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“You’re a good son.”

“Hey, she’s my mom.”

Nadia imagined what a first date might be like. The circumstances were all wrong for her to even go there. Milan was either dead or dying. But she couldn’t help herself. Something casual, maybe lunch at a French bistro and a matinee.

He said, “Let me ask you. Just out of curiosity. You said the man who got shot spoke gibberish in your ear. What exactly did he say? The things people say in circumstances like that fascinate me.”

A car ahead of them hit the brakes hard. Specter did the same. The lurch jolted Nadia. What had he just asked her? She looked beyond the car. Fifth Street was two blocks away. Funny, they kept moving but never got any closer to the police station.

“You remember, don’t you?” he said, eyes on the road. “His exact words?”

He was pushing that question too hard. Nadia reached between her legs and put her hand inside her bag. “Sure, sure,” she said. “But first, let me ask you a question.”

“Okay. Shoot.”

“What is an arteriography?”

He laughed. “What?”

“You heard me. What is an arteriography, and how is it done? They did it to my ex-husband. In the ER. Before he died. After his car crash.”

“Are you kidding me?” Still laughing.

“No, I’m not kidding you. Tell me what it is.”

His laugh dissolved into a look of thorough confusion. “I don’t understand. What’s the problem?”

“The problem, Dr. Specter, is that you don’t know how to check for artery damage, do you?”

No answer. One beat. Still confused. Two beats. Confusion fading. Three beats. Neutral expression. Air in the cabin like nitro.

Specter lunged across Nadia’s body and hammered the glove box with his palm. The lid fell open.

A shiny silver gun in a black leather holster.

Nadia whipped a canister out of her bag and blasted him with pepper spray.

He screamed and slammed the brakes. The car stopped on command. His hands went to his face.

Nadia jumped out the door. Raced toward First Avenue. She told herself not to glance over her shoulder. It would only slow her down.

A yellow cab with a vacant light.

Nadia shouted, “Taxi.”

The driver slowed but didn’t stop. He’d heard her voice but didn’t see her coming down the street. He was rolling away.

At the end of the sidewalk, Nadia didn’t bother looking both ways. She ran onto First Avenue.

A car swerved to miss her. A truck hit the brakes to avoid the car. Horns blared.

The taxi stopped.

Nadia ignored the insults being hurled at her. She ran to the cab, jumped inside, and told the driver to take her to the police station on Fifth Street.

She gave the driver a twenty-dollar bill for a six-dollar fare and didn’t bother waiting for change. Instead, she sprinted into the station.

She told the desk sergeant she’d witnessed a shooting and wanted to report a crime. He took down some basic information and asked her to wait for a detective.

Only when she sat down did she realize her hands were shaking.

CHAPTER 5

AFTER WAITING THIRTY-THREE minutes, Nadia was escorted to the squad room by a detective named Hyland. He was a sturdy veteran with suspicious eyes and love handles above the shirt collar around his neck.

Nadia took a seat in a chair beside his workstation. Stacks of papers, folders, and nine empty Diet Coke cans covered his desk. A flyer promoted the NYPD Museum Car Show.

She told him everything that had transpired that evening, omitting nothing. The problem was, the words coming out of her lips sounded preposterous, especially to a cop who worked Alphabet City. By the time she was done, Nadia could smell his disbelief.

“Did you happen to get a license plate?” he said, twirling a pen that looked like a Montblanc except the black lacquer paint was peeling.

“No.”

“No as in nothing? Not even a partial? On either car?”

“No, I’m sorry. When I was on the sidewalk, both cars were parked parallel to me. When I was in the sports car, we were moving fast. And when I got out of the sports car, I didn’t look back. I was running for my life.”

“Right,” Hyland said, dunking the word in a vat of sarcasm as he looked down at his notes. “From the doctor who turned out to not be a doctor. Which you figured out when he kept asking you what the dying man whispered in your ear. Which was that Damian and Andrew—was it Stein or Steen?”

“Steen.”

“Right. Steen. Damian someone or other and Andrew Steen control the fate of the free world.”

“No. That’s not what he said. He didn’t say they controlled the fate of the free world. He just said, ‘Fate of the free…’” Nadia’s voice trailed off. It didn’t matter what he had said.

Hyland placed his pen on his notes with both hands as though laying it to rest in a casket.

She sighed. “I know. I know how it sounds. Look, I’m not a good liar. I don’t even pretend to be. You must be a good judge of character after all your years as a policeman. Do I look like I’m lying to you?”

Hyland tilted his head at Nadia and leaned back in his chair. “Have you been drinking tonight, Miz Tesla?”

“No, I have not been drinking.”

“Not one drink?”

“No means no.”

“Have you ever been arrested?”

“Excuse me?”

“Have you ever been arrested and charged with a crime?”

Nadia looked around to see if anyone else was listening. The other detectives in the room were on the phone or conducting their own interviews.

“Yes,” she said.

His eyebrows shot up. “What was the charge?”

“Weapons possession.”

“In New York?”

Nadia shook her head. “New Jersey.” She told him how she’d inadvertently taken a bag with an old family gun to the airport.

“What was the disposition of the case?”

“I pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor disorderly-persons charge.”

“When did this happen?”

“March.”

Hyland sat up straight. “Of this year?”

“Yes.”

“You’re on probation now?”

“Yes.”

“Do you have any weapons in your possession now?”

“No, I don’t have any weapons—”

“What about that pepper spray you used? Did you buy it in New York?”

“No, I bought it at a sporting goods store in Connecticut. I gave my mother one canister and kept the other. Pepper spray is legal in New York.”

“Not if it was bought outside the state. It has to be bought in New York State. If it was bought in Connecticut, you’re actually carrying an illegal weapon that is a violation of your probation.”

“What? This is ridiculous. I came here to report a crime, and I told you the complete truth. A man got shot, for God’s sake. He got shot. And you’re worrying about where I bought my pepper spray?”

“Oh. About the man you say got shot. Officers responded to a nine-one-one call earlier tonight. It was a muffled voice from an untraceable cell phone. Said a man had been shot on Seventh Street.”

“That’s it,” Nadia said. “That must have been Specter calling in the shooting of Mr. Milan.”

“Oh, I’m sure it was,” Hyland said with disgust, the kind honed by a lifetime of listening to lies. “In your mind.”

“Pardon?”

“There was no victim when our officers arrived. There was no man. There was no shooting. Some residents said they heard a car backfire a few times, and there was a crash. But both cars moved on. No one was shot, Miz Tesla. There was no body at the scene.”