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Authors: Edward Lee

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“All right,” Cristina conceded. “I’ll have some.”

“Good.” Britt got up. “I’ll be right back.”

“Where are you going?”

Britt whispered. “I just
have
to ask that floozy where she got that dress.”

“You’re not serious!”

“Oh yes I am.” Britt bit her lower lip. “Pretty sick, isn’t it?”

Cristina chuckled, then started on the appetizers.

   

The bus-roar and heel-tapping clamor of the sidewalk didn’t bother her when she left. Cristina declined a ride home from Britt; she liked to walk, and she wanted to get used to the city. The skyscrapers on either side of the street loomed so high, it seemed impossible for them to have even been built. Lunch hour was winding down, and the street was even getting a bit more sane.

“Hot dog, miss?” a gruff voice asked aside.

She looked to see a rugged street vendor in a Yankees hat and a Jets shirt. “Cheese, mustard, mayo?”

“Mayo?” Cristina exclaimed. “On
hot dogs?

“Don’t knock it, toots.” He had a chewed-down cigar between his teeth as he presumed to sell food. “It’s New York
deli
mayo, from Artie’s.”

“Maybe next time…”

“You sure? Only two bucks. They’re Sabrett’s—the
genuine
New York dog.”

“Actually, I’m full of cuttlefish, but thanks just the same,” she said, and then slipped away.

What a pain in the

She eyed the divergent crowd, which seemed to beat along the sidewalks like blood in arteries. It was the ultimate cross-culture here: every nationality mixed with every
economic status, all pulsing together in tandem.
Maybe I
could get used to this
, she considered. Or did the sudden tolerance stem more from feeling better after her talk with Britt?

She slowed by a comic/novelty shop, noticing several of her competitor’s products in the window. Living Dead Dolls, Gurl-Goyles, Fantasmic Fishies.
But no Cadaverettes!
she fumed. She edged into the store, at once hesitant.
I’ve
got to stand up for my product
, she knew, but she also knew she was 100 percent nonassertive. When her well-done burger came to the table medium, she never sent it back. Passivity was as much a part of her as her blonde hair.

All comic shops seemed to possess the same musty smell, and usually only a quarter of the floor space existed for comic books and graphic novels. Novelties comprised the rest: toys, action figures and figurines, T-shirts, etc. Cristina checked the shelves and found no trace of Cadaverettes there, either.

Bastards!

A long line congregated at the checkout. One man in a pricey suit waited to buy an armload of some comic called
Hell Tramp
, while an obese girl with multiple facial piercings sputtered as she held a copy of something called
Mr
.
Torso Part VII
. A man with spiked blond hair and a leather vest hypertensively manned the register. He looked like Billy Idol’s grandfather.

“Excuse me, sir,” Cristina peeped over the line. “I have a question if it’s not too much inconvenience…”

The blond man sneered at her. “I’m a little busy here, if ya couldn’t tell. Got no time for chitchat.”

Cristina felt stultified. “Well…I’ve noticed that you carry Living Dead Dolls and Gurl-Goyles but no Cadaverettes. Do you not
like
Cadaverettes?”

The man shook his head as he frantically rang the next customer. “I like ’em fine, honey!” he snapped. “Reason we
ain’t got ’em is ’cos they sell out faster than I can put ’em on the shelves! Now gimme a break! I’m busy!”

Cristina stood wavering.
What should I do?
“Well…excuse me again, sorry, but would it be possible, do you think, if you could maybe reorder them?”

His glare struck her like an arrow in the face. “I’m busy! Have some fuckin’ courtesy! Come back later, will ya?”

Cristina shivered but managed to mutter, “This isn’t a very nice store,” and then hurried away.

“Hey, bonehead,” the suited man addressed the spiked clerk. “That was Cristina Nichols. She
created
Cadaverettes.”

Alarm. “Hey—uh, I mean, Ms. Nichols?” the cashier pleaded after her. “Sorry! Don’t leave! Can I book you for a signing?”

Cristina slipped back onto the street.
Why can’t people
just be nice?
Everyone seemed so manic here, so type A. But ultimately she left satisfied. They hadn’t neglected her line at all; they’d simply sold it out, which was terrific.
It
means I’m still selling
.

