Festive in Death

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Festive in Death Page 34

by J. D. Robb


  “So you hired Ziegler to draw her into a sexual affair, one I assume you documented.”

  “That’s right. It’s not illegal.”

  On the contrary, Eve thought, but the pimping charges weren’t worth mentioning.

  “I only needed them to do it a couple more times. By the first of the year, or right after, I could file.”

  “But you suggested a trip with Natasha, to shore up your marriage, after the first of the year.”

  “Okay, I did.” He shifted in his chair, leaned forward a bit as if explaining the perfectly reasonable. “It would never have happened, but it was important I came off as trying to fix things up. It’s marriage,” he said, obviously frustrated. “It’s personal business, not police business.”

  “If you wanted it to stay that way, you shouldn’t have killed Ziegler.”

  “I didn’t! I only needed him to screw her a couple more times. Now he’s dead.”

  “He couldn’t finish the job because she broke it off, or was about to.”

  “Maybe she did, maybe she didn’t. But he’d have persuaded her.”

  “One way or the other?” Eve said.

  “He told me he’d persuade her.” Copley looked away. “I told him he didn’t get the money until he did. Just two more times, and I could take it to my divorce lawyer.”

  “When did you tell him?”

  “Just last week when I went . . .”

  “To his apartment.”

  “Look, fine. I went there. One time. Just that one time because he dropped it on me at our training session she’d made noises about working on the marriage, maybe stopping the sex with him the day before. And she was talking to me about fixing things, getting teary, getting flirty. I just needed a couple more times to seal the deal.”

  “He couldn’t do it, but he still wanted money. If you didn’t pay it, he’d go to your wife, confess—and you’d lose. He’d tell her about Felicity. And you’d lose. The prick was hitting you from every angle. It was never going to stop. So you stopped it.”

  “I didn’t kill him. I wasn’t there.”

  “The same way you were upstairs when Catiana was killed, when your wife was attacked? What had Catiana figured out? What did she know? She’d tell Natasha, and you’d lose again. She had to be stopped. You stopped her. But your wife walks in, and that’s not just losing your ‘financial advantage,’ that’s losing everything. She had to be stopped.”

  “He used me. They all used me. I’m the victim here. I’m the goddamn victim. I didn’t do anything. I wasn’t there. I want to talk to Natasha. I want to talk to Felicity.”

  “They’re done with you. What you’ve got now is me. So let’s start again.”

  He fumbled and stumbled, raged a time or two. He pleaded, and he insulted. But he didn’t budge.

  Eve decided spending Christmas in a cage might add the final incentive.

  She sent him off, raging.

  “He’s talked himself into it,” Peabody commented. “Didn’t Mira say something like that? How he could make himself believe the lie so it’s his truth.”

  “Something like that. It may be harder for him to believe after another couple days behind bars. He keeps tripping up over things. Going to Ziegler’s apartment, paying Ziegler to nail his wife. We’ll keep piling up the stumbles until he falls flat.”

  “There’s more than enough to go to trial.”

  “Without a confession, the PA’s going to offer a deal. It’s not enough. Maybe I could swallow it on Ziegler, but not on Catiana. We’ll hit him again after Christmas. Go, grab McNab’s skinny ass, catch your shuttle, see your family.”

  “Really? We have to write up the—”

  “I’ve got it.”

  “You always say that. I’ll—”

  “I say it because I’m the boss. Get the hell out of here.”

  “Thanks. Merry Christmas, Dallas. Don’t hit me.” Peabody flung her arms around Eve, squeezed. “I hope you like your gift half as much as I love my coat.”

  She dashed off, presumably to get said coat.

  In her office, Eve wrote up the report, copied it to Reo, the commander, Mira, Peabody.

  She could work on the twists and turns of it, she thought, maybe straighten some of them out, talk to Quigley one more time.

  Then she thought: The hell with it.

  She was going home.

  Maybe it dogged her on the drive, the insane drive full of rain and revelers. It dogged her enough for her to use her in-dash comp, to ramble some thoughts and speculations into it to sort through later.

