The In Death Collection, Books 1-5

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The In Death Collection, Books 1-5 Page 56

by J. D. Robb


  “Look, I had work.” Naked from the waist up, she dropped into a chair to pull off her boots. “I said I’d be here, and I’m here. I know guests are going to be arriving in ten minutes.” She heaved a boot aside as Summerset’s abrasive words scraped through her head. “I’ll be ready. I don’t take hours to put some dress on and trowel a bunch of gunk on my face.”

  Boots disposed of, she arched her hips and wiggled out of her jeans. Before they hit the floor she was dashing into the adjoining bath. With a smile for the exit, Roarke followed her.

  “There’s no hurry, Eve. You don’t clock in to a cocktail party, or get docked for tardiness.”

  “I said I’d be ready.” She stood in the crisscrossing sprays of his shower, lathering pale green liquid into her hair. Suds dripped into her eyes. “I’ll be ready.”

  “Fine, but no one will be offended if you come down in twenty minutes, or thirty for that matter. Do you expect me to be annoyed with you because you have another life?”

  She swiped at her stinging eyes, tried to see him through suds and steam. “Maybe.”

  “Then you’re doomed to disappointment. If you recall, I met you via that other life. And I have a number of other obligations as well.” He watched her rinse her hair. It was pleasant to see the way she tilted her face back, the way water and soap sleeked down and away from her skin. “I’m not trying to box you in. I’m just trying to live with you.”

  She blew her wet hair out of her eyes as he opened the body dryer for her. She stepped toward it, pivoted. Then surprised him by grabbing his face in both of her hands and kissing him with a burst of enthusiasm.

  “It can’t be easy.” She stepped into the tube and hit the power that swirled warm, dry air over her. “I can have a hard time living with myself. Sometimes I wonder why you don’t just deck me when I start on you.”

  “It’s occurred to me, but you’re so often armed.”

  Dry and fragrant from the perfumed soap, she stepped out. “I’m not now.”

  He caught her by the waist, then stroked his hands down over her firm, muscled bottom. “Other things occur to me when you’re naked.”

  “Yeah.” She wrapped her arms around his neck, enjoying the fact that by rising slightly on her toes they were eye to eye, mouth to mouth. “Like what?”

  With more than a little regret, he eased her back to arm’s length. “Why don’t you tell me why you’re so revved?”

  “Maybe it’s because I like seeing you in a fancy shirt.” She moved away, tugged a short dressing robe off a hanger. “Or maybe it’s because I’m stimulated by the idea of wearing shoes that will make my arches scream for the next couple hours.”

  She peered into the mirror, and supposed she was obliged to put on a little of the paint Mavis was always pushing off on her. Leaning closer, she steadied the lash darkener and lengthener, closed it firmly over the lashes of her left eye, and hit the plunger.

  “Just maybe,” she continued glancing around, “it’s because Officer Peabody found the hidden treasure.”

  “Good for Officer Peabody. What hidden treasure?”

  Eve dealt with her right eyelashes, then blinked them experimentally. “One umbrella and one shoe.”

  “You’ve got him.” Taking her shoulders, Roarke kissed her on the nape of the neck. “Congratulations.”

  “We’ve nearly got him,” she corrected. She tried to remember what was next and chose lipstick. Mavis touted the virtues of lip dye, but Eve was wary of a color commitment that could last for three weeks. “We’ve got the evidence. The sweep confirmed his prints on the souvenirs. His and the victim’s only on the umbrella. Got a few others on the shoe, but we expect salespeople or other customers. Brand-new shoes, hardly a scuff on the bottoms, and she picked up several pairs at Saks right before she died.”

  She went back to the bedroom, remembered the scented cream Roarke had brought back from Paris, and shrugged out of the robe to smear it on.

  “The problem is, we don’t have him. He got tipped somehow that I was coming and skipped. Feeney’s working on his equipment now to see if we can shake loose some data that’ll lead us to him. There’s a net out, but he may have ditched the city. I wouldn’t have made it tonight, but Feeney gave me the boot. Said I was harassing his man.”

