Authors: J. D. Robb
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #New York (N.Y.), #Women Sleuths, #Mystery Fiction, #Police Procedural, #Political, #Models (Persons), #Policewomen, #Drug Traffic, #Police - New York (State) - New York, #Dallas; Eve (Fictitious Character), #Clothing Trade, #Models (Persons) - Crimes Against
“Then close it.”
“It’s not up to me.”
“I’ll be happy to take this up with your commander, in private, give him the facts and my personal recommendation. I think you know what his decision would be. We need people like you to serve and protect, Eve. There’s a man here who needs you to trust him.”
“I do trust him.” She braced herself to look over at Roarke. “I’m afraid of using him. It doesn’t matter what other people think about the money, about the power. I don’t want to ever give him reason to think I ever could or ever would use him.”
“Does he think it?”
She closed a hand around the diamond hanging between her breasts. “He’s too much in love with me to think it now.”
“Well, I’d say that’s lovely. And before much longer, you might figure out the difference between depending on someone you love and trust and exploiting their strengths.” Mira rose. “I’d tell you to take a sedative and tomorrow off, but you’ll do neither.”
“No, I won’t. I’m sorry to have dragged you away from home in the middle of the night.”
“Cops and doctors, we’re used to it. You’ll talk with me again?”
She wanted to refuse, to deny — as she had spent years refusing and denying. But that time, Eve realized, was over. “Yes, all right.”
On impulse, Mira laid a hand on Eve’s cheek and kissed her. “You’ll do, Eve.” Then she turned to Roarke and extended her hand. “I’m glad you called me. I have a personal interest in the lieutenant.”
“So do I. Thank you.”
“I hope you’ll invite me to the wedding. I’ll see myself out.”
Roarke walked over, sat beside Eve. “Would it be better for you if I gave away my money, my properties, tossed aside my companies, and started from scratch?”
Whatever she’d been expecting, it hadn’t been this. She gaped at him. “Would you?”
He leaned forward, kissed her lightly. “No.”
The laugh that bubbled out surprised her. “I feel like an idiot.”
“You should.” He linked his fingers with hers. “Let me help take the pain away.”
“You’ve been doing that since you walked in the door.” With a sigh, she rested her brow on his. “Tolerate me, Roarke. I’m a good cop. I know what I’m doing when the badge is on. It’s when I take it off I’m not so sure of my moves.”
“I’m a tolerant man. I can accept your dark spaces, Eve, just as you accept mine. Come on, let’s go to bed. You’ll sleep.” He brought her to her feet again. “And if you have nightmares, you won’t hide them from me.”
“No, not anymore. What is it?”
Eyes narrowed, he combed his fingers through her hair. “You did change it. Subtly, but charmingly. And there’s something else…” He rubbed a thumb over her jawline.
Eve wiggled her eyebrows, hoping he’d noticed their new improved shape, but he only continued to stare at her. “What?”
“You’re beautiful. Really quite beautiful.”
“You’re tired.”
“No, I’m not.” He leaned in, closed his mouth over hers softly in a long, lingering kiss. “At all.”
Peabody was staring, and Eve decided not to notice. She had coffee, and anticipating Feeney’s arrival had even come up with a basket of muffins. The shades were open to her own spectacular view of New York with its spearing skyline behind the lush green of the park.
She supposed she couldn’t blame Peabody for gaping.
“I really appreciate you coming here instead of to Cop Central,” Eve began. She knew she wasn’t running at full capability yet, just as she knew Mavis couldn’t afford for her to take any down time. “I want to get some of this business squared away before I clock in. As soon as I do, I imagine Whitney will call me up. I need ammunition.”
“No problem.” Peabody knew there really were people who lived like this. She’d heard of it, read of it, seen it on screen. And there was nothing particularly fabulous about the lieutenant’s rooms. They were nice, certainly — plenty of space, good furnishings, excellent equipment.
But the house. Jesus, the house. It went beyond the category of mansion into that of fortress, or maybe even castle. The green lawns, flowering trees, and fountains. There were all the towers, the sparkle of stone. That was before you were brought inside by a butler and blown away by marble and crystal and wood. And space. So much space.