  But when she walked in the house, she ordered herself to leave it outside.

  It wasn’t hard, not when she walked into warmth, light, laughter. Even if some of the laughter was Summerset’s.

  They were in the parlor, Roarke sprawled in a chair, a glass of wine in his hand. Summerset sat with perfect posture across from him. She didn’t think Summerset could sprawl due to the stick up his ass.

  Then she reminded herself it was Christmas and time for a moratorium on insults.

  “What’s the joke?” she asked.

  Roarke smiled. “Just a little stroll down memory lane.”

  “How many pockets picked on the stroll?”

  “Who’s counting?” He rose to kiss her, take her coat, which he tossed onto the arm of a sofa. “I’ll get you some wine.”

  “I’ll take it. Party food.” She studied the tray of fancy finger food, chose one, popped it. She wasn’t sure what it was except good.

  “Everything tied up?” Roarke asked when he handed her the wine.

  “Tied, but not pulled tight and bowed up. Still, Copley’s getting stones in his Christmas stocking.”

  “That’s coal.”

  “What’s coal?”

  “Never mind.” Roarke kissed her again, pulled her down into the chair with him.

  Flustered—Summerset was right there—she started to push up. “We have lots of chairs.”

  “We’re economizing.” Roarke held her fast. “Summerset was telling me about a Christmas during the Urbans when he and some medics fashioned a Christmas tree out of rebar and rags among other things.”

  “It was quite festive, considering,” Summerset added. “We lit it with mini, bat-powered torches, and some enterprising soul stole a case of MREs from the enemy camp so we had a feast.”

  “That would be you.”

  Summerset lifted an eyebrow at Eve. “Perhaps it was. Making do can add to the sense of community.”

  “My team hauled in a broken tree, a dented menorah, fake ears of corn.” She sipped her wine. “It cheered the place right up.”

  She relaxed, let the evening wash the day away. Maybe the cop in her couldn’t approve of some of the tales they told—or the thievery often involved, but . . . hell, the statute of limitations made them all just memories.

  “I’ve friends waiting,” Summerset said at length, and rose.

  Eve bit back the automatic retort involving ghouls and corpses and wait time. Moratorium, she reminded herself.

  “Happy Christmas to you both. It’s a happier one for me knowing this is a home fulfilling its promise and purpose.”

  Glad she’d bitten back the barb, Eve cleared her throat. “It helps having someone who knows what he’s doing to handle the details.”

  “Thank you. An unexpected gift. Good night.”

  Roarke kissed Eve’s cheek after Summerset left. “Unexpected, and sweet.”

  “I’m not sweet. It’s truth. I’m big on truth tonight.”

  “Difficult pieces to your day?”

  “Yeah, and then some. We’re not going to think about that because, hey, look. There are all these presents under the— Shit! Shit.” Now she did push up. “I need twenty minutes.”

  “All right.”

>   “Go . . . do something,” she suggested and fled to wrap the gifts she’d neglected to wrap because there was plenty of time.

  She hauled them down to the parlor, shoved them under the tree. Huffed out a breath, stepped back. And nearly yelped as she spotted Roarke lying on one of the sofas reading a book, the cat stretched out beside him.

  “I didn’t see you.”

  “So I deduced when you reached for your weapon.”

  “I didn’t draw it. You’re reading a book.”

  “It’s the Yeats you gave me our first Christmas together. I reread it every year at this time.”

  “You’re such a sap.” But she smiled when she said it because the idea filled her with pleasure. “Do you want to see what you got this year?”

  “I do.” He rose, set the book aside. The cat just turned over, stayed on the sofa. “We could leave the gifts from friends for tomorrow,” he suggested, poured them both more wine. “For Christmas Day.”

  “Works for me. Then we could finish what we started last night. You know, drink a whole bunch of wine, have crazy sex.”

