twenty-seventh and eighth floors. Milstein works on twenty-eight. Crane, too. But at separate ends of the floor.â
âHow late does Milstein work?â
âUntil six. Pretty much on the dot.â
âWhat about Crane?â
âIt varies. Heâs one of those guys where things revolve around his schedule. He has a place in Miami, and he lives in a loft in Tribeca. Both residences are hooked in with the Summit computer system. He works from home quite a bit.â
âWhere does Milstein live?â
âSeventy-ninth and Park. He has his driver pick him up and take him home, even though itâs only a fifteen-minute walk. Always the same driver. A big guy. Ex-cop.â
Beck reacted immediately. âAn ex-cop?â
âYes. I guess heâs sort of a bodyguard, too.â
âWhy would Milstein need a bodyguard?â
âI donât think he does. Heâs mostly a driver, but Milstein thinks itâs cool to keep a big guy with a gun around who people will assume is a bodyguard. Like a status symbol or something.â
Beck frowned. Armed ex-cops didnât exactly fit in with a Wall Street type.
âAll right, letâs leave it at that for now. If I need to, Iâll be in touch. If we get lucky, you wonât hear from me until this is over.â
âRight.â
Olivia stepped toward Beck and took hold of his forearm. He could smell her soap, or shampoo. Something fresh. Something that fit her exactly.
âThank you,â she said.
She was holding his arm firmly. The contact unnerved him, which surprised Beck. The closeness of her, the touch, she had crossed the normal barrier that separated them.
Beck gave in to the desire to touch her back. He placed his hand on top of her hand, almost as if he were going to remove it. Her skin was incredibly smooth and warm. It seemed as if he could actually feel the sheen of it.
âOkay,â he said.
She let go of his forearm; he let her hand fall away from his immediately.
She turned away from Beck, leading him back to her front door. He took his coat from her, nodded once, and walked out the door, wanting to get outside quickly, to get away from Olivia Sanchez.
In a moment, he was making his way through the Escher-like maze of staircases and arches and walkways that connected the condoâs units. He checked his watch. Heâd been there nearly an hour.
He spotted the black Mercury parked at the fire hydrant about thirty feet down the block. He slid into the passenger seat. Settled back and exhaled.
Demarco looked at him and raised an eyebrow. âWhat?â
Beck shook his head. âChrist.â
âChrist what?â
âChrist sake this isnât what I expected.â
âHow so?â
Beck grimaced, scratched the back of his neck, ran his hand back and forth over the top of his head.
âThat bad?â
âYeah. Maybe. I donât know. Not good.â
âWhy?â
âIt sounds like there might be some nasty players behind this.â
âLike who?â
âLike a fucking Russian arms dealer for starters.â
Demarco frowned. âHowâd that happen?â
âMoney, man. A lot of fucking money.â
âSo now what?â
âI gotta get a handle on this fast. Have to try and make things right for Mannyâs cousin, at least right enough so Manny will back off for now. And do it fast before too many snakes crawl out from under rocks.â Beckâs voice faded out, lost in his thoughts. âAnd not leave any trail.â Beck shook his head, stared out the windshield. âShit.â
Demarco didnât bother asking Beck what he was wrestling with. He just repeated, âSo now what?â
Beck looked at his watch. Almost five oâclock. There was time.
âFifty-seventh and Lex.â
Â
5
Traveling against the rush hour traffic, Demarco and Beck reached Milsteinâs office building on the northwest corner of
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