“Peabody?”
“What? Sorry.”
“It’s all right. The place is pretty intimidating.”
“It’s incredible.” She swung her gaze back to Eve. “You look different here,” she decided, then narrowed her eyes. “You do look different. Hey, you got your hair cut. And the eyebrows.” Intrigued, she leaned closer. “A skin job.”
“It was just a facial.” Eve caught herself just before she squirmed. “Can we get down to it now, or do you want the name of my consultant?”
“Couldn’t afford it,” Peabody said cheerfully. “But you look good. You want to start primping up since you’re getting married in a couple weeks.”
“It’s not a couple weeks, it’s next month.”
“Guess you haven’t noticed that it’s next month now. You’re nervous.” Amusement flitted around Peabody’s mouth. “You never get nervous.”
“Shut up, Peabody. We’ve got homicide here.”
“Yes, sir.” Slightly ashamed, Peabody swallowed the smirk. “I thought we were killing time until Captain Feeney arrived.”
“I’ve got a ten o’clock interview with Redford. I don’t have time to kill. Give me the rundown of your progress at the club.”
“I have my report.” Back in the saddle, Peabody took a disc out of her bag. “I arrived at seventeen thirty-five, approached the subject known as Crack, and identified myself as your aide.”
“What did you think of him?”
“An individual,” Peabody said dryly. “He suggested I would make a good table dancer, as I appeared to have strong legs. I told him it wasn’t an option at this time.”
“Good one.”
“He was cooperative. In my judgment, he was angry when I informed him of Hetta’s death, and the means. She hadn’t worked there long, but he said she was good-natured, efficient, and successful.”
“In those words.”
“In the vernacular, Dallas. His vernacular, which is quoted in my report. He did not observe who she spoke with after the incident with Boomer as the club was crowded and he was busy.”
“Cracking heads.”
“Exactly. He did, however, point out several other employees and regulars who might have seen her with someone. I have their names and their statements. None noticed anything peculiar or out of the ordinary. One client believed he observed her going into one of the private booths with another man, but he didn’t recall the time, and his description is vague. ‘A tall dude.’”
“Terrific.”
“She clocked out at oh two fifteen, which was more than an hour earlier than her habit. She told one of the other companions that she’d made over her quota and was calling it a night. Flashed a fistful of credits and cash. Bragged about a new customer who believed in paying for quality. That was the last time she was seen at the club.”
“Her body was found three days later.” Frustrated, Eve pushed away from the table. “If I’d gotten the case sooner, or if Carmichael had bothered to dig… Well, that’s done.”
“She was well liked.”
“Did she have a partner?”
“No one serious or long term. Those kind of clubs discourage dating the customers on the outside, and apparently Hetta was a real pro. She did move around from club to club, but so far, I haven’t hit on anything. If she worked anywhere the night she died, there’s no record of it.”
“Did she use?”
“Socially, casually. Nothing heavy, according to the people I spoke with. I checked her sheet, and other than a couple of old possession charges, she was clean.”
“How old?”
“Five years.”
“Okay, keep on it. Hetta’s yours.” She glanced over as Feeney strolled in. “Glad you could join us.”
“Hey, traffic’s murder out there. Muffins!” He pounced. “How’s it going, Peabody?”
“Good morning, Captain.”
“Some digs, huh? New shirt, Dallas?”
“No.”
“Look different.” He poured coffee while she rolled her eyes. “Found our snake tattoo. Mavis hit Ground Zero at about two, bought herself a Screamer and a table dancer. Talked to the guy myself last night after I bounced to it. He remembers her. Said she was way out of orbit, and chugging them back. He offered her a list of accepted services, but she passed and staggered out.”
Feeney sighed, sat. “If she crawled into any other clubs, she didn’t use credit. I’ve got nothing after her totaling out from Ground Zero at two forty-five.”
“Where’s Ground Zero?”
