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Judgment in Death Page 10


  Galahad leaped up, sniffed at it, then padded over to butt his head on Summerset’s leg.

  “The flowers are for you,” Summerset said, and since she was looking, ignored the cat. “And as of now, they become your problem.”

  “Who sent them? They’re not Roarke’s style.”

  “Certainly not.” Summerset sniffed, a great deal as Galahad had done, and eyed the elaborate arrangement with distaste. “Perhaps one of your felonious acquaintances considers it a suitable bribe.”

  “Yeah, right.” She snatched out the card, ripped it open, then snarled in a manner that had the cat leaping down and standing between Summerset’s legs. “Ricker, that son of a bitch.”

  “Max Ricker?” Distaste turned to ice, the jagged sort that flayed skin. “Why would he send you flowers?”

  “To get my goat,” she said absently, then a ripple of fear worked into her belly. “Or Roarke’s. Get them out of here. Burn them, stuff them in the recycler. Get rid of them fast. And don’t tell Roarke.” She grabbed Summerset’s sleeve. “Don’t tell Roarke.”

  She made it a point never to ask Summerset for anything. The fact that she was, and urgently, had alarm bells sounding in his brain. “What’s Ricker to you?”

  “A target. Get them out, damn it. Where’s Roarke?”

  “In his office upstairs. Let me see the card. Have you been threatened?”

  “They’re bait,” she said impatiently. “For Roarke. Take the elevator. Move. Get them gone.” She crumbled the card in her hand before Summerset could grab it from her. “Now.”

  Dissatisfied, Summerset lifted the arrangement again. “Be very, very careful,” he said, then maneuvered them onto the elevator.

  She waited until the doors closed before she smoothed out the card, read it again.

  I never had the chance to kiss the bride.

  M. Ricker

  “I’ll give you the chance,” she muttered and carefully tore the card to bits. “The first time we meet in hell.”

  She flushed the pieces, breathed a little easier, then stripped. She left her clothes where they fell, laid her weapon harness over the long counter, then stepped into the glass-walled shower.

  “All jets full,” she ordered, closing her eyes. “One hundred and two degrees.”

  She let the water beat at her everywhere, warm away the little chill the flowers had brought with them. She would put that aside and calculate how she would drill at Lewis the next morning.

  Feeling better, she turned the jets off, squeezed some of the water out of her hair, and turned. Yelped.

  “Jesus. Jesus Christ, Roarke, you know I hate when you sneak up on me like that.”

  “Yes, I do.” He opened the door to the drying tube, knowing she preferred it to a leisurely toweling off. While the fan whirled, he strolled over to take her robe from the hook on the back of the door.

  But when she stepped out, he held onto it rather than offering. “Who put those marks on you?”

  “Huh?”

  “Your arm’s bruised.”

  “Yeah.” She glanced down, had an image of Ricker, his eyes burning as his fingers dug into her flesh. “You’re right. Must’ve run into something.” She reached for the robe only to have him hold it out of reach. “Come on, I’m not going to play your sick games in the bathroom.”

  Such a statement usually made him smile. Her stomach began to quiver when his eyes stayed cool and steady on hers.

  “They’re finger marks, Lieutenant. Who handled you?”

  “For God’s sake.” Working up irritation, she snatched the robe. “I’m a cop, remember? It means I tend to run into a number of nasty characters in any given day. Have you eaten? I’m starving.”

  He let her walk back into the bedroom, stand and fiddle with the AutoChef. Waited until she punched in a request. “Where are the flowers?”

  Oh shit. “What flowers?”

  “The flowers, Eve, that were delivered just a while ago.”

  “I don’t know what you’re talking about. I just got—Hey!”

  He’d spun her around so quickly her teeth nearly rattled. Might have if they hadn’t frozen solid at the fury in his eyes. The chill had turned to fire very quickly. “Don’t lie to me. Don’t ever fucking lie to me.”

  “Cut it out.” He had her arms. But even now, she realized, even when he was furious, he didn’t hurt her, and was careful to keep his grip away from the bruise. “Flowers come here all the time. What am I supposed to know about it? Now let me go. I’m hungry.”

