“Good evening, Skinner. Would you tell Mr. Sayers I want to see him?”
The doorman whispered into a voice tube.
Nick Sayers, handsome proprietor of the Grove Mansion bordello—known as the “Ritz of the Tenderloin”—kept him waiting ten minutes. He was dressed in evening clothes and reeked of top-shelf cologne.
“Mr. Bell. Dare I ask? Business-business or pleasure-business?”
“Advice, Nick. In your office.”
Sayers led him up the grand staircase and into his richly appointed office. He sat at his desk and offered Bell a chair. Bell took notice of a glass display cabinet filled with remarkably specific pornographic ceramic figurines. Sayers beamed proudly. “I’ve become a collector. Turns out, not every Staffordshire potter produces statues of spaniels—what sort of advice?”
“Who recruits girls at Grand Central Terminal?”
“Not the Grove Mansion.”
“I am aware that you don’t lure them personally, Nick. Who does it for you? Who ambushes pretty country girls when they step off the train? Who promises a cushy life?”
“Mr. Bell, I’ve really never felt the need to recruit. Young ladies come to the Grove Mansion as volunteers.”
“Nick.”
“Why don’t I parade my girls by you? You can see with your own eyes that they could work in any house in New York. They work here because they want to.”
“Nick. The Van Dorn Detective Agency was not founded yesterday. Cheap pimps hunt poor farm daughters who can only afford steamers and trolleys at ferry piers and trolley stops. High class resorts like your ‘Ritz of the Tenderloin’ troll Pennsylvania Station and Grand Central for the class of girls who can purchase a railroad ticket to run away from home. I am looking for one particular well-off girl. I know she came by train. I know she arrived at Grand Central because she journeyed from Connecticut. I want to know who to interview at Grand Central. And I am running out of patience.”
“Patience?” Sayers got indignant. “Isaac! You helped me, a long time ago, and I helped you. I call us even steven.”
“Isaac instead of Mr. Bell? Sounds like you’re paying off ever-bigger friends at Tammany Hall.”
“It would pay you to remember how to get along in this town. How dare you barge into my house, making threats?”
“Threats?”
Isaac Bell stood up, draped a big hand on the glass cabinet, tipped it forward, and slammed it down to the floor, shattering glass and smashing ceramics.
Sayers gasped in disbelief. “Do you know what those cost?”
“That was not a threat,” said Bell. “Who is snagging girls at Grand Central?”
Sayers reached for his voice tube.
Bell said, “If you call Skinner, you’ll need a new doorman. That’s not a threat, either.”
The bordello procurer at Grand Central ran his operation from Nyren’s, a fancy station shop that sold French perfume, kid gloves, and silk scarves. Exquisitely dressed and barbered, he had the kindly, twinkly-eyed manner of an unmarried uncle. “May I help you, sir? Something for a young lady friend, perhaps?”
“I don’t have a young lady friend.”
Nyren delivered an indulgent wink. “Well, until you get one, why not something nice for your wife?”
“What I want,” said Isaac Bell, “is a private conversation in your back room with each of your young gents who waylay girls off the trains and steer them in here.”
The twinkle hardened with an edge like limelight. “I don’t know what you are talking about. If you haven’t come to make a purchase, please leave my shop.”
“But first I want to talk to you, Mr. Nyren. I’m looking for this girl.”
He held out Anna’s picture.
Nyren pretended to study it. “I still don’t know what you are talking about, but I never met this girl.” Then, in an act that made the tall detective believe him, he dropped his mask long enough to leer, “I can assure you I never forget a pretty face.”