Glory in Death - J. D. Robb [114]
“Am I supposed to wear anything under this?”
He reached in her top drawer, pulled out a matching colored triangle that might have laughingly been called panties. “These should do it.”
She caught them from his underhand toss, wiggled in. “Jesus,” she said after a quick look in the mirror. “Why bother?” Since it was too late to debate, she stepped into the dress and began to tug the clingy material up.
“It’s always entertaining to watch you dress, but I’m distracted at the moment.”
“I know, I know. Go on down. I’ll be right there.”
“No, Eve. Who?”
“Who?” She snapped the low shoulders into place. “Didn’t I say?”
“No,” Roarke said with admirable patience. “You didn’t.”
“Morse.” She ducked into the closet for shoes.
“You’re joking.”
“C. J. Morse.” She held the shoes as she might hold a weapon, and her eyes went dark and fixed. “And when I’m finished with the little son of a bitch, he’s going to get more airtime than he ever dreamed of.”
The in-house ’link beeped. Summerset’s disapproving voice floated out. “The first guests are arriving, sir.”
“Fine. Morse?” he said to Eve.
“That’s right. I’ll fill you in between canapés.” She scooped a hand through her hair. “Told you I’d be ready. Oh, and Roarke?” She linked fingers with him as they started from the room. “I need you to pass a last-minute guest through for me. Larinda Mars.”
chapter twenty
Eve supposed there could have been worse ways to wait through the last stages of an investigation. The atmosphere had it all over her cramped office at Cop Central, and the food was certainly a long leg up from the eatery.
Roarke had opened up his dome-ceilinged reception room with its glossy wood floors, mirrored walls, and sparkling lights. Long, curved tables followed the rounded walls and were artistically crowded with exotic finger foods.
Colorful bite-sized eggs harvested from the dwarf pigeons of the moon’s farm colony, delicate pink shrimp from the Sea of Japan, elegant cheese swirls that melted on the tongue, pastries pumped with pâtés or creams in a menagerie of shapes, the gleam of caviar heaped on shaved ice, the richness of fresh fruit with frosty sugar coating.
There was more. The hot table across the room steamed with heat and spices. One entire area was a treasure trove for those of a vegetarian persuasion, with another, at a discreet distance, decked out for carnivores.
Roarke had opted for live music rather than simulation, and the band out on the adjoining terrace played quiet conversation-enhancing tunes. They would heat up as the night went on, to seduce dancers.
Through the swirl of color, of scent, of gleam and gloss, waiters in severe black wandered with silver trays topped with crystal flutes of champagne.
“This is so decent.” Mavis popped a black button mushroom in her mouth. She’d dressed conservatively for the occasion, which meant a great deal of her skin was actually covered, and her hair was a tame medium red. Being Mavis, so were her irises. “I can’t believe Roarke actually invited me.”
“You’re my friend.”
“Yeah. Hey, you think if later on, after everybody’s imbibed freely, could I ask the band to let me do a number?”
Eve scanned the rich, privileged crowd, the glint of real gold and real stones, and smiled. “I think that would be great.”
“Superior.” Mavis gave Eve’s hand a quick squeeze. “I’m going to go talk to the band now, sort of worm my way into their hearts.”
“Lieutenant.”
Eve shifted her gaze from Mavis’s retreating form over and up into Chief Tibble’s face. “Sir.”
“You’re looking . . . unprofessional tonight.” When she squirmed, he laughed. “That was a compliment. Roarke puts on quite a show.”
“Yes, sir, he does. It’s for a worthy cause.” But she couldn’t quite remember what that worthy cause was.
“I happen to think so. My wife is very involved.” He took a flute from a passing tray and sipped. “My only regret is that these monkey suits never go out of style.” With his free hand, he tugged at his collar.
It made her smile. “You should try wearing these shoes.”
“There’s