An alley tangented the corner of 67
th
and Dessorio Avenue. “Never cut through alleys, Cristina,” Paul had emphasized the first day. “Never. This is
New York
, not Petticoat Junction. You can never be too careful.” Cristina was touched by the tenor of his concern, but she saw no harm. The alley was only fifty or so yards long, and she could see it was clear save for a few garbage cans.

Which was why she jumped, when a scratchy voice drifted toward her from one side.

“Hey, lady?”

Cristina had only proceeded fifty feet. A homeless girl in pink sweatpants, a men’s white T-shirt, and mismatched flip-flops stood right behind her.

Where did she come from?
Cristina thought.

Scrubby tendrils of hair hung over her face like black
spaghetti. Some ghost of youth struggled beneath wasted features.
These homeless people always look so much older
than they really are
. But at least Cristina didn’t feel threatened now.

“Can I have, like, two dollars so I can buy a hot dog from the guy you didn’t buy one from?”

Cristina couldn’t calculate how the girl could’ve witnessed her encounter with the vendor. “I think so…” She reached in her pocket.

The girl sniffled and rubbed her nose. “And like maybe another one or two dollars so I can buy a soda?”

“Sure.” Cristina gave the girl a twenty-dollar bill. “You can use the rest to go to the shelter on Henry Street. I read they added a lot of beds.”

“Oh, I ain’t homeless.”

“That’s good. Where do you live?”

“Here.” The girl twitched. “We even have a TV. It doesn’t work but we watch it anyway.”

Cristina could think of nothing to say.

“And-and, like, I saw on the TV today that you were cutting your throat but then you blinked and it wasn’t your own throat you were cutting, it was the man’s.”

She’s probably delusional from drugs
, Cristina realized.
And that’s what she’s going to buy with the money I just gave
her

Then she winced when she saw scars on the girl’s wrist.

The girl giggled, staring at the alley’s brick wall. “That sounds kooky, doesn’t it, but that’s what I saw on the TV when the nun turned it on. Thanks for the money, and don’t worry, I ain’t gonna buy any rock with it. I’m gonna get some hot dogs.’ Bye.” Then the girl oddly shuffled backward several steps, turned, and headed out of the alley.

But Cristina hadn’t yet surfaced from her mute stare.
The nun?
“Hey, wait! What did you say about a nun?”

“Maybe I’ll get mustard on mine instead of cheese—er, no, I’m gonna get one with cheese, or maybe…a bunch!”

The girl flip-flopped away as if off balance and left the alley.

The nun
, Cristina’s mind clicked.
She said something
about a nun

How bizarre.

She retraced her steps back out the alley and peeped around.
How do you like that? She wasn’t lying
…She watched the homeless girl buy a bunch of hot dogs from the vendor. Then, still twitchy and off balance, she flopped off in the opposite direction.

The poor thing’s crazy. Mostly gibberish she was talking
, Cristina considered. Just a coincidence.

But where had she actually come from?

An out of business Banana Republic was what sat on the corner, its rear wall forming one side of the alley. The place had finally been bought out by developers a few weeks ago, Paul had told her, and it wouldn’t be long before contractors either leveled it or refurbished the structure for condos. Cristina walked back slowly, checking. There was a locked metal door and a locked garage on the loading bay but that was all.

Wait

She stooped.

Between two garbage cans, street level, was a hole in the wall, not even the diameter of an old vinyl record album.
Could she have
…But, no. It would be hard even for the slightest person to squeeze their shoulders through such an aperture.
And—whew!

Cristina backed away from the uric stench that gusted out.

Nobody could live in there

When she headed home, she didn’t notice the three objects lying near the hole.

Magic markers: one black, one green, and one red.

(I)

Forty-year-old Paul Nasher looked out his office window from the twentieth floor of the Mahoney Building. He stared through his smile down at Beekman Street and watched the orderly chaos of Financial District traffic.
God, I’m lucky
, he realized. Paul and his best friend, Jess Franklin, owned the firm outright now. They were among the most exclusive real estate lawyers in the city.

Yeah, we own this place
, he mused.
And now I own the
house
. It was the next step he’d succeeded in—the next step in cementing his life with Cristina.