  She opened the closet, pushed for revolve, and spotted the minuscule copper-colored dress. She took it out, held it in front of her. The sleeves were long and snug from a deep scooped neck. The skirt ended somewhere just south of the law.

  “Am I supposed to wear anything under this?”

  He reached in her top drawer, pulled out a matching colored triangle that might have laughingly been called panties. “These should do it.”

  She caught them from his underhand toss, wiggled in. “Jesus,” she said after a quick look in the mirror. “Why bother?” Since it was too late to debate, she stepped into the dress and began to tug the clingy material up.

  “It’s always entertaining to watch you dress, but I’m distracted at the moment.”

  “I know, I know. Go on down. I’ll be right there.”

  “No, Eve. Who?”

  “Who?” She snapped the low shoulders into place. “Didn’t I say?”

  “No,” Roarke said with admirable patience. “You didn’t.”

  “Morse.” She ducked into the closet for shoes.

  “You’re joking.”

  “C. J. Morse.” She held the shoes as she might hold a weapon, and her eyes went dark and fixed. “And when I’m finished with the little son of a bitch, he’s going to get more airtime than he ever dreamed of.”

  The in-house ’link beeped. Summerset’s disapproving voice floated out. “The first guests are arriving, sir.”

  “Fine. Morse?” he said to Eve.

  “That’s right. I’ll fill you in between canapés.” She scooped a hand through her hair. “Told you I’d be ready. Oh, and Roarke?” She linked fingers with him as they started from the room. “I need you to pass a last-minute guest through for me. Larinda Mars.”

  chapter twenty

  Eve supposed there could have been worse ways to wait through the last stages of an investigation. The atmosphere had it all over her cramped office at Cop Central, and the food was certainly a long leg up from the eatery.

  Roarke had opened up his dome-ceilinged reception room with its glossy wood floors, mirrored walls, and sparkling lights. Long, curved tables followed the rounded walls and were artistically crowded with exotic finger foods.

  Colorful bite-sized eggs harvested from the dwarf pigeons of the moon’s farm colony, delicate pink shrimp from the Sea of Japan, elegant cheese swirls that melted on the tongue, pastries pumped with pâtés or creams in a menagerie of shapes, the gleam of caviar heaped on shaved ice, the richness of fresh fruit with frosty sugar coating.

  There was more. The hot table across the room steamed with heat and spices. One entire area was a treasure trove for those of a vegetarian persuasion, with another, at a discreet distance, decked out for carnivores.

  Roarke had opted for live music rather than simulation, and the band out on the adjoining terrace played quiet conversation-enhancing tunes. They would heat up as the night went on, to seduce dancers.

  Through the swirl of color, of scent, of gleam and gloss, waiters in severe black wandered with silver trays topped with crystal flutes of champagne.

  “This is so decent.” Mavis popped a black button mushroom in her mouth. She’d dressed conservatively for the occasion, which meant a great deal of her skin was actually covered, and her hair was a tame medium red. Being Mavis, so were her irises. “I can’t believe Roarke actually invited me.”

  “You’re my friend.”

  “Yeah. Hey, you think if later on, after everybody’s imbibed freely, could I ask the band to let me do a number?”

  Eve scanned the rich, privileged crowd, the glint of real gold and real stones, and smiled. “I think that would be great.”

  “Superior.” Mavis gave Eve’
s hand a quick squeeze. “I’m going to go talk to the band now, sort of worm my way into their hearts.”

  “Lieutenant.”

  Eve shifted her gaze from Mavis’s retreating form over and up into Chief Tibble’s face. “Sir.”

  “You’re looking . . . unprofessional tonight.” When she squirmed, he laughed. “That was a compliment. Roarke puts on quite a show.”

  “Yes, sir, he does. It’s for a worthy cause.” But she couldn’t quite remember what that worthy cause was.

  “I happen to think so. My wife is very involved.” He took a flute from a passing tray and sipped. “My only regret is that these monkey suits never go out of style.” With his free hand, he tugged at his collar.

  It made her smile. “You should try wearing these shoes.”

  “There’s a heavy price for fashion.”

  “I’d rather be dowdy and comfortable.” But she resisted tugging at her butt-molding skirt.

