, Carroll Gardens, Coney Island, and Brighton Beach. But in the end, a vicious surprise awaits her as the final piece of the puzzle comes crashing down.

  Copyright © 2015 Susan Russo Anderson

  All Rights Reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher.

  Whiskey’s Gone is a work of fiction.

  Names, places, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination

  or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to persons living or dead

  is purely coincidental.

  Cover design: Avalon Graphics

  Proofreading: Pauline Nolet

  ISBN:

  Author’s Website

  susanrussoanderson.com

  Readers, I’d love to hear from you:

  [email protected]

  For My Parents, Toni & Jim Anderson

  Hope is the thing with feathers—

  That perches in the soul—

  And sings the tune without the words—

  And never stops—at all—

  And sweetest—in the Gale—is heard—

  And sore must be the storm—

  That could abash the little Bird

  That kept so many warm—

  I've heard it in the chillest land—

  And on the strangest Sea—

  Yet, never, in Extremity,

  It asked a crumb—of Me.

  —Emily Dickinson

  Day 1

  Prologue

  Seriously? He was such an abscess. “Why are you calling at this hour?”

  “I didn’t know where else to turn. They’ve taken her.”

  Whiskey thought her head was going to explode. Maybe it would. Or maybe she’d inherited that sudden death thing from the father she never knew. Or an artery would give way and she’d drown in her own blood. Maddie would find her body on the floor. Her heart pounded. “I don’t see what I can do. I can’t leave my daughter.”

  “They came and trashed the apartment and took my wife.”

  “Call the police. Now. If you don’t, I will.”

  His intake of air sounded like the rattle of a snake. “You don’t understand, I think I know where she is. I can get to her, but I need your help. She admires you. You can persuade her to come home. I … didn’t mean to hit her. I don’t know what to do. I think she’s still alive. At least she was breathing when they grabbed her. You’ve got to help me.”

  “You’re not making sense. I’m calling the police!”

  “You can’t do that.”

  “By the time I get to your house—”

  “You don’t understand; I’m downstairs. You’ve got to help me. Please. For us. For all we’ve meant to each other over the years. You can persuade them to give her back. I know you can.”

  “I’m hanging up now.”

  This time his voice was a low growl. “You still don’t get it. I’m downstairs. I’m going to come up there and shoot you and the goddamn kid if you don’t come down here now.”

  Missing

  When Trisha Liam called me, my clothes took on a different electricity as I listened to the raw edge in her voice.

  “My office manager didn’t show up today, and she’s usually the first to arrive. This isn’t like her. Something’s terribly wrong.”

  “And?” I asked, just to make sure we were clear. You’ve got to do that with lawyers.

  “And I need you to investigate. Your retainer’s on my desk, and yes, I’ll sign your contract. Just get over here right away.”

  After the episode with her daughter three months ago, Trisha Liam had made hefty changes to her lifestyle, prompted, no doubt, by a massive shake-up in her soul. For starters, she now paid full and loving attention to Brandy, even attending Packer Collegiate’s parents’ nights, according to my sources. And second of all, she moved her law firm from the Wall Street area to a brownstone a few doors away from her townhouse in the Heights so she could be closer to Brandy’s school.

  It didn’t take me long to drive there, but parking was another matter, the usual Brooklyn comedy routine. I was about to give up when I spied the familiar red of backup lights two blocks away, so I gunned the motor and squeezed into a spot inches from the yellow curb, barely fitting, but only because my Beretta’s back bumper touched the front fender of the car behind me. As I locked up, I pictured Denny in his uniform, arms crossed, mouth set in a tight smirk. Despite the vow that I’d never ever lose myself over anyone, I texted him, half of me not expecting a reply, not from where he was with his buddies, a cabin deep in the Maine woods.

  When Trisha Liam opened her door, she looked almost the same as the last time I’d seen her, like a sawed-off pencil in a pantsuit. Today, however, her face had a warmer, less lined look. She actually hugged me before she led me down the block to the new digs of Liam, Trueblood & Wolsey.

  “How’s Brandy?” I asked as we walked the short distance.

  “Being Brandy.” Trisha Liam’s face took on a proud, motherly glow. I remembered seei
ng it on my mom whenever she looked at me, and mid-stride, a fierce ache swept through me.

