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She sat up again when the data began to roll, and her eyebrows lifted. There were a number of charges over the years, beginning with petty larceny in 2016, continuing with gun running, illegals distribution, fraud, bribery, and two conspiracies to commit murder. None of it had stuck, he’d slipped and slithered through, but his sheet was long and varied.

“Not as clever as Roarke, are you?” she murmured. “He never got caught. There’s the arrogance. You don’t mind getting caught, not really.” She studied his face again. “Because it gives you a kick to fuck the system. That’s a weakness, Ricker. A big one. Computer, copy all data to disc.”

She turned to her ’link. It was time to find out just where Ricker was currently cooling his well-shod heels.

She considered it good luck that Ricker was spending some time in his Connecticut compound. She considered it his arrogance that he’d agreed to meet with her without making her dance through a sea of attorneys.

She made the drive in good time and was met at the gate by a trio of hatchet-faced guards who put her through an ID scan for form’s sake. She was instructed to leave her vehicle just inside the gates and get into a small, sleek cart.

Its operator was an equally small and sleek female droid who drove her along the winding, tree-lined path to a sprawling three-story house of wood and glass that perched on a rocky slope over a restless sea.

There was a fountain at the entrance where a stone woman draped in a flowing gown gracefully poured pale blue water from a pitcher into a pool teeming with red fish. A gardener worked a plot of flowers at the east side of the house.

He wore baggy gray pants and shirt, a wide-brimmed hat, and a double-scoped distance laser.

Another female droid met her at the door, this one a comfortably built serving model in a starched black uniform. Her smile was welcoming, her voice warm.

“Good day, Lieutenant Dallas. Mr. Ricker is expecting you. I hope you had a pleasant trip. If you’d follow me, please.”

Eve studied the house as they walked through. Here, the money all but dripped. It didn’t have the class of Roarke’s place where the mood was rich but somehow homey, with its polished woods and muted colors. Ricker went for the modern and the garish, surrounding himself with eye-searing colors, too much fabric, and not enough taste.

Everything was sharp-edged and accented by what she now concluded was his signature silver.

Thirty pieces of silver, she thought as she stepped into a room done in bloodred with a breathless view of the sea through the window-wall. The other walls were jammed with art, all of it modernistic or surreal or whatever the hell they called stuff that was nothing more than slashes of paint on canvas and pulsing slides of ugly colors on glass.

The scent of flowers was heavy here, and funereal, the light overbright, and the furniture all sliding, sinuous curves with glimmering cushions and silver limbs.

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Ricker sat in one of the chairs, sipping something violently pink out of a long, slim tube. He got graciously to his feet, smiled.

“Ah, Eve Dallas. We meet at last. Welcome to my humble home. What can we offer you in the way of refreshment?”

“Nothing.”

“Oh, well, you’ve only to ask if you change your mind.” There was a roundness to his voice, something that reminded her of the dialogue in some of the old black-and-white videos Roarke liked to watch. “That will be all, Marta.”

“Yes, Mr. Ricker.” She backed out of the room, closing the doors behind her.

“Eve Dallas,” he said again, eyes sparkling as he gestured to a chair. “This is absolutely delightful. May I call you Eve?”

“No.”

The sparkle turned cold, silver sleet now, even as he let out a hearty laugh. “Pity. Lieutenant, then. Won’t you sit down? I have to admit to some curiosity about the woman who married one of my old . . . I was going to say protégés,” he said as he sat again. “But I’m sure Roarke would object to the term. So I’ll say one of my former associates. I had hoped he would accompany you today.”

“He has no business here, or with you.”

“Not at the moment. Please sit. Be comfortable.”

Comfort wasn’t one of the options in the ugly chair, but she sat.

“How attractive you are.” He spoke smoothly while his gaze crawled over her.

Men who looked at a woman in just that way wanted her to feel sexually vulnerable, physically uneasy. Eve only felt mildly insulted.

“In a competent, unpretentious sort of fashion,” Ricker finished. “Not what one expected of Roarke, of course. His taste always ran to the more stylish, more obviously female.” He drummed his fingers on the arm of his chair, and she noted he had his nails painted in his signature color. And the tips were filed to vicious little points.

“But how clever of him to have selected you, a woman of your more subtle attributes and profession. It must be very convenient for him to have such an intimate ally on the police force.”


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