Page 26 of Calculated in Death
Eighteen crowded floors later, she pushed off, strode to the menu of choices. “WIN Group.” She pointed, took a left jog, found the nameplate on a set of double doors.
“Over eight hundred registered,” Peabody reported. “New York alone.”
“We’ll do a standard search and match with the names we have. If nothing pops, we widen it out.”
She pushed through the doors. Inside the small reception area they’d gone for energy—lots of reds, bright whites, chrome. The smoldering brunette behind the counter offered a slow, liquid smile.
“May I help you?”
“Lieutenant Dallas, Detective Peabody.” She set her badge on the counter.
“Oh, this is about that poor woman Brad found last night. Did you find out who mugged her?”
“We need to see Mr. Whitestone,” Eve said.
“Of course. Sorry. He’s really shaken up about it.” She tapped her earpiece. “Brad? The police are here. Yes, Lieutenant Dallas. I will.” She tapped again. “I’ll take you back to his office. Would you like anything?”
She might never want anything again after the soup. “We’re fine. Are Mr. Whitestone’s partners available?”
“Jake’s at a business lunch and should be back by two. He has a two-thirty. Rob’s in with a client. I can let his assistant know you’re here if you need to speak with him.”
“Do that.”
Before she could open the door, Whitestone stepped out. Like Lorraine’s his shirt was crisp and white. His suit perfectly tailored. But shadows dogged his eyes.
“Thanks, Marie. Lieutenant, Detective, I hope you’re here to tell me you found the mugger.” He stepped back to let them into a small, slick office. A good window, she noted, a counter for an AC and a minifriggie. Contemporary art, a glossy black workstation, and a couple of visitors’ chairs in that energetic red.
“We’ve confirmed that Marta Dickenson was killed inside your apartment—”
“What? Inside?”
“It wasn’t a mugging. When’s the last time you were in the apartment?”
“I—” He sat down. “Day before yesterday. I went by to talk to the crew supervisor about a couple of details.”
“Name.”
“Jasper Milk. Milk and Sons Contractors. They’re third generation. They’re artists. And they’re reputable. They always secure the building. We have an alarm system.”
“Yes. I saw it. Who has the codes?”
“I do, Jasper. My partners. And, ah, the designer. Sasha Kirby. City Style. If this person broke in—”
“There’s no sign of a break-in.”
Eve watched his expression change, shift from puzzlement to understanding, then to stubborn denial.
“Listen, I trust, absolutely, everyone who has the code, who has access. I don’t see how anyone could have gotten inside my apartment.”
“Evidence doesn’t lie, Mr. Whitestone.”
“Maybe not, but it sure as hell doesn’t make any sense. That’s a brand-new system.”
“Brewer, Kyle, and Martini. Accounting firm, auditors. The victim worked for them, and there’s some cross between the clients of your firm and theirs.”
He no longer looked puzzled or stubborn, but slightly ill. “I don’t know that name offhand. I can have my admin check, but—if you tell me the clients we have in common—”
“Peabody.”
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