She found Roarke, as she'd expected, waiting in her office. "I'm getting you ten minutes with him. Talk him into letting you lawyer him. I don't care how you do it."
"What happened? What was he doing there?"
"I don't have time. He'll tell you. I've got some legwork, shouldn't take more than an hour. Then I'm going home, with Peabody. We have to do a search. Technically, I don't need a warrant to sweep his quarters as it's on your property. But you could make it sticky."
"I've no intention of making this sticky. I want this put away as much as you do."
"Then do us all a favor—stay away from the house, and see that he stays away once your lawyers spring bail, until after three this afternoon."
"All right. Do you have an ID on the victim?"
"He's alive, barely, and his name is Patrick Murray. He was the floor scraper at the club. I've got to contact his wife."
"Pat Murray. Jesus, I didn't recognize him."
"But you knew him."
"More professionally than personally. He liked to gamble, I provided games." His recollection was vague and misty. "He sold me a tip on where I could find Rory McNee. He must have told someone about it. I certainly didn't, and we weren't friends. The fact is he often ran numbers and minor errands for O'Malley and the others. I never thought of him." He lifted his hand, let it fall. "The tip was a dead end, so I never thought of him."
"Someone did. Doesn't matter if the tip was bogus or not. He sold it to you and that makes him a traitor. Which makes him a target." Her communicator beeped. "Dallas."
"Got your vehicle, Lieutenant, garage
section D, level three, slot 101."
"On my way. I've got to go," she said to Roarke. "Call the lawyers."
He managed to smile a little. "I did that an hour ago. They should be convincing a judge to grant bail about now."
Because she was in a hurry, Eve took the motor glide to section D—or as far as section C, where it broke down. She jumped off without bothering to swear and covered the next level at a fast clip. She located slot 101 and found Peabody gawking at a slick new Sunspot with an angled-down hood, converto-roof, and deflector fins, front and rear.
"I thought you said 101."
"I did."
"Where's my replacement vehicle?"
"This is it." Peabody turned with wide eyes. "Right here. This one."
Eve only snorted. "Nobody in Homicide gets one of these muscle jobs—not even the captains."
"Serial plates match. I checked the key code." She held out a thin metal plate that could be used by the operator if the code was forgotten. "It works. I started to call in to Vehicular Requisitions, then figured why be stupid."
"Well." Eve pursed her lips, whistled lightly. The color might have been an unfortunate pea green, but everything else about it was prime. "Wow. Somebody screwed up, but we might as well enjoy it while we can. Get in."
"You don't have to twist my arm." Peabody scooted under the upward-opening door and wiggled down until her butt settled comfortably. "Nice seats. You can program initial for your voiceprint."
"We'll play with it later." Eve engaged the ignition manually and lifted a brow in approval at the big cat purr of the engine. "Not one hiss or hiccup. This could be the beginning of a fine new partnership. I hope the security shield and jacking deflectors are operational."
"Any particular reason?"
"Yeah." Eve backed up, swung around, and headed down the levels. "We're going back to the Mermaid Club to search out a couple of street ghosts I spotted this morning. Car like this—cop plates or not—someone's going to try to boost it."
"It comes with full shields, deflectors, and a thievery deterrent—graduating electrical shocks."
"That ought to work," Eve mused. When she reached for her car 'link, Peabody shook her head.
"That's a hands-free. You just tap the second button down on your wheel stem to engage.