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"It just came over the car — to — car cha
"How do you know it's the same guy?"
"How many people you know with a name like Smithback? Look, Larry, gotta go."
"Gee, how awful for him. Now about lunch—"
"Screw lunch." She nudged the phone closed with her chin, let it drop to her lap, and fired up the engine. Lettuce, tomato, green peppers, and scrambled egg went flying as she popped the clutch and scooted out into traffic.
It was the work of five minutes to get to West End Avenue and 92nd. Caitlyn was an expert at urban driving, and her Toyota had just enough dings and scrapes to warn off anyone who might think that one more wouldn't matter. She nudged the car into a spot in front of a fire hydrant — with any luck, she'd get her story and be gone before a traffic cop spotted the infraction. And if not, well, screw it, she owed more in tickets on the car than it was worth.
She walked quickly down the block, pulling a digital recorder from her pocket. A bunch of vehicles were double — parked outside 666 West End Avenue: two patrol cars, an unmarked Crown Vic, and an ambulance. A morgue wagon was just pulling away. Two uniformed cops were standing on the top step of the building's entrance, limiting access to residents only, but a knot of people huddled below on the sidewalk, talking in tense whispers. Their faces were uniformly pinched and drawn, almost — Kidd observed wryly — as if they'd all seen a ghost.
With practiced efficiency, she inserted herself into the restless, muttering group, listening to half a dozen conversations at once, deftly filtering out extraneous chatter and homing in on those who seemed to know something. She turned to one, a bald, heavyset man with a face the color of pomegranate skin. Despite the fall chill in the air, he was sweating profusely.
"Pardon me," she said, coming up to him. "Caitlyn Kidd, press. Is it true William Smithback was killed?"
He nodded.
"The reporter?"
The man nodded again. "Tragedy. He was a nice guy, used to bring me free newspapers. You a colleague?"
"I work the crime desk for the
West Sider.
So you knew him well?"
"Lived down the hall. I saw him just yesterday." He shook his head.
This was just what she needed. "What happened, exactly?"
"It was late last night. Guy with a knife cut him up real bad. I heard the whole thing. Awful."
"And the murderer?"
"Saw him, recognized him, guy who lives in the building. Colin Fearing." "Colin Fearing." Kidd repeated it slowly, for the recorder.
The man's expression changed to something she couldn't readily identify. "See, there's a problem there, though."
Kidd leapt at this. "Yes?"
"It seems Fearing died almost two weeks ago."
"Oh yeah?
How so?"
"Found his body floating up near Spuyten Duyvil. Identified, autopsied, everything."
"You sure about this?"
"The police told the doorman all about it. Then he told us."
"I don't understand," Kidd said.
The man shook his head. "Neither do I."
"But you're sure the man you saw last night was also Colin Fearing?"
"Not a doubt in my mind. Ask Heidi here, she recognized him as well." And the man gestured at a bookish, frightened — looking woman standing beside him. "The doorman, he saw him, too. Struggled with him. There he is now, coming out of the building." And he gestured toward the door where a short, dapper Hispanic man was emerging.
Quickly, Caitlyn got their names and a few other relevant details. She could only imagine what the headline guy back at the
West Sider
would do with this one.
Other reporters were arriving now, descending like buzzards, arguing with the cops who had roused themselves and were begi
She couldn't have cared less. She had her big scoop.
Chapter 5
Nora Kelly opened her eyes. It was night and all was quiet. A faint city breeze came through the window of her hospital room and rustled the modesty curtains drawn around the empty bed next to her.
The fog of painkillers was gone, and when she realized sleep would not return she lay very still, trying to hold back the tide of horror and sorrow threatening to overwhelm her. The world was cruel and capricious, and the very act of drawing breath seemed pointless. Even so, she tried to master her grief, to focus on the faint throbbing of her bandaged head, the sounds of the great hospital around her. Slowly, the shaking of her limbs subsided.
Bill — her husband, her lover, her friend — was dead. It wasn't just that she'd seen it; she couldfeel it in her bones. There was an absence, an emptiness. He was gone from the earth.
The shock and horror of the tragedy only seemed to grow with each passing hour, and the clarity of her thoughts was agonizing. How could this have happened? It was a nightmare, the brutal act of a pitiless God. Just last night they had been celebrating the first a
Once again she struggled to push back the wave of unbearable pain. Her hand reached for the call button and another dose of morphine, but she stopped herself. That was not the answer. She forced her eyes closed again, hoping for the grateful embrace of sleep but knowing it would not come. Perhaps it would never come.
She heard a noise, and a fleeting sense of déjà vu told her this same noise was what had woken her up. Her eyes flew open. It was the sound of a grunt, and it had come from the next bed in the double room. The sudden stab of panic subsided; someone must have been put into the bed while she was sleeping.
She turned her head toward it, trying to make out the person on the other side of the curtains. There was a faint sound of breathing now, ragged, stertorous. The curtains swayed and she realized it wasn't from the movement of air in the room after all, but rather from the shifting of the person in the bed. A sigh, a rustle of starched sheets. The semi — translucent curtains were backlit by the window, and she could just make out a dark silhouette. As she stared, it slowly rose up with another sigh and a wheezing grunt of effort.
A hand reached out and touched the curtains lightly from within.
Nora could see the faint shadow of a hand stroking and sliding along the gauzy folds, setting the curtains swaying. The hand found an opening, slipped through, and grasped the edge of the curtain.
Nora stared. The hand was dirty. It was mottled with dark, wet streaks — almost like blood. The longer she stared in the faint light, the more certain she became that itwas blood. Perhaps this was someone just back from the OR, or whose stitches had opened. Someone very ill.
"Are you all right?" she asked, her voice loud and hoarse in the silence.
Another grunt. The hand began drawing back the curtain very slowly. There was something horrible about the deliberation with which the steel loops of the curtain slid back along the ru
As the curtain drew back, it revealed a dark figure, draped in ragged clothing and covered with dark splotches. Sticky, matted hair stood up from its head. Nora held her breath. As she stared, the figure slowly turned its head to look at her. The mouth opened and a guttural sound came out, like water being sucked down a drain.