In Death 16 - Portrait in Death
Nobody saw him until noon when he surfaced from his apartment above the cantina.
"Works the lunch and dinner shifts," Eve said as they headed up to the apartment. "Better tips, more action. Comes from having an uncle as a boss. See if he's got a vehicle registered under his name, Peabody. Then check the uncle, or the business for a van."
"On it."
Peabody started the search as Eve knocked on the door. There was silence, so she used her fist. Moments later there was a spate of Spanish. From the tone, she took it to be curses. She pounded again, and held her badge up to the Judas hole.
"Open up, Diego."
"Nothing under his name," Peabody said under her breath. "Uncle's got a late-model sedan, and a service van."
She broke off when Diego opened the door and she was treated to a blast of color from a pair of electric blue pajamas.
McNab, she thought, would totally dig on them.
"What's this about?" His eyes were dark and slumberous, his stance both lazy and cocky. As he scanned Eve, his full lips set in a leering smile while he lifted a finger to run it over the dot of beard on his receding chin.
"Questions. Want me to ask them out here, or inside?"
He shrugged, using one shoulder, then swept his hand in what was supposed to be a courtly gesture as he stepped back. "I always welcome ladies into my home. Coffee?"
"No. Night before last. You know the drill."
"I'm sorry?"
"Where were you night before last, Diego? Who were you with, what were you doing?"
She got a look at the room while she spoke. Small, furnished in sex-god style of red and black. Overly warm and smelling too strongly of some musky male cologne.
"I was with a lady, of course." He flashed brilliantly white teeth. "And we were making sweet, sweet love all night long."
"Lady got a name?"
He cast his heavily lashed eyes downward. "I'm too much of a gentleman to say."
"Then I'll give you one. Rachel Howard."
He continued to smile, and lifted his hands, palms up.
Eve gestured to Peabody, and took the picture of Rachel, held it out. "Refreshed?"
"Ah, yes. Pretty Rachel of the dancing feet. We had a brief and beautiful romance, but I had to end it." He laid a dramatic hand on his heart, and a gold ring winked on his pinky. "She wanted too much of me. I have to give myself to all the ladies, not just one."
"You ended it? By stabbing her in the heart and tossing her in a recyler?"
The smirk vanished as his jaw dropped, and his expression went bright with fear. "What is this?"
"She was killed night before last. Word is you were hassling her, Diego."
"No. No way." The slight Spanish accent disappeared, and his voice was all New York. "We danced a few times, that's all, in that data club a lot of the college crowd hangs in. I hit on her, okay, no crime in that."
"You came by her place of employment."
"So what? So the hell what? Wanted a taste, that's all."
"What about your brief and beautiful romance?"
He sat now, looking slightly ill. "We never got down to it. I took her to dinner, showed her a nice time, then she brushed me off. Challenged me, so I put the squeeze on. Figured she was playing me, wanted a pursuit."
"Want to give me that lady's name now?"
"I don't know it. Jesus. I was on the bounce, club to club. Got a little action with some girl at her place. On the East Side. Shit. Second Avenue. Halley, Heather, Hester. Fuck if I know. Just some blonde chica who wanted a bang."
"You're going to want to do better."
"Look." He put his head in his hands a moment, then scooped them through all the glossy black. "We were wasted, okay? Scored a little Zoner, dipped a little Erotica. Went to her place. Second, I know it was Second, maybe in the Thirties. Near a subway, 'cause I caught a train home at three, maybe four in the morning. It was just a one-night bang. Who pays attention?"
Eve nodded toward the pictures of naked and scantily clad woman that graced his walls. "You like to take pictures, Diego?"
"Huh? Oh. Man, what is this? I download them from the Net, frame 'em up. I like looking at women, so what? I like women, and they like me. I don't go around killing them."
"Slimy," was Peabody's opinion when they walked back to the car.
"Yeah, slimy's an offense, but it's not a crime.
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