unimpressed with the minimal level of courtesy I’m trying to provide. I won’t tell her that I hope the cops are gone so I can take a look around Dani’s apartment in an attempt to figure out more about what’s going on. Letting her know that would only lead to another barrage of questions, and explaining my job and what I do every day isn’t any of her concern. I don’t want details about her life, and she sure as hell isn’t getting any about mine. Finding her watching my face on the drive over with a weird look of curious infatuation was enough.
After a quick hello to the doorman, Anna scurries across the expansive lobby like she’s trying to hide from everyone. No doubt she’s embarrassed about her uncoordinated shoes. The woman never would leave home without being completely dolled up, and she must be dying a little on the inside knowing that people are seeing her in a designer dress and plain black Nikes.
A smile tugs up both corners of my mouth as the elevator opens. I don’t say a word even though I want to taunt her and make her feel even more out of place. That would be petty, and I’m a grown ass man.
“Think he’s going to share a picture of you in those shoes to TMZ?”
Ha! Obviously not grown enough.
“Genaro is a professional. He’d never do that to me.”
“Anyone will do anything for the right price,” I mumble. “Trust me.”
The elevator opens up on the twenty-sixth floor to silence. The police that Anna mentioned were bustling around earlier are no longer loitering in the halls.
“It’s eerily quiet up here,” Anna observes as we step out.
“The police are gone,” I tell her. “There were no cop cars out front.”
“I’m sure the staff made them park out back. Genaro wouldn’t allow even the cops to cause a spectacle out front. He’s—” Her words catch in her throat, and it doesn’t take but a split second for me to realize why.
I pull my gun from my hip, unsure of what I’m going to find on the other side of Anna’s ajar door.
“You have a gun!” she screeches. “Why do you have a gun?”
“Shut up,” I snap, instinctually moving my body so she’s behind me. “Did you leave your door open?”
“Of course not, idiot,” she snaps, and even though I know she’s scared, she still manages to insult me. Same old Annalise.
Maybe I should let her go in first.
The thought makes me smile, but the sight of the police tape on the door down the hall reminds me just how dangerous the situation is.
“It’s been kicked in,” I tell her as I inch closer, noticing the fractured wood at the door frame.
“The police kicked in my door?”
I stop her from moving around me to see the damage.
“Probably not the police. Stay out here.”
For once in her damn life, the woman listens to me, and by the time I push her front door open fully, I can hear small sobs coming from the hallway.
Bringing her back here was a mistake, and that’s made obviously clear when I look around the trashed room. It definitely wasn’t the police, unless they were looking for a needle because her belongings are the haystack. The entire room is trashed. The television has been kicked in and ripped from the wall. The expensive sofas have been slashed. There isn’t a single piece of furniture that hasn’t been toppled. Every drawer in the kitchen has been pulled out, several on the floor upside down. There are utensils strewn everywhere. This place is a damn mess.
Even the fridge has been opened and divested of its contents all over the marble floor. Her bedroom has met the same fate, the mattress slashed and her clothes scattered all over the damn floor.
“Fuck,” I grumble as I make my way back to the living room. “And to think my night was almost over.”
“Oh my God.”
My eyes snap up to find Anna standing in the doorway with her hands cupped over her mouth and tears streaming down her cheeks. Her eyes are glued to a painting on the floor. It’s destroyed, but it couldn’t have been more expensive than all the other things combined, but it seems to be her sole focus.
“Was it a Monet or something?”
“Zeni painted that for me.”
On second look, I can tell it’s one of those cheap paint by numbers canvases, but after hearing her, it hits me in the gut like an anvil. Zeni was