Though Paul didn’t have the build for a high-powered attorney—he was stocky, broad-shouldered like a power-lifter—he had the brains and the inclination. Real estate law came innately to him; he could “feel” the future pulse of the market, and due to this he made just as much money during the downs as the ups, the annex house he’d bought being a prime example. He didn’t feel that he’d exploited the diocese at all—
Not with a million in cash, I didn’t
—but it was just another of those circumstances that had landed in his jurisprudential lap.
I have the Midas touch. I wonder why

He sat down at the desk, wearing a gratified smile along with his charcoal-gray Z Zegna suit. What he wore at any given time cost more than the average person made in a week, or in a year if one counted his Lange & Sohne Fly-back watch. It was all part of what he worked for, and he
didn’t take it for granted. What he wore was an extension of his sense of communication.

He communicated very well. His attire went hand in hand with his business acumen: it spoke the language of a winner.

Now if I could only get Cristina to marry me

The door clicked open and in walked his partner. Jess Franklin, though he dressed just as well as Paul and, if anything, had more cosmopolitan taste, looked more accountant than attorney, a little mussed with the unruly brown hair and pointy goatee that seemed perpetually in need of a trim. Paul winced when Jess lit a Marlboro.

“You should get a haircut and quit smoking. That shit’s not cool in our business. It’s kind of…redneck.”

“Hey, I
am
a redneck,” Jess countered, “and damn proud of it. I’m the ground-pounder here, remember? You’re the Face—”

“It’s good you know your calling,” Paul laughed.

“—in
spite
of the clear and present fact that I order better in a restaurant than you.”

“Amen. And go ahead, tap the ashes on my floor. Good for the carpet, right? Isn’t that what they say in the trailer park?”

“Carpet
tiles
, man,” Jess prodded.

Paul found it difficult not to guffaw. “It must kill you that whenever you drop a grand for lunch at the Four Seasons, you can’t smoke.”

“Tell me about it. What ever happened to America? Oh, and I let Ann go early. She said she had a date.”

“Who’s the lucky girl?”

Jess and Paul cracked laughs. Then Paul glanced at his Lange & Sohne. “Let’s have a drink at Harry’s. We don’t have anything else going today, do we?”

“Mind like a steel trap, Paul. I’ve got that pile of summary judgment briefs to FedEx for the Mayr land-deal, and you’ve got that call coming in.”

Paul straightened in his leather chair. “What call?”

“Do you ever look at your scheduler? You got a call at one from Panzram and Cartlon.” Jess looked at his own watch, a Breitling Chromatic. “Five minutes.”

“Ann never told me.”

“Yes, she did. Yesterday. You weren’t paying attention because you were too busy trying to see if she wasn’t wearing pan ties beneath that little Cavalli skirt.”

Paul smirked. “You’re out of your—”

“She wasn’t, by the way. And you know who Panzram and Carlton are, don’t you?”

Paul looked fuddled. “I’ve heard of them, sure. East Side ambulance chasers, aren’t they?”

Jess chuckled Marlboro smoke. “They’re more than that as far as you’re concerned. Change the air in your head.”

Paul nodded. “I’ll admit, I’m a little distracted lately, with Cristina here and all.”

“Yeah, yeah, great, but we’re attorneys, remember? Good attorneys forget about their squeeze the second they step into the office.” Jess looked disapproving. “After you finagled the diocese to sell you the annex house for five times less than it’s worth, they fired the lawyer they had on retainer—”

“But the monsignor named his price and I paid!” Paul objected, but only half in earnest.

“The monsignor’s
eighty
, Paul.”

“Fine, but what’s this got to do with Panzram and Cartlon?”

Jess eyed the lengthening ash on his cigarette. “They’re the firm the diocese hired after they shitcanned their regular guy.”

Damn
, Paul thought. “The contract’s ironclad—you saw it yourself. If they try to sue me, they’re gonna think a stone quarry fell on their heads.”

“Well, just get ready ’cos—”

The phone rang.

Jess winked. “There they are, and good luck. I’ll meet you at Harry’s Bar when I’m done at FedEx.”

“Right,” Paul said.

“And, Paul?”

