“I found the FedEx box, but not the contents.”
They went back up the stairs. As they arrived at the desk a man in a FedEx uniform placed an envelope on the desk and gave Gino an electronic box on which to sign. Stone watched as the doorman scrawled his name: only the G and the P were legible; the rest was a scrawl.
Stone thanked Poluci and he and Bob Cantor left. Outside, Stone stopped and handed the FedEx box to Cantor, his hand inside it. “Bob, I know this is a long shot, because a lot of people may have handled it, but I’d like for you to go over this box very, very carefully, see if you can find any legible prints, and if you do, run them against every database you’ve got.”
“Okay, I’ll go back to the office and start on it now,” Cantor said. “I’ll try to have something for you late this afternoon.”
The two men shook hands, and Stone sent Cantor on his way. He decided to walk back to Turtle Bay; it was thirty blocks or so, but the exercise wouldn’t kill him. He began thinking his way through the steps of assembling and sending a FedEx package. You had to put stuff inside, then you had to fill out a waybill or print one from your computer. You’d seal it, then it would begin its journey through the system. Finally, it would be received at the front desk of the building and delivered to the recipient. Except this one wasn’t delivered, because the recipient was dead. It apparently didn’t get to Morgan or her housekeeper, either. It was emptied and the box placed in a locked storage cabinet in a locked apartment storage unit.
The last thing to happen would be for the FedEx box to be discarded, but that hadn’t happened. Someone had opened two locks in order to place it in a steel cabinet, to save it as if it were important. Why? It couldn’t be reused, and it didn’t make any sense to save it.
By the time he got home his feet were hurting, and so was his head.
? ? ?
STONE SAID TO JOAN as he passed her desk, “Hold my calls, will you, please?” He took off his jacket, stretched out on the leather sofa in his office, and dozed.
? ? ?
SOMEBODY TOOK HOLD of Stone’s shoulder and shook him gently. “Bob Cantor’s on the phone,” Joan said. “He said you’d want to hear from him.”
Stone sat up and reached for the phone on the coffee table. “Bob?”
“Hey. I got your package done.”
“What did you find?”
“I got four legible prints off it—two of them were FedEx employees, who would have handled it in the course of business. One was a Margaretta Fernandez, who, according to her Social Security records, is employed as a housemaid for one Mark Tillman. The other is Pio Farina. This one had a juvie record of being a suspect in several burglaries, but no charges were brought. That’s it.”
“Thank you, Bob, that’s very helpful. Send me your bill.”
“Okay. Call when you need me.”
Stone hung up the phone. Pio’s print made perfect sense: he would have handled it on the way to the FedEx store to send it. The maid? She might have received it from one of the doormen. Not Gino, because someone else had signed his name; probably not Ralph, because he had had a chance to pick up $10,000 and didn’t. Certainly it was someone who had a key, not just to the storage units, but to the steel file cabinets, as well. Morgan? She fit the bill. So did the maid, who might have known where the key would be kept in the household.
Stone picked up the phone and called Morgan.
“Hello, there,” she said. “It’s been forever.”
“It was the day before yesterday.”
“In my book, it’s forever. What can we do about that?”
“Let’s have dinner tonight,” Stone said.
“I am agreeable to that. Why don’t I cook something for us?”
“I was not aware that you possessed that skill set.”
“My dear, I am a certificated graduate of Cordon Bleu—London, not Paris. I was sent to the forty-day bride’s course, created for young women of good family who are unacquainted with the concept of boiling water.”
“And how did you do?”
“Top of my class,” she said.
“Then I’ll risk it. What time?”
“Say, seven o’clock?”
“You’re on.”
“Please wear tearaway clothing,” she said. “Cooking makes me amorous.”
“I’ll see what I can do.”
29
STONE TURNED UP on time and, in addition to a kiss from Morgan, was welcomed by an inviting aroma from the kitchen. She sat him down on a living room sofa and brought them both a drink from the bar. “Now,” she said, tapping his glass with hers, “tell me about your day.”
“Did you learn that at Cordon Bleu?” Stone asked.
She laughed. “As a matter of fact, I did. We had a few side lectures to the cooking course, one of them attuned to one’s conduct with the gentleman who is the recipient of the evening meal one has just prepared.”
“Aha. I thought it must be something like that.”
“But I really would like to know about your day,” she said, kissing him on an ear. “I can’t imagine what it is you do when you’re not with me.”
Stone decided it was time to be frank with her. “Well, I spent a good part of my day rummaging around in a storage room, looking for something.”
“One, what were you looking for? Two, and in whose storage room?” she asked.
“One, a Federal Express box,” he replied. “Two, yours.”
Her brow wrinkled. “My what?”
“Your storage room.”
She sat back and looked at him as if he were a naughty child. “Are you perfectly serious?”
“Perfectly.”
“Tell me what this is about, and I may not punish you.”
He set down his drink, took her by the shoulders, and pushed her into the sofa cushions. “All right. It’s not a simple story, and I’d like you to wait until I’ve finished before you ask any questions.”
“That level of restraint is not in my character,” she replied, “but I’ll do the best I can.”
“Here we go. I have learned that early on the afternoon of Mark’s death, he was visited by Pio Farina and Ann Kusch, at his invitation. He gave them a drink, they chatted for a while, and as they left, he asked them to drop off a package at the Federal Express store on Second Avenue, which was on their way to the tunnel. They did so, depositing it in the box outside the store.”
Morgan raised her hand, like a schoolgirl.
“Not yet,” Stone said.
She pouted, then lowered her hand.
“Subsequent investigation by the police revealed that Mark had addressed the box to himself, for third-day delivery.
“Not yet,” Stone said.
She rolled her eyes.
“The box arrived downstairs on the Wednesday following Mark’s death.”
“The day of his cremation,” she said.
“I’m not finished. Someone signed for the package, using Gino Poluci’s name, but it wasn’t Gino. Subsequent to that—I’m not sure when—the package was opened, the contents removed, and the empty box was placed in a locked steel cabinet inside the storage unit of Apartment 15A, where I found it today.”
She raised a hand again.
“What?”
“I have a list of questions before you continue.”
Stone sighed. “All right, go ahead.”
She held up a finger. “One, why would Mark send a package to himself?”
“Because he knew this apartment would be searched, and he didn’t want the contents of the package found.”
She held up two fingers. “What was in the package?”
“I can’t be certain, but I believe it was the missing van Gogh.”
Her jaw dropped.
“Do you have any further questions?”
“Yes, but I forgot what they were. Continue, please.”
“I had the box checked for fingerprints,” Stone said, “and four were found and identified. Two belonged to FedEx employees, one belonged to Pio Farina, and . . . one belonged to Margaretta Fernandez.”
Morgan stared at him. “Why . . .”
“Be specific.”
“Why was Margaretta’s fingerprint on the package?”
“Because at some point she handled it. Perhaps a doorman delivered it to her while you were out.”
“And did you say you found the empty box in my storage unit?”