The in Death Collection Books 11-15 - J. D. Robb [661]
“Yeah. It says something.”
“They got him in the next room. McNab’s in there.” Feeney let out a long breath. “Got him into a chair. Can’t stand easy for long yet. Roarke’s in there with him.”
“Roarke’s here?”
“Yeah.” Grief drenched him. “I couldn’t stay in there anymore. Just couldn’t do it.”
“Being here’s enough, Feeney.”
“Doesn’t feel like it. I’ll take you over to his mother.”
They made their way through the crowd of mourners, through the muted hum of conversation. The air was heavy with the scent of flowers, dim with the quiet light the grieving seemed to prefer.
“Lieutenant.”
Eve turned at the hand on her arm and looked into Jenna Franco’s eyes. She didn’t see grief in them, but she saw plenty of annoyance. She didn’t mask it as smoothly as Peachtree.
“Deputy Mayor.”
“I need to speak with you. Privately.”
“I have something to do first. You’ll have to wait.”
She tugged her arm free, turned her back. It was petty, she knew. But since she had a damn good idea what the private chat was going to entail, she doubted she and Jenna Franco were going to waste much time on the amenities.
Eve braced herself before approaching Colleen Halloway. She would probably be in her forties, maybe fifties, Eve calculated, but looked younger. Grief had given her skin a kind of translucence that added a youthful fragility against the unrelieved black of her mourning.
“Lieutenant.”
It was Anna Whitney who spoke first. Eve had often found herself on the commander’s wife’s wrong side. But at the moment there was none of the usual hint of impatience or irritation on her face.
And to Eve’s surprise, Anna took her hand and squeezed it.
“Mrs. Whitney.”
“Detective Halloway’s mother has been hoping to speak with you.” Her voice was low, her back turned slightly so that the words were for Eve alone. “Do you know the one thing more difficult than being married to a cop, Lieutenant?”
“No. I always figured that was the short straw.”
The faintest smile ghosted around Anna’s mouth. “There’s one shorter yet. That’s giving birth to one. Be careful with her.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Colleen?” With a natural gentleness Eve admired, Anna draped an arm over the woman’s shoulders. “This is Lieutenant Dallas. Lieutenant, Kevin’s mother.”
“Mrs. Halloway. I’m very sorry for your loss.”
“Lieutenant Dallas.” Colleen gripped Eve’s hand. It was stronger, firmer than Eve had expected. “Thank you so much for coming. I wonder—there’s a small privacy room upstairs. I wonder if you could spare a few minutes? I’d like to speak with you.”
“All right.”
She led Eve out of the dim parlor, up a set of stairs. Cops had spilled out, crowded there as well. But they stepped aside, eyes lowered respectfully as Colleen passed.
“My husband would like to meet you as well. And Lily. But I asked them if I could have this time alone with you. They understood.”
She opened a door, walked into a small sitting room. More flowers, soft fabrics just a little overdone in style, just a little too dark in their wine-red tones.
“These places are so horribly depressing, aren’t they? I wonder why they don’t let in the light.” Colleen walked to the window, threw open the heavy drapes, and let in the sun. “I suppose a lot of people find comfort in the shadows.
“Do you?” she asked Eve, then shook her head. “My thoughts are rambling. Please, sit down.”
Colleen took a chair, sat with her back very straight. “I’ve seen you on-screen. You always seem so competent, even when it’s coverage of one of those social functions you attend with your husband. He’s terribly handsome, isn’t he?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“It was kind of him to come as well. To make the time, to speak to me, my husband, Lily. Very kind. Kevin spoke of you occasionally. You never worked with him, though, did you?”
“Not directly, no. But I often depend on EDD in my work. Hall . . . Kevin was a valued member of the department.”
“He admired you. I wanted to