was an ideal building for odd ducks and geeks like Bobby Allwine, he of the stolen heart. They would be drawn here, and in the company of their own kind, no one among them would receive particular attention.
A grizzled old man knelt on the front steps, fixing a railing brace.
âExcuse me. You work here?â Michael asked, flashing his ID.
âNo more than I have to.â The old man looked Carson up and down appreciatively, but still spoke to Michael. âWhoâs she?â
âItâs bring-your-sister-to-work day at the department. Are you the super here?â
ââSuperâ donât seem to be a word that fits anyone or anything about this dump. Iâm just sort of the jack-of-all around here. You come to see Bobby Allwineâs place?â
âNews travels fast.â
Putting down his screwdriver, getting to his feet, the jack-of-all said, âGood news does. Follow me.â
Inside, the public stairwell was narrow, dark, peeling, humid, and malodorous.
The old guy didnât smell so good, either, and as they followed him up to the second floor, Michael said, âIâll never complain about my apartment again.â
At the door to 2-D, as he fumbled in his pockets for a passkey, the jack-of-all said, âHeard on the news his liver was cut out.â
âIt was his heart,â Carson said.
âEven better.â
âYou didnât like Bobby Allwine?â
Unlocking the door, he said, âHardly knew him. But this makes the apartment worth fifty bucks more.â He read their disbelief and assured them, âThereâs people thatâll pay extra.â
âWho,â Michael asked, âthe Addams family?â
âJust people who like some history about a place.â
Carson pushed inside the apartment, and when the old man would have followed her, Michael eased him aside and said, âWeâll call you when weâre done.â
The blinds were drawn. The room was uncommonly dark for a bright afternoon.
Carson found the switch for the ceiling fixture and said, âMichael, look at this.â
In the living room, the ceiling and walls were painted black. The wood floors, the baseboards, the door and window casings were black, as well. The blinds were black.
The sole piece of furniture was a black vinyl armchair in the center of the room.
Closing the front door behind him, Michael said, âDoes Martha Stewart have an emergency design hotline?â
The windows were closed. No air conditioning. The moist heat and the blackness and a tauntingly familiar sweet fragrance made Carson feel slow, stupid.
âWhatâs that smell?â she asked.
âLicorice.â
Thick, sweet, pervasive, the aroma was indeed licorice. Though it should have been pleasant, the smell half nauseated Carson.
The black floor had a glossy sheen, unmarred by dust or lint. She wiped a hand along a windowsill, down a door casing, and found no grime.
As it had in the library with Allwineâs corpse, fear found Carson, a creeping disquiet that climbed her spine and pressed a cold kiss to the back of her neck.
In the meticulously clean kitchen, Michael hesitated to open the black door of the refrigerator. âThis feels like a Jeffrey Dahmer moment, severed heads among the bottles of pickles and mayonnaise, a heart in a OneZip bag.â
Even the interior of the refrigerator had been spray-painted black, but it held no heads. Just a coffee cake and a quart of milk.
Most of the cupboards were empty, too. A drawer contained three spoons, two forks, two knives.
According to his employee file, Allwine had lived here for two years. An inventory of his possessions would give the impression that heâd been prepared to leave on a momentâs notice and to travel light.
The third room was the bedroom. The ceiling, the walls, and the floor were black. Even the bed and sheets: black. A black nightstand, black lamp, and black radio with
Team Rodent: How Disney Devours the World