Spin State - Chris Moriarty [42]
Gould had perfect posture and the sort of washed-out Anglo-Saxon face that Li had never been able to read worth a damn. Like her assistant, she wore a tribal collar. Unlike her assistant’s collar, Gould’s was genuine. It nestled against her throat, half-hidden by a smoke gray linen blouse. But the bone was real bone; the beads antique bottle glass; the knots actually hand-tied by some shirtless old woman in the Sub-Saharan Cultural Preserve. And all shipped into orbit at a cost Li couldn’t begin to imagine. Nobody was better at looking rich than rich liberals.
“Hannah!” Gould said, smiling. Then she saw Li.
The smile shut down like someone had shot the lights out. “What is this?” Gould asked, her blue eyes cold enough to freeze running water.
Li swiped the scan plate at the bottom of the screen and let her ID do the talking. “Just a few routine questions.”
“Fine,” Gould said. “But I’m recording this.”
Li blinked and put on her boring face. “The official Fuhrman-locked recording will be available to you immediately, Ms., ah”—she paused and pretended to look down at the book in her hand—“Gould. After all, this isn’t a criminal investigation.”
“Of course not,” Gould said, backpedaling.
“What’s your relationship to Hannah Sharifi?” Li asked.
“Cousin.”
“But—”
“Her adoptive mother was my father’s sister.”
“I see. When did you last speak with her?”
“I don’t know exactly.”
Lie number one, Li thought, her eyes nailed to Gould’s carotid artery where it emerged from the intricate beadwork of the tribal collar. “Approximately?”
“Within the last few weeks probably. We talk a lot.”
Li considered asking Gould about Sharifi’s “life insurance” but decided not to. Information was power, and it rarely paid to show a suspect your cards when you were still shuffling them. “Did she send you anything by surface mail since then?” she asked instead.
“She might have.”
“I see,” Li said again. She wasn’t quite able to keep the sarcasm out of her voice.
A line appeared between Gould’s pale eyebrows. “I have nothing to hide. She often sent me drafts of her work.”
“What? You’re a physicist too?”
“I’m her editor. She had two books in the works with me.”
“Had?”
The line deepened. “One book’s gone into final production.”
“Did she usually ship her manuscripts solid mail?”
“She dislikes working on electronic galleys.”
“She must dislike it a lot. Real mail’s slow. And pricey.”
“She has poor eyesight.”
“Bad eyesight,” Li said. “A construct?”
She gave Gould a blank, eyebrows-raised look—a look that had squashed trench mutinies and broken strong men in interrogation.
It slid off Gould like water. Which just went to show that nasty looks worked better when there was a real possibility of backing them up with something a little more solid than harsh language.
“Are we done?” Gould said. “I really am busy, so unless you have any more questions about my cousin’s reading habits . . . ?”
A minute later the conversation was over.
It was true what people said, Li thought as the screen shut down. Ring-siders really were a different species.
Well, she’d gotten something out of the call. Gould had lied about when she had last seen Sharifi, and probably about the package and Sharifi’s eyesight as well. Most important, she’d never asked the one question any friend or relative should have asked: where was Sharifi?
She checked the time—8 A.M., local. High time for good little security officers to be in the office. “McCuen?” she said, toggling her comm.
“Here,” said his disembodied voice in her ear, so quickly that he must have been hanging over his terminal waiting for her call.
She didn’t initiate a VR link. If she’d thought about it, she