every thirty minutes. I do all the scheduling—the phoning and texting and e-mailing—myself.
At three o’clock a girl with incandescent mahogany skin appears. Her skin is so shiny it looks polished. Her hair is short and dark. She smiles. I am sitting in a comfortable blue club chair. She approaches me and touches my face.
“Please have a seat over there,” I say, pointing to the identical blue club chair opposite my own. No doubt she thinks we’re about to begin a freaky fantasy.
“Here is the first piece of news: I’m not going to touch you, but I will, of course, pay you for this visit.” I hand her three hundred-dollar bills. (The agreed-upon price was two fifty.)
“Here is the second piece of news, and perhaps it is not quite so welcome. I am going to ask you some questions.”
She smiles. I quickly add, “Nothing uncomfortable—just some simple talking and chatting. I am a detective with the NYPD.”
Her face becomes a mask of fear.
“But I promise. You have nothing to worry about.”
The questions begin:
Have you ever serviced a client at 655 Park Avenue?
Have you ever serviced a client at the Auberge du Parc Hotel?
Have you ever serviced a client who acted with extreme violence?
A client who hurt you, threatened you, brandished a weapon, a gun, a cane, a stick, a whip? A client who tried to slip a tablet or a powder or a suspicious liquid into a beverage?
Have you ever met with a client who was famous in his field—an actor, a diplomat, a senator, a governor, a foreign leader, a clergyman?
The answers are all no. And the pattern remains the same for every woman who follows.
A few of them tell me about men with some odd habits, but as the woman in the tight yellow jeans says, “A lot of guys have odd habits. That’s why they go to prostitutes. Maybe their fancy wives don’t want to suck toes or fuck in a tennis skirt or take it up the ass.”
Other statements are made.
A tall woman, the only woman I’ve ever seen who looked beautiful in a Mohawk haircut, says, “Okay, there is this congressman from New Jersey that I see once or twice a month.”
A very tan woman in a saronglike outfit says, “Yeah, one guy was sort of into whips, but all he wanted was for me to unpin my hair and swing it against his dick.”
A woman who shows up in blue shorts cut off at mid-thigh, her shirt tied just above the navel, gives me some hope, but she, too, is a waste of time. “I think I was at 655 Park once. But it was for a woman. I hate working chicks. The few I’ve done were all, like, just into kissing and touching and petting. They’re more work than the guys.”
No information of any value. Yes, two of the girls have been slapped—both of them by men who were drunk. Yes, the girl-on-girl prostitute at 655 Park works for the Russian gang, but she knows nothing about the death of Maria Martinez, and she has never even heard of Paulo Montes.
What I am learning from these few hours of wasted interviews is the knowledge that the world is filled with men who are happy to pay to get laid. That’s it. That’s the deal. Over and out. It is a gross and humiliating way for a girl to make money, but, in most cases, each has made her separate peace with it.
The interviews end. Thousands of dollars later I have nothing to show for my work.
It is definitely time for me to leave the Pierre.
It is definitely time for me to return home to Dalia.
Chapter 25
Every morning at the precinct, K. Burke and I have the following dialogue.
Instead of saying the words “Good morning,” she looks at me and says sternly, “You’re late.”
I always respond with a cheery “And good morning to you, ma belle. ”
It has become a funny little routine between the two of us, the sort of thing two friends might do. Who knows? Maybe K. Burke and I are becoming friends. Sometimes a mutually miserable situation can bring people together.
But this morning it’s different. She greets me by saying, “Don’t bother
Tie Ning
Robert Colton
Warren Adler
Colin Barrett
Garnethill
E. L. Doctorow
Margaret Thornton
Wendelin Van Draanen
Nancy Pickard
Jack McDevitt