Big Jack

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Authors: J. D. Robb
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“All Cobb’s jobs were completed and confirmed through Saturday. She had Sunday off. No confirmation of the Gannon residence yesterday. There’s a flag by her name today, which means the client notified us she didn’t report for work. Scheduling had to replace her.”
    Ms. Tesky did what Eve assumed anyone named Tesky would. She tsked.
    “Give me her home address.”
     
    Tina Cobb lived in one of the post-Urban Wars boxes that edged the Bowery. They’d been a temporary fix when buildings had been burned or bombed. The temporary fix had lasted more than a generation. Lewd, creative and often ungrammatical graffiti swirled over the pitted, reconstituted concrete. The windows were riot-barred, and the loiterers on the stoops looked as though they’d be more than happy to burn or bomb the place again, just to break the monotony.
    Eve climbed out of her car, scanned the faces, ignored the unmistakable aroma of Zoner. She took out her badge, held it up.
    “You can probably guess that’s mine,” she said, pointing at her vehicle. “What you might not be able to guess is that if anybody messes with it, I’ll hunt you down and pop your eyes out with my thumbs.”
    “Hey.” A guy wearing a dingy muscle shirt and a gleaming silver earring flipped her the bird. “Fuck you.”
    “No, thanks, but it’s sweet of you to ask. I’m looking for Tina Cobb.”
    There were whistles, catcalls, kissy noises. “That’s one fiiine piece of ass.”
    “I’m sure she’s delighted you think so. Is she around?”
    Muscle Shirt stood up. He poked out his chest and jabbed a finger at Eve’s. Fortunately for him, he stopped short of actual contact. “What you want to hassle Tina for? She don’t do nothing. Girl works hard, minds her own.”
    “Who said I was going to hassle her? She might be in trouble. If you’re a friend of hers, you’ll want to help.”
    “Didn’t say I was a friend. Just said she minds her own. So do I. Whyn’t you?”
    “Because I get paid to mind other people’s own, and you’re starting to make me wonder why you can’t answer a simple question. In a minute, I’m going to start minding yours instead of Tina Cobb’s.”
    “Cops is all shit.”
    She bared her teeth in a glittering grin. “Want to test that theory?”
    He snorted, shot a glance over his shoulder at his companions as if to let them see he wasn’t worried about it. “Too hot to bother,” he said, and shrugged his skinny shoulders. “Ain’t seen Tina for a couple of days anyway. Don’t run a tab on her, do I? Her sister works across the street at the bodega. Whyn’t you ask her?”
    “I’ll do that. Mitts off the car, boys. Pitiful as it is, it’s mine.”
    They walked across the street. Eve assumed the kissing noises and invitations for sexual adventure that came from the stoop were now aimed at her and Peabody. But she let it go. The skinny asshole was right about one thing. It was too hot to bother.
    Inside, she noted the girl manning the checkout counter. Short, thin, olive complexion, an odd updo of hair with purple fringes over the ink black.
    “I could get us something,” Peabody offered. “Something to do with food.”
    “Go ahead.” Eve walked to the counter, waited while the customer in front of her paid for a pack of milk powder and a minuscule box of sugar substitute.
    “Help you?” the woman said, without much interest.
    “I’m looking for Tina Cobb. You’re her sister?”
    The dark eyes widened. “What do you want with Tina?”
    “I want to talk to her.” Eve slipped out her badge.
    “I don’t know where she is, okay? She wants to take off for a couple days, it’s nobody’s sweat, is it?”
    “Shouldn’t be.” Eve had run Tina Cobb in the car and knew the sister’s name was Essie. “Essie, why don’t you take a break?”
    “I can’t, okay. I can’t. I’m working alone today.”
    “And nobody’s in here right now. Did she tell you where she was going?”
    “No. Shit.” Essie sat

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