After following her home, he'd gleaned her last name from the slot over the mailbox she'd perfunctorily checked before going upstairs to her apartment.
She hadn't seen him, and might not recognize him now if she noticed him in Starbucks, sitting only two booths away, where he could overhear the three women.
So far, none of them had called each other by name. It was amazing how, after the initial meeting, people seldom used names to address each other. He did learn from their conversations that they were actresses. That didn't surprise him, considering the beauty and bearing of the woman he'd followed. The woman he'd chosen.
So she was an actress, which meant it shouldn't be difficult to learn her given name. He smiled. Her name might even be up in lights somewhere.
All he really needed now was her name.
John Lutz
In for the Kill
34
Four days later, early in the morning, Pearl was sitting on a bench in Washington Square, watching a homeless guy finding his way awake on an opposite bench. He was wearing ragged clothes two sizes too large, and he moved arthritically though he didn't appear to be older than forty. An empty can of Colt 45 malt liquor lay beneath the bench, probably his sleeping pill.
Pearl watched as the man sat up, glared angrily at her as if she'd caused his bad luck, then made it to his feet and staggered toward Macdougal Street. Lauri passed him walking the other way, toward Pearl, and gave him a wide berth. He didn't seem to notice her.
In sharp contrast to the homeless guy, Lauri strode with the sureness and lightness of youth, through about a dozen disinterested pigeons pecking about on the pavement, causing them to flap skyward with obvious reluctance. She was smiling. She and Pearl had met for lunch, or simply to walk and talk, several times, and had come to like each other. Pearl knew the teenager admired and trusted her, perhaps too much.
Lauri plopped down next to Pearl on the bench. She was wearing jeans and a yellow sleeveless blouse, joggers without socks. The morning sun glinted off her zirconia nose stud.
"You talk to my dad?" she asked.
"Beautiful morning," Pearl said.
"Oh, yeah, I'm sorry. Inward directed, I guess."
Pearl figured the kid must have been watching Dr. Phil.
"It is a beautiful morning," Lauri said, applying the grease.
Pearl didn't actually think it was particularly beautiful. There was trash all over the ground, including some broken crack vials, and four or five homeless reminders of life's travails still lurked about. The pigeons Lauri had stirred up were back. Dirty things. Pearl didn't like pigeons.
"Pearl-"
"I did ask your dad what he thought about me giving you pointers on what it means to be a cop. He was okay with that. In fact, he likes us talking with each other. But he also doesn't want you to be a cop."
"Why not? He is."
"He thinks you can do better."
"Can or should?"
"Both, I would imagine."
"Mom and that Elliott geek were always pushing me to do better. Like I was some kind of Rhodes Scholar." Lauri made a face as if she were disappointed. "I didn't think Dad was like that."
"Wanting the best for his kid? Why shouldn't he?"
"Because not everybody can be a Rhodes Scholar. Some of us want to be cops. Like you."
"I don't think it's that, Lauri. Your dad doesn't want you to see certain things."
"Well, why shouldn't I see them? He has."
"Exactly. He has, and he knows. Also, he doesn't want certain things to happen to you."
"Such as?"
That one was easy. "Getting shot or stabbed to death."
"Oh."
Pearl stood up from the bench. "I'd better get going, Lauri. I've gotta meet your dad and Feds in about twenty minutes."
"I thought we were gonna have breakfast."
"No time now. You were almost an hour late."
Lauri bowed her head to gaze at a gray-and-white pigeon that had wandered close. "Yeah, I need to work on promptness."
Pearl smiled. "It'll come."
"What about the other?" Lauri asked. "Did you talk to Dad again about that?"
"He didn't seem warm to the idea of you tagging along with me while I'm working."
"How do you mean?"
"He said he'd shoot me." Pearl waited until Lauri looked up from the pigeon to her. "I think it's a bad idea, too, Lauri. This isn't a job like word processing or selling insurance. You can learn by watching, but you can also get hurt."
"I'm willing to take the chance."
"He isn't."
"And he's Dad, is that it?"
"Yeah. And he's my boss."
"I guess we both have to settle for that."
"Now you're learning."
But Pearl knew this was too easy. Lauri was, after all, Quinn's daughter, and Pearl knew a thing or two about Quinn.
"We can still meet now and then as friends," Lauri said. "Still talk."
"Wouldn't have it any other way," Pearl said.
Lauri stood up, shrugged, and smiled. "Then I guess that's the way it is. That's what life's about, settling for what you get."
"Part of what it's about," Pearl said. "Car's parked over there. Want a lift uptown?"
"No, I've gotta check in to work soon." Big smile. Made her look like Quinn. "Gotta be prompt."
"Atta girl," Pearl said. You are so full of bullshit, like your father.
When she reached the car, Pearl turned and saw Lauri walking in the opposite direction, away from her. Standing there with her hand on the sun-warmed car roof, she felt a sudden and unexpected fondness for Quinn's daughter, a protectiveness. Maybe even a stirring of something maternal.
Scary.
When Pearl arrived at the office, Quinn was seated behind his desk, wearing the drugstore reading glasses he used for fine print and looking at the postmortem results on Anna Bragg. They were those weird glasses that sat low on the nose and looked as if they'd been sawed in half lengthwise. Fedderman was across the room, pouring himself a cup of coffee.
"Want one?" he asked, glancing over at Pearl.
"Not this morning." Pearl's stomach felt oddly unsettled, maybe because of her probably futile conversation with Lauri and the unfamiliar maternal instinct it had provoked.
"Orange juice? I stopped and got a carton."
"Nothing, thanks." Leave me the hell alone.
"This is more of the same, almost down to the number of cuts the killer made," Quinn said dejectedly, tapping the report with a blunt forefinger. Pearl wouldn't have wanted to be tapped that hard.
"Cause of death?" she asked.
"Drowning. Like the others. He puts them in the bathtub, runs the water, then drowns them before carving them up."
"What about the tape residue?" Pearl asked. "Is that the same?"
"Yeah. Same kind of duct tape, sold everywhere. Same MO all the way. Taped tight as a Thanksgiving turkey, and with a rectangle of tape across the mouth. When they're dead and silent forever, he removes the tape, including the gag, before going to work with his blades and saw."
"Time of death?"
Quinn adjusted the narrow glasses on his nose and glanced down to make sure. "Says here between six and nine P.M."
Pearl thought that was about perfect. Unless Maize the waitress was lying, Jeb Jones had his alibi.
Jeb…
"Her colleagues at Courtney Publishing all seemed to like her."
"They always do, after they're dead," Pearl said.
"Yeah. She was an associate editor, working her way up. Her boss said she had potential. Nobody there noticed her acting scared lately, or different in any way. She'd dated a guy in sales a few times, but it didn't go anywhere and they stopped seeing each other. He's at some book convention in Frankfurt now."
"Ah, the Frankfurt alibi."
"I talked by phone to people who were with him at the time of Anna Bragg's death," Quinn said. "No possibility he flew here, killed her, then flew back."