"No."
"Shit." She sighed it, then rubbed absently at her temple. "Where were you at midnight last night?"
"Eve—"
She cut Roarke off with a look. "This is what I do. What I have to do. Were you at the Green Shamrock last night at midnight?"
"I was in bed with a book."
"What was your relationship with Shawn Conroy?"
Summerset set the brandy down, stared at Roarke over Eve's shoulder. "Shawn Conroy was a boy in Dublin years ago. He's dead, then?"
"Someone claiming to represent Roarke lured him to one of Roarke's rental units, nailed him to the floor, and opened up pieces of him. Let him bleed to death." There was shock on his face, she noted. Good, she wanted him to be shocked. "And you're going to have to give me a solid alibi, something I can confirm, or I'm going to have to take you in for a formal interview."
"I don't have one."
"Find one," she suggested, "before eight a.m. tomorrow. That's when I want you at Cop Central."
His eyes were cold and bitter when they met Eve's. "You'll enjoy interrogating me, won't you, Lieutenant?"
"Hauling you in on suspicion of a couple of torture murders is just the chance I've been waiting for. The fact that the media will be screaming the news of your connection to Roarke by midday is only a minor inconvenience." Disgusted, she stalked toward the door that connected her office with Roarke's.
"Eve." Roarke's voice was quiet. "I need to speak with you."
"Not now" was all she said as she closed the door between them. Roarke heard the bad-tempered snick of locks engaging.
"She's already decided I'm guilty." Summerset drank brandy now, deeply.
"No." While regret warred with irritation, Roarke studied the panel that closed him off from his wife. "She's decided she has no choice but to gather the facts." His gaze shifted to Summerset's, held it. "She needs to know all of them."
"That would only worsen the situation."
"She's entitled to know."
Summerset set the snifter down, and his voice was as stiff
as his spine. "I see where your loyalties lie, Roarke."
"Do you?" Roarke murmured as Summerset left him alone. "Do you really?"
• • •
Eve slept in her office suite, and slept poorly. She didn't care that her deliberate avoidance of Roarke was petty. She needed the distance. Well before eight she was at Cop Central. After toying with a bagel the consistency of cardboard and coffee that bore too close a relationship with raw sewage, she shot off a transmission to Peabody with orders to report to Interview Room C.
Prompt as a palace guard, Peabody was already in the small tiled and mirror-walled room checking the recording equipment when Eve came in. "We've got a suspect?"
"Yeah, we've got one." Eve filled a pitcher from the water distiller herself. "Let's try to keep a cork in it until the interview's wrapped."
"Sure, but who…" Peabody trailed off when a uniform brought Summerset and Roarke to the door. Her eyes darted to Eve's, rounded. "Oh."
"Officer." Eve nodded to the uniform. "You're dismissed. Roarke, you can wait outside, or in my office."
"Summerset is entitled to representation."
"You're not a lawyer."
"His representative isn't required to be."