Gone Tomorrow
quiet. I walked south on Sixth and west on 33rd and came up along the flank of the faded old pile where I had bought my only uninterrupted night of the week. The MP5 was hard and heavy against my chest. The Hoths had only two choices: sleep on the street, or pay off a night porter. Manhattan has hundreds of hotels, but they break down quite easily into separate categories. Most of them are mid-market or better, where staffs are large and scams don’t work. Most of the down-market dumps are small. And the Hoths had fifteen people to accommodate. Five rooms, minimum. To find five empty unobtrusive rooms called for a big place. With a bent night porter working alone. I know New York reasonably well. I can make sense of the city, especially from the kind of angles most normal people don’t consider. And I can count the number of big old Manhattan hotels with bent night porters working alone on my thumbs. One was way west on 23rd Street. Far from the action, which was an advantage, but also a disadvantage. More of a disadvantage than an advantage, overall.
Second choice, I figured.
I was standing right next to the only other option.
The clock in my head was ticking past two-thirty in the morning. I stood in the shadows and waited. I wanted to be neither early nor late. I wanted to time it right. Left and right I could see traffic heading up on Sixth and down on Seventh. Taxis, trucks, some civilians, some cop cars, some dark sedans. The cross-street itself was quiet.
At a quarter to three I pushed off the wall and turned the corner and walked to the hotel door.
Chapter 73
The same night porter was on duty. Alone. He was slumped on a chair behind the desk, staring morosely into space. There were fogged old mirrors in the lobby. My jacket was puffed out in front of me. I felt I could see the shape of the MP5’s pistol grip and the curve of its magazine and the tip of its muzzle. But I knew what I was looking at. I assumed the night porter didn’t.
I walked up to him and said, “Remember me?”
He didn’t say yes. Didn’t say no. Just gave a kind of all-purpose shrug that I took to be an invitation to open negotiations.
“I don’t need a room,” I said.
“So what do you need?”
I took five twenties out of my pocket. A hundred bucks. Most of what I had left. I fanned the bills so he could see all five double-digits and laid them on his counter.
I said, “I need to know the room numbers where you put the people who came in around midnight.”
“What people?”
“Two women, thirteen men.”
“Nobody came in around midnight.”
“One of the women was a babe. Young. Bright blue eyes. Not easy to forget.”
“Nobody came in.”
“You sure?” “Nobody came in.”
I pushed the five bills toward him. “You totally sure?” He pushed the bills right back.
He said, “I’d like to take your money, believe me. But nobody came in tonight.”
I didn’t take the subway. I walked instead. A calculated risk. It exposed me to however many of the six hundred federal agents happened to be in the vicinity, but I wanted my cell phone to work. I had concluded that cell phones don’t work in the subway. I had never seen anyone using one down there. Presumably not because of etiquette. Presumably because of a lack of signal. So I walked. I used 32nd Street to get over to Broadway, and then I followed Broadway south, past luggage outlets and junk jewelry stores and counterfeit perfume wholesalers, all of them closed up and shuttered for the night. It was dark down there, and messy. A micro-neighborhood. I could have been in Lagos, or Saigon.
I paused at the corner of 28th Street to let a taxi slide by.
The phone in my pocket started to vibrate.
I backed into 28th and sat down on a shadowed stoop and opened the phone.
Lila Hoth said, “Well?”
I said, “I can’t find you.”
“I know.”
“So I’ll deal.”
“You will?”
“How much cash have you got?”
“How much do you want?”
“All of it.”
“Have you got the stick?”
“I can tell you exactly where it is.”
“But you don’t actually have it?”
“No.”
“So what was the thing you showed us in the hotel?”
“A decoy.”
“Fifty thousand dollars.”
“A hundred.”
“I don’t have a hundred thousand dollars.”
I said, “You can’t get on a bus or a train or a plane. You can’t get out. You’re trapped, Lila. You’re going to die here. Don’t you want to die a success? Don’t you want to be able to
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