7
THERE WAS A POLICE CAR in front of his house.
Tom had been away from his office when Anna called. It was one of those mornings, the kind where by nine-thirty he knew he’d be lunching at his desk, and by eleven o’clock he realized he wouldn’t be eating lunch at all. The kind where he wished he’d stuck to his dream of writing books, instead of getting a corporate job doing technical writing. The Vice President in Charge of Fucking Up People’s Day had had a change of heart on a program Tom’s team had been set to roll out next week. Typical bullshit, just ego cloaked in platitudes about “forward-thinking design” and “going another way,” but it tanked ten weeks’ worth of work. After a meeting like that, seeing the red voice-mail light burning didn’t brighten things up.
Then he heard the message, and it got worse. Anna was panicky, breathless. All he could make out was something about someone in their house, and to come home right away. He’d stood with the phone in one hand, his lips clenched, staring out at the city street far below, boxy yellow cabs and ant people. Part of him was thinking about how this was going to complicate things here, and wondering what the hell she was doing at home in the middle of the day anyway. The other part was already racing for the street, hailing a cab, offering the driver forty on a twenty-dollar ride if only he’d go fast.
He went with the latter, spent the ride praying that nothing was wrong. But there was a police car in front of his house. Tom threw two bills at the driver and leapt out of the car. He ran straight through the rows of tulips his neighbor had planted, and took the steps to their porch two at a time. “Anna?” He started to unlock the door to their apartment, then noticed that the one to the bottom unit was a few inches open. He pushed it wide, looked in. “Hello? Anna?”
“Tom?” The voice came from down the hall, followed by loud footsteps, and then she was there, throwing her arms around him, her grip tight, her hair in his face, and something in his chest loosened, a fist he hadn’t realized was clutching his heart.
“You okay?”
“Yes. Yes, I’m fine, just . . .” She sniffed. “Someone was here. In this apartment. I was so scared—”
“It’s okay, baby. It’s okay.” He held her, stroked her hair. “You’re okay. Just tell me what happened.”
She stepped back, took a deep breath. “I decided to call in. Ran some errands, took care of our bills”—giving him a meaningful look—“you know, like we’d talked about.”
They had talked about it, though he hadn’t intended for her to miss yet another day of work to do it. Not like Currency Exchanges weren’t open twenty-four hours. But that wasn’t important. He nodded.
“When I came home, I was dropping stuff off in here. I went in the bedroom, and the drawers were open, the closets, there were things on the floor.” She locked eyes with him. “Tom, they went through everything.”
The fist moved from his chest to his gut, his stomach going wobbly. “Are you saying—”
“They were looking for something. Whoever they were.”
He realized his mouth was open, and closed it. “It was probably just someone robbing the place.” He saw her uncertainty, kept talking. “Looking for jewelry, money, that kind of thing.”
“They didn’t take the TV, the—”
“They didn’t take it yet. You probably startled them.”
She started to protest, then stopped as footsteps came down the hall. A cop, tall and barrel-chested in his bulletproof vest. “Are you the husband?”
“Yes. Tom Reed.” He put his hand out.
“Al Abramson.” The cop shook hands, then rested his right on the butt of his gun and turned to Anna. “Ma’am, we’ve checked the whole place, including your apartment and the basement. There’s nobody here.”
She sighed. “Thank God.”
“Any idea who would have done this?”
“No,” she said. “Tom?”
He shook his head.
“Well,” Abramson said, “the way they went through everything, I’d guess it was junkies. They hit the medicine cabinet too. Pretty common. Get strung out, need a fix, they’ll try anything. I wouldn’t worry about them coming back.”
“What about the . . .” Anna hesitated, then pointed toward the bathroom.
Abramson shook his head. “These guys are animals. At least they used the toilet. I’ve seen places they did it right on the living room carpet.” His radio chirped, and he said, “Excuse me a moment,” then stepped down the hall and answered it.
“Did what?” Tom cocked his head at Anna.
“Uh,” she said. “You don’t want to know.”
“Are you sure you’re okay?”
“Yeah. Just shaken up.”
He hugged her again, wrapped his arms around her, the smell of her filling his nostrils. “Anna, maybe we should tell them—”
“No.”
“I’m just saying.”
