part by stopping by the crime scene on Michaudâs behalf. She asked all the right questions and looked at all the pertinent evidence. Sheâs here, she decides, because right now everywhere else is worse.
As soon as Sobieski sees the lawyers, whom she expected, albeit not four of them, as well as Lauâs boss Emily Cheng, she knows that Mo was correct, that the interview will reveal nothing of substance. She might not be a homicide detective, but she knows her way around the paranoid halls of a multinational bank well enough to see that no financial institution is about to open up its records simply to find the killer of one of its entirely dispensable employees. If it were money and not a life that was lost, it would be different. But for this, they wonât even let them go up to Lauâs floor to take a look at his workstation. Instead theyâre sequestered in an executive conference room and given tea in fine china cups, and repeatedly told that they will receive âthe bankâs full cooperationâ while, repeatedly, their requests are denied.
âWas Lau happy?â Mo asks.
âPatrick was a very happy young man,â answers Cheng.
âHad you noticed anything different in his performance . . . any incident with a coworker or trouble with a client?â
âNot at all.â
Then, Sobieski asks, âWas he having a good year?â
âExcuse me?â
âI know the markets have been inching up, and I was wondering if, you know, performance-wise, he was having a good year.â
Cheng glances at corporate legal suit number two before answering, âIâm afraid thatâs confidential bank information.â
Mo asks, âHave you ever been to Patrick Lauâs apartment?â
Cheng shakes her head. âI heard it was nice. Overlooking the harbor, correct? But Patrick and I did not socialize.â
Sobieski glances at Mo, but he has nothing else to ask. Regardless, she presses on. âWhat about today? Was there any conversation or transaction or client interaction that involved Patrick Lau, your direct report, that seemed at all unusual?â
Chengâs eyes narrow as she considers Sobieski the inquisitor. Before Cheng can answer, legal suit number three speaks up. âExcuse me, but is this a U.S. government issue, Miss . . . Sobieski? Because as much as weâd like to . . . I donât see why or how . . .â
Sobieski waves off the attorney and stands. No problem. Not my business. Just wanted to let you know that I know youâre stonewalling. âJust one last question, Miss Cheng: Do you know of anything that happened today that would have compelled Patrick Lau to want to celebrate tonight, a Monday?â
Rather than look at one of her four attorneys or at Sobieski, Cheng looks down at the conference table as she answers. âNo. As Iâve said, Patrick Lau is one of approximately fifty traders whom I oversee, and I make it a point to have little to no knowledge of any of their personal affairs.â
*Â *Â *
As soon as theyâre back on the street, she mentions Chengâs downward glance. âShe knows something.â
âAbout the murder? Maybe, but if anything, it tells me they made some serious money there today. How they made it, how much, and with whom, thatâs anyoneâs guess.â
âI wonder where she made her dinner reservations.â
They stand looking back up at the massive glass-and-steel tower of the bank as if it can provide answers.
Finally, Mo says, âThis is what I expected from themâa wall. And exactly why I called Michaud, because if weâre to find anything, itâs going to come back channel. I know itâs really not the business of your organization, but if anyoneââ
She cuts him off before something is said that could get either of them in trouble, not that Mo seems to care. She decides, when she gets
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