Indulgence in Death (40 page)

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Authors: J.D. Robb

BOOK: Indulgence in Death
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She could work this, she realized. Yes, she could work it.
“My commander’s on my ass, my husband’s getting testy with the hours I’m putting in. I’m starting to look like an idiot and I don’t like it. I’m going to light some fires.”
“How much will you give them?” Whitney asked her.
“Just what they’ve given me. The surface connections, but I need to make it personal. Them, me. Budget’s stretched,” she decided. “Yeah. I can’t access the resources through the department, but I’ll use my own money to get those resources outside the department. Don’t you know who I am? Don’t you know I’ve got more money than the two of you put together? That’ll speak to them, won’t it?” she asked Mira. “He bought me, but now I can get my hands on billions as long as I bang him when he wants it.”
“A fool and his money,” Roarke murmured, amused despite himself.
Mira let out a little sigh. “I would say it’s their probable view of your relationship.”
“And I’d say this no longer sounds like a backup plan,” Roarke put in.
“Feeney’s right, I front the play. I can time it. Hit them after I know, or am reasonably sure, we’re going to get the warrants, but before we serve them. It’s just adding incentive for them to move up their timetable. We sting them right,” she insisted, and Roarke understood she was pushing to get him in her corner, “they go after me, they go after a cop, they’re done. Their high-priced lawyers, their family fortunes, their goddamn pedigrees aren’t going to keep them out of a cage for the rest of their lives.”
“Is that what worries you?” he asked. “That even with the case you’ve built, even with the evidence you believe you’ll gather with the warrants, they’ll slip through the system?”
“They worry me.” In one sharp move, she pointed to the board, to the faces of the dead. “The chance I’ll have to put another up there worries me.”
He watched her realize she’d let her emotions spike, let them show in front of her superior. And he watched her draw them down again, draw them in.
“They want me up there,” she said in a tone both cool and flat, “so we’ll make them want me up there sooner.”
“You know, I’ve been working on something like this off and on.” Feeney continued to study the wrist unit as his casual comment defused the charged air. “This one’s nice and compact, got more bells and whistles than I’d worked out.”
He glanced up, his gaze flicking over Roarke before homing in on Eve. “What would be prime is if you run into them—the both of you—someplace. Public place. Restaurant, club, like that. That’s what fries you, see, trying to get a little downtime, and there they are in your face. Maybe you’re already pissy, having a spat with Roarke, and that just shoves you over the line. That way it comes off impulse. Like you just lost it there for a minute.”
“That is prime,” Eve agreed.
“I’ve got moments.” Feeney rose, handed the unit back to Eve, looked at Roarke. “That’s nice work.”
“Thanks.”
“Peabody, see if you can find out where they’re going to be tonight. At least one of them. Friday night . . . they’re not going to sit at home playing mah-jongg.”
“It’ll be easier and quicker for me to find out.” Roarke took out his ’link, walked away.
“Still want eyes and ears on you,” Feeney told her.
“Fine.” She stuck her hands in her pockets as she tracked Roarke out of the room.
“You keep them on, unless you’re locked up in that fortress you live in, or you’re working toward getting your hands on some billions.”
“What . . .” It struck her. “Jesus, Feeney.”
“You started it. I’ll start setting it up.”
“I want two officers on you at all times. That starts now,” Whitney added.
“McNab and I will take tonight.”
“They’ve seen you,” Eve reminded Peabody.
“They won’t make me.”
Mira slipped out, waiting until Roarke put his ’link away.
“I’m going to apologize to you,” she began. “I couldn’t, in good conscience, keep my opinion to myself, even knowing how she’d react, what she’d do. But I’m sorry.”
“I’m obliged to accept what she does. What she is,” he added, reminding himself that she, in turn, accepted him. Hardly realizing he did so, he slid a hand into his pocket, found the button he carried there. That tiny piece of her. “That obligation started when I fell in love with her, and was sealed when I married her. Before you told her, I’d been engaged in a vicious internal debate about telling her myself.”
“I see.”
He held her gaze for a long moment. “I don’t know which side of me would’ve won.”
