“True. And that’s good diligence on your part, Detective.” Zanderhoof smiled the kind of empty smile that made her want to check to make sure she still had her watch and her wallet. “But I’m sure your tenacity will also lead you, at some point, to ask yourself why, if my client had someone else kill her, he didn’t have them dispose of her remains then and there rather than suffer all the risk and attention caused by the incident on Second Avenue yesterday.”
He said “incident” in a downplaying way, already jockeying to have charges reduced. Fine, that was his job. Hers was to catch a killer. And as much as she didn’t like being jawboned, she had to concede his point. She had as much as arrived at that conclusion herself staring at the time line on the whiteboard not three minutes before. “We’ll follow this investigation wherever it leads, Mr. Zanderhoof,” she said, giving no ground. No reason to until the chef was entirely ruled out. “The fact remains, your client is up to his neck in this, starting with his affair with my murder victim.”
The lawyer chuckled. “Affair? This was no affair.”
“Then what was it?”
“A business arrangement, simple as that.” He looked through the glass at Rook, leaning on the fender of the Crown Vic, and when he was sure Nikki registered that, his eyes narrowed into a smile she didn’t like and he said, “Cassidy Towne was trading sex for print. She certainly wouldn’t be the first woman to do that, now, would she, Nikki Heat?”
“You’re being awfully quiet.” Rook twisted himself sideways in his seat to face her as best he could, given the seat belt and the radio gear between their knees. It was never an easy trip from the Upper West Side to the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner down near Bellevue, and since they had hit the meat of rush hour, it was taking forever. It probably seemed longer than forever to Rook because Heat seemed far away in her thoughts. No, more than that, her vibe was brittle.
“Sometimes I like the quiet, OK?”
“Sure, no problem.” He let exactly three seconds pass before he broke the silence. “If you’re bumming about Chef Vergennes not being the killer, look at the glass-half-full part, Nikki. We got the body back. Did Montrose say anything?”
“Oh, yeah, Cap’s plenty happy. At least the tabloids won’t be putting pictures of magicians and disappearing bodies on their covers tomorrow.”
“Guess we can thank Fat Tommy for that, can’t we?” He searched her for a reaction, but she steadied her focus on traffic, seeming especially interested in anything that was going on out the opposite window from him. “And I’m not trying to claim credit because he was my source. I’m just saying.”
Nikki nodded imperceptibly and went back to studying her side mirror like she was somewhere else. Somewhere that didn’t feel so comfortable if you were Jameson Rook.
He tried another approach to connect with her. “Hey, I liked that line you hit them with back there in Interrogation. You know, the one about what did they have to offer except a complimentary dessert?” Rook chuckled. “Pure Heat. That’s going in the article, for sure. That and blast matrix.”
Nikki did engage, but not how he’d expected. “No,” she added sharply, “no.” Then she checked the side mirror and jerked the wheel, bringing the car to a lurching stop that made everything on the backseat slide off onto the floor. She didn’t care. “What the hell do I have to do to get through to you?” She poked her finger in the air, punctuating her words with a stab. “I do not, do not, want to be in your article. I do not want to be named, quoted, pictured, or so much as alluded to in your next or any other article. And further, since we seem to have hit a dead end in terms of your so-called secret journalistic sources and insights, I’m thinking this is our last ride. Call the Captain, call the mayor if you want to, I have had it. No más. Now do you understand?”
He studied her a beat and grew quiet.