  “Well.” He took her arm, eased her toward a shielding arborvitae. “Now that we’ve exchanged the obligatory small talk, I’d like to tell you you’ve done an excellent job on the investigation.”

  “I bumped with Angelini.”

  “No, you pursued a logical line, then you backtracked and found pieces others had missed.”

  “The albino junkie was a fluke, sir. Just luck.”

  “Luck counts. So does tenacity—and attention to detail. You cornered him, Dallas.”

  “He’s still at large.”

  “He won’t get far. His own ambition will help us find him. His face is known.”

  Eve was counting on it. “Sir, Officer Peabody did fine work. She has a sharp eye and good instincts.”

  “So you noted in your report. I won’t forget it.” When he glanced at his watch, she realized he was as edgy as she. “I promised Feeney a bottle of Irish whiskey if he broke it by midnight.”

  “If that doesn’t do it, nothing will.” She put on a smile. There was no use reminding the chief that they hadn’t found the murder weapon in Morse’s apartment. He already knew.

  When she spotted Marco Angelini step into the room, her shoulders stiffened. “Excuse me, Chief Tibble. There’s someone I have to speak to.”

  He laid a hand on her arm. “It isn’t necessary, Dallas.”

  “Yes, sir, it is.”

  She knew the moment he became aware of her by the quick upward jut of his chin. He stopped, linked his hands behind his back, and waited.

  “Mr. Angelini.”

  “Lieutenant Dallas.”

  “I regret the difficulties I caused you and your family during the investigation.”

  “Do you?” His eyes were cool, unblinking. “Accusing my son of murder, subjecting him to terror and humiliation, bringing more grief upon already impossible grief, putting him behind bars when his only crime was witnessing violence?”

  She could have justified her actions. She could have reminded him that his son had not only witnessed violence, but had turned away from it without a thought but to his own survival, and had compounded his crime by attempting to bribe his way out of involvement.

  “I regret adding to your family’s emotional trauma.”

  “I doubt if you understand the phrase.” He skimmed his eyes down. “And I wonder if, had you not been so busy enjoying your companion’s position, you might have caught the real murderer. It’s easy enough to see what you are. You’re an opportunist, a climber, a media whore.”

  “Marco.” Roarke spoke softly as he laid a hand on Eve’s shoulder.

  “No.” She went stiff under the touch. “Don’t defend me. Let him finish.”

  “I can’t do that. I’m willing to take your state of mind into account, Marco, as the reason you would attack Eve in her own home. You don’t want to be here,” he said in an undertone of steel that indicated he was taking nothing into account. “I’ll show you out.”

  “I know the way.” Marco’s eyes stabbed at Eve. “We’ll put our business association to an end as soon as possible, Roarke. I no longer trust your judgment.”

  Hands balled into fists at her side, Eve trembled with fury as Marco strode away. “Why did you do that? I could have handled it.”

  “You could have,” Roarke agreed, and turned her to face him. “But that was personal. No one, absolutely no one comes into our home and speaks to you that way.”

  She tried to shrug it off. “Summerset does.”

  Roarke smiled, touched his lips to hers. “The exception, for reasons too complicated to explain.” He rubbed away the frown line between her brows with his thumb.

  “Okay. I guess I’m not going to be exchanging Christmas cards with the Angelinis.”

  “We’ll learn to live with it. How about some champagne?”

  “In a minute. I’m going to go freshen up.” She touched his face. It was getting easier to do that, to touch him when they weren’t alone. “I guess I ought to tell you that Mars has a recorder in her bag.”

  Roarke gave the dent in her chin a quick flick. “She did. I have it in mine now, after I let her crowd me at the vegetarian table.”

  “Very slick. You never mentioned pickpocketing as one of your skills.”

  “You never asked.”

  “Remind me to ask, and ask a lot. I’ll be back.”

  She didn’t care about freshening up. She wanted a few minutes to simmer down, and maybe a few more to call Feeney, though she imagined he’d bite her head off for interrupting his compusearch.

  He still had an hour to go before he lost his bottle of Irish. She didn’t think it would hurt to remind him. She was at the door to the library, preparing to code herself in, when Summerset melted out of the shadows behind her.