  “That would absolutely work for me. Or.” He cupped a hand behind her neck, kissed her slow. “We could start at the end of that, work back. Crazy sex, lots of wine, gifts.”

  “It’s a plan, but—” She pulled back, grabbed a large, clumsily wrapped box. “Open this. I figured it would be the . . .” She threw her hands in the air, made a whooshing sound. “What is it?”

  “The explosion.”

  “No, no, when the guy who—” With loosely fisted hands she waved her arms in the air. “And the musicians all—”

  “The crescendo?” He laughed, sat on the floor with the box. “I do adore you. So, in this case, crescendo first.”

  “Yeah. I want to see if I hit the mark. It’s a crappy wrapping job.”

  “It’s charming.” He untied the ribbon, tore the paper. When he opened the box, she gauged surprise. But surprise didn’t necessarily mean bull’s-eye.

  “You didn’t get yourself a magic coat,” she pointed out.

  “I hadn’t gotten to it.”

  He drew out the soft black leather, in classic style, and he noted—touched—the buttons held the symbol of Celtic trinity knots.

  “You amaze me.”

  “You can buy your own clothes—you can buy everybody’s clothes, but this is . . . I want you safe, too.”

  “Darling Eve.” When he leaned over, kissed her, she knew she’d hit the mark.

  “It’ll fit,” she told him. “I went to your guys—the R&D guys on the lining, and that wasn’t easy. I think I could get into the White House War Room easier. And your tailor.”

  He stood to put it on. “It’s perfect. Absolutely perfect.”

  And on him, the knee-length, supple black leather was ridiculously sexy. “There’s an add-on. Hidden interior pockets. I figure a guy like you can find them easy enough. For carrying things even an expert civilian consultant isn’t suppose to carry.”

  “Is that so?” He did, indeed find them, grinned like a boy.

  Double bull’s-eye, Eve thought. On a roll, she started to reach for another gift.

  “No, your turn now.” He slipped out of the coat, laid it with hers. “We’ll just stick with the crescendo theme.” He chose a small box. “This one.”

  She expected jewelry. He couldn’t help himself. So puzzlement came first when she opened it, found a simple business card. “Master Wu? I don’t get it.”

  “You get him. He’ll work with you, at his dojo, or here, in the one we’re having put in beside the gym on the lower level.”

  “The what? Dojo. Here?”

  “The work starts next week. Master Wu will train you. If and when you’re unable to connect in person, we’ve devised a holographic program.”

  “Master Wu will work with me. The Master Wu?” She’d met the martial arts legend briefly on a case, had admired him for years. “You bought me Master fucking Wu?”

  “In a manner of speaking.”

  “Holy shit, holy shit!” She jumped up, literally danced around the room, stopping to jab at an imaginary opponent, destroying them with a vicious side-kick. “Master Wu!”

  She leaped onto Roarke, bowling him back, kissing him hard when he laughed, and while the cat ran over to see what the hell was going on.

  “This is the best. This is the most amazing gift ever in the history of gifts. You know I’m going to be able to seriously kick your ass now.”

  “We’ll see about that.”

  “Master Wu.” She shoved up, pulled him up with her. “You’re putting in a dojo.”

  “We are. It’ll be fun, won’t it, for both of us? I’ll show you the design, the plans. Ah now,” he murmured when the insane joy in her eyes clouded with tears.

  “You,” she said, and wrapped around him. “You know me, and you love me anyway. I’ll never get over it.”

  “And you. My cop put stash pockets in my magic coat. I couldn’t have dreamed you better.”

  She sniffled, eased back, pulled another gift from under the tree. “This one. This one needs to come next.”

  “I could sit here, with you, under these happy lights, and need nothing else in the world. But since it’s here,” he added, making her laugh as he opened the gift.

  She’d framed a photo of them at the preview of The Icove Agenda. Not one of the glitzy red-carpet shots, but one taken after she’d squared off with a killer—after he’d bloodied the bastard’s face.

  They stood smiling at each other, his torn knuckles on her bruised cheek.

