“This will crush Ms. McKensie. His mother. They were really tight. He was a nice guy, Lieutenant, I just want to say. Always had a word, you know?”
“Do you know anyone who didn’t think he was such a nice guy?”
“Not right off, I’m sorry. He had a lot of friends. They’d come over for parties, for music.”
“Girlfriends, boyfriends?”
Frank shifted on his feet.
“Anything you can tell us,” Peabody said, adding a light touch to his arm. “Anything may help us find who killed him.”
“I get it, but it’s hard to talk about a resident’s personal life. I’d say Mr. Kuper had both, and nothing really serious.”
“All right. Has anyone been around in the past couple weeks, asking about him?” Eve asked. “Any former friend make any trouble?”
“Not that I know of. And when you’re on the door, you usually know.”
“Okay, Frank, thanks. I need you to clear us up to his place.”
“Sixth floor. Apartment six hundred. That’s the main entrance. I’ll clear the first elevator. I need to get clearance to get his pass key and code. It’ll take a minute.”
“I’ve got a master. We’ll get in.”
With a nod, Frank walked over to a blank granite counter, tapped and brought up a screen. “Lobby droid’s in the back. I don’t activate her this early. It’s usually quiet, so what’s the point? You’re clear, Lieutenant.”
He cleared his throat as Eve and Peabody stepped to the elevator. “Ah, does his mom know?”
“We’ll speak to her after we see his apartment. Like you said, it’s early. No reason to wake her up with this kind of news.”
“It’s going to crush her. They doted on each other, you know?”
Though she didn’t know what it was to have a mother dote on her, or to dote back, Eve nodded before she stepped into the elevator.
Ascending to sixth floor, the computer announced as they started to rise, proving Frank as efficient as any droid.
“Nice guy, lots of friends, loved his mother, bisexual.” Eve considered. “Not a bad rundown from a doorman in a couple minutes.”
“He looked sad,” Peabody commented. “When the doorman looks sad, you know you’re going to be dealing with a lot of sad in an investigation.”
“If you want happy, don’t be a murder cop. Or a cop period,” Eve decided.
The elevator opened to a wide hallway carpeted in dignified gray with the classy touch of artwork arranged on the walls. Curved tables holding slim, clear vases of white flowers ranged between apartment doors.
Six hundred took the west corner farthest from the elevator. Prime real estate in a prime building. Yeah, Eve thought, playing the big, fat violin brought in the bucks.
“Full security,” she noted, engaging her recorder. “Cam, palm plate, double police locks.”
She bypassed all with her master, opened the right side of the double entrance doors. Lights that had been off went automatically to a soft ten percent illumination.
“Convenient,” she said, “but not enough. Lights on full,” she ordered.
“Wow.” Peabody’s eyes widened as the light strengthened. “It’s totally uptown.”
Classy old-world, was Eve’s sense. The sort of deal Roarke preferred. Rich, deep colors, sink-in sofas and chairs. High backs, graceful curves. Dark, gleaming wood, the glint of silver and crystal. Flowers in vases that looked old and precious, candles in slender holders.
Art ran to landscapes, cityscapes, seascapes.
“Let’s take this floor first, see if he kept an office down here. We’ll want a look at his computers, his house ’link.”