The Fifth Avenue Series Boxed Set (81 page)

“Hurry,” Jack said, when the man stepped inside. “I’ve got twenty minutes to get my ass on that plane. Move!”

The washroom was large and clean and empty.
 
They entered the last two stalls and started undressing.
 

“Did anyone follow you?” Jack asked.

The pilot tossed his clothes over the stall partition.
 
“No,” he said.
 
“No one followed me.”
 
He paused to grasp the uniform Jack slipped under the gray metal wall and said, “Before you get on that plane, you should call Redman.”

“Can’t,” Jack said. “His phone might be bugged.”

“Then call ahead to the police.
 
You won’t be there for another seven hours.
 
Ryan might have done something by then.”

Jack left the stall and went to the full-length mirror. The clothes were loose, but not too loose. The baseball cap concealed his sandy hair.

“Forget it,” he said.
 
“Louis Ryan probably owns the police.”

The pilot stepped out of the stall and stood beside Jack.
 
Their eyes met.
 
“Besides,” Jack said, “by the time we arrive, Ryan will be at the opening of his new hotel.
 
The event will just be getting underway.
 
We know he’s planned something significant, but it won’t happen at that party.”

“I disagree.
 
That’s exactly when he’d plan it.”

“I don’t think so,” Jack said.
 
“I’ve got a hunch.”

He moved toward the door, but stopped to shoot the pilot a look.
 
“Buy your daughter a gift.
 
They’ll be watching.”

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER FIFTY-THREE

 

As soon as Elizabeth laid eyes on him, she knew that something else was wrong, knew it had to do with the envelope he just received by messenger.
 
It was not a familiar look, that brief glimpse of horror she saw in his eyes, but she recognized it just the same.

She closed the door behind her and stood there, not far from him or his desk, watching his features slowly return to normal as he folded the letter in half and tucked it in his jacket pocket.
 
For a moment, he was unmoving, his gaze fixed on the photo of Leana that was on his desk.
 
Then he took a breath and looked up at his wife.
 
The years he had never shown were suddenly there on his face.

Elizabeth took a step forward, out of the shadows and into the light.
 
“What is it?” she asked.
 
“Is it about Celina?”
 

George didn’t answer.
 
With an effort, he rose from his seat and crossed to the bar.
 
He chose a gold-rimmed highball glass and poured himself a glass of Scotch.
 
He drank.
 

Watching George, sensing his fear almost as surely as she sensed this sudden tension, Elizabeth felt inept, unable to help him.
 

She stepped beside him.
 

George put the empty glass down onto the bar and poured himself another drink.
 
It seemed that forever passed before he finally spoke.
 
“No,” he said. “This isn’t about Celina.”
 

“Then what’s it about?”
 

“I can’t tell you,” he said.
 
“At least not now.
 
So, please don’t push me on this.
 
I have to leave.”
 

Elizabeth watched him walk away from her.
 

Across the room, through the long stretches of darkness and silence, was the dim glass of an enormous, 18th-century beveled mirror.
 
George hesitated before it and his back stiffened.
 
Framed in gold and heavy with age, his pale face loomed in the night, glowing like some odd, faraway moon.
 
He stared at himself, and there was the sense that he didn’t recognize the person staring back.
 

Elizabeth went to him.

She put her arms around him and held him.
 
She was eager to know where he was going, but she trusted him enough not to ask and instead stood there, holding him, feeling his body relax slightly against hers.
 

“I have to go,” he said.
 

“I know.”
 

“I want you to stay here.”
 

“I can’t.”
 

He turned and kissed her on the lips. They looked at one another for a long moment and then George broke the embrace.
 
He made and effort and smiled at her.
 
“I might be a while,” he said.
 
“Don’t wait up for me.
 
Okay?”
 

Elizabeth suddenly felt sick.
 
She took a step back and watched him look around his
 
office.
 
It was as though he was seeing it for the first time, maybe the last.
 

Reluctantly, she watched him move toward the twin mahogany doors and step into the hall.
 

She went after him.
 

“I’m really not that tired,” she called.
 
“I can’t imagine falling asleep.”
 

The hallway was long and in shadow, so dim it seemed almost gaslit.
 