“No.” She pulled away. “That’s our child. I’m not giving it up, not without a reason.”
He was saved from replying by Abramson’s return. “Sorry about that, folks. I didn’t realize, I guess you had an incident here the other night?”
“Yes,” Tom said. “Our tenant died. This was his apartment.”
The cop nodded, not overly interested. “Well, that was my dispatcher, wanting to let me know a detective was on the way. Guy named Halden?”
“We met him that night. But he’s a homicide detective, right? Why is he coming?”
Abramson shrugged. “Have to ask him. Meanwhile, you want to take a look around, see if anything in particular is missing? I need to know for the report.”
“We didn’t know our tenant very well,” Anna said. “I wouldn’t know what to look for.”
“Well, just take a glance, see if you spot anything.”
They shrugged, started walking around. Tom figured unless the refrigerator was gone, he wasn’t going to notice much difference, but it gave him time to think.
What he’d said to Anna, about it being thieves, that had been automatic, just him trying to calm her down, to make things better. Male problem solving. But in his own head, he had to wonder. They’d never been robbed before. Lincoln Square was pretty quiet. And as he took in the gaping cabinets, the cans of soup and containers of pasta spilled across the counter, the open drawers, it was hard not to get the feeling that this was a pretty thorough search for a couple of junkies.
Maybe they hit this unit instead of ours because it was on the ground floor. Maybe the place is torn apart because they were looking for cash, or for pills. Maybe they were thorough precisely because they were desperate. There’s no reason to think it’s more than that.
Except, of course, that there were reasons. Several hundred thousand of them.
 
 
DETECTIVE HALDEN made Anna feel good about paying taxes. Justice in gray pinstripes, he was in charge the moment he stepped into the room. The other cops clearly deferred to him, their posture improving. Halden spoke to the officers, nodding and asking questions. He squatted by the front door and focused a flashlight into the lock, then repeated the process in the back.
“Hello again,” as he shook their hands. “Officer Abramson gave me a rundown, but would you take me through it again, Mrs. Reed?”
“Anna, please.”
“Anna. I’d like to hear it from you.”
She nodded, sitting at the kitchen table now, the three of them having coffee, the uniformed cops gone. Told him about running errands—leaving out the part where she leveled seventy grand in debt—then coming home, finding the place ransacked. The foul smell in the bathroom, the insult of it, the violation, someone they didn’t know leaving that floating in their toilet. Her fear as she realized they might still be around, then her flight, right past her purse with her cell phone, and finally dialing 911 from the corner market. Halden nodded, scribbled the occasional note. His posture straight, a good-looking guy, clean-cut as a recruiting poster. Her gaze kept pulling to the gun on his hip, a matte black thing that made her shiver. When she finished talking, he nodded, said, “When you arrived, the door was locked?”
“Yes.”
“You’re sure?”
She thought back, remembered setting down the plastic bags to dig out her keys. “Yes.”
“And the windows were closed and locked as well.”
She nodded. Then caught where he was going, said, “Yes. So how did they—”
“Neither door shows signs of force. My guess would be that they either had keys or jimmied the lock.”
“Who would have keys?”
“A friend?” Halden stared at her. “Tell me, have you remembered anything else about your tenant?”
She made herself bite her lip before shaking her head, wanting it to look like she was thinking hard. “I’m sorry. We really didn’t know him.”
“You said the other night that you didn’t know what he did for a living.”
“No.”
“Did you ever notice him going to work? Bump into him in the hallway?”
She thought about it. “You know, I guess I didn’t, really.”
“Why do you ask?” Tom lifted his mug by the rim. “Could whoever broke in have something to do with him?”
Damn it, don’t go there. Why even plant the seed?
Halden rocked his head in a noncommittal gesture. “Hard to say.” He set his pen down on top of his notebook, the edges perfectly parallel, then leaned forward with his hands laced. “Usually we don’t disclose information about active cases, but given the circumstances, there’s something I should tell you. Your tenant, the man you knew as Bill Samuelson, that wasn’t his name. His real name was William Tuttle. When we ran his fingerprints, the record came up.” He paused. “I’m not going to lie to you. Tuttle was a bad guy.”
“What do you mean, bad?” Tom asked.
