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“Good morning. How may I direct you?”

“Kenneth Stiles.” Eve laid her badge on the counter beside a brass pot teeming with flowers.

“Is Mr. Stiles expecting you, Lieutenant Dallas?”

“He’d better be.”

“Just one moment please.” She swiveled to a ‘link, her smile never dimming, her voice maintaining that same smooth and pleasant tone of an expensive and well-programmed droid. “Good morning, Mr. Stiles. I have a Lieutenant Dallas and companion at the lobby desk. May I clear them?” She waited a beat. “Thank you. Have a lovely day.”

Turning from the ‘link, she gestured toward the east bank of elevators. “The far right car is cleared for you, Lieutenant. Enjoy your day.”

“You bet. I used to wonder why Roarke didn’t use more droids,” she said to Peabody as they crossed the black tiles. “Then I run into one like that, and I understand. That much politeness is just fucking creepy.”

The ride up to the fiftieth floor was rapid enough to have Eve’s stomach jump and her ears pop. She’d never understand why people equated height with luxury.

Another droid was waiting for them when the doors slid open. One of Stiles’s serving units, Eve concluded, done up in such stark and formal attire he made the dreaded Summerset look like a sidewalk sleeper. His steel gray hair was slicked back and matched with a heavy mustache that dominated his thin, bony face. The black of his slacks and long jacket was offset with snow-white gloves.

He bowed, then spoke in a fruity voice with a rolling English accent. “Lieutenant Dallas and Officer, Mr. Stiles is expecting you. This way, please.”

He led them down the hall to double doors that opened into the corner apartment. The first thing Eve saw when she entered was the sweeping window wall that opened onto New York’s bustling sky traffic. She wished Stiles had drawn the privacy screen.

The room itself was wild with color, rubies and emeralds and sapphires tangled together in the pattern on the wide U-shaped conversation pit. Centered in it was a white marble pool where fat goldfish swam in bored circles among lily pads.

A strong scent of citrus spread out from the tidy forest of dwarf orange and lemon trees, heavy with fruit. The floor was a violent geometric pattern of color that on closer look shifted into an erotic orgy of naked bodies in inventive forms of copulation.

Eve strode across blue breasts and green cocks to where Stiles lounged—posed, she thought—in a saffron ankle-duster.

“Some place.”

He smiled, a surprisingly sweet expression on his craggy face. “Why live without drama? May I offer you anything before we begin, Lieutenant?”

“No, thanks.”

“That will be all, Walter.” He dismissed the droid with a wave of his hand, then gestured Eve to sit. “I realize this is routine for you, Lieutenant Dallas, but it’s new and, I confess, exciting territory to me.”

“Having an associate murdered in front of you is exciting?”

“After the initial shock, yes. It’s human nature to find murder exciting and fascinating, don’t you think? Else why does it play so well through the ages?” His eyes were deep, dark brown, and very shrewd.

“I could have taken any number of tacks with this interview. I’m a very skilled actor. I could be prostrate, nervous, frightened, confused, sorrowful. I chose honesty.”

She thought of Carly Landsdowne. “It seems to be going around. Record on, Peabody,” she said, and sat.

And sank into the clouds of cushions. Biting off an oath, Eve shoved herself up, sat on the edge of the couch. Balanced, she read off the pertinent data and issued the standard warning.

“Do you understand your rights and obligations in this matter, Mr. Stiles?”

“I do indeed.” That sweet smile spread over his face again. “Might I say you read your lines with authority and panache, Lieutenant.”

“Gee, thanks. Now, what was your relationship with Richard Draco?”

“Professional associates. Over the years, we worked together from time to time, most recently in the play that had its unusual opening night yesterday.”

Oh yeah, Eve thought. He’s enjoying this. Milking this. “And your personal relationship?”

“I don’t know as we had one, in the way I assume you mean. Actors often…” He made a vague gesture with his hand and set the multicolored stone cuff bracelet on his wrist to winking cheerfully. “Gravitate toward each other, you might say: ‘Like minds, like egos.’ We marry each other with a kind of distressing regularity. It rarely lasts, as do the temporary friendships and other intimacies between players on the same stage.”

“Still, you knew him for a number of years.”


Tags: J.D. Robb In Death Mystery