Isadora, the family cat, left the library and now was trotting after George, her tail high and full.
 
Above them, their shadows joined on the ceiling in a delicate sort of embrace.
 

“Well talk when you get back,” Elizabeth said. “All right?”
 

“I love you,” she said.

George lifted a hand in response.
 
He turned the corner and was gone.
 

 

 

*
  
*
  
*

 

 

Ten minutes later, when he pushed through Redman International’s revolving glass doors, George hesitated only a moment before he walked the few steps to the black Mercedes limousine that was waiting for him at curbside.

Vincent Spocatti was leaning against the driver’s side door.
 
“Mr. Redman,” he said, with a slight bow of his head.
 
“Glad you could make it.”
 

George looked at the man, committed his face to memory, but said nothing. He stepped inside the limousine and came face to face with a woman.

She was striking.
 
She was dressed completely in black, her long, dark hair pulled away from her face.
 
Her mouth tightened slightly when he sat down next to her.
 

And there was someone else in the car.
 
He was sitting next to the woman, his own face a frozen mask.
 
It was Michael Archer.
 

The two men stared at each other.
 
Ropes of silence spun out between them.
 

George was about to speak when the woman started frisking him.
 
Her hands were quick and thorough.
 
She looked at Spocatti when he leaned inside the open door.
 
“He’s clean.” she said.
 

Spocatti glanced at Michael and George.
 
“Jesus,” he said.
 
“Would you look
 
at yourselves?
 
You’d think we were going to a morgue and not a party.
 
Lighten the hell up.”
   

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER FIFTY-FOUR

 

Music swelled, there was a sharp burst of applause and Leana continued moving through the crowd, smiling to people she didn’t know, nodding to those who suddenly knew her, wondering where Michael was.
 

She had no escort.
 
She was surrounded by hundreds of smiling, laughing people, yet never had she felt more alone.
 
Where was he?
 
She specifically asked him to be here by eight, so they could join the party together at eight-thirty. Yet now it was pushing ten and he was nowhere in sight.

Neither was Louis.

Alone, she had just finished greeting, by name, the better part of eighteen hundred guests, including the French ambassador, the British ambassador, Countess Castellani and her blind husband, Count Luftwick, Lady Ionesco from Spain, and the mayor and governor of New York. Alone, she had given interviews to select members of the press—an exhausting task that hadn’t gone well.
 
Everyone wanted to know why she took this position given the public feud that existed between her father and Louis Ryan.
 
And everyone wanted to know if there was any information on Celina.

Leana had handled them, cleverly skirting their questions and instead concentrating on the hotel and its future.
 
But she was tired and not having a good time.
 
She looked around the crowded space.
 
At least the flowers had been delivered.

She panned the room for Michael.
 
She saw men her father had once cut deals with, powerful women Celina once charmed, couples her mother once invited to dinner.
 
She saw old money and new money, wealthy widows and wealthier divorcees.
 
But there was no sign of Michael.
 
He hadn’t arrived.

There was a hand on her arm.
 
Leana turned and saw Louis Ryan.

“Dance?” he asked.

Leana looked crossly at him.
 
He was wearing a black silk dinner jacket and a deep red tie.
 
“Where have you been?” she asked.
 
“People have been asking where you are, I had to greet the guests myself and you said you’d be here hours ago.
 
Where were you?”

Louis lifted a finger to his lips.
 
“I know I’m late and I apologize.
 
But I do have an excellent excuse.”
 
He paused, then said in a quieter voice, “I’ve found the person who murdered your sister.”

Stunned, Leana could only look at him. “You’ve found him?”

“That’s right,” Louis said.
 
“Spocatti came through.
 
I told you he’s the best.”

“Who is he?
 
Where is he?”

“I won’t talk about it in this crowd—too many people listening.”
 
He motioned toward the dance floor, where society was whirling.
 
“Come,” he said.
 
“Dance with me.
 
I’ll whisper what I know in your ear.”

She followed him to the dance floor, hesitating only briefly when a photographer stepped in their path to take their picture.
 
A light flashed, the photographer moved aside and as Leana walked passed him, she saw on his face the hunger and desperation her sister must have seen when she was in this very position.
 

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