A moment later the phone vibrated and he answered. Duncan said, "I'm inside. How's the street look?"
"A few cars from time to time. Nobody on the sidewalks. It's clear."
Vincent heard a few metallic clicks. Then the man's voice in a whisper: "I'll call you when she's ready."
Ten minutes later Vincent saw someone in a dark coat walking toward the workshop. The stance and motion suggested it was a woman. Yep, it was his flower girl, Joanne.
A burst of hunger filled him.
He ducked low, so she wouldn't see him. He pushed the TRANSMIT button on the phone.
He heard the click of Duncan's phone. No "hello" or "yes."
Vincent lifted his head slightly and saw her walk up to the door. He said into the phone, "It's her. She's alone. She should be inside any minute."
The killer said nothing. Vincent heard the click of the phone hanging up.
Okay, he was a keeper.
Joanne Harper and Kevin had had three coffees at Kosmo's Diner, otherwise just another functional, boring eatery in SoHo, but as of today a very special place. She was now walking to the back door of the workshop, reflecting that she wished she could have lingered for another half hour or so. Kevin had wanted to-there were more jokes to tell, more stories to share-but her job loomed. It wasn't due till tomorrow night, but this was an important client and she needed to make sure the arrangements were perfect. She'd reluctantly told him she had to get back.
She glanced up and down the street, still a bit uneasy about the pudgy man in the parka and the weird sunglasses. But the area was deserted. Stepping inside the workshop, she slammed the door and double-locked it.
Hanging up her coat, Joanne inhaled deeply, the way she always did when she first walked inside, enjoying the myriad scents inside the shop: jasmine, rose, lilac, lily, gardenia, fertilizer, loam, mulch. It was intoxicating.
She flicked on the lights and started toward the arrangements she'd been working on earlier. Then she froze and gave a scream.
Her foot had struck something. It scurried away from her. She leapt back, thinking: Rat!
But then she looked down and laughed. What she'd kicked was a large spool of florist wire in the center of the aisle. How had it gotten there? All of the spools hung from hooks on the wall nearby. She squinted through the dimness and saw that somehow this one had slipped off and rolled across the floor. Odd.
Must be ghosts of florists past, she said to herself, then regretted the joke. The place was eerie enough and an image of the fat man in the sunglasses came back immediately. Don't go spooking yourself.
She picked up the spool and saw why it had fallen: the hook had slipped out of the wood. That's all. But then she noticed something else curious. This spool was one of the new ones; she hadn't used any wire from it yet, she thought. But she must have; some was missing.
She laughed. Nothing like love to make a girl forgetful.
Then she paused, cocking her head. She was listening to a sound she was unaccustomed to.
What was it?
Very odd…dripping water?
No, it was mechanical. Metal…
Weird. It sounded like a ticking clock. Where was it coming from? The workshop had a large wall clock in the back but it was electric and didn't tick. Joanne looked around. The noise, she decided, was coming from a small, windowless work area just beyond the refrigerated room. She'd check it out in a minute.
Joanne bent down to repair the hook.
Amelia Sachs skidded to a stop in front of Ron Pulaski. After he jumped in she pointed the car north and gunned the engine.
The rookie gave her the details of the meeting with Jordan Kessler. He added, "He seemed legit. Nice guy. But I just thought I ought to check with Mrs. Creeley myself to confirm everything-about what Kessler gets because of Creeley's death. She said she trusts him and everything's on the up-and-up. But I still wasn't sure so I called Creeley's lawyer. Hope that was okay."
"Why wouldn't it be okay?"
"Don't know. Just thought I'd ask."
"It's always okay to do too much work in this business," Sachs told him. "The problems're when somebody doesn't do enough."
Pulaski shook his head. "Hard to imagine somebody working for Lincoln and being lazy."
She gave a cryptic laugh. "And what'd the lawyer say?"
"Basically the same thing Kessler and the wife said. He buys out Creeley's share at fair market value. It's all legit. Kessler said his partner had been drinking more and had taken up gambling. His wife told me she was surprised he did that. Never was an Atlantic City kind of guy."
Sachs nodded. "Gambling-maybe some mob connections there. Dealing to them, or just taking along recreational drugs. Money laundering maybe. He win or lose, you know?"
"Dropped some big money, seems like. I was wondering if he hit a loan shark to cover the loss. But his wife said the losses were no big deal, what with his income and everything. A couple hundred thousand didn't hurt much. She wasn't real happy about it, you can imagine… Kessler said he had a good relationship with all his clients. But I asked for a list. I think we ought to talk to them ourselves."
"Good," Sachs told him. Then she added, "Things're getting gluier. There was another death. Murder/robbery, maybe." She explained about her meeting with Gerte and told him about Frank Sarkowski. "I need you to track down the file."
"You bet."
"I-"
She stopped speaking. She'd glanced into the rearview mirror and felt a tug in her gut. "Hm."
"What?" Pulaski asked.
She didn't answer but made a leisurely turn to the right, went several blocks more and then made a sharp left. "Okay, we may have a tail. Saw it a few minutes ago. Merc made those turns with us just now. No, don't look."
It was a black Mercedes with darkened windows.
She turned again, abruptly, and braked to a stop. The rookie grunted at the tug from the belt. The Merc kept going. Sachs glanced back, missed the tag but saw that the car was an AMG, the expensive, souped-up version of the German car.
She spun the Camaro in a U-turn but just then a delivery truck double-parked in front of her. By the time she got around it the Merc was gone.
"Who do you think it was?"
Sachs shifted hard. "Probably a coincidence. Real rare to get tailed. And, believe me, it never happens by some dude in a hundred-and-forty-thousand-dollar car."
Touching the cold body, the florist lying on the concrete, her face as pale as white roses scattered on the floor.
The cold body, cold as the Cold Moon, but still soft; the hardness of death had not yet set in.
Cutting the cloth off, the blouse, the bra…
Touching…
Tasting…
These were the images cascading through Vincent Reynolds's thoughts as he sat in the driver's seat of the Band-Aid-mobile, staring into the dark workshop across the street, breathing fast, anticipating what he was about to do to Joanne. Consumed with hunger.
Noise intruded. "Traffic Forty-two, can you…they want to add some barriers at Nassau and Pine. By the reviewing stand."
"Sure, we can do that. Over."
The words represented no threat to him or Gerald Duncan and so Vincent continued his fantasy.
Tasting, touching…
Vincent imagined that the killer would probably be pulling Joanne down on the floor, trussing her up right now. Then he frowned. Would Duncan be touching her in certain places? Her chest, between her legs?
Vincent was jealous.
Joanne was his girlfriend, not Duncan's. Goddamn it! If he wanted to fuck something, let him go find a nice girl on his own…
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