In Death 11 - Judgment in Death
season.
He'd decorated his grounds with those flowers, with trees that would outlive both of them, with shrubs that spread and fountained. And closed it all away with the high stone walls, the iron gates, and the rigid security that kept the city outside.
But it was still there, the city, sniffing around the edges like a hungry, restless dog.
That was part of it. Part of the duality of Roarke. And, she supposed, of her.
He'd grown up in the alleys and tenements of Dublin and had done whatever was necessary to survive. She'd lost her childhood, and the flickers of memory, the images of what had been, of what she'd done to escape, haunted the woman she'd become.
His buffer against yesterday was money, power, control. Hers was a badge. There was little either of them wouldn't do, hadn't done, to keep that buffer in place. But somehow, together, they were... normal, she decided. They'd made a marriage and a home.
That was why she could sit on the steps of that home, with the ugliness of her day smearing her heart, look at blossoms dancing in the breeze. And wait for him.
She watched the long, black car slide quietly toward the house. Waited while Roarke climbed out the back, had a word with his driver. As the car drove off, he walked to her in that way he had, with his eyes on her face. She'd never had anyone look at her as he did. As if nothing else and no one else existed.
No matter how many times he did so, just that long, focused look made her heart flutter.
He sat beside her, set his briefcase aside, leaned back as she was.
"Hi," she said.
"Hi. Lovely evening."
"Yeah. The flowers look good."
"They do, yes. The renewal of spring. A cliche, but true enough, as most cliches are." He ran a hand over her hair. "What are you doing?"
"Nothing."
"Exactly. That's out of character for you, darling Eve."
"It's an experiment." She crossed her scarred boots at the ankles. "I'm seeing if I can leave work at Central."
"And how are you doing?"
"I've pretty much failed." Still with her head back, she closed her eyes and tried to recapture some of it. "I was doing okay with it on the drive home. I saw Mavis's billboard."
"Ah yes. Fairly spectacular."
"You didn't tell me about it."
"It just went up today. I figured you'd see it on your way home and thought it would be a nice surprise."
"It was." And remembering brought her smile back. "I nearly clipped a glide-cart, and I was sitting there, grinning at it, about to call her, but I had a transmission come through."
"So work intruded."
"More or less. It was Webster." Because the smile was gone again, and she was scowling at the trees, she didn't notice the slight tension in Roarke's body. "Don Webster from Internal Affairs."
"Yes, I remember who he is. What did he want?"
"I'm trying to figure that out. He called on my personal and asked for a private meet."
"Did he?" Roarke murmured, his voice deceptively mild.
"He went out of his way for it, tailed me from Central. I met up with him just down the block from here, and after he got finished trying to make nice, he started a song and dance on the Kohli case."
Just thinking about it again got her blood boiling. "Tells me how IAB wants it put away quiet, doesn't like the idea that I'm going to look into Kohli's financials. But he won't confirm or deny anything. Claims it's just a friendly, unofficial heads-up."
"And do you believe him?"
"No, but I don't know what he's feeding me. And I don't like IAB's sticky fingers poking into my case files."
"The man has a personal interest in you."
"Webster?" She looked over now, surprised. "No, he doesn't. We blew off some steam one night years back. That's the beginning and end of it."
For you, perhaps, Roarke thought, but let it go.
"Anyway, I can't figure if the meet was really about Kohli or if it's more about the Ricker connection."
"Max Ricker?"
"Yeah." Her eyes sharpened. "You know him. I should've figured that."
"We've met. What's the connection?"
"Kohli worked on the task force that busted Ricker about six months back. He wasn't a key player, and Ricker slithered through, but it had to cost him a lot of time and money. Could be Ricker put out contracts and is getting some of his own back by whacking cops."
"What I saw in Purgatory today didn't seem like Ricker's style."
"I don't figure he'd want his fingerprints on it."
"There's that." Roarke was silent for a moment. "You want to know if I ever did business with him."
"I'm not asking you that."
"Yes,
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