  “Lieutenant, you have a call, termed both personal and urgent.”

  “Feeney?”

  “He did not grant me his name,” Summerset said down his nose.

  “I’ll take it in here.” She had the small but worthy satisfaction of letting the door close smartly in his face. “Lights,” she ordered and the room brightened.

  She’d almost gotten used to the walls of books with leather bindings and paper pages that crackled when you leafed through. For once she didn’t give them so much as a glance as she hurried to the ’link on Roarke’s library desk.

  She engaged, then froze.

  “Surprise, surprise.” Morse beamed at her. “Bet you weren’t expecting me. All dressed up for your party, I see. You look flash.”

  “I’ve been looking for you, C. J.”

  “Oh yeah, I know. You’ve been looking for a lot of things. I know this is on record, and it doesn’t matter. But you listen close. You keep this between you and me, or I’m going to start slicing off little tiny pieces of a friend of yours. Say hi to Dallas, Nadine.”

  He reached out, and Nadine’s face came on screen. Eve, who’d seen terror too many times to count, looked at it now. “Has he hurt you, Nadine?”

  “I—” She whimpered when he jerked her head back by the hair, touched a long slim blade to her throat.

  “Now, you tell her I’ve been real nice to you. Tell her.” He skimmed the flat of the blade over her throat. “Bitch.”

  “I’m fine. I’m okay.” She closed her eyes and a tear squeezed through. “I’m sorry.”

  “She’s sorry,” Morse said between pursed lips and pressed his cheek to Nadine’s so both of their faces were in view. “She’s sorry she was so hungry to be top bitch that she slipped the guard you put on her and fell right into my waiting arms. Isn’t that right, Nadine?”

  “Yes.”

  “And I’m going to kill you, but not quick like the others. I’m going to kill you slowly, and with a lot of pain, unless your pal the lieutenant does everything I say. Isn’t that right? You tell her, Nadine.”

  “He’s going to kill me.” She pressed her lips together hard, but nothing would stop the trembling. “He’s going to kill me, Dallas.”

  “That’s right. You don’t want her to die, do you, Dallas? It�
��s your fault Louise died, yours and Nadine’s fault. She didn’t deserve it. She knew her place. She wasn’t trying to be top cunt. It’s your fault she’s dead. You don’t want that to happen again.”

  He still had the knife at Nadine’s throat, and Eve could see his hand shake. “What do you want, Morse?” Calling up Mira’s profile, she carefully hit the right buttons. “You’re in control. You call the shots.”

  “That’s right.” His smile exploded. “Damn right. You’ve got my position coming up on screen by now. You see I’m at a nice quiet spot in Greenpeace Park, where nobody’s going to bother us. All those nice green-lovers planted these pretty trees. It’s a wonderful spot. Of course, nobody comes here after dark. Unless they’re smart enough to know how to bypass the electronic field that discourages loiterers and chemi-heads. You’ve got exactly six minutes to get here so we can conduct our negotiations.”

  “Six minutes. I can barely make that at full speed. If I run into traffic—”

  “Then don’t,” he snapped. “Six minutes from end of transmission, Dallas. Ten seconds over, ten seconds you might use to call this in, to contact anyone, to so much as blink for backup, and I start ripping Nadine. You come alone. If I smell an extra cop, I start on her. You want her to come alone, right, Nadine.” As incentive, he turned the point of the blade to prick a narrow slice at the side of her throat.

  “Please.” She tried to arch back as the blood trickled. “Please.”

  “Cut her again, and I won’t deal.”

  “You’ll deal,” Morse said. “Six minutes. Starting now.”

  The screen went blank. Eve’s finger poised over the controls, thought of Dispatch, of the dozens of units that could be around the park in minutes. She thought of leaks, electronic leaks.

  And she thought of the blood dribbling down Nadine’s throat.

  She bolted across the room and hit the elevator panel on the run. She needed her weapon.

  C. J. Morse was having the time of his life. He’d begun to see that he’d sold himself short by killing quickly. There was so much more kick in courting fear, seducing it, watching it swell and climax.

 

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