  “I’ll tolerate, and by God do tolerate, a great deal from you, Eve. But you won’t stand here and lie to my face. You have bruises on you put there since I last saw you, and by someone’s hand. Summerset is downstairs feeding a bunch of flowers into the recycler. On your orders, I assume, since he brought them up here first. Goddammn it, I can still smell them. What are you afraid of?”

  “I’m not afraid of anything.”

  “Then who? Who put the fear behind your eyes?”

  “You.”

  She knew it was wrong, knew it was cruel. And hated herself for it when his eyes went blank, when he stepped just a little too carefully back from her.

  “I beg your pardon.”

  She hated when he used that rigid and formal tone, hated it worse than a shout. And when he turned to walk away from her, she gave up.

  “Roarke. Damn it, Roarke!” She had to go after him, take his arm. “I’m sorry. Look, I’m sorry.”

  “I have work.”

  “Don’t freeze me out. I can’t take it when you do that.” She dragged her hands through her hair, pressed the heels of them hard on her forehead where it had begun to throb. “I don’t know how to do this. Any way I do, it’s going to piss you off.”

  Disgusted, she stalked back to the sitting area, flopped on the couch, scowled at nothing in particular.

  “Why don’t you try the truth?”

  “Yeah, all right. But you have to make me a promise first.”

  “Which would be?”

  “Oh, get the stick out of your ass and sit down, would you?”

  “The stick in my ass is surprisingly comfortable just now.” He’d been studying her face, calculating, speculating. And he knew. “You went to see Ricker.”

  “What are you, psychic?” Then her eyes popped wide and she was up and running again. “Hey, hey, hey, you promised.”

  “No. I didn’t.”

  She caught up to him in the hallway, considered trying to muscle him to the floor, then decided to go for his weak spot. She simply wrapped her arms around him.

  “Please.”

  “He put his hands on you.”

  “Roarke. Look at me, Roarke.” She laid her hands on his face. The look in his eyes was murder. She knew he could accomplish it, hot or cold. “I baited him. I’ve got my reasons. And right now, I’ve got him shaken. The flowers were just a dig at you. He wants you to come after him. He wants it.”

  “And why shouldn’t I oblige him?”

  “Because I’m asking you not to. Because taking him down is my job, and if I play it right, I’m going to do that job.”

  “There are times you ask a great deal.”

  “I know it. I know you could go after him. I know you’d find a way to get it done. But it’s not the right way. It’s not who you are anymore.”

  “Isn’t it?” But the rage, the first blinding rush of it, was leveling off.

  “No, it’s not. I stood with him today, and now I’m standing with you. You’re nothing like him. Nothing.”

  “I could have been.”

  “But you’re not.” The crisis had passed. She felt it. “Let’s go in and sit down. I’ll tell you all of it.”

  He tipped her face back, a finger under her chin. Though the gesture was tender, his eyes were still hard. “Don’t lie to me again.”

  “Okay.” She closed a hand over his wrist, squeezed there in silent promise where his pulse beat. “Okay.”

  chapter seven
/>   So she told him, running through the steps and movements of her day in a tone very close to the one she’d used in her oral report to Whitney. Dispassionate, professional, cool.

  He said nothing, not a word, stretching out the silence until her nerves were riding on the surface of her skin. His eyes never left her face and gave her no clue to what he was thinking. Feeling. Just that deep, wicked blue, cold now as Arctic ice.

  She knew what he was capable of when pushed. No, not even when pushed, she thought as her nerves kicked into a gallop. When he believed whatever methods he used were acceptable.

  When she was finished, he rose, walked casually to the wall panel that concealed a bar. He helped himself to a glass of wine, held up the bottle. “Would you like one?”

  “Ah . . . sure.”

  He poured a second glass, as steadily, as naturally as if they’d been sitting discussing some minor household incident. She wasn’t easily rattled, had faced pain and death without a tremor, had waded through the pain and death of others as a matter of routine.

