Syndrome by Thomas Hoover (read along books txt) đ
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But now a pounding rain had just come through, which meant no walk for either of them. Knickers would show up looking like a bedraggled mop. Definitely the moment to take the car.
Alexa Hampton liked to say that she wasnât really an auto person. Hers was a four-year-old Toyota, light blue, and its modesty befitted her needs. In New York, hopping around SoHo and the Village, it made a lot more sense to rely on a bike or on cabs, or just plain walk. Garaging a car in New York cost the equivalent of a studio apartment rental in most normal places, and the bottom-line truth was, she resented the Toyotaâs presence in her life. But there were moments when cabs werenât the answer, and this was one of them. Fortunately, the parking garage she used was just around the corner, so she and Knickers got there before being totally soaked. Knickers loved riding in the Toyota, and she always seemed to know what was coming the minute they turned the corner for the garage. This morning she gave a gleeful âWoofâ and started panting, a sure indicator of joy.
As they drove the few blocks downtown, the rain was easing up but the streets were still shiny. Ally reached into her bag and took out the personal card of Winston Bartlett. His private residence was on Gramercy Park. The only reason he could possibly want to meet her there was if he did indeed have a job. She decided she would call him from the office and confirm the appointment, assuming he still remembered it. Then sheâd get Jennifer to help her assemble a portfolio of their work and make a color copy to leave with him.
She leaned over and rubbed Knickersâ ears. Her thoughts were drifting back to Karl Van de Vliet. At some level his stem cell technology sounded like the ultimate snake oil. Was she about to take leave of her common sense to go to see him, or even to consider letting him perform some experimental procedure on her motherâs mind?
On the other hand, what about him? What kind of âprocedureâ could Van de Vliet have done that would stop his own skin from aging? If Grant had merely told her that Karl Van de Vliet had finally realized the cosmeticianâs dream and learned how to make human skin youthful and supple again, she would have passed it off as just more Wall Street IPO hyperbole. But seeing was believing, and it also seemed like there was a lot more going on than just a change in his skin. There was something about him, in his eyes, that felt⊠inconsistent.
She was still puzzling on that point when Knickers jumped up and barked. They were passing a garbage truck and the guys were banging the cans into the back.
âShhh.â She reached to quiet her. âWeâre almost there, baby.â Then she tugged at her leash and settled her back into the seat.
Since the rain was all but over, she decided to park the car where she dropped Knickers off and then walk over to her office, which was only a couple of blocks east. She found a spot right next to the awning of Pooch Pros, and the minute Knickers was liberated from the car, she bounded to the door dragging her leash through the puddles. Misha was already there to meet her.
âCome on, my kraceve baby, my beauty.â He reached down and gave her a big hug. Misha was a gaunt, balding, blond-haired Russian who had once been the hero of the Soviet Olympic swim team. Now he looked like he could stand a piroshki or two to plump him up. âYou be big fluff of cloud after we finishing.â
Ally followed them in, and there was Betty. Ally figured âBettyâ assumed her made-up but totally American name was easier than whatever sheâd used in Russia, but to Ally it just felt weird Betty had dark hair, a broad smile that wouldnât die, and approximately thirty pounds that would have looked better on Misha. They reminded her of Jack Sprat, et al.
âHoney, there is problem at your office. Woman name Jennifer call. Say she try reach you at home but you leave already. And you donât answer your cell phone.â
âShit, I turned it off. Knickers goes nuts if it rings in the car.â
Jennifer was only a couple of years older than Ally, but sheâd been with the firm back when Allyâs father, Arthur, ran it and she was the mother figure of CitiSpace. She was also Allyâs best friend and had been even before Ally came back to run the firm. Ally felt like she had known her forever. These days Jen spent a lot of effort trying to create a social life for Ally that would include eligible men. She kept nagging her to join some clubs, anything, just get out there.
Ally knew she was right, but she was working too hard to take time out. She had the idea, which she wasnât naive enough to actually believe at a rational level, that sooner or later someone who could replace Steve would come along. Yes, she was lonely a lot, but until this last deterioration of her heart sheâd spent a lot of evenings and weekends outside, biking and hiking around town, and she knew plenty of people who were interesting and kind. She sometimes thought her problem was that she liked people, all kinds of people, as long as they were kept slightly away, at a psychic distance. Maybe it was the getting close part that never seemed to work out.
It had actually been that way ever since Steve disappeared. She had the premonition that if she got too close to somebody, she was destined to lose them.
Now she stood for a second, puzzling. Sheâd mentioned taking Knickers to Pooch Pros, so thatâs how Jen knew where sheâd be, but what could have gone wrong at 7:45 in the morning?
