City of Lies. Alafair Burke

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the rest of the description fits?’

      The man nodded. ‘Where is he? I don’t appreciate getting called away from an important event by some building superintendent.’

      ‘Unfortunately, sir, the man you’re calling Robo is dead. He was shot in what is apparently your bed. And he was naked in your bed, in case you were wondering.’

      The man stared at her for three full beats before the corner of his mouth crept upward. ‘You’re going to regret this conversation, Miss Hatcher. I won’t ask you to clean up the mess you’ve made lest you accuse me of sexism, but please have one of these lackeys standing guard on taxpayer dollars remove your soggy shoes from what you so eloquently called my rug. It’s worth more than you make in a year.’

      ‘First I need a name and some identification, sir.’

      ‘Samuel Sparks.’ He didn’t even feign a reach for his wallet.

      ‘And who’s Robo?’

      ‘His name is Robert Mancini. He’s one of my protection specialists. I’ve been calling him ever since I was beckoned down here about some kind of police emergency.’

      ‘A protection specialist. You mean a bodyguard?’

      The man nodded, and Ellie suddenly matched the name to the face: Samuel Sparks was Sam Sparks. That Sam Sparks. Before she scored a rent-stabilized sublet of questionable legality, she had perused countless real estate listings for units in Sparks’s buildings that she could not afford. This was the man who had been rumored to be purchasing the 110-building Stuyvesant Town to convert into condos before a rival tycoon outbid him. He was the mogul who had been photographed with so many A-list women that he himself had become fodder for the tabloids and paparazzi, including some who speculated about the sexuality of the self-declared ‘permanent bachelor’. Ellie assumed those rumors might explain Sparks’s response to her mention of the victim’s exposed hip.

      Sparks’s smirk widened into a full-blown smile. ‘You can apologize after these shoes have been picked up.’

      Needless to say, Ellie did not apologize.

      ‘Mr. Sparks, your apartment is now officially a crime scene. I need you to leave.’

      ‘Excuse me?’

      ‘Did you hear my request, sir?’

      ‘Of course I heard you, but –’

      ‘Then I’m ordering you, for the second time now, to leave the premises.’ Ellie intentionally used the kind of I-get-high-on-my-authority tone that made a person want to disobey.

      ‘I am not leaving my own –’

      ‘Sam Sparks, you’re under arrest for disobeying the lawful order of a police officer.’ Ellie used her index finger to signal to a uniform officer who’d been observing cautiously from the front doorway. The officer removed his handcuffs from his duty belt.

      ‘You want to do the honors, or should I?’ the officer asked.

      Sparks sucked his teeth and squinted at the officer’s nameplate. ‘Officer T. S. Amos. I’d warn against taking another step in my direction unless you plan to spend the rest of your NYPD career on parking patrol.’

      Ellie snatched the handcuffs from the uniform’s grasp. ‘Not to worry, Amos. This one’s all me.’

Part I You Can’t Let This Get to You.

       Chapter Three

      Four months later…Wednesday, September 24

      11: 00 a.m.

      Ellie Hatcher raised her right hand and swore to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.

      But the testimony she gave before Judge Paul Bandon was not really the whole truth. It was a dry, concise recitation of the basic facts – and only the facts – of a callout 120 days earlier. Time: 11:30 p.m. Location: a penthouse apartment at a building called 212 at the corner of Lafayette and Kenmare. Nature of the callout: a report of shots fired, followed by the subsequent discovery of a bullet-ridden body in the bedroom. The dead man: Robert ‘Robo’ Mancini, bodyguard to Manhattan real estate mogul Sam Sparks.

      Ellie allowed herself a glance at Sparks, who sat at counsel table with a blank-faced stare next to his lawyer, Ramon Guerrero. According to her police report, Sparks was fifty-five years old, but looking at him this morning, she could understand why he enjoyed the serial companionship of the various models and aspiring starlets who graced his side on the society pages. It wasn’t just the money. With his square jaw, bright green eyes, and a permanent Clint Eastwood squint, Sparks exuded the kind of chiseled intensity that was catnip to a certain kind of woman.

      Ellie was surprised that he had bothered to make a personal appearance. It was probably the man’s way of signaling to Judge Bandon that this hearing was just as important to him as it was to the police. The only spectator on the government’s side of the courtroom, in the back bench by the entrance, was Genna Walsh, the victim’s sister. Ellie had told her there was no point coming into the city for the hearing, but she could not be dissuaded. Perhaps Sparks was not the only one trying to send a message.

      Assistant District Attorney Max Donovan continued to feed Ellie the straightforward questions that would lay the groundwork for today’s motion.

      ‘Did the decedent reside at the apartment in which his body was found – the penthouse in the 212 Building at 212 Lafayette?’

      ‘No, he did not. Mr. Mancini’s personal residence was in Hoboken, New Jersey.’

      ‘Did he own the apartment where his body was found?’ Donovan asked.

      ‘No.’

      ‘Who does own the apartment?’

      ‘Mancini’s employer, Sam Sparks.’

      ‘In your thorough search of the crime scene, did you find any evidence to suggest that the decedent was staying long-term at the 212?’

      ‘No, we did not.’

      ‘No suitcase, no toothbrush or shaving kit, nothing along those lines?’

      ‘No.’ Ellie hated the formal back-and-forth that was inherent in testifying. She’d prefer to sit across a desk from Judge Bandon and lay it all out for him. ‘In fact, Mr. Sparks himself told us that very night that the decedent was only using the apartment for the evening.’

      Again, Ellie reported just the facts. According to Sparks, he had completed the development at 212 six months earlier and kept the penthouse for himself as an investment and as a place to host the European investors who increasingly preferred downtown’s modern lofts to the more conventional temporary housing stock in midtown. To further justify the space as a corporate deduction, he allowed his personal assistant and security officers to make use of the apartment when the calendar permitted.

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