  But God, he rattled her. She took the glass he offered her and had to remind herself not to gulp it down like water.

  “So . . . that’s all there is to it.”

  He sat again, gracefully arranged himself on the cushion. Like a cat, she thought. A very big, very dangerous cat. He sipped his wine, watching her over the crystal rim.

  “Lieutenant,” he said in a voice so mild it might have fooled another.

  “What?”

  “Do you expect me—honestly expect me—to do nothing?”

  She set her glass down. It wasn’t the time for wine. “Yes.”

  “You’re not a stupid woman. Your instincts and intellect are two of the things I admire most about you.”

  “Don’t do this, Roarke. Don’t make this personal.”

  His eyes flashed, a hard glint of blue steel. “It is personal.”

  “Okay, no.” She could handle it. Had to. And leaned forward toward him. “It’s not, unless you let him string you. He wants it to be, wants you to make it personal so he can fuck with you. Roarke, you’re not a stupid man. Your instincts and intellect are two of the things I admire most about you.”

  For the first time in more than an hour, his lips curved in a hint of a smile. “Well done, Eve.”

  “He can’t hurt me.” Seeing her opening, all but diving through it, she shifted onto her knees, put her hands on his shoulders. “Unless you let him. He can hurt me through you. Don’t let him do that. Don’t play the game.”

  “Do you think I won’t win?”

  She lowered to her heels. “I know you will. It scares me knowing you will and what the cost could be to both of us. To us, Roarke. Don’t do this. Let me work it.”

  He said nothing a moment, looking in her eyes, studying what he saw there, felt there. “If he touches you again, puts his mark on you again, he’s dead. No, be quiet,” he said before she could speak. “I’ll stand back so far, for you. But he crosses the line, and it’s over. I’ll find the way, the time, and it’s over.”

  “I don’t need that.”

  “Darling Eve.” He touched her now, just a skim of his fingertips over her jaw. “I need that. You don’t know him. As much as you’ve seen, as much as you’ve done, you don’t know him. I do.”

  Sometimes, she reminded herself, you had to settle for what you could get. “You won’t go after him.”

  “Not at the moment. And that costs me, so leave it at that.”

  When he pushed off the couch, she felt the chill, swore under her breath. “You’re still pissed off at me.”

  “Oh yes. Yes, I am.”

  “What do you want from me?” Exasperated, she scrambled to her feet and wished she didn’t want to punch a fist into his gorgeous face for lack of a better solution. “I said I was sorry.”

  “You’re sorry because I pinned you.”

  “Okay, right. That’s mostly right.” Out of patience with him, with herself, she kicked viciously at the sofa. “I don’t know how to do this! I love you, and it makes me crazy. Isn’t that bad enough?”

  He had to laugh. She looked so baffled. “Christ Jesus, Eve, you’re a piece of work.”

  “I ought to at least get some sort of handicap for . . . Damn it,” she hissed as her communicator beeped. She resisted the urge to simply pluck it out and wing it against the wall. Instead, she just kicked the sofa again. “Dallas. What?”

  Dispatch, Dallas, Lieutenant Eve. DOS reported, George Washington Bridge, eastbound, level two. Victim is preliminarily identified as Mills, Lieutenant Alan, assigned to Precinct One two-eight, Illegals Division. You are ordered to report to scene immediately, as primary.

  “Oh God. Oh Christ. Acknowledged. Contact Peabody, Officer Delia, to act as aide. I’m on my way.”

  She was sitting now, her head weighing heavily in one hand, her stomach dragging to her knees. “Another cop. Another dead cop.”

  “I’m going with you. With you, Lieutenant,” Roarke said when she shook her head. “Or alone. But I’m going. Get dressed. I’ll drive. I can get us there faster.”

  The bridge sparkled, an arch teeming with lights against the clear night sky. In that sky, busy air traffic streamed, all but obliterating the tentative light of a thumbnail moon.

  Life surged on.

  On the second level of the bridge, closed now to traffic, a dozen black and whites and city units crowded together like hounds on a hunt. She could hear the ’link chatter, the mutters and oaths, as she cut through the uniforms and plain-clothes.

