Manhattan Serenade: A Novel. Joseph Sinopoli Steven

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importantly, what did she mean by ‘taking matters into my own hands’?” Hernandez said and flipped through several pages and stopped. “Listen to this,” he said and read aloud:

      “‘May 15 – M called this morning and canceled our date.

      Lately he’s becoming impossibly jealous. I have to talk to C about keeping his promise—he’s so forgetful at times.” Hernandez turned the page. “May 16 – Saw H last night and he seemed so depressed. I wish he’d leave his wife once and for all. He’s not happy. That’s the tall and the short of it for now.’” He then turned another page.

      “There’s an entry here regarding an ‘R’ person and some weekend they spent together,” Hernandez said.

      “Let me see that,” Moran said and grabbed the diary. “S, M, C, H, R. What is this, the Alphabet Song book?”

      “Maybe she had trouble spelling. I remember in grade school—” Hernandez began.

      “Drop it, Frank. One thing’s pretty clear, the ‘M’ could be Myer.” Moran handed the book to the sergeant and swallowed a gulp of iced tea, then reached over and picked up a Bowery Bank savings book. He opened the passbook and whistled. “According to this, on the day Lacy died, she had fifty-thousand, two-hundred forty-nine dollars and fifty-five cents saved up.”

      Hernandez seemed unimpressed. “Wouldn’t surprise me. Topless dancers make a lot of money, plus tips and other activities.”

      “Except,” Moran said, and waved the passbook, “four months before she was murdered the account was opened with two cash deposits of five thousand dollars on the same day at two different branches. Bag it.”

      Moran continued to sift through the contents and pawed out a neatly folded white T-shirt with the purple Arabic cupola logo of the Trump Taj Mahal Hotel and Casino on the front. He stretched it.

      “Seems Lacy liked to gamble,” Hernandez said.

      Moran set the T-shirt aside. “Ho-ho-ho, what’s this?” Moran brought out a 5x7 snapshot of a smiling Lacy wearing the T-Shirt posing on a veranda. An expansive beach in the background. The lieutenant turned the picture over. The date scribbled in pencil was two weeks before Lacy’s death, and the word ‘Jersey’ next to the date was underlined in heavy pencil.

      Moran handed the picture to Hernandez. “I’d guess the Jersey Shore.”

      “That’s pretty ritzy for a struggling dancer,” Hernandez said, and cast the snapshot on top of the T-shirt. He examined more of the strewn contents and lifted up a receipt and peered at it. “According to this, Lacy paid a visit to the Haifa Diamond Exchange on East 72nd Street a week before she was murdered and—” he handed it to Moran—“she exchanged a two thousand dollar ladies Movado for a diamond tennis bracelet.”

      Moran read the receipt and set it down. “That address is only a couple blocks up from where she lived. I’ll—”

      The front door buzzer sounded and Hernandez glanced at his watch. “Must be Simms and Darcey.”

      When Sandra led the two detectives into the living room, Darcey stepped toward Moran and held out an evidence bag that contained a spiral notepad.

      “We found it in the dresser drawer,” Darcey said.

      “The guy obviously believed in the simple life. Two cans of tuna in the fridge alongside a bottle of Stoli, a beat-up sofa in the living room facing a 50-inch plasma television screen, and nothing else. In the bedroom only a bed and the dresser.”

      As Moran took the bag, Darcey said, “I think you’ll find the notations on the second page very interesting.”

      When Hernandez offered Moran a pair of latex gloves, the lieutenant gazed at his partner appraisingly. “I can’t believe you always carry these things with you.”

      Hernandez smiled. “You’re welcome.”

      Moran slipped on the gloves and Simms said, “Check out the second page.”

      “Very n-i-c-e,” Moran said when he read the page. “July 2, five thousand dollars—good start. August 4, two thousand; September 2, three thou, October 4, six thou; and November 2, two thousand five hundred.”

      Moran flipped through the rest of the pad. Blank pages. He handed it to his sergeant.

      “We found a copy of the lease to the apartment,” Simms said. “The rent’s three and half grand a month and the deposit was seven thou in cash. Myer moved in on July first, before which he was living at…” She paused and flipped through her leather notepad. “181 West 6th Street.”

      “I know that area,” Hernandez said. “Full of flophouses with hot-and-cold running mice.”

      Moran asked if there was any cash in the apartment, but Simms and Darcey shook their heads. “Nothing,” Darcey said. “But Myer did own a closet full of Armani, Hugo Boss, and Calvin Klein suits.”

      “Looks like besides banking, Myer was good at extortion,” Hernandez threw in. “From the regularity of these payments, I’d say somebody was being squeezed hard.”

      Simms nodded. “One more thing,” she said. “The doorman said that while Myer lived there he had a visitor in black motorcycle gear and a helmet with the visor down. Came once a month.”

      “Doorman know who the guy was?” Hernandez said.

      Darcey shook his head. “Myer always instructed the doorman the morning of the visit that he was expecting a person fitting that description and to just let him through.”

      “Does ‘Evel Knievel’ have a description—tall, short, thin, fat?” Moran asked.

      Simms said, “Only that he was slender and about five-ten or five-eleven.”

      “What about the bike?” Hernandez asked.

      “Doorman never saw it. Figured it was parked around the corner,” Simms said.

      Moran and Hernandez exchanged glances. “I want Myer’s apartment sealed off,” Moran told Simms. “And have a couple of uniforms make sure no one without authorization goes in or out.” He turned to Hernandez. “Have Forensics go over it. Maybe our motorcyclist friend left some prints.”

      The slender woman with flashing dark eyes wore black Capri pants and a sleeveless silver top. It played well against her olive skin. She squirmed forward on the sofa, aimed the remote at the television set, and turned it off. Frank Hernandez seated next to her glowered. “Hey, what’re you doing, the ‘Double Jeopardy’ part of the show was about to start.”

      Pilar Hernandez pulled back the silky black hair that flowed over her shoulders. “Don’t be mad,” she said. “I’m sorry I sprung the news on you during dinner, but I only found out this afternoon.”

      Hernandez kept stoically silent, his gaze glued to the blank screen.

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