But now it was time for some fresh air. This was the first time she'd been out of the house in almost a week. It was good to know the city was still here. It even smelled good. A fall breeze was diluting the fumes from passing cars and trucks. And most amazing of alclass="underline" traffic was moving.
She planned to walk up to Park, maybe head downtown for a few blocks, then circle back home. As she waited for the light to change, she felt the baby kick and had to smile. What a delicious sensation. Tomorrow she was scheduled for another ultrasound. Everything was going to be fine, she just knew it.
Finally, the walking green. She took one step off the curb but froze when she heard a blaring horn. She looked up and saw a delivery van racing toward her along the avenue. Gia heard a scream—her own—as she turned and leaped back onto the sidewalk. One of the front tires bounced over the curb just inches from her feet. The sideview mirror brushed the sleeve of her sweater as the truck slewed sideways and slammed into the rear of a parked UPS truck.
The rest of the world seemed to stand silent and frozen for a heartbeat or two as glittering fragments of shattered glass tumbled through the air. catching the sunlight as they showered the impact area, and then cries of shock and alarm as people began running for the truck.
Gia stood paralyzed, feeling her heart pounding as she watched bystanders help the shaken and bloodied driver from the car. She looked back to where she'd been standing and realized with a stab of fear that if she hadn't moved, the truck would have made a direct hit. At the speed he'd been going, she could not imagine anyone, especially her and the baby, surviving an impact like that.
She looked back and saw the driver shuffling toward her across Fifty-eighth. Blood oozed from the left side of his forehead.
"Dear lady, I am so sorry," he said in accented English—Eastern Europe, maybe. "The brakes, they stop working… the steering it no good. I am so happy you are well."
Unable to speak yet, Gia could only nod. First the near miscarriage, now this. If she didn't know better she might think somebody up there didn't want this baby to be born.
10
Sitting at his office desk, Luther Brady studied the printout as TP Cruz stood at attention on the other side. Cruz looked exhausted, as he should: He'd been up all night and had lost his boss to boot.
"So the elevator records show this John Roselli going to the twenty-first floor and nowhere else."
"Yessir. At least not by elevator. GP Jensen used it next."
The printout showed the elevator going directly to twenty-one a second time. The next use after that was when it was called back to twenty-one and taken to the lobby.
"And this time?" He tapped the paper.
"That was Roselli again, sir. He's on the tape. But there was something strange going on with Roselli and the tapes."
"For instance?"
"Well—"
"Excuse me?"
Luther looked up and saw his secretary standing in the office doorway.
"Yes, Vida?"
"I just got a call from downstairs. The police are here again and want to see you."
Luther rubbed his eyes, then glanced at his watch. Only ten A.M. When would this morning end?
"Tell them I've already given my statement and have nothing more to add."
"They say they're here on a murder investigation."
"Murder?" Did they think Jensen was murdered? "Very well, send them up."
He dismissed Cruz, then leaned back in his desk chair and swiveled it toward the morning sky gleaming beyond the windows. Jensen murdered… Luther remembered his impression when he'd first heard the news. But who could survive a confrontation with that human mountain of bone and muscle, let alone hurl him down an elevator shaft? It didn't seem possible.
Minutes later Vida opened the door and looked in on him. "The police are here."
"Send them in."
Luther remained seated as she stepped aside and admitted a pair of middle-aged, standard-issue detectives. Both wore brown shoes and wrinkled suits under open, rumpled coats. But they weren't alone. A trio of younger, more casually dressed men followed them. Each carried what looked like an oversized toolbox.
Alarm at the number of invaders and the looks on the detectives' faces drew him to his feet.
"What's all this?"
The dark-haired detective in the lead had a pockmarked face. He flashed a gold badge and said, "Detective Young, NYPD." He nodded toward his lighter-haired partner. "This is Detective Holusha. We're both from the Four-Seven precinct. Are you Luther Brady?"
The detective's cold tone and the way he looked at him—as if he were some sort of vermin—drew the saliva from Luther's mouth.
He nodded. "Yes."
"Then this"—Young reached into his pocket, retrieved a folded set of papers, and dropped them on Luther's desk—"is for you."
Luther snatched it up and unfolded it. His eyes scanned the officialese but the meaning failed to register.
"What is this?"
"A search warrant for your office and living quarters."
The three other men were fanning out around Luther, opening their toolboxes, pulling on rubber gloves.
"What? You can't! I mean, this is outrageous! I'm calling my lawyer! You're not doing anything until he gets here!"
Barry Goldsmith would put them in their places.
"That's not the way it works, Mr. Brady. You have the right to call your attorney, but meanwhile we'll be executing the warrant."
"We'll just see about that!"
As Luther reached for the phone the detective said, "Do you own a nine-millimeter pistol, Mr. Brady?"
My pistol? What do they want with…?
"Yes, I do. Licensed and legally registered, I'll have you know."
"We do know. A Beretta 92. That's one of the reasons we're here."
"I don't under—" And then it hit him. "Oh, no! Was Jensen shot?"
The other detective, Holusha, frowned. "Jensen? Who's Jensen?"
"My chief of security… he died this morning… an accident. I thought you were here about—"
Young said, "Where is your pistol, Mr. Brady?"
"Right here in the desk." Luther reached toward the drawer. "Here, I'll show—"
Holusha's voice snapped like a whip. "Please don't touch the weapon, Mr. Brady."
Luther snatched his hand back. "It's in the second drawer."
"Step away from the desk, please."
As Luther complied, Young signaled one of the younger men. "Romano." He pointed to the drawer. "Gun's in there."
Luther felt as if reality were slipping away. Here in his building, his temple, his word was law. But now his office, his home, his sanctum, had been invaded. He was no longer in control. These storm troopers had taken over.
And no one was saying why. He felt as if he'd fallen into a Kafka story.
It had to be a mistake. Did they think he'd shot somebody? Who? Not that it mattered. He'd never even aimed that pistol at a human being, let alone shot one.
This mix-up would be straightened out, and then someone at the District Attorney's office would pay. Oh, how they'd pay.
"What…?" He swallowed. "What am I supposed to have done?"
Holusha pulled an index card from the breast pocket of his shirt.
"How well do you know Richard Cordova?"
"Cordova?"
Luther ran the name through his brain as he watched the man called Romano lift the Beretta from the drawer. He held it suspended from a wire he'd hooked through the trigger guard.
Cordova … he was drawing a blank. But how could anyone be expected to think under these circumstances?
"I don't believe I've ever heard of him. It's quite impossible for me to remember the name of every Church member. We have so—"