"I love you," he murmured. "Outrageously."
"So you're here when you should be off planet seeing to your business." She shook her head before he could speak, could slide some smooth excuse by her when she knew better. "You were there tonight, knowing I'd be pissed off, because you thought there might be a chance I'd need you. You're here right now ready to argue with me just to take my mind off what's ripping at it. I know you, damn it. I'm a cop. I'm good at knowing people."
He only smiled. "Busted. So what?"
"So ... thanks. But I've been on the job eleven years now and I can handle myself. On the other hand ..." She studied her wine, then took a long swallow. "It sure gave me a nice feeling to watch you beat the puss out of that creep who jumped Peabody. I had to sit there in the fucking van. Couldn't risk getting out to smear him onto the pavement myself and blow cover. So it felt pretty good to watch you do it for me."
"Oh, it was absolutely my pleasure. Is she all right?"
"She will be. He shook her -- that's the human part. She'll take a hot shower, a tranq if she's smart, and sleep it off. The cop part will maintain. She's a good cop."
"She's a better one because of you."
"No, don't put that on me. She's what she is." Uncomfortable with that topic, she shot him a cool stare. "I bet you hugged her, stroked her hair, and gave her a kiss good night."
That gorgeous eyebrow lifted again. "And if I did?"
"Her little heart's still pitty-patting over it, which is just fine. She's got a thing for you."
"Really?" He grinned widely. "How ... interesting."
"Don't play with my aide. I need her focused."
"How about you unfocus for just a little while, and I see if I can make your heart pitty-pat?"
She ran her tongue around her teeth. "I don't know. I've got a lot on my mind. It'd be a lot of work."
"I enjoy my work." With his eyes on hers, he stubbed out his cigarette, set down his glass. "And I'm damned good at it."
* * *
She was facedown on the bed, naked and still vibrating, when the call came in. She grunted, blocked video, and answered. Thirty seconds later, she was rolling over and looking for her clothes. The call had been for her response to an anonymous tip on a domestic dispute. The address was all too familiar.
"That's Holloway's place. It's not a 1222. He's dead. It followed pattern."
"I'll go with you." Roarke was already out of bed and reaching for his trousers.
She started to protest, then shrugged. "Okay. I have to tag Peabody for this, and she might not handle it well. I'm counting on you to give her the strokes because I'm going to have to be hard on her to keep her in line."
"I don't envy your job, Lieutenant," Roarke said as he dressed in the dark.
"Right now, neither do I." She dug out her communicator and called Peabody.
CHAPTER TWELVE
Brent Holloway had lived well, and died badly. The furnishing of his town house spoke of a man who was ruled by both trends and comfort. A lake-sized sofa dominated the living area and was pooled with triangular black pillows that appeared wet to the touch. A view screen was recessed in the ceiling above. In a cabinet, shaped like a well-endowed female from neck to knee, was an expansive collection of porn discs, some legal, some bootlegged.
A silver serving bar stretched across one wall and was stocked with expensive liquor and cheap illegal drugs.
The kitchen was fully automated, soulless, and appeared to have been used rarely. There was an office with a high-end computer system and holophone and a playroom equipped with VR and a mood tube. A servant droid stood in the corner, shut down and blank-eyed.
Holloway was in the master suite, stretched over a water-to-air mattress, trussed in sparkly silver garland and staring blindly at his own reflection in the mirrored canopy. The tattoo had been painted low on his belly, and four plump birds flew on the silver choke chain around his neck.
"Looks like he'd been to a health center," Eve commented. His nose was only slightly swollen. Whatever bruising there might have been was expertly concealed with cosmetics.
Roarke stood back, knowing he wasn't permitted in the room. He'd seen her work before. Competent, thorough, with a gentleness under the professional moves as she tended the dead.
He watched her run the standard field test to establish time of death, recording it herself until Peabody and the Crime Scene techs arrived.