“I do. You’d have told her, then had your argument over her reaction in private.”
“I expect you’re right.”
“What troubles you more? What she’s planning to do, or the fact that she’s in the position of doing it because her connection to you qualified her?”
“Toss-up. They have utter contempt for me, and enjoy letting it show. Just enough. I suppose they think I’d be insulted, or have my feelings hurt.”
“As you said, they don’t understand you.”
“If they did, they’d have tried to kill her already. They think killing her will inconvenience me, certainly disrupt my personal and professional lives for a bit, cause me some distress.”
He turned the button in his fingers. “They’d enjoy all of that. If they knew losing her would destroy me in levels they can’t imagine, they’d cut her into pieces and bathe in her blood.”
“No.” Eve spoke from the doorway. “No, they wouldn’t because I’m better than they are. They can’t beat me, and they sure as hell can’t beat us. Can you give us a minute?” she asked Mira.
“Yes.” She touched Roarke’s arm before she went back inside the conference room.
“Do you really think those two trust-fund fuckwits could take me down?”
Oh aye,
he thought, her ego was healthy enough—so was her temper. But by God, so was his. “Think, no. But neither would I have thought those two trust-fund fuckwits could or would murder nine people or more, and have the NYPSD chasing their tails.”
“Chasing our . . .” Fury erupted. He’d have sworn his skin singed in the hot flow of its lava. “Is that what you call this? Is that what you call putting a solid case together in under a week? Making connections that tie them up out of sweat and sleepless nights and solid, consistent police work? Chasing our tails?”
“So solid a case you’re about to paint a target on your back rather than trust that solid case and police work.”
“This is police work, goddamn it. This is the job, and you know it. You knew it from the jump, and if you can’t back me when—”
“Stop there,” he warned her. “I haven’t said I wouldn’t back you, but I won’t be pushed into it.”
“I don’t have time to ease into it, to debate and discuss. I didn’t put it together, and I should have. I didn’t see it until Mira pointed it out, and it should’ve been flashing like fucking neon in my brain. I’ll know who their next target is if it’s me, and I won’t have to stand over somebody else I couldn’t save.”
“I understand that, and you, very well.” Christ, he was tired. He couldn’t remember when he’d last been so bloody knackered. “Do you really expect me to have no concerns, no worries, no dark thoughts? Reverse it. I’m putting myself up as bait. What do you do?”
“I trust you enough to know you can and will handle yourself, and use the resources you have available to ensure your own safety.”
“Eve, please don’t stand there and shovel that bullshit at my feet. These are good shoes.”
She hissed out a breath, but at the end of it he saw the chip on her shoulder tumble off. “Okay, I would trust you, but I’d also have some concerns, worries, and dark thoughts. And you’d be sorry I did. You’d hate that I did.”
“All right.”
She squinted at him. “All right? That’s it?”
“I had a bigger and considerably more vicious fight with you before, in my head. It was passionate, fierce, and very, very loud.”
“Who won?”
He had to touch her, just a skim of his fingertip down the little dent in her chin. “We hadn’t quite got there, but since we’ve finished it here, I like to think we both have.”
“I meant what I said in there, which I shouldn’t have said in front of Whitney. I can’t have another face on that board.” He watched her face change, watched her let him see what was inside.
“The ones on there now, I couldn’t stop it; I couldn’t save them. But if there’s another, I own it, because I know I have the tools to stop it. To make the best possible effort to stop it.”
“And the warrants aren’t enough?”
“I had to believe it to sell it, so I did. I still do, almost clear through.” She looked away for a moment. “But there’s that fraction, that percentage that maybe they’ve covered everything, that we won’t find enough to charge them—or we’ll charge them, indict them, and that fleet of high-priced lawyers will find enough little holes to spring them. I’m hedging my bets, and I’ve got a couple other ideas that should add more edge. You could help me with them.”
“I suppose I could.”
“Do you know where they’re going to be tonight?”
“They’re attending the ballet, at the Strathmore Center.”
“Can you score us tickets?”
“We have a box. They are, however, meeting for drinks at Lionel’s before the performance.”
“That’ll work even better.” She took his hand, linked fingers. “Let me lay it out for you.”