Paul glanced up. Jess, ever so meticulously, tapped an inch-long ash on the carpet and winked.

“Redneck.” Paul sighed, waited two more rings, and picked up the phone. “Nasher and Franklin, Paul Nasher speaking.”

“Ah, Mr. Nasher,” issued a crisp, calculated voice. “I’m Vic Winner at Panzram and Carlton. I’ve recently been retained by the diocese to examine some of their legal affairs and I’ve come upon a discrepancy in the sales contract for the old annex house on Sixty-seventh Street.”

“You mean
my
annex house,” Paul corrected. “And I can’t imagine what discrepancy you’re referring to, because there is none.”

A pause, then, “Really, Mr. Nasher, I’m sure you realize that the price you paid for the property was, shall we say, invidious.”

“The diocesan legal representative wrote the contract, and the monsignor happily signed it. And then he
even
more
happily took my million dollars. In cash.”

A longer pause this time. “Monsignor Romay, as you know, is on in his years, and he was badly advised on the property’s true market value—”

Paul stared at the gold-framed picture of Cristina on his desk. “I’d have to say that if the monsignor was badly advised about anything, it was in replacing his previous attorney with your crew. I know your firm, Mr. Winner, and it’s not exactly topflight. Weren’t you the guys who blew that huge asbestos case in Queens? A lot of innocent people got fucked up for life by those contractors. How could you botch a rainmaker like that?”

“That’s outrageous!” the caller yelled. “You’ve got a lot of gall saying that after what you’ve done!”

“What
I’ve
done, Mr. Winner?”

“You hoodwinked the Catholic Church! You
stole
from them! This is actionable and you know it!”

Paul actually chuckled. “The only thing I know, Mr. Winner, is that you and your firm are second-rate. I’m sure the diocese approached much more bankable firms than Panzram and Carlton, and I’m sure they all turned the diocese down. Why? Because a
good
firm would know in a half a second that my sales contract for the Sixty-seventh Street property is 100 percent legal and binding. You wouldn’t find a judge in a million years who’d hear the case after he looked at that paperwork. So go ahead and sue me, Mr. Winner. It would be my plea sure to bury you in court and embarrass you so bad you’ll never get work again.”

“You’re unmitigated, Mr. Nasher!”

Paul unconsciously wiped at a scuff on his $300 shoe. “Let me put it as politely as I possibly can. If you fuck with
me
, I’ll fuck you back so hard you’ll be walking like a cowboy for the rest of your chump-change career.”

Paul hung up.
My God, I LOVE confrontations like that
, he thought.
It makes my blood pressure go down

He stood up, tweaked his Luigi Borrelli silk tie, then smiled down at the picture of Cristina on his desk.
None of
it means anything without her. Yeah, I’m REALLY lucky, all
right
.

He called the floor janitor to report that a cigarette ash needed to be cleaned from his carpet.

Some guys got it, and some guys don’t
, he thought and left for the bar.

(II)

Twentieth Precinct Homicide on 82
nd
Street sat stone-silent. Vernon felt awkward; he squirmed in his seat with
nothing to do.
Has the damn phone even rung in the last
hour
? They were covering burglary, too, since the administrative shake-up last winter, but there was nothing there, either.
All our cold cases are solved, and we’ve only got three
ongoing investigations. Twenty-
fourth Precinct’s got FIFTY!
Howard Vernon was a senior inspector with twenty-five years on the force and more commendations and valor medals than he could remember.
Somebody give me something
to do!

He spent his time getting fresh coffee and looking at the Byzantine-looking Ukranian cathedral out the window.

“This must be what retirement’s like,” he muttered.

“What’s that, How?” someone asked. “You’re retiring?”

Vernon turned to see. It was Slouch who’d made the remark, a fifteen-year vet in good standing. They called him Slouch because he slouched whenever he sat down. He was hard to make as undercover; he looked like some happy-go-lucky deadbeat who hung out in strip joints and actually thought the girls were attracted to him. His shaggy hair was always half in his face, dicing the permanent lazy shuck-and-jive smile.

“I feel irresponsible,” Vernon said. “We’re getting paid money to do a job, but—”

“But there’s no job to do? Sounds good to me.”

