“Has anyone at Pace heard from him since the day he stormed out of here?” I asked him.
He leaned forward and his color began to rise again. “Who the hell says he stormed anywhere?” he growled. “Who’ve you been talking to?”
I looked at Carmody. She sighed.
“As far as we know, Danes has not been in touch with anyone at the firm since he left,” she said. Turpin smacked his palm on the desktop.
“What the hell are you doing, Jan? Why should we tell him a goddamn thing if he’s not willing to play ball?”
Carmody looked at him. “He is playing ball, Dennis. He’s held up his end of the bargain. Now he’s asking his questions and doing a little fishing in the process. There’s nothing wrong with that. And there’s nothing that says we have to take the bait, either.”
Her voice was calm and level, and I smiled at her. While Turpin might have been- and maybe still was- a high-powered securities lawyer, it was clear he hadn’t spent much time in court. And it was just as clear that Carmody had.
Turpin’s mouth got tight and his nostrils flared, and I could see him talking himself down.
“So this business of his being on leave…?” I asked.
“Technically, he is on leave,” Carmody said. “That’s the status he was placed on when he didn’t return from vacation.” Turpin shot her an annoyed look, but it passed.
“When did he tell you he was taking vacation?”
Turpin answered this time. “The last day he was in the office- or that night. He left a voice mail with his number two in research, saying he was taking three weeks. She got it the next morning.”
“He say anything about where he was going?” Turpin shook his head. “And he hadn’t mentioned this vacation to anyone beforehand?” Another no. “That didn’t worry anybody?”
“I thought a vacation was a good idea,” Turpin said. “He had a lot on his mind.”
“Like lawsuits and arbitration claims?” I asked. “Like the SEC?”
“That’s something we’re not going to talk about today, Mr. March,” Carmody said. I nodded.
“Anybody he’s particularly friendly with here at the office?” I asked. They looked puzzled.
“Not that I know of,” Turpin said.
“Have you been looking for him?” I asked.
“We’ve made some calls,” Turpin said.
I nodded. “Calls to whom?”
Turpin stiffened visibly and looked at Carmody.
“We’ve spoken with his lawyer, Toby Kahn,” she said. “He hasn’t heard anything from Danes since he left. On the other hand, he wasn’t expecting to. The cases are moving to settlement, and there’s nothing happening now that requires Danes’s input.”
“And that’s the extent of your search- calling his lawyer?”
Turpin’s face darkened. “What the hell would you have us do?” he said.
I shrugged. “You’re not worried about him at all?”
“We’d like to know if he plans on coming back,” he huffed. “We’d like to-”
Carmody cut him off. “Do you have reason to worry about him, Mr. March?” she asked me. “If so, you should take your concerns to the police. That’s what we would do.”
“But you haven’t yet?”
She shook her head. “As Dennis said, we’ve made some calls. But we haven’t found out any more than you have, and nothing that would lead us to bring in the police.”
Turpin checked his watch. “I think you’ve hit your limit here, March,” he said.
“Just one more thing. What were you and he fighting about the day he walked out of here?” Turpin may have had a short fuse but he wasn’t completely stupid, and this time he managed a respectable lie.
“I don’t know who you’ve been talking to, but whoever it is they’re not reliable. Gregory Danes is a smart guy, with firm opinions that he defends vigorously. I can respect that- I’m that way myself. Sometimes Greg knocks heads with people- and so do I. Occasionally, we’ve knocked heads with each other. Voices get raised, doors get slammed. It happens in business; sometimes it’s even healthy. Creative tension, they call it.” His smile was crooked and disturbing.
“And what were the two of you creatively tense about that day?”
Turpin’s face got tight, but Jan Carmody spoke before he could. “I think Dennis was right when he suggested we wrap this up, Mr. March. Thanks for your time today.” She didn’t wait for a response but pulled a date book from the briefcase at her feet and began leafing through it. Turpin was perfectly still. His thick brows were knit together, and he stared at me as if I’d stolen his last banana. I left.
I waited alone for the elevator, and it arrived empty. I knew from the directory Neary had given me that Danes’s department, Research, was on 22. I rode down two floors.
The reception area was unattended when I passed through, and for no good reason I turned left. The color scheme on this floor was slate blue and white. Otherwise, it was nearly identical to 24: cubicles and thick carpet, telephones and computers, bent heads and hushed tones. The people in the cubicles paid me no heed as I walked by.
I turned a corner and came to another acre of blue and white cubicles, bordered by offices and conference rooms. But in this neighborhood, instead of bland corporate art on the walls, there were long chrome racks stocked with Pace-Loyette research reports. The cubicles here were larger and equipped with more imposing computers, sometimes several of them, and the stacks of paper and periodicals rose higher. There was a big glass room along the rear wall, outfitted like a library. I figured this was Research. Although it was well past lunchtime, there were few people about. If any of them noticed me, they didn’t seem to care. I went looking for the biggest office.
It was on a corner, and Danes’s name was outside. Nearby was a large low-walled cubicle with Giselle Thomas’s name on it. It was empty. I looked around and saw no one. I tried the door. It was locked.
“Can I help you?” It was a woman’s voice and nothing like helpful. I turned around. She was tall and very thin, and she was standing near Giselle Thomas’s cubicle, holding an armful of journals. She wore khaki pants and a beige button-down shirt and a wary expression on her pinched face.
“Irene Pratt’s office?” I said.
She scowled. Her eyes went to Danes’s nameplate and came back to me. “Well, this clearly isn’t it.” She looked me up and down and decided I passed some sort of muster. “Irene is back that way and around the corner.” She gestured with her head. I thanked her and walked off. I glanced back as I was rounding the corner and saw her talking to a tall black woman. They were looking in my direction. Shit.
My pulse quickened. It was just a matter of time now; I needed to pick up the pace. Irene Pratt’s office was where the skinny woman said it would be, and the door was open. Her assistant’s cubicle was empty. I looked into the doorway.
Pratt’s office was similar to Turpin’s, but with more evidence of actual work being done in it. There was more technology on her deskthree big flat-panel screens- and more paper, too- wobbly stacks of spreadsheets, prospectuses, research reports, and trade rags- and no room for knickknacks. Pratt was at her desk, talking into a telephone headset and scanning one of her monitors, when I stepped in. She looked up.
Disheveled chestnut hair fell past her shoulders and framed her pale oval face. Round wire-framed glasses sat askew on her short straight nose; the eyes behind them were large and dark and intelligent. Her mouth was small and skeptical and partially obscured by the headset microphone. Her pink blouse had a square neck and a coffee stain down the front. If not for the headset and the speed at which she spoke, it would’ve been easy to imagine Irene Pratt as an academic- a Beowulf scholar, perhaps, or an expert in medieval textiles- something dusty and far from the world of commerce. A fragment of her conversation dispelled the thought.
“I’m telling you, they’re full of shit. They’re shading the costs, and their pension assumptions are solidly fucked.” The high nasal voice was as I remembered it.