“Good and tired.”
“I’ve got eighteen on the priority list. There are going to be more.”
“You’ll get back to that after some sleep.” He carried her to the elevator, ordered their bedroom.
“I’m closer than I was.”
“My book says you’ll be closer yet tomorrow.”
He sat her on the side of the bed—the cat was already sprawled dead center. Pulled off her boots, ordered the fire on.
“What if a big gust of wind blew you off the side of the building?”
Back to that, are we? he thought. “I’d have been very annoyed.”
“I mean . . .” She pulled herself up to strip off her weapon harness. “Did you wear a chute?”
“That would depend on the job.”
Groggy, she undressed, pulled on a sleep shirt. “Who’s the one who . . .” She made a whoosh sound, flipped out her fingers, mimed climbing a wall.
He thought it a wonder he followed her. “Spider-Man.”
“Yeah, yeah. He’s a good one. Smart-ass kid. At least you didn’t go swinging around buildings on web ropes.”
Something in his smile had her eyeing him as she crawled into bed. “You didn’t do that. There aren’t really web ropes.”
“There are cables, pulley systems—and those are stories for another time.”
He slipped in with her, wrapped an arm around her to tuck her close. “Go to sleep.”
“You never did that in New York. I’d’ve heard about it.”
“Not if I did it right.” He kissed the back of her neck as she dropped off. “And I did.”
*
When she woke in the morning, he sat drinking coffee, watching the financials with the cat stretched out beside him.
She sat up. “It wasn’t a Spider-Man suit.”
He glanced over. “Wasn’t it?”
“It was black—but he has a black one, too, I guess. It’s confusing. But it had an R—for Roarke—instead of the spider deal. And you’re swinging over the damn city and climbing up buildings, and there was a big gust of wind. It scared the shit out of me. Don’t do that again.”
“I’ll resist. Though you do have the most fascinating dreams.”
She grabbed coffee, gulping it as she headed for the shower.
When she came back he had breakfast waiting, more coffee, and had banished the cat to the spot in front of the fire.
The oatmeal didn’t surprise her—winter couldn’t end soon enough—but at least it was just a cup of it and it came with bacon and eggs.
“We’re in for a bright, if blustery, day,” he told her.
She thought of the financials on the screen. “Anything up there these guys would be interested in?”
“There’s always something, but there’s nothing major coming to boil at the moment.”
“You’re always buying stuff—companies.”
“And you’re worried they might try for one of mine. We’ve taken precautions—and all my people are accounted for.”
“You’ve got a lot of people.”
“And still, they’re accounted for. Add to it, I don’t have anything brewing in New York right now. A thing or two pending overseas or off-planet, but nothing here.”
“And you’re not going anywhere, like to oversee one of those pendings?”
“No travel plans for several days.”
“If that changes—”
“I’ll let you know.” He took her hand, kissed it. “Don’t worry. I won’t be tempting any wind gusts.”
“Okay.” Satisfied, she finished breakfast, got up to dress.
Since he didn’t comment on her choice—brown trousers and jacket, navy sweater—she figured she’d at least scaled the high bar of his fashion sense.
“I’ll be at Central through the morning at least. I’ve got off-case work I let go yesterday, and I want to finish as much of the eliminations and priorities as possible before I start interviews.”
“I’ll be at my own HQ. And if you start looking seriously at any of my people, I’d like to know it.”
“It’s not going to be one of your people.” She scooped up her pocket debris. “I have to eliminate, but it won’t be. A subcontractor, possibly, but not one of your hotel staff. Your screening’s tougher than the NSA’s.”
“And still.” He rose, gripped her hips, kissed her. “Take care of my cop.”
She framed his face, kissed him back. “Don’t climb any buildings.”
“Only by the stairs.”
“Good enough.” She started out, glanced back over her shoulder. “You looked good in the suit.”
She took the flash of his grin with her out into the bright, blustery day.
Thinking of him as she started the drive to Central, she considered exactly what he’d said.
If he’d targeted a place like Banks’s, he’d . . . take what he needed, wouldn’t have bothered with a painting.
Yeah, the painting bugged her. Why take it—then try to hide that fact by waiting until you were in the escape location before taking it out of its frame? He/they didn’t, as Roarke would have, go the subtle route in the search of the apartment, but took the framed painting across the hall before removing it from the frame, discarding the frame.
Why?
Because it mattered, she decided. I’d take what I came for, Roarke had said. The painting was something they’d come for. It mattered.
She tagged Baxter from her wrist unit.
He said, “Yo.”
“Pick up the iced artist.”
His smile spread. “I like a sexy start to the day.”
“Keep it in your pants, horndog. I need her to go over her own lists again, incomplete or not. Link it up with the record of the artwork—in the main level of the crime scene. One’s missing. What is it? Who painted it? Not painted,” she corrected. “Drew. Drew what? When and where did Banks acquire it?”
“I’ve got a list of what he took from the gallery—officially. She added to that, ones she knows he slipped out of there, but she knows she didn’t catch them all.”
“I want her to look again anyway. Focus in on the figure-study types. For right now, we don’t care about paintings—landscapes, portraits, whatever. It’s the black and whites, the nakeds or mostly nakeds.”
“It bugged her,” Baxter commented. “She figured if she’d had the gallery comps, she’d have been able to pin it down, or get closer to pinning it.”
“That’s the point of taking them out. We’re going to have to rely on her notes, her memory. You and Trueheart work with her to match up what’s on the lists, and what’s not. Whatever they took mattered.”
“I’ll tag the boy, swing by and get him. We’ll scoop up the icy one, take a trip back uptown.”
“I need to know as soon as you get anything, even a maybe.”
She ended transmission and spent the rest of the drive calculating what a drawing of a naked person had to do with murder and money.
13
She went straight to her office, made herself ignore her board. With coffee, she spent the thirty minutes she’d given herself before shift to catch up on her department’s caseload—open and closed. She read reports, signed off on requisitions, and dealt with the top skim of the most urgent administrative duties.
The rest could wait.
When Eve walked into the bullpen, Peabody stood at her desk unwinding one of her boa constrictor scarfs. A single glance—and the fact that her eyes didn’t start to melt—showed her Jenkinson and his tie, Reineke and his socks weren’t at their desks.
“They just caught one,” Peabody told her. “Construction crew on Tenth found a DB in their dumpster. You clocked in early.”
“Paperwork.” She tossed a disc onto Peabody’s desk. “That’s your half of currently viable suspects. Start a second run, see if you can eliminate any, or bump any up the list. Baxter and Trueheart are picking up the art gallery woman.”
“Suspect?”
“Not at this time. I want her to look at the artwork again, her records. Why did they take a figure-study deal? Which one did they take? Who drew it?”
“I figured souvenir. Potentially valuable.”
“Then why not take it out of the frame on-site? Why take it across the hall to remove it?”
“Maybe . . . once he got it over there, he realized it would be easier and safer to take the rolled canvas than the whole deal.”
“Possible,” Eve conceded. “It’s possible he was that stupid and impulsive.”