Tags:
Fiction,
General,
detective,
Romance,
Fantasy fiction,
Thrillers,
Mystery & Detective,
American Mystery & Suspense Fiction,
Horror,
Private Investigators,
Mystery Fiction,
Hard-Boiled,
Fiction - Mystery,
Mystery & Detective - Hard-Boiled,
Occult & Supernatural,
Horror - General,
Repairman Jack (Fictitious Character)
constant battle of wits. But he found it hard to imagine life any other way.
THURSDAY
1
"You're going to buy a map?" Abe said. "What for a map when you've got Mapquest?" He turned to his computer. "I'll look it up for you right now."
An hour after a simple breakfast of plain old Entenmann's crumb cake and newspaper skimming at Abe's rear counter—no story on finding Gerhard's body yet—Jack was readying to wander off in search of a New York state map. The one he had was falling apart.
"Don't bother. I've already got driving directions from Mapquest, but I like a map I can fold and unfold. I like to see the big picture."
"You want a big picture, I can get you a satellite photo of where you're going."
"No thanks. But you can do a reverse look-up on Doctor Levy's phone number for me."
"I thought you had an address already."
"I do, but I just want to check."
"You mean you want me to check."
"Okay, I want you to check. Please?"
Jack had been into computers from his early teens through his college years. But after he'd dropped out—of everything—he lost touch with the cyber world. His early years in the city had been a catch-as-catch-can existence, with no permanency, no way to stay wired in. Only in the past few years had he begun exploring the World Wide Web. A lot had changed in the years he'd been disconnected. He was still in an acclimation stage.
Abe, on the other hand, with his international connections and dealings, was a whiz—or as he'd say, a maven.
He watched Abe do some mousing and keyboard tapping, frown, do some more, then come up with…
"Nothing. The name and address connected to that number are restricted."
Jack shrugged. "I'll go with what I have then. How's the professor, by the way?"
Abe shook his head. "Again I dropped in on him last night. No change. His mind… I don't know. Still with the numbers."
"Shame. Okay, I'm off on my map quest."
"Wait. I just thought of something. Let me try a straightforward lookup." More tapping. "Ha! Here's an Aaron Levy, M.D., at twenty-six-eighty-one Riverview Road in Rathburg, New York."
"That's the address I have. Okay, we've found him. What can you tell me about him?"
Abe did his click-click-tap-tap thing and then smiled.
"Here's something mentioning him as an attendee at a fund-raiser for the Rathburg Public Library."
"Got a picture?"
"What for you want a picture?"
"Because I've got a lawyer's chance of heaven of getting through the front door to see this guy. I'll have to use some backdoor tactics. And to do that I need to know what he looks like."
"Here we go: ' Doctor Aaron Levy, associate director of patient care at the Creighton Institute, with his wife, Marie, and daughter, Mollie' at the same fund-raiser."
Abe turned the monitor toward Jack. He saw a smiling dark-haired man in his early fifties with a dark-haired woman of the same age, flanking a dark-haired girl who looked about twelve or so. The article, from the Rathburg-on-Hudson Review , had appeared two years ago.
"Perfect. Print that out for me, will you?"
"It's printing already."
"Great. And while we're waiting, see where I can find this Creighton Institute. I saw that mentioned on Gerhard's computer. Sounds like a hospital or something."
"Here it is: The Creighton Institute. And you'll never guess the address."
"Twenty-six-eighty-one Riverview Road in Rathburg?"
"You got it."
"Okay. That's where he works. But where does he live? There's gotta be a way—"
"Tax records, maybe. No, wait. Let me Google this." Abe started tapping again. "New… York… property… search…" He hit ENTER. " Gevalt! Let me fill in these boxes. County… Westchester. Town… Rathburg. Name… Aaron Levy. Enter." A pause, then, "Here it is: Nine-oh-three Argent Drive."
Jack felt a little queasy as he said, "Print that out for me too."
Abe shook his head as he hit PRINT. "This is terrible."
Jack knew exactly what he was feeling.
"Because it's so easy?"
"Frighteningly so."
"Makes