Fantasy in Death - J. D. Robb [28]
“I will so inform Mr. DuVaugne. You’re requested to wait in the anteroom. I have engaged all internal security cameras. Your movements and conversation are being recorded.”
“We’ll resist scratching in inappropriate places.”
He sniffed, turned his back, then led them across the open foyer with its central pool of Venus-blue water guarded by some sort of metal sculpture of a mostly naked female poised to dive in.
The glass-walled anteroom held twin gel sofas in glittery silver with murder-red cushions, chairs in a dizzying pattern of both colors. All the tables were clear glass. Some held gardens of strange blooms winding in their bases. From the ceiling a tangle of steel and glass formed chandeliers. The floors were the same tone and texture as the exterior steel.
Eve tried to think if she’d ever seen a more hyper-trendy and less comfortable room, but couldn’t come up with one.
“Wait here,” Derby ordered. When he left, Eve walked to the front wall.
Yes, it definitely made her feel exposed.
“Why would anybody want nothing but a sheet of fancy glass between them and the rest of the world?” She managed a shrug instead of a shudder, then turned away. “Impressions?”
Peabody circled her eyes as if to remind Eve they were being recorded. “Um. It’s really clean? And quiet. You can’t hear any street noises at all.” She gestured to the window. “It’s kind of like a vid with the audio muted.”
“Or we’ve stepped into an alternate universe where the world outside this glass is soundless. And creepy.”
“Well, it’s creepy now.” Then Peabody winced, circled her eyes again. “But really clean.”
Eve turned again at the sound of footsteps—a man’s, and from the click-click, a woman’s heels.
She noted the woman first, and realized the new wife had modeled for the mostly naked sculpture in the foyer. Now she wore a short summer dress that matched the soft blue of her eyes and the current rage of footwear that left the top of the foot unshod. Her toes sported polish in various pastel shades. Her hair fell in a tumble of red with gilded highlights around a face dominated by full, pouty lips.
Beside her the man stood nondescript in a conservatively cut business suit. Still, his jaw held firm, and his burnished brown eyes matched his sweeping mane of hair.
His slightly crooked tie and the slumber-satisfied look in his wife’s eyes gave Eve a solid clue what the couple had been up to during her arrival.
“Lieutenant Dallas, is it, and Detective Peabody.” DuVaugne crossed the room to give them both a hearty handshake. “What can I do for you?”
“We’re investigating the murder of Bart Minnock.”
“Ah.” He gave a wise nod, a regretful sigh. “Yes, I heard about that. The media doesn’t have many details.”
“You were acquainted with Mr. Minnock?”
“No, not really. I knew of him, of course, as we’re in the same business.”
“Geezy, honey, you gotta ask them to sit down. Tsk.”
She actually said “Tsk,” and with the heavy Bronx base struggling to affect the rounded tones of her droid, Eve found it rather remarkable.
“I’m Taija. Mrs. Lane DuVaugne. Please, won’t you sit?” She gestured the way screen models did to showcase prizes on game shows. “I’d be happy to order some refreshments.”
“Thanks.” Eve accepted the invitation to sit. “We’re fine. So you never met Bart Minnock?”
“Oh, I believe we met a time or two.” DuVaugne took a seat on the red and silver sofa with his wife. “At conventions and events, that sort of thing. He seemed to be a bright and affable young man.”
“Then why did somebody kill him?” Taija asked.
“Good question,” Eve said, and made Taija beam like a student flattered by a favored teacher.
“If you don’t ask questions, you don’t find anything out.”
“My philosophy. Let me apply that by asking you, Mr. DuVaugne, if you can verify your whereabouts yesterday between three and seven P.M.
“Mine? Are you implying I’m a suspect?”Outrage sprang out where, Eve thought, puzzlement would have been a better lead. “Why, I barely knew the man.”
“Geezy, Lane wouldn’t kill anybody. He’s gentle as a lamb.