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‘What is it?’

‘It’s a promise. It’s not so hard to promise to do something you really want, anyway. And if I’m lousy at being a wife, you’ll just have to live with it. I don’t break my promises. And there’s this one other thing.’

He could see her slipping, and shifted slightly so that Mira could tend the cut on her cheek. ‘What other thing, Eve?’

‘I love you. Sometimes it makes my stomach hurt, but I kind of like it. Tired now, come to bed. Love you.’

He eased back to let Mira get on with her tending. ‘It’s all right for her to sleep?’

‘Best thing for her. She’ll be fine when she wakes up. Maybe a little hungover, which seems unfair since she didn’t drink anything. She said she wanted a clear head for tomorrow.’

‘Did she?’ She didn’t look calm when she slept, he noted. She never did. ‘Will she remember any of that? What she was telling me?’

‘She may not,’ Mira said cheerfully. ‘But you will, and that should do the job.’

He nodded and stepped back. She was safe again. One more time safe. He glanced over at Peabody. ‘Officer, can I count on you to fill me in on the details?’

Eve did have a hangover, and wasn’t pleased about it. Her stomach was tied in greasy knots, and her jaw was sore. Between Mira and Trina’s wizardry with cosmetics, the bruises didn’t show. As brides went, she supposed, studying herself, she was passable.

‘You look mag, Dallas.’ Mavis sighed and took a slow turn around Leonardo’s finest hour. The dress sleeked down, as it was meant to, the bronze tone adding warmth to Eve’s skin, the lines highlighting her long, lean form. Its very simplicity made the statement that it was the woman within who counted.

‘The garden’s packed with people,’ Mavis went on cheerily as Eve’s stomach roiled. ‘Did you look out the window?’

‘I’ve seen people before.’

‘There was media doing flybys earlier. I don’t know whose button Roarke pushed, but they’ve stopped.’

‘Goodie.’

‘You’re all right, aren’t you? Dr. Mira said you shouldn’t have any dangerous aftereffects, but—’

‘I’m fine.’ It was only partly a lie. ‘Having it closed, knowing all the facts, the truth makes it easier.’ She thought of Jerry and suffered. She looked at Mavis, the glowing face, the silver-tipped hair, and smiled. ‘You and Leonardo still planning to cohabitate?’

‘At my place, temporarily. We’re looking for bigger digs, one where he’ll have room to work. And I’m going to start making the club rounds again.’ She took a box from the bureau, handed it over. ‘Roarke sent this up for you.’

‘Yeah?’ Opening it, Eve felt twin tugs of pleasure and alarm. The necklace was perfect, of course. Two drapes of twisted copper studded with colored stones.

‘I happened to mention it.’

‘I bet you did.’ With a sigh, Eve draped it on, then fastened the long matching drops to her ears. And looked, she thought, like a stranger. A pagan warrior.

‘There’s one more thing.’

‘Oh, Mavis, I can’t stand one more thing. He’s got to understand that I—’ She broke off as Mavis turned from the long white box on the table, took out a sweeping spray of white flowers - petunias. Simple, backyard-variety petunias.

‘He always knows,’ she murmured. All the muscles in her stomach loosened, all the nerves died away. ‘He just knows.’

‘I guess when somebody understands you that way, that, you know, intimately, it makes you pretty lucky.’

‘Yeah.’ Eve took the flowers, cradled them. The reflection in the mirror didn’t look like a stranger. It looked, she thought, like Eve Dallas on her wedding day. ‘Roarke’s going to swallow his tongue when he gets a load of me.’

She laughed, grabbed Mavis’s arm, and rushed out to make her promises.

If you enjoyed Immortal in Death you won’t want to miss J.D. Robb’s exciting novel of romantic suspense . . .

Rapture in Death

Here is a special excerpt from this provocative novel available soon from Piatkus.


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