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The in Death Collection Books 11-15 - J. D. Robb [131]

By Root 3691 0
I hope you don’t mind that I painted a very clear picture of a man on the edge. You were getting damn tired of walking on eggshells, tired of losing money by keeping your business on her side. A lot of threats and recriminations. You cried,” she said to Eve, not without some satisfaction.

“Well, thanks.”

“He liked that part. Anyway, after you stormed out, I went in, offered Roarke a sympathetic ear. He was prime for it, so we had a couple drinks. That’s when you told me you’d had enough of the straight life. You were bored, restless, and your marriage was shaky. Not that you didn’t love your wife, but you needed an outlet. She didn’t have to know you were dipping back into the pool, did she? You needed something to distract you from worrying about her. And you figured you might kill two birds by going to Ricker and making a deal. A nice quiet business association, the high side of profit for him, and he leaves your wife alone. You’re going to get her off the force, but you want her in one piece while you work on that. You’re stupid in love with her, but damned if she’s going to castrate you and keep you on a leash. I agreed with you, then offered to talk to Ricker for you. That was the part that took him awhile to buy.”

She touched her fingers to her sore arm. “I convinced him you agreed to it because you haven’t been yourself. You’d gone soft and careless in certain areas. I think he swallowed it because it’s what he wanted and because he doesn’t believe I’d have the guts to lie to him.”

She picked up her glass again, wet her throat. “It wasn’t as bad as I thought it would be,” she decided. “He was biting at the bait before I’d finished hanging it. The lawyer, Canarde, he doesn’t like it, but Ricker told him to shut up. When he didn’t, Ricker threw a paperweight at him. Missed, but it left a hell of a dent in the wall.”

“Ah, to be a fly,” Eve murmured.

“It was a moment,” Rue agreed. “In any case, Canarde shut up then, and Ricker will be here. He won’t miss the chance to humiliate you, to grind you under his heel a bit. And if he sniffs out that he should’ve listened to the lawyer, to take you out where you stand. If he can’t have you ruined, he’ll have you dead. Those were his words, exactly.”

“Then it’s perfect,” Roarke decided, and he felt the thrill of the hunt heat his blood.

“Not quite.” Eve hooked her thumbs in her front pockets, and turned toward Rue. “Why didn’t you have Roarke cry?”

Rue shot her a look of such profound gratitude Eve had hope it was all going to work.

chapter twenty-two

Time was running short. Running two critical operations meant every hour was crammed with two hours’ work and worry. She left Purgatory in Roarke’s perhaps too-competent hands and, switching gears, drove out to Clooney’s suburban house.

“Whitney already had Baxter question the wife,” Peabody said and earned a steel-tipped stare from Eve.

“I’m following up. Do you have a problem with that, Officer?”

“No, sir. No problem at all.”

Time might have been rushing by for Eve, but for Peabody it seemed the next thirty hours were going to crawl like a slug. She decided it best not to mention the surveillance car parked in full view of the single-story ranch house on the postage-stamp lot.

Clooney would spot it, too, if he attempted to get to the house. Maybe that was the point.

Keeping her silence, she followed Eve up the walk, waited at the door.

The woman who opened it might have been pretty in a round, homey way. But at the moment she merely looked exhausted, unhappy, and afraid. Eve identified herself and held up her badge.

“You found him. He’s dead.”

“No. No, Mrs. Clooney, your husband hasn’t been located. May we come in?”

“There’s nothing I can tell you that hasn’t already been said.” But she turned away, shoulders slumped as if they carried a fierce burden, and walked across the tidy little living area.

Chintz and lace. Faded rugs, old, comfortable chairs. An entertainment screen that had seen better days. And, she noted, a statue of The Virgin—mother of Christ—on a table with her serene, compassionate

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