New York Dead

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Authors: Stuart Woods
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reached the lobby, and, when the doors opened, they could see the rain beating against the windows.
    “Can I give you a lift?” she asked. “I’ve got a car waiting, and you’ll never get a cab down here at this time of the evening.”
    “Sure, I’d appreciate that.” He took a deep breath. “If you’re all through with work, how about some dinner?”
    “You’re off duty now?”
    “The moment you say yes.”
    She looked at him frankly. “I’d like that.”
    They ran across the pavement to the waiting Lincoln Town Car, one of hundreds that answer the calls of people with charge accounts.
    “Where to?” Cary said, as they settled into the back seat.
    “How about Elaine’s?” Stone said.
    “Can you get a table without a reservation?”
    “Let’s find out.”
    “Eighty-eighth and Second Avenue,” she said to the driver.
    Stone turned to her. “I got the impression from what you said in the elevator that I shouldn’t necessarily believe everything Barron Harkness tells me.”
    “Why, Detective,” Cary said, her eyes wide and innocent. “I never said that.” She scrunched down in the seat and laid her head back. “And, anyway, you’re off duty, remember?”

Chapter
10

    Elaine accepted a peck on the cheek, shook Cary’s hand, and gave them Woody Allen’s regular table. Stone heaved a secret sigh of relief. This was no night for Siberia.
    “I’m impressed,” Cary said when they had ordered a drink. “Whenever I’ve been in here before, we always got sent to Siberia.”
    “You’ve clearly been coming here with the wrong men,” Stone replied, raising his glass to her.
    “You could be right,” she said, looking at him appraisingly. “You’re bad casting for a cop, you know.”
    “Am I?”
    “Don’t be coy. It’s not the first time you’ve been told that.”
    Pepe, the headwaiter, appeared with menus. Stone waved them away and asked for the specials.
    “No, it’s not the first time I’ve been told that,” Stone said, when they had chosen their food. “I’m told that every time a cop I don’t know looks at me.”
    “All right,” she said, leaning forward, “I want the whole biography, and don’t leave anything out, especially the part about why you’re a cop and not a stockbroker, or something.”
    Stone sighed. “It goes back a generation. My family, on my father’s side, was from western Massachusetts, real Yankees, mill owners.”
    “Barrington, as in Great Barrington, Massachusetts?”
    “I don’t know; I didn’t have a lot of contact with the Massachusetts Barringtons. My father was at Harvard — rather unhappily, I might add — when the stock market crash of ’twenty-nine came. His father and grandfather were hit hard, and Dad had to drop out of school. This troubled him not in the least, because it freed him to do what he really wanted to do.” “Which was?”
    “He wanted to be a carpenter.”
    “A
carpenter
? You mean with saws and hammers?”
    “Exactly. He took it up when he was a schoolboy at Exeter, and he showed great talent. My grandfather was horrified, of course. Carpentry wasn’t the sort of thing a Barrington did. But when he could no longer afford to keep his son in Harvard, well…” “What does this have to do with your being a cop?”
    “I’m coming to that, eventually. Dad got to be something of a radical, politically, as a result of the depression. He gravitated to Greenwich Village, where he fell in with a crowd of leftists, and he earned a living knocking on people’s doors and asking if they wanted anything fixed. He lived in the garage of a town house on West Twelfth Street and didn’t own anything much but his tools.
    “He met my mother in the late thirties. She was a painter and a pianist and from a background much like Dad’s — well-off Connecticut people, the Stones — who’d been wiped out in the crash. She was younger than Dad and very taken with the contrast between his upper-class education and his working-class

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