“It’s an easy question,” she said. “You’re a smart kid; I think you know why I’m asking.”
“No. No.” He wouldn’t look at her.
Suzanne couldn’t figure out if this was an act or self-preservation. Dennis didn’t want to think about his brother being a cold-blooded killer, so he just shut down when he figured out where she was going with the questioning.
Either way, she was onto something, and she’d get Dennis to tell the truth. It was just a matter of time and patience.
She had all the time in the world.
Until James Thorpe walked into the apartment a minute later and put an end to her questioning of Dennis Barnett.
TWENTY-ONE
Ryan lived in a nondescript, run-down, brown, eight-story apartment building with at least one hundred units in the Fifties near Third. Whereas the Upper West Side near Columbia was a mix of quaint old and new, this section had a mix of office buildings circa the 1950s and a hodgepodge of apartment housing.
Sean appreciated New York, he liked visiting, but seeing so many people packed together reminded him that he was a bit homesick for California and the elbow room he’d enjoyed.
“Keep your mouth shut,” Sean told Trey when he buzzed Ryan’s apartment.
“But-”
Sean shot him a stern look and Trey scowled, but didn’t talk back.
“Yup,” a voice said in the speaker.
“You called about a phone.”
“Come on up.”
The door buzzed and Sean led the way to the third-floor apartment. The hallways were so narrow he and Trey had to walk single file. The entire building smelled of stale food from poor ventilation, but it wasn’t a tenement.
When Ryan opened the door, he seemed apprehensive at the sight of Sean and Trey. Ryan was of average height, gaunt but clean-cut enough that he might still be considered attractive to the opposite sex.
Sean handed him his card. “The phone you found belongs to a runaway. I need to ask you a few questions.”
“You’re a private eye?” Ryan asked, skeptical.
“I was hired by her parents to find her. I know she was supposed to be at a party in Sunset Park. Can we come in?”
Sean took Ryan’s moment of hesitation to enter the apartment. Trey was right behind him.
The place looked like a typical, sloppy college student’s studio apartment. Bed in the corner that doubled as a couch; large-screen television that dwarfed the room; a couple of chairs; desk with computer, books, and papers; and a small lopsided table. Dirty clothes were heaped in one corner. Two posters were tacked to the beige walls- one showing a sleek red Lamborghini with a naked blonde on the hood, the other commemorating the Pittsburgh Steelers’ Super Bowl XLIII victory.
“I just found the phone.” Ryan stood next to the open door as if he would bolt at the first sign of trouble.
Sean spotted Kirsten’s smart phone next to the computer. He picked it up. It had a crack on the front of the screen, but he didn’t know whether the damage was old or new. It was on, with only one battery bar.
“You just now found the phone? I couldn’t get a GPS lock on it, but it has one bar.”
“I mean, I found it Saturday night, but I forgot. I was pretty wasted, didn’t know I had it in my pocket. I was doing laundry this morning and found it. It was totally dead, but I had an old charger that fit and, um, I liked the girl who dropped it, thought we could go out if I gave her the phone.”
Trey stepped forward and opened his mouth to talk, but Sean cut him off. He showed Ryan Kirsten’s photo.
“Is this the girl who dropped the phone?”
Ryan grinned. “Yeah. Ashleigh. She’s hot.” Then he looked nervous and said to Trey, “You’re not her brother, are you?”
“Boyfriend,” Trey said.
“I doubt that,” Ryan snorted.
Sean said, “Trey, do you need to step out?”
“No,” he grumbled.
To Ryan: “Tell me what happened Saturday night.”
“Is she really missing?”
“Yes.”
“It was a rave. Seven hundred people, maybe more. I lost track of her.”
“When did you find the phone? I know she used it late Saturday night.”
“Um, no. I was, um, dancing with her. We had a little action, she said she had to meet a friend but would be back. She took off, then I saw her phone on the floor.”
Sean kept his face neutral, but he knew what Ryan meant with his euphemisms. He wanted to pound sense into the jerk, but that wouldn’t get them any closer to finding Kirsten.
“How did you know it was hers?”
“Saw her with it. She said she was coming back. But she didn’t, and I pocketed her phone, got another drink. Forgot all about it until I found it this morning and remembered how she-” He cut himself off with a glance at Trey.
Trey burst out, “And you didn’t go look for her? You weren’t worried that something might have happened?”
“Hey! It was a big party. I figured she hooked up with someone else. She was dressed for it.”
Trey stepped forward aggressively, and Sean had to put his hand on his chest to physically hold him back. Ryan backed up, obviously not wanting a confrontation. He was definitely not the stand-up-and-defend-your-girl kind of guy. Trey, however, was, and Sean needed to defuse the situation.
Sean showed Ryan Wade Barnett’s photograph. “Know him?”
“Sure. Wade.”
“Was he at the party?”
“Oh, yeah. He knows how to have fun.”
“Do you remember what time he arrived? When he left?”
Ryan shook his head and leaned against the door-jamb. “Have no idea when he showed up, but he made a stink as the party was winding down that his ride had left.”
“Did he call a car service? Do you know how he got home?”
“He left with some girl, but he didn’t look too happy about it.”
“Can I take your charger? You said it was an old one.”
“Well-”
Sean put a twenty-dollar bill on the desk and picked up the charger. “Thanks for your help.” He walked out, Trey on his heels.
Before Ryan had even closed the door, Trey said, “Do you believe that guy? Kirsten would never go out with a loser like that.”
“At least he tried to get her phone back to her. This is going to help.”
“He didn’t even know her name!” Trey said, shaking his head.
“And you have to let it drop. He’s a witness; don’t tell him anything he doesn’t already know, got it?” Sean was already scrolling through the text messages on Kirsten’s phone. He skipped the messages that had been sent Sunday and Monday before the phone died-they were from her mother, Trey, and a few friends at her school-and looked at the messages during the time frame of the party.