“About six blocks from the murder scene. She’d been moving steadily down and across town from the time she left Pandora and walked into ZigZag. She went into five other clubs between, Screamers all the way, mostly triples. I don’t know how she stayed on her feet.”
“Six blocks,” Dallas murmured. “Thirty minutes before the murder.”
“I’m sorry, kid. It doesn’t make it look any better for her. Now, the security discs. Leonardo’s scanner was busted up at ten on the night in question. Lots of complaints about kids whacking outside cameras in that area, so it’s likely that’s how it went down. Pandora’s security was turned off using the code. No fiddling, no sabotage. Whoever went in knew how to get in.”
“Knew her, knew the setup.”
“Had to,” Feeney agreed. “I can’t find any blips on the discs from Justin Young’s building security. I’ve got them going in about one thirty, and her going out again at ten or twelve the next day. Nothing in between. But…” He paused for effect. “He’s got a back door.”
“What?”
“Domestic entrance, through the kitchen to a freight elevator. No security on the freight. It goes to six other floors and the garage. Now, the garage has security, and so do the other floors. But…” Another pause. “You can also take it to the rear utility, ground floor. The maintenance area, and security’s very spotty there.”
“Could they have gotten out unobserved?”
“Could have.” Feeney slurped coffee. “If they knew the building, the system, and if they were careful to time the exit to avoid the sweep in maintenance.”
“Could put a different light on their alibis. Bless you, Feeney.”
“Yeah, well. Send money. Or just give me these muffins.”
“They’re yours. I think we’ll have to talk to our young lovers again. We’ve got some interesting players here. Justin Young used to sleep with Pandora and is now intimately involved with Jerry Fitzgerald who is one of Pandora’s associates and her top rival for queen of the runway. Both Fitzgerald and Pandora are after a screen career. Enter Redford, producer. He’s interested in working with Fitzgerald, has worked with Young, and is sleeping with Pandora. All four of these people are partying at Pandora’s, at her invitation on the night she’s killed. Now, why would she want them there, her rival, her ex-lover, and the producer?”
“She liked drama,” Peabody put in. “She enjoyed friction.”
“Yeah, true. She also liked causing discomfort. I wonder if she had something she wanted to rub their faces in. They were all very calm in interview,” she recalled. “Very composed, very easy. Let’s see if we can shake them up.”
Eve glanced over as the panel between her offices and Roarke’s slid open.
“It wasn’t secured,” he said as he stopped on the threshold. “I’m interrupting.”
“It’s all right. We just need to finish up.”
“Hey, Roarke.” Feeney toasted him with a muffin. “Ready to strap on the old ball and chain? Just a joke,” he muttered when Eve scalded him with a look.
“I think I’ll continue to hobble along well enough.” He glanced at Peabody, lifted a brow.
“Sorry. Officer Peabody, Roarke.”
At Eve’s introduction, he smiled, crossed the room. “The efficient Officer Peabody. It’s a pleasure.”
Struggling not to goggle, she accepted the hand he offered. “Nice to meet you.”
“If I could steal the lieutenant for just a moment, I’ll get out of your way.” He laid a hand on Eve’s shoulder, squeezed. When she rose to go with him, Feeney snorted.
“You’re going to swallow your tongue, Peabody. Why is it just because a man’s got the face of a devil and the body of a god, women get all glassy-eyed?”
“It’s hormonal,” Peabody muttered, but she continued to watch Roarke and Eve. She’d developed an interest in relationship games recently.
“How are you?” Roarke asked.
“I’m fine.”
He cupped Eve’s chin, dipped his thumb lightly in its dent. “I believe you’re working at it. I have some meetings in midtown this morning, but I thought you’d want this.” He handed her a card, one of his own, with a name and address scrawled on the back. “It’s the off planet expert you asked about. She’ll make time for whatever you need. She already has the sample you gave to me, but would like another. Cross-testing, I believe she called it.”
“Thanks.” Eve slipped the card into her pocket. “Really.”
“The reports from Starlight Station — “
“Starlight Station?” It took her a moment. “Christ, I forgot I asked you. My mind’s not cued.”