“What’d you get?” I was outside the station house on the street, leaning against Vickee’s car.
“The intern who answered at the news desk didn’t have cell phones for any of the reporters,” Vickee said. “I used my NYPD public info credentials to find which hotel he’s at, and lucky to have gotten that. Jake is staying at the London.”
“West 54th Street. Convenient to Rock Center and the NBC studios. Coop loves herself a fine hotel. Somebody else to make the bed.”
“Give it a try, Mike.”
“I’m not sure what you want me to do, girl.”
“Worst-case scenario? Alex didn’t keep her assignation with Jake and we’ve got real trouble on our hands.”
“Even worse than that case scenario? I get to the London and find a love nest, but a ménage is not what they had in mind,” I said. “Giuliano put her in a cab when she left the restaurant. She’s just embarrassed to see you or me.”
“Turns out he didn’t walk her out,” Vickee said. “Al Vandomir told Catherine he saw her using her Uber app to order a car.”
“To go five blocks? That’s not her style. She always walks home from Primola.”
“Exactly. That’s my point.”
“So what do you propose? Dumping her phone, checking her credit card to see if there’s an Uber receipt with her destination?” I asked. “I’d be treating her like she’s a perp—or like I’m a stalker. She’d have my head for that.”
“I want to know where she is, Mike. Just like you do.”
I wasn’t sure I needed to know the truth. After ten years of verbal foreplay, I didn’t fancy rejection quite this way.
“Maybe she flew off the handle, me pressing her about playing with your emotions. Maybe she just, I don’t know, disappeared, like Battaglia suggested—like to the Vineyard. We can talk sense to her.”
“She’s not there.”
“At her house?” Vickee asked. “How do you know?”
“’Cause I called the Chilmark police when you went to freshen up. They rode up and checked the house,” I said. “All locked up and nobody home. Got the call back while you were on the phone with the intern.”
I was pacing the sidewalk now. I was somewhere between jealousy and concern, but not even twenty-four hours had elapsed since we’d all been together. Coop often let her team take what she called “mental health days”—just a break from the stress of a very difficult job.
A trial had blown up in her face, an impostor hired by the DA’s people had hacked into her computer and stolen an unknown measure of professional and personal information, and she was obviously in some kind of turmoil—maybe regret—about our affair.
“I know you’ve got a conscience, Mike,” Vickee said, pulling open her car door. “So it’s on your head, okay? Whatever is going on with Alex.”
“Hold on,” I said, grabbing the door before she slammed it shut. “Because you’ve decided to put the weight all on me? That’s why it’s there?”
Vickee nodded. “May not be fair, but you’ve got to do it.”
“Okay. It’ll give me something to occupy myself with for the rest of my tour. I guess murder doesn’t trump your pal, even if she’s just livin’ la vida loca, huh?”
“Bring her back in, Mike. And you’ll stay in touch with—?”
“I’ve made a fool of myself for less important reasons. Sure, I’ll call.”
When Vickee reached for her belt I closed the door. It was time for my meal break anyway. I went inside, told Peterson that I’d grab a bite and then canvass some of Wynan Wilson’s neighbors to see what they’d heard the night of the murder, and went back out to my own car.
It was the height of rush hour, so it took me almost an hour to crawl down Broadway to get to 54th Street. I parked the car, went to the front desk of the London—making my way past all the Eurotrash clientele clogging the lobby bar—and asked for Jake.
“Certainly, sir,” the receptionist said, the French accent coating her words like a treacly sweet syrup. “I’ll ring his room for you.”
She looked me up and down with a keen sense of disapproval while the rings went unanswered. “I’m sorry, sir. Mr. Tyler is not in at the moment.”
“What’s his room number?”
“I’m sorry again, sir. But I can’t give you that information.”
“I bet you can,” I said, putting my badge on the countertop. “Homicide.”
I didn’t exactly whisper the word. The receptionist’s eyes opened wide, and the woman beside me inquiring about a driver for the next day placed the forefinger of her gloved hand next to the badge.
“Did I hear you say ‘homicide’?” she asked, while the receptionist scurried off to get her supervisor. “Is everything all right here?”
I gave the bejeweled older woman my best grin. “Except for the dead man, it’s fine.”
