step out of the elevator. It feels like a warning. Or maybe that’s just a side effect of Ingrid’s message scraping at my nerves like sandpaper.
BE CAREFUL
It doesn’t help that the basement bears a cryptlike quality. Dank and dark. Like it’s gone untouched since the Bartholomew rose on top of it a hundred years ago. Yet here I am, palming the key Ingrid left behind and hoping whatever’s in that storage unit tells me where she’s gone.
Hanging from the support column opposite the elevator is a security camera. The one Leslie said wasn’t working when Ingrid left last night. I peer up at it and wonder if I’m being watched. Although I’ve noticed the bank of monitors in the alcove just off the lobby, I haven’t seen anyone looking at them.
I move deeper into the basement. Everywhere I look are cages of steel mesh. One behind the elevator that contains its ancient equipment. Greasy wheels and cables and cogs. Inside another are the furnace, water heater, and air-conditioning unit. All of them hum—a ghostly sound that gives the entire basement an air of unwanted menace.
Another sound joins them. A ragged swish that quickly gets louder. I spin toward the noise and see a bulging trash bag plummet into a dumpster the size of a double-wide trailer. Near it is a door of retractable steel so it can be moved outside for emptying. The entire area is surrounded by a chain-link barrier.
I’m not surprised. Down here, even the lightbulbs are caged.
I round the dumpster, startling Mr. Leonard’s aide, who stands on the other side. She startles me right back. We both suck in air—simultaneous gasps that echo off the stone walls.
“You scared the shit out of me,” she says. “For a second, I thought you were Mrs. Evelyn.”
“Sorry,” I say. “I’m Jules.”
The woman nods coolly. “Jeannette.”
“Nice to meet you.”
Jeannette’s dressed for the basement’s chill, her purple scrubs covered by a ratty gray cardigan with gaping pockets. One hand rests just above her ample bosom. Her way of silently telling me just how much I scared her. She keeps her other hand behind her back in an attempt to hide the lit cigarette she’s holding.
When it becomes clear that I’ve seen it, she lifts the cigarette to her lips and says, “You’re one of those apartment sitters, aren’t you? The newest one?”
I wonder if she knows this because Leslie told her or if I just look the part. Maybe the former. Probably the latter.
“I am.”
“How long are you in for?” Jeannette asks, making it sound like a prison sentence.
“Three months.”
“Like it here?”
“I do,” I say. “It’s nice, but there are a lot of rules to follow.”
Jeannette stares at me a moment. Her hair’s pulled back, which tightens her forehead into an impassive look. “You’re not going to narc on me, are you? Smoking’s not allowed in the Bartholomew.”
“Not anywhere?”
“Nope.” She takes another drag. “Mrs. Evelyn’s orders.”
“I won’t tell,” I say.
“I appreciate that.”
Jeannette takes one last puff before stubbing out the cigarette on the concrete floor. When she bends down to pick it up, a lighter falls from a pocket of her cardigan. I grab it while she drops the butt into a coffee can at her feet and slides it into a corner, where it blends in with the shadows.
“You dropped this,” I say, handing her the lighter.
Jeannette stuffs it back into her cardigan. “Thanks. This damn sweater. Stuff’s always falling out.”
“Before you go, I was wondering if you could help me. One of the other apartment sitters left last night and I’m trying to reach her. Her name is Ingrid Gallagher. She was in 11A.”
“Never heard the name.”
Jeannette shuffles to the elevator. I follow, pulling out my phone and swiping to the picture of Ingrid and me in Central Park. I hold it in front of her. “This is her.”
Jeannette presses the button for the elevator and gives the photo a brief glance. “Yeah, I saw her once or twice.”
“Ever talk to her?”
“The only person I talk to lately is Mr. Leonard. Why do you need to find her?”
“I haven’t heard from her since she left,” I say. “I’m worried.”
“Sorry I can’t help you,” Jeannette says. “But I’ve got enough to deal with. Sick husband at home. Mr. Leonard convinced he’s going to keel over every damn minute of the day.”
“I understand. But if you remember anything—or hear something about her from someone else in the building—I’d really appreciate it if you told me. I’m in 12A.”
The elevator arrives. Jeannette