"I was expecting Marilyn," he said, obviously puzzled.
Pearl didn't say anything immediately. Let him stew. She wanted the advantage.
"You a friend?" he asked. Curious and still amiable, as if open to making new friends himself. The heart of a golden retriever.
She flashed her shield and introduced herself as NYPD Homicide.
"Are you a friend?" Pearl asked.
He was the one who was slightly rattled now. "Yeah. Yes, I am. Name's Jeb Jones."
Pearl didn't recall the name from Marilyn's address book.
His brown eyes slid to the side, then back. "You said 'homicide.' This yellow tape really what I think it is?"
"I'm afraid so."
"Not a gag?" He seemed deeply upset now, and genuinely surprised. He didn't want to believe.
"No gag. You look at the papers or check the news on TV, Mr. Jones?"
"Not for a couple of days. Tell you the truth, I stay away from the news. It gets me depressed."
"Marilyn Nelson was a victim of the Butcher," Pearl said.
Judging by the stricken expression on his face, Jones had heard of the killer. "Holy Christ!" He raised a hand and pinched the bridge of his nose, closing his eyes and trying to adjust to the news that was even worse than he'd thought.
"C'mon inside," Pearl said, stepping back. "Marilyn's…gone."
He entered slowly, looking left and right as if expecting to see bloodstains or other signs of violence. If he noticed the odor of death he gave no sign. He walked unsteadily to the sofa and sat down on it with what Pearl took to be a kind of familiarity.
She took the wing chair opposite and got out her notepad and stub of a pencil. "How good a friend of Marilyn's were you?"
He pinched the bridge of his nose again, the way people do sometimes when they have a bad headache. Closed his eyes again, too, only they were lightly closed and not clenched shut like before. "We dated twice. We got along well, I thought. Last time we parted, about a week ago, I told her I was going to drop by sometime." He lowered his hand, trained his blue gaze on Pearl, and shrugged. "Here I am."
"Your name is really Jones?"
"Of course."
His indignation seemed genuine. "I had to ask," she said.
"I guess you did."
"Where did you and Marilyn meet?"
"In a lounge, a couple of weeks ago."
"Nuts and Bolts?"
"Pardon?"
"It's a lounge on the East Side."
"No. A place called Richard's, near Lincoln Center."
Pearl knew it. A respectable stop for the after-show and concert crowd. Not a pickup parlor like Nuts and Bolts. "Where'd you and Marilyn go on your two dates?"
"We went out once to dinner, the other time to an old Woody Allen movie at the Renaissance Theater over in the next block."
"Bananas," Pearl said. She happened to be a big Woody Allen fan and knew what was playing at the Renaissance.
"Huh? Oh, yeah. South American dictators and all. I forgot the title."
"On the other date, where'd you have dinner?"
"The Pepper Tree, right down the street." He looked around. "We talked by phone, and we met where we decided to go. This is the first time I've ever been inside her apartment. And now she's…I mean, Jesus!"
Pearl made a show of folding her notepad and putting it away with her pencil. She sat back and made herself look relaxed; it was time for a friendly off-the-record conversation. She'd seen Quinn use this tactic to lull someone he was interviewing, pretending the real interview was over. "I'm interested now not so much in facts as in your impressions. So tell me, what kind of woman was Marilyn?"
Jones gave it some thought before answering. "She was always upbeat, optimistic. At least when I saw her. Also bright and ambitious. She thought she was going someplace in this world, and she probably was. She hadn't been in the city long and was doing some sort of consulting work for a chain of clothing stores."
"Rough Country?"
"I'm not sure. That coulda been it."
Pearl smiled as if slightly embarrassed. "Now I'm sorry to have to ask you an intimate question, Mr. Jones."
He understood. "She and I were never intimate." He looked at Pearl with direct honesty. "Like I said, this is the first time I've ever been in here. And she never came to my place." He glanced down at his shoes, back up. "I did have hopes."
"Sure," Pearl said. "What else can you tell me about her? I'm just trying to get a feel for who she was." And who you are.
"She laughed so easily," Jones said. "I liked that about her more than anything. She had the kind of sense of humor where she didn't say much that was funny, but she enjoyed what other people said." He actually seemed about to tear up. "The truth is, I guess we didn't know each other all that well, but I'm going to miss her, so I guess that's the kind of person she was." He glanced about. "This is such a waste. Such a goddamned shame!"
"It is," Pearl agreed. Two dates and no sack time, and this guy was about to cry. Well, it was possible. Pearl wondered who'd cry over her if she were murdered. It was the kind of question her mother might ask.
She really should call her mother.
"I mean, a woman so wonderful and still young." Jones sniffed. "Well, I guess in your job you see it all the time."
"Too often." She waited a beat, then: "What do you do for a living, Mr. Jones?" Abrupt change of subject. It might cheer him up even if it didn't throw him off balance. His grief did seem real.
"I'm a freelance journalist."
Great!
Her alarm must have shown on her face.
"Not a newshound," he assured her. "I'm in New York working on a book about the intersection of politics and economics and its influence on the functions of each."
"Sounds fascinating."
A faint smile passed across his features. "I try not to make it too dry. I'm still looking for a publisher."
She got out her pad and pencil again. Official cop time. "And your address?"
Pearl dutifully wrote it down, the Waverton, a residential hotel over on the West Side. It was a place that showed its age but was still respectable and had reasonable rates. Pearl thought it was exactly the kind of hotel where a freelance journalist with intermittent income might stay.
She put pad and pencil away again and thanked Jeb Jones for his time; then she stood up, waiting to see how anxious he was to leave.
Not very.
"We finished?" he asked.
Pearl had the impression he might prefer to hang around for a while and chat, as if he were lonely.
"Maybe," she said. "I might be in touch." She smiled. "You've been a help."
"I hope so." He stood slowly and looked around again, almost as if expecting to see Marilyn Nelson. He didn't so much as glance toward the bathroom.
"What do you know about the bastard who did this?" he asked. "Are you going to find him?"
"Not much yet, but we're learning. And you can bet we're gonna find him."
Jones nodded, but he didn't seem satisfied.
When he was gone, Pearl used her cell phone to call the Waverton and ask for Jeb Jones.
She waited while his room phone rang over and over, until finally it stopped and someone Pearl assumed to be the desk clerk came on the line and informed her that Jones wasn't in his room but she could leave a message.
Pearl told him no message, then thanked him and broke the connection.
So Jones was real, what he'd told her was at least true up to a point, and he wasn't in two places at once. Progress?
Who the hell knew?
She glanced at her watch. She was a long way from the Village, but there was still plenty of time to get to where she was having lunch with Lauri Quinn.
Quinn's request that she talk to his daughter nagged at Pearl, but she could understand why he had to ask.