“Just playing hard to get,” Moyena said, a touch of irony in her low, lazy voice. “Nice to meet you, Payton.”
“Back at you.”
She tilted her head to one side and commented, “You’re actually quite handsome, Payton.” Like somebody had been contesting the fact.
Coy d’Loy tittered in agreement. “I was just thinking the same thing.”
I wasn’t surprised; I always get a bit more attractive when I’m working on something. A subtle form of lycanthropy triggered by the scent of prey.
I asked the Russian, “How ’bout you, Gladys? Still think I’m pretty?”
The blond kid laughed through his mouthful of chicken.
Gladimir stared hard at me with his nearly black eyes, like he was measuring me for a four-ply plastic trashbag.
He poured himself another shot.
“Okay,” I said, “so we all agree I’m the best looking boy since Michelangelo carved the David. What am I doing here, Ms. d’Loy?”
“Call me Coy. And, please, sit down. Would you care for something to drink?”
I shrugged. “A bottle of beer, if the cap’s still on.”
“Very good. I’ll join you. Philip, do the honors.”
It wasn’t a request, but an order. The blond kid hopped to it; with his all-consuming dream of being famous one day, he knew which side his bread was buttered on, and now so did I. Ms. Coy d’Loy was calling all the shots.
When he was gone I asked her, “What’s with the kid? Relative of yours?”
“Philip? No, no relation. But he proves himself very useful to the group. He’s been with us several months now and I have no regrets for taking him on.”
“Where’d you pick him up, Boy-Toys ‘R’ Us?”
She patted my hand, a little too sharply I thought, more like a slap.
“I see I’m going to have to watch what I say around you. No, he just showed up at the offices one day in April, looking for a job. I took him on as a trial—completely off the books, of course. And he’s proven himself useful. He’s very ambitious. Wants to learn the business from the ground up. That always helps.”
Helps what? I thought, but didn’t ask because he’d returned with our beers, two Pacifico Claras. I popped my cap on the table’s edge. Coy d’Loy didn’t even look at hers, just left it unopened on the table.
“So,” she said, “you must be wondering why I arranged to meet you this evening.”
I took a swig of my beer.
“Not really. I can make an educated guess. You want to lay your hands on Michael Cassidy. You think I can help.”
“You got it in one. That’s right.”
“The question’s why. What’s she to you?”
“We represent Ethan Ore. He’s worried about her. With his new film ready for release, we can’t afford to have our client distressed or…worse.”
“What’s worse?”
“If you know anything about Michael Cassidy, you must know she’s hardly a stable person. There’s no telling what she’s capable of, what harm she could do to him. And I don’t mean just professionally. She’s been known to be violent in the past. Especially when she’s taking drugs.”
I said, “Sounds like it’s a good thing she ran off with another man then.” I didn’t mention names.
“Maybe. If she’d stayed away. But we know she’s back in the city.”
“What makes you so sure?”
She gave me a withering smile.
“Please, Payton, let’s not waste time. We won’t make any headway if we don’t put all our cards on the table.”
I shrugged, took another pull on my beer.
“I’m not disputing it, I only asked how you know.”
She sighed.
“Maybe it will simplify matters if I tell you that the Peer Group also represented Craig Wales. Last night, Michael Cassidy appeared at the premiere of Craig’s film. You see, there was a scheduling change. Originally, Ethan’s movie was to be screened last night, but he was bumped back because we decided it was a better slot for Craig’s film. But Michael Cassidy didn’t hear about the change and she showed up to confront her husband. She stayed and attended the afterparty. I think you know how that ended.”
“She and Wales went off together to shoot up and he ended up overdosing on bad junk.”
“Exactly. It should’ve been her.”
“What do you mean by that?”
“Just that she’s the junkie—isn’t that what junkies are supposed to do? Poor Craig was just experimenting. To the best of my knowledge, it was his first time using heroin.”
“Tough break,” I said, then drained the rest of my beer. “He should’ve stuck to wine coolers. You going to drink that?”
She slid her unopened beer over to me. I opened it and drank.
She said, “Before any of us knew what had happened to Craig, she’d slipped away. I believe the police are looking for her in connection with his death, as the supplier of the drug that killed him.”
“Then maybe you should be talking to them instead of me.”
“I don’t think so. A man came to the Peer Group offices this morning, saying he was acting on Michael Cassidy’s behalf. He wanted our help in contacting Ethan. You see, Ethan had moved and changed all his numbers during her…absence.”
If she wanted to dance around the subject of Michael Cassidy running off with Law Addison, it was okay with me. I was thinking of the handbills I’d found in Owl’s pockets, sales fliers for two stores in Chelsea located on the same street as the Peer Group’s offices.
“What’s that got to do with me?”
“Please. We know he’s an associate of yours. When we told him we couldn’t possibly give Ethan’s information to anyone but Michael Cassidy personally, he walked out. I instructed young Philip here to follow him, hoping he’d lead us to her. Instead, he went to your office.”
“Not quite all the way to my office,” I said.
“No, not quite.”
I asked her, “Did he explain to you why Michael Cassidy couldn’t go in person to your offices? No? Well, it seems she thinks someone tried to kill her last night. Whoever it was got Craig Wales instead by mistake.”
She frowned at me.”Do you believe that?”
“Enough of it.”
“It sounds to me like a junkie’s paranoid dream. You see that, don’t you? You understand why it’s so important we get to her before the police do. She needs professional help.”
“Police are professionals.”
“Medical help.”
“Oh. So what medical school did you—”
“Enough!” Gladimir bellowed. I guess the vodka had done its trick. He reached a bear’s paw across the table, grabbed a hunk of my shirtfront, and twisted it. “Tell us where she is! Now!”
For a second I considered smashing my beer bottle across his face. Except it was still half full and I hated to waste.
I grinned at him instead. Smiles cost nothing.
“Gladimir, comrade, buddy,” I said, “hasn’t Coy here told you why she really wants to find this woman? From that look on your face, I guess not. She isn’t interested in helping Michael Cassidy—all she wants is to get a line on the guy who ripped her off. Law Addison, the man Michael Cassidy ran off with.”
I don’t know how much of it Gladimir was processing, but it interested him enough that his grip loosened up on my shirt.
He turned to Coy d’Loy. “What’s he saying?”
“I’ve no idea.”
“Then try this on for size,” I said. “Up until this past Spring, the Peer Group—like many of its clients—was heavily invested with a financial outfit called Isolde Enterprises, run by a man named Lawrence Addison. The problem is Addison turned out to be a con man and an embezzler and he did a disappearing act with all their money. The way I heard it, the business almost went under, until someone stepped in and bailed them out, becoming a new silent partner. Sound familiar? I make that new partner to be you, Gladimir.”