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The doorman stepped out to greet Beck before he had walked halfway along the driveway. He was a short, slight man, red-haired, boyish. A wide smile dominated his face. His doorman’s hat tilted back on his head, he seemed happy to see Beck even though he had never seen Beck in his life.

“Hello,” said the doorman. “Can I help you?”

Beck didn’t smile back. “Yeah, I want to ask you a few questions.” Beck pulled his detective badge out from under his shirt and held it up for a brief inspection, then let the badge remain on display hanging from his neck. “My name is Logan. I’m a detective with the nineteenth precinct.”

“Oh, okay,” said the doorman, still smiling. He saluted Beck. “What can I do for you?”

“What’s your name?”

“Owen.”

“Owen. So Owen, we got a report earlier tonight, a complaint from uh…” Beck pulled a scrap of paper out of his back pocket. It was the receipt from their dinner. He checked it. “… somebody named Frederick Milstein. We were hoping to talk to him tonight.”

“Oh, Mr. Milstein just went out.”

“Really?”

“Yep.”

“You know where?”

Still smiling, Owen answered, “No. I think he went out to eat.”

“Any idea when he’ll be back?”

“Well, I’m pretty sure he’ll be back by around ten.”

“Oh yeah, why’s that?”

“That’s when he walks the dog,” said Owen, still smiling.

“He walks his dog around ten?”

“Yes, sir. Most of our people have dog walkers. But Simpson on twelve and Milstein on fourteen, they take their dogs out for the night walk. Milstein likes to have a cigar at night, so that’s why he does it.” Owen smiled and laughed. “I don’t think he likes the dog all that much. But his wife won’t let him smoke in the house, so the night walk works out for him.”

“Where does he go?”

“Straight from here into the park, then over to Dog Hill.”

“Dog Hill? Where’s that?”

“Just a little south of the Seventy-ninth Street entrance.”

“He doesn’t mind walking around in the park at night?”

Owen laughed and said, “Oh, it’s not a problem. The dog is huge, and he goes with his driver. Big guy. Ex-cop.”

“I see. That sounds pretty good.” Beck shoved his badge back under his shirt. “All right, don’t bother telling him I was here. Don’t make him wonder about it. We’ll follow up tomorrow. My shift is going off.”

“Sure,” said Owen, still smiling, as if smiling were part of his job.

Beck looked Owen in the eye and pointed back and forth with his index finger. “Just between us for now. Got it?”

For once Owen’s smile vanished. “Got it.”

Beck walked back along the driveway and climbed into the Mercury, checked his watch.

“What’s the plan?” asked Ciro from the backseat.

“Oh, something for everybody. D gets to be the big scary black man. You get to be the guy with the gun. But you have to promise not to shoot or hit anyone unless I say so.”

“Promise.” said Ciro, “Unless someone deserves it. Who do you get to be?”

“I haven’t quite decided yet. Let’s find a parking spot around here somewhere. We got a little time to kill while I figure this out.”

9

At ten-fifteen, Beck slipped into the passenger seat of the Mercury parked on Fifth Avenue just past Seventy-eighth Street, Demarco at the wheel, Ciro sitting motionless in the backseat.

Beck used the palm of his hand like he was about to diagram a touch-football play.

“So, the asshole is sitting on a bench, right about here, opposite an open field. He let his hound off the leash to go take a shit somewhere while he smokes a cigar. The bodyguard is sitting on a bench on the other side of the pathway facing him.”

Beck quickly explained his plan.

*   *   *

Milstein sat hunched against the cold February night, puffing on a Montecristo Double Corona, watching the dark open space in front of him, completely uninterested in anything his dog might be doing.

They weren’t far into the park, but other than the ambient light from Fifth Avenue, the only illumination came from decorative street lamps spaced along the park pathway that meandered from the Seventy-ninth Street entrance to where Milstein sat, just at the edge of a pool of light facing Dog Hill.

He and Walter heard someone approaching from the north. Both men turned in the direction of the sound. Walter slipped his police-issue Glock 17 out of his hip holster, laying the semiautomatic pistol on top of his thigh, ready just in case.

The figure came into view. A tall black man wearing a hooded sweatshirt that covered much of his face. He came toward them slowly, giving them the feeling that he was checking them out as much as they were him.

Shit, thought Milstein, this is all I need. But the sight of Walter watching the black man every step of the way with his gun at the ready made Milstein almost giddy.

The hooded man came nearly parallel to them. He seemed to be looking mostly at Milstein, who straightened up, ready to get up and break away if the man made any move toward him. But the menacing black man just kept walking, hands stuffed in the pockets of his sweatshirt. Walter’s head swiveled to keep his eyes on the intruder as he passed them by.

Milstein watched, too, as Demarco Jones continued walking slowly south. Neither of them saw where Ciro Baldassare came from. He’d been standing in the dark, out in the field behind Walter. All he had to do was step out and take a seat next to the big bodyguard while Walter had his head turned watching Demarco Jones walk off around the bend on the park pathway.

Walter never even heard Ciro sit next to him, but when he turned from watching Demarco, Ciro’s Smith & Wesson .45 automatic was an inch from his face. The gun looked huge.

“Don’t move, fella,” said Ciro. “Not even a twitch.”

Ciro deftly slipped the Glock out of Walter’s hand, slid down the bench a bit, rested his right arm on the back of the bench, and pointed the muzzle of the Smith & Wesson at Walter’s face.

Milstein hadn’t seen where Ciro had come from either, but he saw him now, pointing a very large gun at Walter, saying nothing, not moving, completely calm as if this was something he did all the time.

And then the last piece of Beck’s plan fell into place as he stepped out from the darkness behind Milstein, and sat down next to the small man.

Milstein reared back. “Jeezus Christ, you again.”

“Yes, me again,” said Beck. “And trust me, Mr. Milstein, you do not want to see me a third time, so let’s finish our conversation. How about we take a little walk?”

Milstein looked over at Walter and then back at Beck.

“I know,” said Beck. “How the fuck did this just happen? Don’t worry about it. You’ll both be all right if neither of you does anything stupid. Come on.”

Beck grabbed a handful of Milstein’s coat and lifted him to his feet. Any thought of resisting vanished when he realized whoever this was, he had enough strength to lift him with one arm.

Beck pointed down the path toward the model boat basin, and released Milstein with a slight push in that direction. They arrived at a bench around a bend where the bodyguard couldn’t see them or hear them. Beck indicated that Milstein should sit. He settled in next to him, close enough to make Milstein uncomfortable.

“So,” said Beck. “Olivia Sanchez.”

Milstein puffed on his cigar, grimaced, annoyed, shot back, “What about her? What is it with you and Olivia Sanchez?”

There was a pause before Beck reacted. Just about two seconds before he backhanded the cigar out of Milstein’s mouth and grabbed Milstein by the side of his neck. Beck pressed his right thumb into Milstein’s throat.

He spoke very quietly, very intensely. “Are you fucking crazy? You think you can use that tone with me? You want to end up in that boat basin with your throat crushed?”

Beck squeezed Milstein’s windpipe. He stood up off the bench and faced Milstein. Milstein grabbed Beck’s wrist and forearm with both hands, trying to pull Beck’s hand off his neck and throat. It only made Beck squeeze harder.