The Quickie - James Patterson [69]
Chapter 98
IT WAS A LITTLE AFTER EIGHT the next morning when the barista at the Starbucks across from Paul’s Pearl Street office building raised an eyebrow at me in surprise.
Jeez, I thought. You’d think she’d never seen a disheveled, emotionally demolished woman ask for the entire top shelf of the pastry case before.
After last night’s Battery Park epiphany, I’d called Paul and told him that Bonnie wanted me to stay over in the city for old time’s sake. Then I’d wandered up Broadway, like the homeless person I now was, until about midnight.
I’d made it all the way to The Midtown, just south of the Ed Sullivan Theater, when my legs quit on me.
I had just enough strength to toss the questionable orange-speckled bedspread into the corner of my three-hundred-dollar-a-night closet before I passed out. Pretty pricey, but Paul could afford it.
I woke up at 7 a.m., left the hotel without showering, and caught a taxi on Seventh Avenue, heading downtown to the financial district.
For the first time in a month, I had a game plan. I knew exactly what I had to do.
Interrogate Paul.
I didn’t care what it took. I’d be both good cop and bad cop. I was tempted to bring the hotel phone book along in case I had to beat the truth out of him. One thing was certain. Paul was going to tell me what the hell was going on if it was the last thing he ever did.
And based on the way I was feeling as I stood in the Starbucks across from his office, that was a distinct possibility.
“Anything else?” the barista asked, pushing my five-figure-calorie breakfast across the counter.
“You don’t have anything else,” I told her.
In an oversize purple velvet wing chair positioned by the window, I read the FBI report, cover to cover.
I stared at the autoradiographs — the DNA vertical barcodes — for both crime scenes until my vision blurred.
There was no mistake, no denying what the pages said. I didn’t have to know what variable number tandem repeat meant or what the heck an STR locus was to see that the two samples were one and the same.
I put the report down, and with one eye on the revolving doors of Paul’s black-glass office building across the narrow street, I commenced a world-record round of compulsive eating. Hey, alcohol and nicotine were out. What’s a very pissed-off, pregnant cop supposed to do?
I was licking chocolate icing off my fingers fifteen minutes later when, through the scrum of business suits and power ties, I spotted the sandy head of a man Paul’s height turning into the office building. Good-looking guy, no denying it. That was one constant about my husband. Maybe the only one.
I knocked back the last of an espresso brownie, slowly brushed myself off, and grabbed the latte-stained FBI report.
Come out with your hands up, Paul, I thought as I crossed the still-shadowy canyon of Pearl Street. Your pissed-off, pregnant wife has a gun in her handbag.
But as I stood in line behind a FedEx guy at the security desk, I noticed something odd.
Paul was in the open door of one of the elevators.
Here we go again, I thought.
Unlike the rest of the invading, pin-striped financial army, he was making his way out, like a salmon swimming upstream, a lone salmon.
Whatever, I thought, taking a quick step toward him through the crowd. This saves me an elevator trip.
But as I got closer, I noticed the carry-on strapped across his chest. And the shopping bag in his hand.
The blue Tiffany shopping bag.
I stopped dead-still, and stayed silent as I watched him head toward the doorway.
Chapter 99
CARRY-ON? TIFFANY BAG? Where was Paul going? What the hell was happening now? Did I really want to know?
Yes! I needed to find out, I decided, as I watched him flag a taxi.
His cab was pulling out when I whistled and caught the next one pulling in.
“At the risk of sounding clichéd,” I told the orange-turbaned driver. “Follow that cab.”
So we did. Up to Midtown Manhattan. Then through the