
I stared at this best friend, this cop. When, I wondered, had Mary stopped understanding me?
A small, sharp-featured man stepped out of Joel’s office. His gold shield was clipped to his pocket, and I knew someone had told me his name, but I had no idea what it was. He stopped when he caught sight of the badge hanging around Mary’s neck. “Who’re you?”
“Mary Kee. Fifth Precinct.”
“What’re you doing here?”
Mary pointed. “She’s a friend of mine.”
The uptown cop frowned. “Your name’s familiar. Do I know you?”
“We spoke on the phone. Your Asian John Doe from the hotel.”
“Right! You’re supposed to be ID-ing him.”
“I’m working on it.”
“Here? Now, I need the witness.”
“I’d like to stay.”
“I’d like you not to.”
“She’s a friend of mine. She’s upset.”
“And you’re off your turf. I’ll be nice.” He showed me a bunch of teeth, which was probably a smile.
Mary looked to me. I shrugged. She said, “When you’re ready to go, I’ll take you home,” and walked away down the hall.
The detective watched her, then turned back to me, notebook in hand. “You worked for Pilarsky?”
A preface would have been nice, I thought. Your name, how sorry you are. “Not exactly.” My voice sounded dull. Well, maybe I’d bore him, and he’d go away. “We’re both freelance. He called me in on a case. Before that I hadn’t seen him in a while.”
The detective had stopped writing, as if to let me finish babbling. “So, on this case, you worked for him.”
“I guess.”
“What’s the case?”
“Stolen jewelry.” I gave him a summary, finding it hard to stay focused. I kept seeing Joel standing outside the Waldorf, bursting into off-key song.
“Any way that could be related to this?” On “this” he nodded toward the office. I could read the skepticism in his lifted brows.
“I don’t know. When he called, he said something was fishy.”
