door. Locked from the inside too. But with the long bar he was able to get the door open enough to squeeze through. Not a pretty job, he thought, slipping inside.

The building was dark. He pulled out his flashlight and came upon a rolling bin full of paper. He found a light switch. The building was in fact filled with shredded paper, some in rolling bins, some bagged in huge seventy-five- gallon waste bags. The blue bags were tagged, he noticed. The identifying information was in Chinese. At the end of the building, underneath a large clock, stood a desk and lamps and some kind of schedule, all written in Chinese.

CorpServe appeared to have been set up atop a previously abandoned operation: there were yellow lines painted on the floor, which, again, suggested some kind of light manufacturing process-back when America still made things that people in the rest of the world wanted-and these lines showed a parallel series of operations, probably conveyor belts that arrived at the back of the building where the loading dock was.

On the wall, under bright lights, hung a large white marker board, showing about thirty midtown locations and gridded by date for vehicle, staff levels, time, in, time out, supervisor name, and net weight received. Another large board was gridded for vehicles by date, load weight, driver, time in and out, service requirements, and start and finish mileage. Quite an operation, Jin Li, he thought, why didn't you tell me?

He noticed an office, its door locked. Maybe this was the nerve center. He took the crowbar and made quick work of the door, broke it down. One large desk, with huge file cabinets. Each was devoted to a company in midtown. There was a lot of confidential information, he saw, sales reports, office memos, legal reports, all kinds of stuff. What was it doing here?

He continued to paw through the paper on the desktop. He looked quickly at every piece. Nothing much here-except, wait, a faxed form letter from a Norma Powell that said, 'Your previous tenant, NAME: Jin Li, has applied to be a tenant in my building, and listed you as her previous landlord. Kindly confirm that-'

He checked the date. Sent just a few days earlier. An address? Yes, in Harlem. The street address was just off Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard. Jin Li was in Harlem? Okay, he said to himself, I'm coming. Maybe she'd already moved in. It was the best lead he had. He took the paper with him, so that no one else would find it, and hurried through the building, not worrying about turning off the lights, and wedged himself back through the broken door.

He hauled himself up the rope to the water tower, arm over arm, kicking away at the fence again, found the catwalk, and threw the rope and tools down to the ground, then he lowered himself down the rusty ladder and dropped heavily on the other side.

A moment later he was back in his truck, speeding toward Harlem, barely noticing the old Chinese man on a bicycle who had witnessed Ray's impressive penetration of the lot by way of the water tower. The man had spent a few minutes inspecting the truck, too. Seeing Ray's hurry, he wondered whether to pull out the phone in his pocket. Jin Li had told him to call her, so he would.

27

Oh, timing really is everything! Martz waited a second longer, looked back at Phelps, who nodded. Phelps had arranged their entry into the East Side hotel, knew the security manager. It was a very nice place but Martz was surprised that Tom Reilly wasn't using the Pierre, say, or the Peninsula. Or the Ritz Carlton. He'd used it a few times, back in the day. The women always liked that, were enthused by the atmosphere.

Martz knocked on the glossy white door.

No answer.

He knocked again, politely.

The door opened a few inches and the face of a beautiful young woman appeared.

'Yes?'

Martz pushed in.

'Hey!'

Phelps came quickly after him, shut the door, began to gently explain to the young woman that she needed to dress and leave quickly.

The big bed was empty. Martz saw steam coming out a doorway, heard the shower. He stepped into the bathroom, saw Reilly in the large glass-walled shower soaping his dick reverently.

'Not bad,' Martz said.

'What? Hello?' cried Reilly at the sound of a man's voice.

Martz pulled open the shower door. 'See what you've made me do?'

'Get the fuck out of here!' yelled Reilly.

Phelps stepped into the bathroom doorway.

Martz reached in and turned off the shower, getting his sleeve wet.

'I've been trying to talk to you, Tom. I've called many times. I've had you followed to Yankee Stadium. I've invited you to my house. Which somehow resulted in your wife sticking her fingers in my butt. She and I had a little chat. I'm sure she told you about that. Yes, I've done a lot to get your attention. But you know what?'

'What?' said Reilly in his naked misery.

Martz looked at Reilly's crotch. 'You've lost a little of your exuberance. How come? I don't excite you, Tom? Even after all the trouble I've gone to? I don't make your heart go fucking pitter-pat?'

'What did you tell my friend? Where is she?'

'Gone,' said Phelps. 'Dressed and gone.'

'What do you want, Martz?'

Martz looked back at Phelps. 'You can leave and close the bathroom door now.'

Which he did. Martz leaned into the shower stall. 'It's very simple, Tom,' he said quietly. 'You know there's been a serious security breach at Good Pharma.' He stepped into the shower, his eight-hundred-dollar shoes on the wet tile, forcing Tom backward, and then lowered his voice to whisper. 'It affected the stock price. But you didn't tell anybody. That was very illegal.'

Reilly studied Martz's sun-damaged face, the droopy malevolent eyes.

'The SEC guys in Washington would enjoy buttering their toast with you, Tom,' continued Martz. 'Take it from me, I've been around long enough to see it happen. Given your behavior, it wouldn't take much to get them started. They butter the toast and then they take a lot of careful bites until the toast is gone. But that's just the government lawyers, Tom. Think of the investors, the lawyers they can afford!' he hissed. 'Think of the cost of the lawyers you'd have to hire! That lovely young woman who just left? Some plaintiff's lawyer will want to depose her. See what the pillow talk in the hotel room was. What corporate secrets got mixed in with the juicy stuff. Come on, man, this is New York City! Where blood gets turned into money! Think of the articles in The Wall Street Journal! Think of your wife! The hit to her reputation and practice. The looks her patients will give her. I mean, the multiplier effects just go on and-'

Reilly allowed a slow nod of his wet hair, his eyes never leaving Martz's.

'But-to get back to my point-though it was illegal of you not to immediately tell the many trusting investors who own thirty billion dollars of Good Pharma stock, it was also smart.'

'Why do you say that?' asked Tom, surprised.

'Because you have a good friend who can help you with your little problem if only-if only you would talk to him.'

'Who, you?'

Martz gave a silent nod. 'Me.'

Tom exhaled through his nose, studying Martz.

'It's simple,' Martz continued. 'You and I will revert to our anthropological origins. We either hunt big prey together or we hunt each other until one of us wins.'

'You're hunting me now.'

'Nope, this is just tracking.' Martz smiled a big, fabulous, glad-eyed grin, his teeth bright. 'Hunting is when you actually make the kill.'

Вы читаете The Finder
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату