“Who knows? Maybe he’s being protective of his building’s reputation.”
The doorman spoke up. “That sounds like Mr. Harkness,” he said. “He and the board are very picky about what goes on here. That’s why I wouldn’t let you in. It woudda been my job, y’know.”
Stone nodded, then joined Dino on a sofa in the lobby to wait for Harkness.
They didn’t have to wait long. A black Lincoln Town Car pulled up at the curb, and Harkness strode into the building. He shook hands with Stone and was introduced to Dino. “All right,” he said, “let’s get this over with. I’ve got to get back to the office.”
“We don’t really need you for this,” Stone said, “if you’d like to go back now.”
Harkness fished a letter from an inside pocket and handed it to Stone. It was from a midtown law firm.
“You’re her executor?” Stone asked. “But we don’t even know that she’s dead.”
“I got the letter this morning; it was the first I’d heard of it.” He shrugged. “I guess I’m representing Sasha in this,” he said, “so, unless you want to get a search warrant, I’m going to have to go into that apartment with you.”
“All right,” Stone said.
“Eddie,” Harkness said to the doorman, “I’ll use my pass-key. We won’t need you.”
On the elevator, Stone turned to Harkness. “You say you didn’t know that Ms. Nijinsky had appointed you executor of her will?”
“Didn’t have a clue,” Harkness replied. “I was astonished, to tell you the truth.”
“Mr. Harkness, did you and Sasha Nijinsky ever have a romantic relationship?”
Harkness looked him in the eye. “Stone, I haven’t the slightest intention of answering that.”
The elevator door opened, and they stepped into a vestibule; only two apartments opened onto it, 10-J and 10-K. Harkness opened the door to 10-J and led the way in. There was an entrance hall, then a large living room. Furniture had been dumped here and there, as if the moving men had no instructions, and the boxes Stone had seen at Sasha’s old apartment were piled in the middle of the floor. Every one of them had been opened, and the woman’s belongings were strewn across the floor.
“Now that’s interesting,” Dino said.
Stone picked up a yellow movers’ receipt from the floor and handed it to Dino. “See if there’s a working phone; if not, go down and use the doorman’s. Get hold of the movers’ supervisor and ask him what the hell went on here.”
Dino took the receipt and went in search of a phone. “The one in the kitchen is working,” he called out.
“Do you have any idea who might have opened these boxes?” Stone asked Harkness.
“Not a clue,” Harkness replied. “As I said earlier, she didn’t even own the apartment yet. It would have been like Sasha, though, to have her stuff moved at the moment she would have been closing the sale. She wasn’t a woman who liked to be kept waiting.”
“I want to go through her belongings,” Stone said, “and I may want to remove some things for evidence. Have I your permission to do that?”
Harkness hesitated. “I think maybe I should talk to a lawyer, first. I want to do the right thing, here.”
“Look, Barron,” Stone said, “Sasha trusted you enough to put you in charge of her estate. There may be something here that will help us find out what happened to her, and we’re going to need your cooperation.”
Dino returned from the kitchen. “The supervisor at the movers’ says his guys didn’t open any boxes. I called the doorman on the house phone, and he confirms that they were sealed when he signed the receipt and let the movers out.”
“So,” said Stone, turning to Harkness, “somebody has been in here since the movers left.”
“Don’t look at me,” Harkness said.
“You’ve got a passkey, right?”
“I’m chairman of the cooperative board. Look, I thought the apartment was empty. Why would I want to come in here?”
“Who else besides the doorman has a key to this apartment?”
“The owners would, the people who were selling to Sasha. They live in Connecticut; I’ll get the phone number for you.”