Jennifer wasnât usually in this early, but she was finishing a rush job for a marble bathroom for a couple on the Upper East Side. On days when Jennifer did get to the office first, sheâd have the coffee going and an extra bagel for Knickers, on the chance Ally might bring her, which she often did. But to phone Betty just to tell her to hurry? That was odd.
âShould I call now?â It seemed pointless. She was no more than ten minutes away. What else could go wrong in ten minutes?
âShe sound very hurry,â Betty declared.
Ally took her cell phone out of her bag and switched it on. The office rang only once and then Jennifer was there.
âAlly, youâre not going to believe who called here ten minutes ago, asking for you. Winston Bartlett. My God, itâs like Donald Trump called. Well, actually it was some male secretary or something. He said he was calling to confirm your ten oâclock appointment. At an address on Gramercy Park East. Whatâs that about? Jesus, Ally, where are you? I donât know what youâre up to, but this could be big. He owns entire buildings, for chrissake.â
âDid you say I was coming?â
âI didnât know what to say. He left a number to call if you canât make it. Otherwise, heâll assume youâll be there. Itâs only two hours from now.â
âAll right, Jen, letâs put together a âfolioâ of our biggest jobs. Lead with that gut rehab we did on the building down by the South Street Seaport. And put in those two floor-through lofts we did on that conversion in TriBeCa. The ones with the slate bathrooms and the stainless-steel countertops in the kitchen.â
âIâve already started. Do you know specifically what he has in mind?â She paused. âHow did he find out about us, anyway?â
âMy creepy kid brother works for him.â She sighed. âItâs a long story. Be there in a couple of minutes.â She clicked off the phone.
âBetty, thanks a lot. Iâve gotta run.â She turned and gave Knickers a last rumple of the ears. âBe good, baby. Iâll pick you up by six at the latest.â
âWhat wrong?â Misha was concerned, twisting a white towel he was holding. âBig problem?â
âNothingâs wrong. Actually, something probably is wrong. I just donât know what it is yet.â She headed out the door.
The design firm her father had started and sheâd kept going, now with some architecture thrown in, was on the ground floor of an old industrial loft building whose upper floors had been converted into rental apartments in the early 1980s. The owner was an ex-wrestler named Oskar Jacobi, who had turned Zen master (after a fashion) and had a studio upstairs, on the second floor. He had drifted from wrestling into karate during his thirties and thence into the life of the mind, or rather the life of âno-mind,â in his late forties. Now he taught meditation as well as karate and insisted they be learned in that order. He served as his own superintendent, mopping the halls and setting out the garbage on pickup days.
The ground floor was zoned commercial, and CitiSpace had a lease for all of it, which meant she had tons of space. Oskar had given Allyâs dad, Arthur, a ten-year lease, which was now a fraction of the going rate. They both knew that, and sheâd more than once offered to renegotiate or move, but he said he didnât need any more income and, besides, he liked having her as a tenant because she reminded him of her father. It was a generosity perfectly in keeping with his philosophy that excess money corrupted the spirit.
Sheâd done the place as a sort of Spanish desert flower, with burnt-orange tile floors and all the natural materials she could cram in. A lot of her clients wanted the hard-edge industrial look in their lofts, which was fine by her, but she found it too cold for a daily working environment. The front was unassuming, with small lettering on the window. CitiSpace was not a walk-in business. And she had no metal gates over the windows. Whatâs to protect?
When she marched through the door, everybody looked up from their coffee and computers, and Jennifer led the applause. Winston Bartlett. Had they finally made the A-list? This could be the start of something big.
Monday, April 6
9:56 A.M.
Ally stepped out of the cab, holding the large leather-bound portfolio, and checked the number on the card against the bronze plaque above the door. Winston Bartlett lived like a nineteenth-century robber baron. The building had five stories and was adorned with Italian marble window lintels that glowed like mother-of-pearl.
Already she liked his sense of style. Bartlett was New Money, but this place had the solemn dignity of Old Money. The front door was eight feet tall and solid mahogany. The odd thing was, there were two doorbells. One read w. BARTLETT and the other read E. BARTLETT.
That was when she remembered she had read somewhere that he had a wife named Eileen. But why did she have a separate doorbell? Winston Bartlett had a tabloid reputation as a womanizer. Perhaps they lived apart. If so, there it was, for all the world to see.
She found herself examining the late Greek Revival columns on either side of the door. They were marble and meticulously cleaned of soot, whose ubiquitous presence in New York meant that eventually everything not regularly scrubbed turned gray. It told her that Winston Bartlett liked things to be immaculate and that he was a stickler when it came to details.
She glanced up and noticed that she was being observed by a security camera. She was reaching out to push the bell for w. BARTLETT when
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