“Here? A murder?”
“No, ma’am. Not here. You’re perfectly safe, if all that glitz in the lobby isn’t lethal.”
She turned her head to look at the other guests just as the senior desk clerk arrived. “Do you have a problem, Detective? May we take it into my office?”
“No problem at all. If you’ll have security accompany me up to Mr. Tyler’s room, I just need to look around for a few minutes.”
I had the woman’s attention again. “Jake Tyler? The NBC reporter? I just saw his on-air segment fifteen minutes ago,” she said. “Surely he’s not hurt?”
“No, ma’am.”
“Don’t tell me,” she said, her gloved hand to her throat. “He’s not a suspect in a murder case? That’s not possible.”
I put my finger up to my lips, hinting that I was telling her something in confidence. “Just a person of interest at this point,” I said, using the bullshit term that had become so popular on television news. “No charges yet.”
Fuck Jake and the horse he rode in on.
“Would you please step into my office?” the clerk asked, repeating his request. He was anxious to get me out of the way of his guests. “It’s Mr.—?”
“I won’t, actually. It’s Detective,” I said. “Mike Chapman. Homicide.”
“Let’s avoid a scene, shall we?”
“Happy to. Get the head of security to take me up to Jake Tyler’s room and open the door. All I need is a quick look around and I’m gone.”
“I can’t do that, Mr. Chapman. Our guests are entitled to their privacy.”
“Fair enough. I can have Emergency Services here with a battering ram in no time.”
“He’s bluffing,” the young Frenchwoman muttered to her boss. “I didn’t even tell him the room number.”
“No,” I said, hitting the keypad on my phone. “But NBC will and then you’ll have a real mess to clean up.”
I dialed Vickee’s number and got her voice mail. She was probably giving Logan his evening bath. “Detective Eaton? Call NBC again—the guy who told you Jake was here at the London—and get his room number. I’m bringing ESU in to break down the door.”
“In that case, Detective,” the supervisor said, “let me get security to take you upstairs. Two minutes is all you need?”
“For starters.”
I didn’t have to wait long for security. Two men in suits huffed and puffed their way to the front desk in short order. They introduced themselves and took me to the elevator, to a suite on the sixth floor. One of them knocked but got no response.
The taller man of the two was holding a key card. He inserted it in the lock and the door opened.
The room was empty.
Jake’s suitcase was on a luggage rack in the living room area of the suite, open, with sweaters visible on top. His laptop was on the desk, with papers scattered around it.
I walked into the bedroom and the security guys followed. The bed was made. I looked in the closet and saw only men’s suits and shirts hung neatly there.
I checked out the bathroom. His toiletries lined the side of one of the two sinks, and a small plastic cosmetics bag, covered in a pink azalea pattern, was next to the other sink. I picked it up and noted the toothbrush and lipstick case inside. I tensed up.
“What are you looking for?” the shorter guard asked.
“What’s it your business?”
“I thought maybe if I could help, it would go faster.”
“Did you hear me say I was in any kind of a hurry?”
I glanced at the towel rack opposite the sink. There was a bra and a pair of panties hanging over a plush towel.
I picked up the lacy lingerie. The bra was a C cup—way too big for Coop to wear. The underwear covered a much broader ass. I liked those facts.
“Somebody pays the rates to get a suite at this joint, and they’re taking in laundry up here on the side?” I said.
“You gotta be kidding,” the taller man said. “The room rate is nothing. They charge twelve bucks to wash a brassiere. Twenty to clean and iron a man’s shorts.”
“How many key cards did Jake ask for when he signed in?”
The same guy checked his iPad. “Just one.”
“He registered alone?”
“Yeah.”
“You’ve got cameras everywhere?” I asked.
“Lobby, elevators, corridors.”
“Good. If it comes to that, I may need to see last night’s film.” I reentered the bedroom, pulling open a dresser drawer, with my back to the living room. “You got someone who can keep an eye out tonight? See when Mr. Tyler comes home for the evening, whether there’s a dame with him to claim her clean underwear?”
“Sure.”
“That won’t be necessary, Mike,” Jake Tyler said, stepping into the room. “She’s on her way here right now.”