Seven Ways to Die

Seven Ways to Die by William Diehl Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: Seven Ways to Die by William Diehl Read Free Book Online
Authors: William Diehl
up the wallet, watch. But check this out.”
    Bergman skimmed the carpeting with his flashlight, aiming it toward the library door nearest the kitchen. Naked footprints.
    “He knew the killer was waiting for him. He was naked when he went into the library and…” they followed Handley’s footprints to the library entrance near the kitchen where the pair of booties was awaiting for him. “The killer met him at the door.”
    “I was thinking,” said Bergman, “maybe this was an S&M thing gone sour. Or maybe he was killed somewhere else which would account for the absence of blood.”
    “Not a chance,” Cody answered. “This was a set-up hit from the go and he knowingly walked right into it.”
    “I was also thinking maybe I ought to get into his briefcase. Remember what the maid said about his little black book?”
    “Good. Take it out to that little sitting room in the hall. Nobody, nobody, goes in or out until Wolf and his team gets here.”
    “No problem.”
    As Cody headed for the apartment door, he muttered half-aloud: “I can’t wait for Wolf to tell us what happened to all five liters of Mister Handley’s blood.”
     

5
     
    At the same time Micah Cody and Cal Bergman were preparing to enter Raymond Handley’s apartment, crime writer Ward Lee Hamilton was seated in the Eames chair of his 59 th Street penthouse apartment overlooking south Manhattan. It was a breathtaking view. The corner room had two floor-to-ceiling windows from which he could see five bridges, the spires of the city, and the heart-breaking emptiness where the Twin Towers once stood.
    As always, and regardless of the season, he was dressed in his three-piece white linen suit. It was his trademark. With a lavender shirt and a dazzling yellow tie to complete the ensemble, he was aware that his exaggerated appearance attracted attention, that there were some who looked at him as a foppish popinjay.
    He couldn’t care less. He had earned the right to set his own unique standards of dress and attitude. He marked his detractors off as silly, untalented, jealous fools. Ward Lee Hamilton was a snob in the truest sense of the word.
    Hamilton had authored more than a dozen true crime narratives in twenty years, most considered the best of their kind in literary history. His first book, written when he was nineteen, had leapt to the top of the bestselling lists in its first week of publication. It had been followed by fifteen scrupulously researched books, flawlessly detailed examinations into the malicious minds of killers whose sexual, avaricious, and otherwise depraved cravings had resulted in some of the most grisly crimes in history. He was relentless in his search for facts, always digging for that one last clue to justify every word, as tenacious as a hungry-eyed hyena stalking another animal’s kill.
    The room was filled with memorials to his success: Plaques, proclamations, awards, framed letters, all tributes to his achievements. Plus, an old-fashioned barber’s chair, complete with adjustable foot rests, anchored to the floor of the apartment. Ward sat in the chair for his weekly manicure, with the manicurist kneeling before him to finish his nails—and sometimes providing further service as well, whether he needed it or not. Yes, he was smug with success.
    He was the Lord of the Literati. The Beau Brummel of the greatest metropolis in the world.
    But today he had a little problem, which somehow annoyed him even more than his big, deadly problem.
    He took out his pocket watch, snapped open the cover and checked the time. He got up, threw a tan, cashmere coat over his shoulders, set a gray homburg on his head, and strolled forth to the elevator that would carry him down to the streets of the city of which he considered himself a peerless prince.
    His car arrived at the Regency precisely on time. He checked his coat and hat and strolled into the elegant dining room where he immediately became the focus of attention. This was a room

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