“She’s fifty-one hundred, Lieutenant,” he said as she crossed to the elevator. “I don’t mean to tell you your job or anything, but if you could maybe gentle it up some with Ms. Wallace? It’s going to knock her back pretty hard.”
Eve nodded, stepped into the elevator. Murder was supposed to knock you back, she thought. She keyed the names the doorman had given her into her notes as the elevator rode silently, smoothly up fifty-one floors.
As she pressed the buzzer beside the wide double doors of 5100, she wondered what constituted “gentling it up.”
The woman who answered had about five pounds of madly curling black hair and skin the color of Peabody’s coffee regular. Her eyes, a spring leaf green, held Eve’s for a long beat. Long enough Eve understood she didn’t have to worry about the gentle.
“I know you.” The smoky voice was breathless. “I know who you are. It’s Adrianne. Something’s happened.” Her lips trembled, her hand squeezed the edge of the door. “Please say it very fast.”
“I have to inform you Adrianne Jonas is dead. I’m sorry for your loss.”
She swayed, but even as Eve braced to catch her, she toughened up. Tears sheened those soft green eyes, but didn’t fall. “Someone killed Adrianne.”
“Yes.”
“Someone killed Adrianne,” she repeated. “She wasn’t here when I got here. She’s not answering her ’link, and she always answers her ’link. Someone killed Adrianne.”
Just because the woman wasn’t going to faint or scream or rush into hysterics didn’t mean she wasn’t in shock. Gentle, Eve supposed, had different levels.
“I’d like to come in. Why don’t we go inside and sit down?”
“Yes, I need to sit down. Yes, come in.”
The entrance foyer led to another set of doors, open now, that connected to a large, high-ceilinged living space with a wide ribbon of windows. Seating had been cleverly built in beneath the windows, with more glass doors worked in between.
The woman chose a scroll-armed chair, lowered into it slowly. “When?”
“Early this morning. She was found in Central Park, near the Great Hill. Do you know why she would have been there?”
“She had an appointment. At three o’clock this morning.”
“With whom?”
“Darrin—” Her voice broke. She shook her head, cleared her throat. “Darrin Wasinski. A client. He wanted to arrange for his daughter to be married there, at that time of the morning. She and her fiancé had gotten engaged there, at that time.”
She put her fingers over her eyes, breathed and breathed. “I’m sorry. I’m trying to think clearly.”
“Take your time. Do you want something? Some water?”
“No. He wanted her to meet him there, to get an idea of the terrain, the look of it at that hour. His daughter wanted romantic, but unique. Something nobody else had done. He wanted Adrianne to handle the logistics. Oh, God, was Darrin killed, too? Oh, God.”
“No. Is he a new client?”
“No. He’s used us before, personally and professionally. He’s CFO for Intelicore, New York operations.”
Of course he is, Eve thought.
“I should have gone with her.” Her breath tore and wheezed as she fought for control. “Adrianne’s so self-sufficient, and God knows she can handle herself. But I should have gone with her. We were at a party last night, and she was going straight from there.”
“Where was the party?”
“Winston Dudley’s home. It was still going strong when I left, about one-thirty. I don’t know what time she left. Did Darrin meet her? Do you know if—”
Eve interrupted. “Did he personally book the appointment?”
“Yes. He e-mailed her yesterday afternoon. Lieutenant, Darrin wouldn’t have hurt Adrianne. I can swear to it. He’s a very lovely man, devoted to his family—which is why he’d go to such lengths to make this brainstorm of his daughter’s happen.”
“Did either you or Ms. Jonas or anyone else on staff actually speak to him about the arrangements?”
“Just by e-mail. It was very last minute, and nothing we’d have taken on except Darrin’s a regular, long-term client.”
And a booking by a regular, long-term client when Jonas would already be out—at the party Dudley had invited her to—ensured she’d be where they wanted her, when they wanted her.
“I’d like copies of the e-mails. Has Ms. Jonas ever facilitated for Mr. Moriarity, Mr. Dudley?”
“Yes. They’re very good clients. Was it a mugging?”
“No.”
“I didn’t see how it could be. She’s trained in self-defense, a black belt in several martial art disciplines, and she carried repel spray and a panic button.”
“In her purse?”
“The spray, yes. Her wrist unit had the panic button. It’s very much like mine.” Wallace tapped her wrist. “Adrianne gave everyone who works with her one. We go into unusual places, often at unusual times. We all take self-defense courses. She wanted us safe,” Wallace added, and the first tear spilled down her cheek. “Can you tell me what happened to her?”
It would be out soon enough. “She was hanged.”
“Oh, God, my God.” She blanched as her hands gripped together in her lap. “Can any of this be happening?”
“I know this is hard, but I need to see those e-mails. It would help if I could go through the apartment. Did she have workspace here?”
“Yes. Yes. We work in the adjoining unit, primarily. It spills over, of course, into the living space.”
“You and Ms. Jonas, and Katie?”
“Oh, Jesus, I have to tell Katie. She’s not due in until noon today. I should contact her. And Bill and Julie.”
“Bill and Julie?”
“Her parents. They live in Tulsa. She’s from Tulsa.”
“We’ll notify her parents. Maybe you can contact them later today after I’ve spoken with them.”
“All right. Yes. All right. I was worried, a little worried, when she wasn’t here this morning. But I thought maybe she went back to the party after her appointment, and maybe she went home with someone. It’s not usual, but she and Bradford Zander—one of the other guests last night—saw each other occasionally. But she didn’t answer her ’link, and she was fierce about always answering, or at least acknowledging a contact. But I told myself it was nothing, to give her a few more minutes, that she might be in the shower or . . .
“Then I saw you at the door, and I knew. We have a whole file on you.”
“You what?”
“Oh, that sounded wrong.” She rubbed her damp face with the heels of her hands. “Adrianne believes in being prepared. You might be a client one day. So we keep files—articles and basic data. She admired you. She believed, strongly, in women leaving a deep mark doing what they were meant to do. And as soon as I saw you, I knew why she wasn’t home, why she didn’t answer her ’link. She’s my best friend in the world, and I knew you were here to tell me she was dead.”
Wallace wiped another tear away, blinked the rest back. “You’ll find who did this to her. She’d have expected that from you. I’ll take you through to the offices.”
As they rose, the buzzer sounded.
“Will you excuse me a minute?”
As Wallace went to the door, Eve angled herself to keep it in view. She watched Roarke step in, take Wallace’s hands. He kept his voice low, so all she heard was the comfort in the tone.
When she turned back, Eve saw the tears had won again.
“I’ll take you both over. I’ll get a printout of the e-mails you wanted.”
“It would be helpful if you’d get me a list of anyone who knew Ms. Jonas was going to the park, and when.” Busywork, Eve thought, but it would give the woman something to do.
“All right.” She walked them back through the foyer and through already open doors to another large unit.
Another living space designed to Eve’s eye to keep clients comfortable. Stylish, sunny built-ins that likely housed entertainment and refreshment equipment.
Later, Eve decided, she’d need to go through the rest of the space, the more personal spaces.