“He’d been arrested for assault. Did a little time, couple of years, on an armed robbery. He was questioned in several more, and was picked up on a distribution charge out in California, though that eventually fell apart.” Halden leaned back, spread his hands. “I should say that he wasn’t wanted for anything when he died. Just because he had a sheet doesn’t mean he was still a criminal. That’s why I was asking about a job.”
Anna could hear the ticking of the wall clock, could feel her pulse outpacing it. The money. It wasn’t what they’d thought, a quirky story, a recluse who didn’t trust banks. That money was stolen. And not in the victimless embezzlement scenario they’d spun, either. Will Tuttle was no pension scammer or white-collar embezzler. He was a dangerous man who worked with others like him. She met Tom’s eyes, saw the same calculation in them.
They had to get Halden out. The longer he was here, the greater the chance they’d slip in some way. She could tell that Tom half-wanted to just give in, to announce the truth to the detective. But it was more complicated than that.
She realized that Tom and Halden had continued talking. Shook herself, tuned back in.
“. . . an overdose,” Halden said. “That prescription? It was a drug called fentanyl, a very serious painkiller. It’s not normally available in pills like that, but this was re-cooked for the street.”
“So it was suicide?”
The cop shook his head. “No. He probably figured it was something he could handle, OxyContin. But the dosage was powerful enough to trigger a heart condition. Chances are he didn’t even know he had heart problems. People usually don’t, until it’s too late. But here’s the thing.” Halden sipped his coffee. “To get his hands on stuff like that, he would have known people. Dealers, other junkies. It’s very possible one of them knew where he lived.”
“And decided to see if Samuelson—I mean, Tuttle—if he had any drugs to steal,” Tom said.
“Exactly.” The detective nodded. “That’s my thinking.”
She crossed her arms, leaned back. Looked away. Hitting the body language hard, trying to get the detective to see it was time he left. But Tom kept talking, asking, “Is there anything you can do?”
“Do?”
“To catch whoever was here. Fingerprints or something?”
Halden smiled, shook his head. “If you want, I’ll get a team out. They’ll make a big mess, stain up your nice white walls, but if it’ll make you feel better, I’m happy to do it.”
“There’s really no point?”
“Guy who knows how to pick a lock but not to wear gloves? Or even if he had keys.” Halden shrugged. “I mean, you think they don’t watch TV too?”
“So should we be worried?”
“That they’ll come back? No,” the detective said. “They’d have gotten a pretty good scare. Besides, they probably found what there was to find.”
Tom looked at Anna, then reached out to cover her hand with his own. “Good.”
A silence fell, and then the detective picked up his mug, took a last sip, set it down. “Well. I best be on my way. There will be some follow-up paperwork for your insurance, but you should be in good shape.”
They stood up, followed him to the door.
“Thanks again, Detective,” Anna said, thinking, Almost, he’s almost gone.
“My job,” he said. He tucked his gold pen inside his suit jacket. “One more thing.”
Tom cocked his head. “What’s that?”
“Will Tuttle was a thief. Who knows what he might have stolen, what might have been lying around his place. Jewelry, drugs. Hell, maybe even cash.”
“So?”
Halden shrugged. “Life’s funny. Sometimes situations land in front of you that you don’t know how you’ll react until you’re in them.”
“What does that mean?”
“Well, just hypothetically, say that someone found whatever it was Will had. It would be the easiest thing in the world to decide to keep it. I mean, he’s dead, so it’s not stealing.” The detective’s eyes were searchlights. Anna felt something squeezing her lungs. Her mouth was dry and her palms were soaked. She stared, trying to think of something to say.
“I’m not sure where you’re going with this.” Tom sounded steady, even the tiniest bit offended. It gave her strength, her partner in crime covering when she slipped. “Are you suggesting we took something?”
Halden just hit them with the gaze again, steady, knowing; he was seeing inside her, knew what they’d done. He was smarter than she’d guessed, smarter and more in tune, and he’d known while they sat at the table and chatted, had maybe known from the very beginning. Anna felt a mad urge to open her mouth and let truth pour free. Forced her teeth to grind.
After a long moment, the detective shrugged, said, “Tell you what. If you remember anything else useful, give me a call, would you? Sooner would be better.” He reached for the door handle. “Thanks for the coffee.” Then he stepped out, letting the door fall behind.