 
 
H
e had to admit, she’d slapped together an interesting and inventive scenario in very short order. He refined it a bit, and felt as confident as he could.
“I’m going to give Reo another thirty. She should’ve finished talking to her boss by then. I’ll need to brief the team.”
“They’re meeting at seven. That gives you time for an hour’s sleep. Not negotiable,” he said before she objected. “And not on the damn floor. There have to be cots at least in your infirmary.”
“I hate the infirmary.”
“Suck it up,” he advised.
“Mira has a big couch in her session room. I’ll ask if I can use it.”
“Make it we. I could use a lie-down myself.”
She slept like the dead woman a couple of rich guys wanted her to be, then contacted Reo. Again.
“Tell me you’ve got it.”
“I told you I’d contact you when I did. Didn’t I tell you the boss thinks Judge Dwier’s the best hit on this?” The testy edge of frustration came through loud and clear. “No known connections with either family, solid reputation, open-minded, and so on and so on, and didn’t I tell you Judge Dwier is fly-fishing in Montana?”
“And didn’t I say go with another choice?”
“Don’t tell us our jobs. The PA’s talking to the judge right now. He’s walking him through it, and my sense is we’re nearly there. We’re ninety percent there.”
“Close enough. When you’ve got it, tag Baxter. He’ll head up that end.”
“Where are you going to be?”
“I’m going to meet a couple guys at a bar.”
She clicked off as Feeney came in. “Gotta suit you up.”
“I can do that.” Roarke walked in behind him, carrying a silver garment bag. “She’ll need to change anyway.”
“Into what?” Eve demanded.
“Appropriate attire. Your con will be more convincing if you’re dressed for an evening out.”
“I’ll test you out when you’re attired.” With a snort, Feeney strolled out.
“Strip it off, Lieutenant,” Roarke told her. He shut and locked the door.
“I need to be able to carry my weapon.”
“I said appropriate attire.” He unzipped the bag.
The dress was short, simple, and black. But it came with a hip-skimming jacket that fastened up the front with a lot of fancy loops.
“Somebody could kill me five times before I got that jacket undone and drew my weapon.”
Roarke simply demonstrated by tugging the jacket open. “The loops are for show.”
“Not bad. Not bad at all.” When she peeled off her clothes, Roarke fixed on the recorder, the mic, the earpiece. “Where’d the dress come from?”
“Your closet. I had Summerset bring it down. Along with the accessories.” He held up diamond earrings. “They’ll see these, believe me, and won’t give a single thought to the possibility you’re wired. And switch your wrist unit for the evening one.”
She gave it, all that fire and ice, a dubious glance. “I haven’t really played with that one.”
“It works the same way as your everyday. You can carry a clutch piece in this bag—though not much else. Add the shoes.”
They were hot murder red with heels that made her arches twinge when she looked at them. “How am I supposed to run in those?”
He gave her a quick, amused look. “Are you planning on running?”
“You never know.” But she dressed, and added the murderous shoes. “Appropriate?”
“You’re perfect.” He framed her face with his hands. “Perfect for me.”
“We’re supposed to be pissed at each other, remember. You need to get in character.”
“I never have a problem acting pissed at you.” When he grinned, he brushed his lips over hers. He laid his forehead to hers briefly at the knock on the door, then crossed over to answer.
“Peabody, you look lovely.”
“Thanks.” She lifted her hands, palms up to Eve. “Well?”
She also wore black, young and funky, with a brightly striped sleeveless vest that covered her sidearm. With her hair done in crazed corkscrew curls, her eyes lined in emerald green, and her lips as red as Eve’s shoes, Eve was forced to agree.
“You’re right. They won’t make you.”
“McNab and I are heading out now so we’ll already be in place when the subjects get there. Detective Carmichael and the new guy will take the ballet. Baxter’s waiting for the go, then he’ll have both search units move in.”
“Good work, Peabody.”
“See you at the bar.”
“She’s juiced,” Eve commented. “She took a booster earlier, but this is just juice. Because we’re close, because we’re going to bring them in before much longer. Bring them in, sweat them, break them. End it.”

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