“There is no spinach anywhere in that pie.”
“That’s perfect. I think wine’s a good thing. I’ll get it.”
She looked back at him as she chose a bottle with a name she actually recognized. “It doesn’t matter.”
“What doesn’t matter?”
“How hard it gets with the job. It doesn’t matter if you’re pissed at me or I’m pissed at you, or we’re seriously pissed at each other. Because we’re always going to come back to this.”
“To pizza and wine,” he said a smile.
“To that. To each other.” She carried the bottle to the table, poured him a glass, poured herself half of one. “And that’s enough sloppy stuff. Let’s eat.”
19
She could take a half hour, Eve told herself, with him, pizza, and wine. And talk about anything but murder.
“So the youth center, it’s coming along?”
“It is. We should do a walk-through, you and I. You may have some ideas on the finer details as we move in that direction.”
“They won’t care about that—the kids who come there. They’ll care about having a roof over their head, and a decent bed to sleep in, a decent meal.”
Which should include pizza regularly, Eve thought.
“I know it’s more than that,” she added. “The counseling, the education, and the training, the chance to become something other than a punching bag or an addict or a petty criminal. They’re not going to care what color you paint the walls, or the shape of a sofa or table.”
“Perhaps not, but by living in a space that surrounds them with care in those details, they may be more inclined to care how they live, to take care of where they live.”
He brushed his hand over hers. “And some,” he continued, “might make the connection that someone cared enough about them to add the little details.”
“That’s a point. It’s a good point,” she decided. “I can guarantee they are going to care about the size of the screen in the community room, and what vid games they’re allowed to play.” She smiled as she bit into pizza. “And they’ll bitch about the classes, the assignments, the chores.”
“Which would make them normal, wouldn’t it?”
“That’s exactly right. And that’s what you’re doing. Giving them a chance for normal. It’s big, Roarke. I’d like a walk-through.”
“Good, we’ll set it up. I want, very much, for you to see what it’s becoming.”
She thought of the girls they’d found there—those long-dead girls. And knew he’d always think of them, too. “When do you figure you’ll open?”
“We’re planning for spring. May, if all continues to go well. We’ve already contracted some of the key staff, and we’re interviewing and vetting others.”
“You move fast, ace.”
“If I didn’t, we might not be sitting here now, having pizza and wine.”
“Sure we would.” She ate another bite. “You’d have caught up with me eventually.”
He laughed, took a second slice. “Your headache’s gone.”
“Yeah, it is.”
And because it was, because of all she had—right here—she added another dollop of wine to her glass and embraced the moment.
After the meal, she went straight to coffee. The work, the job, the hours ahead would be long and tedious. The conclusions her instincts pointed her to had to be set to the side.
Facts and evidence, she reminded herself. The gut wasn’t enough.