“Nothing ever happens in this precinct,” he grumbled and sat back down. “I spend more time walking to and from the coffee machine than writing up DOR’s.”

“You’re complaining like that’s a bad thing, How,” Slouch pointed out. “It means the crime rate is going down. And don’t forget, the Comm’s office transferred you here as a
reward
for outstanding service. Don’t complain.”

“Jesus Christ, Slouch, there’s nothing to
do
. We’re tits on a bull. The Twentieth doesn’t get homicides so the boss has us double-timing on B&E’s and nobody’s even breaking and entering here.”

Slouch stretched back with his feet up on his desk. He smiled big. “Maybe it’s your karma—it makes people peaceful. It drives the bad guys off to the Twenty-fourth.”

Where’s Bed-Sty when you need it
?

When Slouch’s phone rang, Vernon glared. “Why your phone and not mine?” he yelled.

Slouch laughed. “Because you’re the head of the unit and I’m the flunky, remember? Lemme do some grunt work for ya.” When Slouch picked up the phone, he said, “Yeah? When? Okay,” and hung up.

“What is it?” Vernon pleaded.

“Treat yourself to a cartwheel, How. Worden’s Hardware Store got busted into last night.”

“I’m on it,” Vernon said, jumping up.

“Sit back down, How. Taylor did the work on it an hour ago. That wasn’t the store calling—it was Vice.”

“What the hell’s Vice got to do with a B&E at a hardware store?”

Slouch paused at the door, grinning. “They got a witness…
A hooker
.”

“Yeah?”

“I’m picking her up at booking and bringing her in. I hope to God she’s hot. Meanwhile, Taylor’s on the way with the lowdown.”

Slouch loped out, leaving Vernon anxious and frowning. Now he was alone.
What could be duller than a hardware
store burglary
? But he supposed it was better than nothing.

Vernon’s second in charge was Jake Taylor. Good cop. Drank too much. “But only on Sundays,” he once told Vernon. His curly brown hair and fat mustache, plus shabby tweed sports jackets made him look like a reject from the early seventies when every cop in the department was trying to look like Bruce Dern and be “hip.”

When Taylor came in, he said, “Did you hear about the—”

“Worden’s Hardware Store, B&E,” Vernon responded to at least
sound
like he was a leg up. “Let me guess. A truck-job. They cleaned the place out.”

“Not even close.” Taylor dropped his case notes on Vernon’s desk and sat down. “Somebody ripped off four Sloyd-brand wood-carving knives. Total value of the heist? $39.80.”

Vernon glared. “That’s the dumbest-ass thing I’ve ever heard! Nobody busts into a fuckin’ hardware store and steals four cheap knives! You steal power drills and diamond-tipped saw blades and air compressors!”

“Right, and if you’re looking to fence knifes, you go for Gerbers and the Al Mars and the bowies, the ones that go for two bills a pop.”

Vernon’s anger spilled over into his incredulity. “How’d they break in?”

“Front window, bold as brass. Don’t know what time last night. They knew what they wanted, they went in, got it, and split. We got some prints but—” Taylor shrugged. “You might not wanna waste Tech Service’s time on a forty-dollar heist.”

“Four cheap knives?” Vernon just didn’t get it. “That’s the dumbest-ass thing I ever heard,” he repeated.

Taylor eyed him. “I know you’ve had a few more birthdays than me, How, but is any of this ringing a bell? You said the same exact thing last winter…”

Vernon stared back at his partner. “Worden’s…Yeah. The place near Greenflea, right? Around Seventy-seventh?”

“The cogs are turning.”

Then the memory snapped back. “That’s right. Somebody B&E’d Worden’s last December, and stole…”
Ridiculous
, he recalled. “They stole a bunch of Christmas tree stands.”

“Yep. Over a dozen of them, and that’s
all
they ripped off. And do you remember who did it?”

Vernon pointed like a gun. “A bunch of homeless
women! Yeah, now I remember. They got them on the security camera, and we even busted one of them a few days later.”

“Exactly. And you said it was the dumbest-ass thing you ever heard for somebody to pinch a bunch of Christmas tree stands. Gotta say I agree with you on that.”

“Don’t tell me it was the same homeless girls,” Vernon ventured.

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