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That night at home, Magliacci decided to leave for New York the next morning. He got up early and left a message on his supervisor’s phone that he was sick today and would try to make it in tomorrow. He threw his best sport coat in the back seat of the Lincoln and headed north on the Garden State Parkway. Lenny knew Tiffany’s had a store in Atlantic City but that was not an option. Too many people in Atlantic City knew him, and any notice of his activities with this ring, unique because of its inscription, had the potential to cause him trouble.

He parked off Fifth Avenue near Tiffany’s and smoothed his hair in the car mirror. The beard needed a trim but it was too late for that. When he tried to button his jacket he realized how long he’d had it, and thought of the promises he’d made to Molly to lose some weight. He took another look at the diamond ring, holding it in the sun to get the full spectrum of colors, and stuck it back into his pants. He patted his pocket several times for reassurance the ring was still there as he walked the two blocks to the corner of Fifth Avenue and 37th. He knew it was a tell to pickpockets but he couldn’t help himself. He looked at the Tiffany’s sign, shined the tops of his shoes on the back of his trouser legs and walked into the store. He looked around at the lights and displays and thought of the contrast between there and old man Barella’s shop.

A floor manager met him at the door. “How may I help you, sir?”

Magliacci fished the ring from his pocket. “Uh, I inherited this ring. I think it came from here.”

“Oh, wonderful!” said the manager with a congratulatory smile. “How can we help?”

“Well, I want information about it. You know, details.”

The man led him to a small paneled room. Lenny sank into a leather chair and moments later a woman came in and introduced herself as Laura Lerner and asked how she could help.

He gave her the diamond ring and addressed her as he might a subordinate. “Laura, I represent the estate of the deceased who left this ring. We’d like to know something about it.”

She left with the ring, returned with it two minutes later and punched something into her computer. She confirmed that it had been bought at Tiffany’s, gave him technical details about the stone and confirmed Barella’s thirty-thousand-dollar estimate for a new similar stone.

Lenny suppressed his excitement as he pressed on. “And can you determine who you sold the ring to from the initials on the inside?”

She looked at him apologetically. “That would require a great deal of documentation from you.”

Lenny thanked Lerner and left. The trip wasn’t a waste. She had confirmed what old man Barella said about value but, more important, Magliacci gleaned from a peek at the computer monitor the exact date the ring was purchased.

Driving back to Atlantic City, Magliacci racked his brain for a way to identify KA and JAG. The purchase date of the ring was a little more than seven years ago. Someone at the GT besides Gallardi must have known KA or JAG, probably both of them. Lenny thought of a handful who had worked there for a long time and scribbled their names on a legal pad as he drove. Of the seven he came up with, five were top Golden Touch executives, close allies of Gallardi’s who wouldn’t throw a bucket of water on Lenny if he were on fire, and the sixth was dead. He might have a chance with the seventh, a woman whose office was not located on the executive level with the others.

* * *

Before she became the Golden Touch’s first executive housekeeper, Maria Sanchez held the same position at a small four-star hotel in New York. She had bided her time for years waiting for the right opportunity to get out of the city. Maybe this new hotel and casino in Atlantic City was it, she told her husband when the headhunter contacted her. In prior years, they had driven down on vacation twice and loved the Boardwalk, the ocean air and the less frenetic pace. After clearing three preliminary interviews with some of the hotel executive staff, Maria met with Frank Gallardi himself for final approval. She knew within minutes he was a man she could work for all out. Everything about him — the people he surrounded himself with, the fact that he made eye contact when he talked to her, his straightforward manner — felt right. She figured Gallardi was impressed as well because he hired her on the spot. That same day, she and her husband found a house they liked within walking distance to both the Golden Touch complex and a Catholic church.

Maria had spoken to Gallardi’s widow soon after he died and offered her services in any way that might make things easier. Rose Gallardi thanked Maria and told her how much her husband thought of her, but of course there was nothing she or anyone else could do. She would not hesitate to call.

Since joining the Golden Touch Maria had been approached by headhunters representing almost every hotel in Atlantic City. Although her housekeeping department and its army of workers was not a profit center for the hotel, it contributed to the Golden Touch’s success. Every day, thousands of sheets and towels had to be laundered and hundreds of rooms cleaned and restocked — and all before three p.m. How efficiently it was done made an impression on the guests, and how economically it was carried out affected the hotel’s operating cost. Frank had told her more than once that the Golden Touch outperformed the other Boardwalk hotels in those areas and always gave Maria the credit. Which of course made her work all the harder for this man she loved like a brother and respected so much. Frank’s murder would not change that for Maria.

It was nine-fifteen when Maria’s phone rang for the hundredth time that morning. She picked it up without taking her eyes off of her computer monitor that listed checkouts.

“Leonard Magliacci. Need a few minutes.”

Maria took a deep breath. The hotel had been packed for a week and she didn’t have time to talk to anyone. The last person she wanted to see was Big Lenny, as those in her department referred to him. Although she had few direct dealings with him, she’d heard the occasional idle chatter among other managers that Frank had hired him as a favor to his sister and that he was nothing but a drain on Gallardi. To some, Big Lenny was laughing stock but Maria disliked his reputation too much to waste her own time even thinking about him.

“Very busy.” She spoke with a slight accent.

“Since it’s about my uncle’s estate I’d say it’s more important than whatever you’re doing.”

Maria restrained herself. “Go ahead then.”

“Not on the phone. Be there in a minute.”

Maria went to the ladies’ room to check her starched white blouse and green blazer. She was fifty-seven now, and even though she didn’t care what Leonard Magliacci thought about anything, she took as much pride in her personal appearance as in her work. When she returned to her office Magliacci was seated behind her desk in her chair, which was too small for him. She wasn’t pleased about that, and she wondered if he would be able to get out of it.

“What can I do for you, Mr. Magliacci?” She stood in front of her own desk, arms crossed behind her back.

Lenny looked at some papers he’d brought, and Maria wondered if they were her employment records. “You been here since the hotel opened, right?”

“Since day one. Yes.”

He nodded toward another chair beside her desk. “You can sit down.”

“I’ll stand. I’m sure you can see how busy we are,” she said, forcing a smile that was polite at best.

He nodded. “Came across the name Karly in some of my uncle’s things. She was probably around the hotel several years ago. I think her last name was spelled with an A. Know her?”