Tags:
Fiction,
General,
detective,
Suspense,
Mystery & Detective,
Women Sleuths,
Mystery,
Mystery Fiction,
Police,
Mystery & Detective - Women Sleuths,
Fiction - Mystery,
Police Procedural,
Large Type Books,
Mystery & Detective - General,
New York (N.Y.),
Mystery And Suspense Fiction,
Policewomen,
American Light Romantic Fiction,
Eve (Fictitious character),
Dallas,
Dallas; Eve (Fictitious Character)
roof garden. She didn't like heights. But despite the sprawling space of the house, being inside made her feel closed in. And maybe the air would clear her head.
She opened the dome so starlight sprinkled down on the dwarf trees, the lush blooms that speared and spilled out of pots. A fountain gurgled into a pool where exotic fish flashed like wet jewels.
She took her time walking to the wall, carved with winged fairies, that circled this section of the roof.
They'd entertained up here a few times, she remembered. For a man in Roarke's position, entertaining was a job. Though, for reasons that escaped her, it was something he actually enjoyed.
She couldn't recall ever coming up here alone before, or for that matter, ever coming up with just Roarke. And she wondered who the hell tended the masses of flowers and plants, fed the fish, kept the tiles gleaming, made certain the seats and tables and statuary were clean.
It was rare to see any sort of servant, human or droid, in the house other than Summerset. But then, she'd learned that people who held great wealth, great power, could easily command silent and nearly invisible armies to handle the pesky details of life.
Despite that wealth and that power, Roarke had gone personally to handle the final details of a friend's death.
And she spent her days handling the details of the deaths of strangers.
She let her mind clear, then filled it with Bryna Bankhead.
Young, eager, romantic. Organized. She'd surrounded herself with attractive things displayed in an attractive manner. Her closet had been full of stylish clothes, with everything hung neatly.
Both the dress and the shoes she'd worn on her fatal date had been new, with the debits efficiently listed in her log book. She'd gotten a manicure and had a facial as well, had put on pretty earrings purchased the afternoon of her date.
A very female woman, Eve mused. One who read and enjoyed poetry.
Which meant the killer had hunted the young, the romantic, the particularly female.
She had two bottles of wine in her kitchen, one white, one red. And neither approaching the label or price range of the bottle on the table. Had he brought it with him, in his black leather bag, along with the illegals, the rose petals, the candles?
She'd kept condoms in her goodie drawer, but the killer hadn't used one. Bryna had been too high on illegals to insist on such defenses, which meant the killer hadn't been concerned about protection, or leaving DNA evidence.
Because, had she lived, she wouldn't have been able to identify him by description. More, Eve thought, she wouldn't have been sure what had happened. They'd had drinks in public, where, according to the server Eve had interviewed that evening, she had been very cozy with her date. Hand-holding, kisses, quiet laughter, long, soulful looks. The server, according to his statement, had assumed they were lovers.
The security cameras would not only follow that theme but add to it. She'd not only let him into her apartment, she'd pulled him inside.
That had been clever of him, Eve thought now. Waiting, letting her make the move. For the record.
If she'd lived, he'd have gotten away clean.
She wondered now if he'd done it before.
No, no. She began to pace along the wall. If he had, why would he make the mistake of overdosing her? It seemed like a first time. But she'd run a probability on that.
If there were another it was another channel to explore, another route to tracking him. To stopping him.
Pulling out her memo book, she plugged in key words.
Chat rooms
Poetry
Rare, expensive illegals
Wig, cosmetic enhancements
Pink roses
Pinot Noir '49
Sexual deviant
Tech skills
Chemistry knowledge
After scanning her own words, she tucked the book back in her pocket. Maybe she'd have that shower, that meal, and work after all.
And turning, she saw Roarke.
It didn't matter that they'd been together more than a year. It occurred to her that she would, very likely, have this leap
John Patrick Kennedy
Edward Lee
Andrew Sean Greer
Tawny Taylor
Rick Whitaker
Melody Carlson
Mary Buckham
R. E. Butler
Clyde Edgerton
Michele Boldrin;David K. Levine