  “It’s us, that’s what you said when you saw this.” He looked up at her. “So it is, and it’s going straight onto my desk. Open this.”

  Relieved the emotional jag had passed, she ripped in. And found the exact same photo. Different frame, but the same photo. Nothing could have struck her more.

  “Look at us. We know each other.”

  “And love each other anyway.”

  “All glammed up, and your knuckles bleeding, my eye already going purple. To think of all that bullshit prepping for the cameras. The Trina treatment. Clothes, hair, face—and I end up with a black eye anyway.”

  “You got your man. And it was a hell of an after party.”

  “Bagging Frye was the best part, but, yeah, it was. If parties didn’t take so much time and work, they’d . . . Wait. Wait.”

  “For what?”

  “She helped with the party prep. That’s what Tella told me today. Catiana was over there, helped out, got ready for the party there. Catiana.”

  Roarke dangled a ribbon for Galahad to bat at. “I suspect it’s Christmas that’ll have to wait.”

  “I need to . . . No, it can wait.” She started to reach for another gift, but he took her hand.

  “We know each other.”

  She turned her hand under his, gripped tight. “Thank God. You can wear your new coat.”

  So she ran those twists and turns as he drove, wondered if she indeed smoothed some of them out. It made a convoluted, nasty kind of sense. And considering those involved, it played right through to crescendo.

  She didn’t bother to have Copley brought up, but went down to the bowels of Central, logged in, badged through and walked up to where Copley paced his cell.

  “What do you want? I don’t have to talk to you. Fuck you, and you with her,” he said to Roarke.

  “You can send for the lawyer you don’t respect, or you can answer a couple of simple questions. On the night of your holiday party, what time did you see or speak to your wife for the first time?”

  “How the hell do I know? I wasn’t watching the damn clock.”

  “Fine.” Eve turned away.

  “Wait. Why does it matter? I told you when I got home, I told you I went up to dress. Tash came in later. She
was running behind.”

  “What about hair, makeup?”

  “So what? Wait, wait. She had to deal with it herself. She was rushed, something about a screwup with catering. She was upset, said how she’d had to put out a dozen fires. I know she’d been running around dealing with things because Tella’s girl called up, caught me just after I got out of the shower, looking for her.”

  “Why not tag Natasha directly?”

  “I don’t know. I didn’t ask. I had a party to get ready for. I don’t get into the domestic stuff. Tash deals with that. She deals with the staff.”

  “How long did it take you to get ready?”

  “Jesus Christ. I don’t know. I take my time. Maybe ninety minutes.”

  “So Catiana was looking for your wife about six-thirty? Sometime around six-thirty?”

  “About that. So what? The girl should’ve been able to handle whatever the problem was instead of bothering us. But I didn’t kill her for it.”

  “You’re a complete dick, JJ,” Eve commented, and walked away with him shouting after her.

  “He is, indeed, a complete dick,” Roarke agreed.

  “Yeah, but he’s not a murderer.”

  EPILOGUE

  A skeleton crew manned the hospital. That meant Eve had to go through more hoops for admittance to the surgical wing, but she found herself tolerant.

  When she stepped into Natasha’s room with Roarke, she noted they’d brought in a tree, gifts, strung some lights.

  Natasha sat up in bed, flanked by her sister and brother-in-law. She looked more alert, and had added lip dye, other enhancements. She wore a lacy robe over a silky gown.

  “Lieutenant.” Martella came over to greet her. “Roarke. Oh, you work too hard to still be at it on Christmas Eve! Please, have some champagne. The doctor said Tash could have a half glass. She’s doing so much better already.”

  “So I see. You look better, Ms. Quigley.”

  “I feel more myself. A little weak and shaky, but much better. Tella and Lance brought me Christmas.”

  “Nice. We’ll have to skip the champagne, but this won’t take long. I wanted to check in on you, and give you some updates.”

  “So kind.”

  “I’m going to have just a couple questions, to tie it all up. I’ll keep it simple.”

 

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