"Amber Bristol diapered you? In your office at the Tribune?"
I had been taught in my early years never to appear to be judgmental, but sometimes it was harder to feign indifference than others.
"Yes."
"And there was no other sexual contact of any kind?"
"None. None at all."
"Did she bring anything else with her when she visited you?"
"What kind of things do you mean?"
"You mentioned the word 'fantasy.' Any objects that went along with what you two did. And how was she dressed, Mr. Ackerman? Did she carry a handbag? Did she bring any kind of tote with her?"
"Amber was dressed-we laughed about it, actually. She looked like something off a sailing ship, is what I told her. She had just bought herself a jacket-sort of white cotton, double-breasted affair. It had gold buttons and epaulets, with some gold braid on the shoulders. I made fun of it, I guess, but she thought it was quite the style."
The short-waisted military-style jacket had been the rage in the spring, sold all over town by department stores and boutiques knocking off the high-end version.
"The last I saw of her is when she walked out of my office. I saluted her and told her she looked like a ship's captain."
The description of the clothing might be useful if it turned out Amber Bristol had been killed that night.
"Did she carry a purse?"
"Yes," he said, nodding at me. "Always did. One of those great big things, with long straps on her shoulder. Did you find that? It's where she kept her Palm Pilot."
"Suppose we found it, Mr. Ackerman. Why don't you tell me what else was in it?"
"Do you enjoy doing this, Ms. Cooper?" He sat up straight and thrust his head forward again. "Humiliating me like this?"
"That's not my plan, sir. I'd prefer not to be asking these questions." They didn't seem a fraction as mortifying to me as the thought of seeing him undressed on a sofa in his office.
"Look, Mr. Ackerman. We know that Amber was also into sadomasochistic liaisons."
He wagged a finger in my face. "Not with me. I'm not involved in any business like that."
"But she was," I said. "That's an indisputable fact. And we believe some of her own devices may have been used to kill her."
"I never touched them. None of them."
"None of what, Mr. Ackerman?"
"Handcuffs, then, okay? Is that what you want? Yes, she brought handcuffs with her sometimes. But I swear we never used them. She took them out of her bag occasionally to show them to me, but that wasn't my thing. God knows what else she carried around with her."
He was distraught now, his head nestled back down onto his chest.
"Anything else?"
"No. Nothing at all."
"Was there anything you would characterize as violent that occurred between you and Amber?"
"Absolutely not. I'm not like that, Ms. Cooper."
I was trying to get a clue as to what Herb Ackerman really was like.
"You understand that we're going to have to get a sample of your saliva, for DNA," I said, in case any other evidence developed. "The detectives will do that later today."
"I'm not a common criminal, young lady. I won't be treated like one."
Many of my witnesses started with that attitude. The idea of Mike Chapman venturing into the Tribune building with a Q-tip to take a buccal swab from Ackerman made me think we'd find a more cooperative way to get it done.
"Did you speak with Amber again after she left your office?"
"You heard me, didn't you? I didn't hurt that young woman. I had nothing to do with her death. And no, I never heard from her again."
"Did you try to reach her? Did you leave any messages for her?"
He tilted his head, ready to test me again. "I don't remember."
"I haven't listened to her answering machine or her cell yet," I said, happy to be bluffing him. "Perhaps I can refresh your recollection after I do."
"Maybe so."
"Other than your office and your home, did you ever go anywhere with Amber? Did you ever take her anywhere else, like out to dinner?"
Ackerman shook his head. "She was a nice girl, Ms. Cooper. But our relationship only had one purpose."
"How much did you pay Ms. Bristol?"
Another deep breath. "Two hundred fifty dollars, in cash. That bought me an hour of her time. And I must tell you something else that you haven't asked."
"Yes?"
"You'll see, if your detectives do their homework, that I wrote about that place where Amber's body was found in an article that was published this winter. In my column," he said.
"Trib-ulations" was Ackerman's sounding board, a weekly opinion piece that let him take on issues of local or national importance.
"The Battery Maritime Building?"
"Precisely."
"You've been to the terminal recently? I thought it's abandoned and-"
"Ferry service to Brooklyn stopped in 1938, as you probably know. But the army used the slip for years when they owned Governors Island. I've been writing, advocating about converting the empty space for other uses."
Mike would be as interested in the military history of Amber's death chamber as in Ackerman's familiarity with it.
"Is that something you and she ever talked about?"
He puffed himself up now, unable to resist the opportunity to gloat. "She made it a point to read everything I wrote. Quite a bright girl. I don't remember discussing that column in particular, but Amber would have been certain to see it."
"You were smart to call the district attorney, Mr. Ackerman. This way, I can arrange for you to meet with Detective Chapman, and we won't have to come looking for you at an inconvenient time."
"There'll be no calls to the office, then?" he asked as I stood up. "No leaks to the media?"
"Mr. Battaglia controls that pretty well," I said, knowing that my boss played the press like a Stradivarius.
"When Amber left you that evening, what time was it?"
"A little after midnight," Ackerman said. "She arrived at eleven o'clock, I'm quite certain of that."
"There'll be a record of when she signed out."
"Probably so."
"And you, did you leave with her?"
"Oh, no. No, no, no. I see where you're going with that, Ms. Cooper. No, no. Even if I walked her out to get a cab, which I may have done. I sometimes did that, as a gentleman would. But I'm sure I went back to my office to lock up."
"Did Amber tell you where she was going?" I asked, my hand on the doorknob as I tried to escort Herb Ackerman from the room.
"She was meeting someone for a drink. She was mad at her boyfriend, I know that. I think she was planning to meet someone at another bar. Maybe she was trying to make the man jealous. Amber knew just what buttons to push.
NINE
Today we're going to travel back in time," I told the jurors.
Sixteen people in the box, twelve regular jurors and four alternates. There were an even number of men and women, a racially diverse mix of New Yorkers, but only four of the group had been born at the time Kerry Hastings was raped.
There were few spectators in the room. The trial of an aspiring rap star who had shot up a Midtown nightclub when the manager tried to throw him out had drawn reporters to the courthouse across the street.
That was good news for Hastings, who had no interest in reliving her assault so publicly. But I couldn't ignore the presence of a young man who glared at me from the front-row bench. I recognized him from yesterday's pack of Latin Princes. He had passed through the hallway metal detector, which gave me some level of comfort, but I knew he wasn't there to root for my case
"The events that the witnesses will describe to you took place in the early morning hours of July 10, 1973. You will meet Kerry Hastings," I said, outlining some of her background in my opening statement for the people who would soon hear her story, "who was twenty-two years old on the night that Floyd Warren changed the course of her young life"