  The lawyer stopped. “But now that you ask, she’s been having nightmares. You know, because of her ordeal. It’s too early to see much progress, but the doctor thinks she’ll be fine.”

  Shrinks. They manage to create optimism with an edge. I nodded. Brandy had been through a lot, and although I didn’t really understand kids or their needs, we had developed a rapport.

  “Her grades are fine, and she hangs with her usual crowd. I think they talk about what happened to her, which helps. She doesn’t confide in me.” Trisha Liam looked down at the sidewalk. “But that’s changing. Slowly. And something else. For no reason, she begins crying—in the store, in the middle of her favorite TV series, in class, too, her teachers tell me. The doctor says it will take time.”

  I’ll bet she does. I listened to leaves crunch underneath our shoes. In a few minutes, we climbed the stairs of another Greek revival. Inside there was a substantial entryway with one of those old-fashioned rock-crystal chandeliers, the kind that swing back and forth whispering money.

  On one side of the hall was a door leading to a large room “for staff and guests,” Trisha told me. I peeked in. It was furnished with expensive drapes. Overstuffed chairs were arranged around a fireplace. There were a couple of laptops and small desks scattered about. On the far wall was a wet bar.

  “We call it the clients’ reception, and you’re welcome to come here and do whatever it is investigators do. Don’t they sit and ruminate for hours about their cases?”

  “You’re thinking of Nero Wolfe.”

  Across the entryway was another massive room, this one filled with people working. As we made our way up the aisle to Trisha Liam’s office tucked into the back corner, she nodded to the staff, men and women on the phone or murmuring to one another or clicking keys. Except for the receptionist. She wore a pair of earbuds and seemed to be deep inside herself. Cracking gum, she stared hard at her screen, one manicured nail gently tapping on her mouse. Maybe she was hiding from us, or maybe that’s what she did while waiting to pick up the phone.

  “Any word on Whiskey?” someone asked.

  Trisha Liam shook her head.

  A wooden desk by the window was vacant. Something about the stillness around it told me it was the missing office manager’s. I walked past, and a shiver swept through me. If Cookie were nearby, she would tell you how I, Fina Fitzgibbons, having been plunged into wizardry at birth, had a weirdness about me when things weren’t right. And although it was too early to call it a disappearance, I knew there was something not right about the office manager’s absence.

  Trisha Liam closed the door, and I glanced at the view spread before us. The early afternoon’s crisp rays bounced off the East River, the Statue of Liberty shining in the distance, Manhattan’s old seaport glinting across the water. I bit down the desire to be successful, because if I were, I wouldn’t want to live in any other place but this.

  “Tell me about … what did you say her name was?” I asked, after we were both seated.

  “Whiskey Parnell.”

  “You’re kidding.”

  That was a pointless remark—Trisha Liam’s not the joking type. “When was the last time you saw her?”

  “Yesterday.”

  “You saw her leave, or what?”

  She hesitated, and I studied her, just the way Mom taught me. “Watch the eyes: if they move to the right, the person is trying to remember the truth; if they move to the left, they’re thinking up a lie.”

  Trisha Liam’s irises slid to the right. “No, I left before she did. She was still sitting at her desk as I was leaving, the only other person in the room. She looked up when I said goodnight, but I could tell she was engrossed in something on her screen. She’s usually the last one to leave. As I walked through the office, I think she mumbled a goodbye or flapped her arm in my direction.”

  “You didn’t talk?”

  “Why would we?” She paused. “Well, we would have, of course, if we’d had business to discuss. Every now and then I make it a point to show I’m interested in their lives, so I make small talk, but I’d done that with Whiskey last week.”

  I said nothing.

  “You’re not making this easy. I know what you think of me, that I’m a cold-hearted lawyer. But Whiskey and I weren’t friends, not even close business associates.”

  “You mean you never ‘shared.’” I knew I was being a hard-ass, even though Trisha Liam had changed.

  “Look. I’m not a mother hen. I’m not a chum. I know I need to be more human, and I’m working on it, but Whiskey and I are so different. I admire her. She never makes a mistake, not one, keeps the office running, and I don’t know how we’d replace her. This is a small office. Each of us plays a big part in creating the right atmosphere. She’s the best we have.”

  “How long has she worked for you?”

