D’Agosta slumped in a chair, feeling dazed and in shock. It seemed one-half of his body was numb, and the half that wasn’t was throbbing in pain. The old mansion gave him the creeps, so damp, cold, and dark. Was this really where Pendergast was now living? Here the guy had a beautiful place on Central Park West, but chose instead to live in deepest Harlem, in a spookhouse of a museum no less, all stuffed animals and skeletons and shelves covered with weird crap. At least this library was like an oasis: soft chairs, a roaring fire. Pendergast had a guest, it seemed, but for the moment D’Agosta felt too scratched, bruised, and wiped out to care.
“You look like you just escaped from the devil,” Pendergast said.
“I did.”
“Sherry?”
“You wouldn’t happen to have a cold Bud?”
Pendergast looked pained. “Would a Pilsner Urquell do?”
“If it’s beer, it’ll do.”
The other occupant of the library—a young woman in a long salmon-colored dress—rose and left the room. Within a few minutes, she was back, bearing a glass of beer on a salver. D’Agosta took it and drank gratefully. “Thanks, uh . . .”
“Constance,” came the soft reply.
“Constance Greene,” said Pendergast. “My ward. This is Sergeant Vincent D’Agosta, a trusted associate of mine. He’s assisting in this case.”
D’Agosta glanced at Pendergast. His ward? What the hell did that mean? He looked back more curiously at the girl. She was beautiful, in a pale, delicate kind of way. Her dress was very proper and demure, but the breasts that swelled the lace-front brought a most undemure stirring to D’Agosta’s loins. Despite the old-fashioned clothes, she looked no older than twenty. But those violet eyes of hers, so alert and intelligent, somehow didn’t look like the eyes of a young girl at all. Not at all.
“Glad to meet you,” said D’Agosta, straightening up in his chair and wincing.
“Are you hurt?” Pendergast asked.
“Just about everywhere.” D’Agosta took another long pull.
“Tell us what happened.”
D’Agosta set down the glass. “I’ll start at the beginning. I visited Lady Milbanke first. She was a complete wash. All she wanted to do was talk about her new emerald necklace. Cutforth wasn’t much better: lied about the reason Grove called him, answered questions evasively if at all. Last was Bullard, at the New York Athletic Club. Claims he hardly knew Grove, doesn’t know why he called, can’t really remember what they chatted about, doesn’t know how Grove got his number. A liar through and through, and didn’t even bother to hide it.”
“Interesting.”
“Yeah, a real piece of work. Big, ugly, arrogant motherf—” D’Agosta glanced at the girl. “Man. Basically, he blew me off. I left, ate dinner at Mullin’s Pub over on Broadway. Caught sight of a gold Impala more than once. Took the subway to 96th and walked over to Riverside. Hoofed it from there. The Impala reappeared again around 130th.”
“Heading north or south?”
D’Agosta wondered why that was important. “North.”
Pendergast nodded.
“I saw something was about to come down, so I ran into Riverside Park. Two guys jumped out and chased me, shooting laser-sighted handguns: accurate, large-caliber. Chased me through the park. I ran down toward the West Side Highway and came up against a chain-link fence. I really thought it was over. Then I noticed a recent car wreck fifty yards on. Some shitbox had gone through the fence, making a gap. Just left the car rotting there. I dove through the gap, lost them on the highway, flagged down a car. It let me off at the next exit, but I couldn’t get a cab and had to walk the thirty blocks back down. Sticking to the shadows the whole way, watching out for that Impala—it took quite some time.”
Pendergast nodded again. “So one of the men followed you onto the subway, the other drove the car. They reconnected and tried to cut you off.”
“That’s how I figured it. An old trick.”
“Did you return fire?”
“Lot of good it did me.”
“Ah! And your vaunted shooting ability?”
D’Agosta looked down. “Little rusty.”
“The question is, who sent them?”
“It seemed to happen awful damn fast after I got Bullard stirred up.”
“Perhaps too fast.”
“Bullard didn’t look like the kind of guy who would wait. He’s the decisive type.”
Pendergast nodded.
Throughout this recitation, the young woman had listened politely. Now she rose from the couch. “With your permission, I’ll leave you to discuss this matter amongst yourselves.” She had a precise, mannered way of speaking, and a faint accent that for some reason reminded D’Agosta of old black-and-white movies. She came over and kissed Pendergast lightly on the cheek. “Good night, Aloysius.” Then she turned toward D’Agosta and nodded. “A pleasure to make your acquaintance, Sergeant.”
A moment later the door to the library closed, and silence fell.