  More lights, cold blue, iced white and blood red washed over her face. She didn’t speak but walked to the dirty beige vehicle parked in the break-down lane.

  Mills was in the passenger’s seat, his eyes closed, his chin on his chest as if he’d stopped to take a catnap. From the chin down, he was blood.

  Eve stood, coating her hands with Seal-It, and studied the position of the body.

  Posed, she thought as she leaned in the open window. She saw the badge, facedown on the bloody floor of the car, and she saw the dull glint of silver coins.

  “Who found him?”

  “Good Samaritan.” One of the uniforms stepped forward, as if he’d been waiting anxiously for his cue. “We got him stashed in a unit with a couple of cops. He’s pretty shook.”

  “You get a name, a statement?”

  “Yes, sir.” Smartly, the uniform flipped out his notebook, keyed in. “James Stein, 1001 Ninety-fifth. He was heading home from work—worked late tonight—and saw the vehicle in the break-down lane. Wasn’t much traffic, he said, and he saw somebody sitting in the car. Felt bad about it. Stopped, went over to see if he could lend a hand. When he saw the deceased, he called it in.”

  “When did the call come in?”

  “Ah, twenty-one-fifteen. My partner and I were first on-scene, and arrived at twenty-one-twenty-five. We recognized the vehicle as departmental, called it in, and transmitted the vehicle identification number and a physical description of the deceased.”

  “All right. Have Stein taken home.”

  “Sir? You don’t want to question him?”

  “Not tonight. Verify his address and have him taken home.” She turned away from the uniform and saw Peabody and McNab hustle out of another black and white.

  “Lieutenant.” Peabody glanced toward the car, and her mouth went tight. “I was with McNab when the call came through. I couldn’t shake him off.”

  “Yeah.” Eve looked over to where Roarke stood, dark against the lights. “I know the feeling. Seal up, record the scene, all angles.” She didn’t bother to bite back an oath when yet another car squealed up, and Captain Roth jumped out.

  Eve walked over to meet her.

  “Report, Lieutenant.”

  Eve didn’t report to Roth, and they both knew it. They studied each other a moment, a subtle flexing of muscles. “At this point, Captain, you know what I know.”

  “What I know, Lieutenant, is you fucked up, and I’v
e got another man dead.”

  The chatter around them cut off, as if someone had severed vocal chords with a knife.

  “Captain Roth, I’ll give you leeway for emotional distress. But if you want to try to set me down, you do it officially. You don’t come at me on my crime scene.”

  “It’s no longer your scene.”

  Eve simply sidestepped and blocked Roth from shoving by her. “Yes, it is. And because it is, I have the authority to have you removed, should it become necessary. Don’t make it necessary.”

  “You want to take me on, Dallas?” Roth jabbed a finger between Eve’s breasts. “You want to go a round with me?”

  “Not particularly, but I will if you put your hands on me again or try to interfere with my investigation. Now, you either back off, fall in, or remove yourself from the sealed area.”

  Roth’s eyes flared, her teeth bared, and Eve braced herself for what was to come.

  “Captain!” Clooney pushed his way through the crowd of cops. His face was flushed, his breath short as if he’d been running. “Captain Roth, may I speak with you, sir? In private.”

  Roth vibrated another moment, then seemed to pull herself in. With a brisk nod, she turned and strode back to her vehicle.

  “I’m sorry about that, Lieutenant,” Clooney murmured. His gaze slid past her, rested miserably on Mills. “This cuts deep with her.”

  “Understood. Why are you here, Clooney?”

  “Word travels.” He sighed, long and deep. “I’m going to be knocking on another door tonight, sitting with another widow. Goddamn it.”

  He turned away, walked to where Roth waited.

  “She’s got no cause slapping at you that way.” McNab said it, from just behind her.

  Eve shifted, stared at the scene Peabody meticulously recorded. “That’s cause,” she said.

  He didn’t think so but decided to let it go. “Can I help out here?”

  “I’ll let you know.” She took a step away, looked back. “McNab?”