  “Two years ago, she became the office manager. Well, she functioned as the manager from the start, long before she had the title. She’s been here about five years now. Knows all the others. They admire her. She lends a certain brightness to the place. Whiskey’s always laughing, and her work is immaculate.” She stopped talking and stared at her hands. “But that’s all you’ll get from me. Facts about her? If they’re not in the file, you’ll have to ask the others.”

  She shoved a manila folder in front of me, and I took my time going through it, even though it was thin. There was a five-by-seven card with a headshot of a woman stapled to it. Judging from the photo, she was about my age, maybe a few years older, sporting brown curls and a turned-up nose maybe a fraction too long. There was humor, intelligence, wistfulness. I’d never seen her before, but I felt like I’d known her all my life. As I gazed at her, I felt that earlier chill travel up me again. It was as if the camera had captured Whiskey’s fate, an invisible shroud cloaking her, an aura of doom in the shadows of her smile.

  Below her likeness were the usual pieces of information, an employee number—not that they needed numbers in an office this small—a signature, a date, and an emergency contact. There were a few other official-looking forms. One had Whiskey’s name and an address on Ocean View Avenue. My geography was off a tad—pretty rotten, actually—but I looked it up on my phone. It was way the hell out on the tip of Brooklyn in Brighton Beach. Before I did anything else, I copied her information into my contacts, scanning her photo into my phone with a fancy app I’d downloaded in the wee hours one morning when Mr. Baggins had pawed me awake.

  As if anticipating my question, Trisha Liam said, “Our human resource files are kept online now. These folders hold the bare bones—copies of government forms new hires signed on their first day. We’re obliged to keep them.”

  One of the papers would contain her social security number, I knew, and I might need it, but not right now, so I resisted looking at it, but only for a moment. You might say I am conflicted about privacy issues. All right, I riffled through the papers, and what do you know, I found her social and copied it down, not that I was going to use it right away. I hunched into myself. Our right to privacy is one of my favorite subjects to jaw about, yet I’ve been known to trample on it whenever I think it’s necessary.

  As for the quality of the information in the folder, I was looking at old stuff, a fleeting moment in Whiskey Parnell’s life, probably from the day she started at Liam, Trueblood & Wolsey. I tried to pick out what remained of the real Whiskey—her soul on paper. I stared at her signature. It was neat, small, in a slight right-hand slant, each letter formed to perfection, all the Os closed, an honest, careful woman, a straight-ahead sort of person. I wondered why she’d no-show at a place where she was respected, needed.

  “She commutes each day from Brighton Beach?” I asked. “That’s a forty-five-minute ride one way, if she’s lucky.”

  Trisha Liam punched a few keys. She had a top-of-the-line laptop attached to one of those humungous Apple monitors and was busy looking a
t both screens. While she peered at Whiskey’s digital files, I waited. The lawyer was doing a passable job poking at her computer, but I could tell she was no techie.

  “Whiskey aced all her tests. She’s a whizz, you know. Types over 140 wpm; even knows the old-fashioned shorthand.” The lawyer peered at her screens for a minute before nodding her head my way. “Some of the information in that file I gave you is old—her phone numbers, for instance, and her address.”

  Swell.

  She turned back to her screen. “Says here she lives on Baltic Street. That’s Cobble Hill, but I know she lives in Carroll Gardens now and has a little girl. I know that much about her. Moved there a few months ago. The child’s name is Maddie, I think.” She seemed proud of herself and squinted some more while I copied down her old Baltic Street address. “I have her phone number in my contacts, I must have, but apparently they’re not in her file. And we haven’t updated her personal information with her new address; we just note ‘Moved to Carroll Gardens.’”

  “Minor points.”

  “Whiskey’s moved a couple of times since we hired her.”

  “Of course you called her house?”

  She gave me a withering look. “And her cell phone, too. And, yes, I’ve left messages.”

  “I’d like to have a look around. This is a huge building. Perhaps there are clues in other rooms. Or perhaps she—”

  “Waste of time. We’ve already searched everywhere, even though she never goes up to the third floor. Never. But on the off chance she was in one of the conference rooms having breakfast or making a private call, we took a look. I tell you, she didn’t show up for work.”

  “When was the last time you saw her?”

  “Yesterday evening.”

  I shrugged, watching a line of color flood her face.

 

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