New York Dead
sweetly.
“You’ve been very helpful, Herbert,” Stone said, “and we appreciate your cooperation.”
“Have you found out anything else about Sasha?” Van Fleet asked.
“I’m afraid we can’t discuss an investigation in progress,” Stone said.
“The papers said you’re making no progress at all,” Van Fleet said, walking them to the front door.
“Don’t believe everything you read in the papers,” Dino said, as Van Fleet closed the door behind them.
Back in the car, Stone sighed. “Clean as a hound’s tooth,” he said.
“Yeah,” Dino agreed, disconsolately.
“Let’s go up to Sasha’s and go through those boxes.”
“Okay.”
There was a different doorman on duty when the detectives arrived at the building. Stone flashed his badge and asked for his key to the Nijinsky apartment. The man handed it over silently.
The moment they stepped off the elevator, it was obvious that something was wrong. The police notice fixed to the apartment door had been removed.
“The seal’s broken,” Dino said. “What the fuck?”
Stone led the way into the apartment. It was completely empty. The two men stood there looking helplessly about them, as if waiting for inspiration. Stone bent over and picked up a card from the floor.
Effective immediately,
Sasha Nijinsky is at
1011 Fifth Ave.
New York 10021.
Burn this.
“The movers,” Stone said.
“What?”
“The movers. She was moving the next morning.”
“What’s the new address?”
“Ten-eleven Fifth.” Stone didn’t mention that he knew someone else at that address.
“Let’s go see the doorman.”
Downstairs, Stone braced the doorman. “There was a police seal on the door of the Nijinsky apartment,” he said. “Who broke it?”
“Jesus, Officer,” the man pled, “I don’t know nothing. The moving people showed up and took her stuff; that’s all I know.”
They drove uptown in silence. The building was across the street from the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The doorman greeted them.
“Can I help you, gentlemen?” he said, blocking the entrance.
Stone showed his ID. “Miss Nijinsky’s apartment.”
“Yes? What about it?”
“We’d like to see it. This is part of a police investigation. Did some moving people bring some furniture and boxes here yesterday?”
“Yes, but I’m afraid I can’t let you into the apartment without permission, unless you’ve got a search warrant, of course.”
Dino sighed loudly. “I guess you know the lady’s in no condition to give permission.”
The doorman shrugged. “My hands are tied,” he said, “unless you get permission from the cooperative’s board of directors. If one of them says it’s okay, I’ll let you in.”
“Who’s the chairman of the cooperative’s board?” Stone asked.
The doorman went to a tin box on his desk and produced an index card. He handed it to Stone.
The name on the card was Barron Harkness.
Stone registered this for a moment, then showed the card to Dino. “May I use your telephone?” he asked the doorman.
“Sure,” the man said, placing a phone on the desk.
“An interesting connection, wouldn’t you say?” he asked Dino. He checked his notebook and dialed the number of the network.
Chapter
13
A woman answered Harkness’s phone, a voice Stone didn’t recognize.
“Barron Harkness, please. My name is Barrington; he knows me.”
“I’m sorry, Mr. Barrington, Mr. Harkness is in a meeting. May I have him return the call?”
“Let me speak with Cary Hilliard, please.”
“Ms. Hilliard is in the same meeting.”
Stone tried not to sound annoyed. “Please take a note to Mr. Harkness. Tell him Detective Stone Barrington would like to speak with him at once, and that it’s important.”
“I’m sorry, but—”
“Please do it now. This is police business.”
The woman hesitated. “All right,” she said finally. “What is your number?”
“I’ll hold.”
An irritating minute passed, then: “Barron Harkness.”
“Mr. Harkness, this is Stone Barrington. I’m at your apartment building, and I want your permission to enter Sasha Nijinsky’s apartment. The doorman insists on speaking with you before allowing entry.” “But why?” Harkness asked. “Sasha never moved into the apartment; there’s nothing there. Legally, she didn’t even own the apartment; she was supposed to have closed on it the morning after she…” “It appears that a moving company followed instructions she gave before her
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