Ballsy, Eve decided.
Smug.
“I really appreciate you coming down. Things are wonky with the holidays.”
“After everything you’ve done for me and Bobby, it’s the least I can do. I talked to him right before I left, told him you were going to try to help me bring him back to the hotel from the hospital.”
“We’ll try to make that happen. Listen, I’m going to use one of the rooms to finish this up. It’ll be more comfortable than my office. You want something? Really bad coffee, vending drink?”
Zana looked around the busy corridors like a tourist at a street fair. “Oh, I wouldn’t mind a fizzy, any flavor but lemon.”
“Peabody? Would you take care of that? I’m going to take Zana into A.”
“Sure, no problem.”
Eve shifted the file folder as she walked. “Paperwork’s a killer,” she said casually. “And mostly a pain in the ass, but we want to have all the t’s crossed on this, so you and Bobby can get back home.”
“We are getting anxious. Work’s really piled up, and Bobby wants to get back to it. Plus, I guess we’re just not big-city types.”
She walked into the room after Eve opened the door, then hesitated. “Oh, is this an interview room, like you see on the cop shows onscreen ? ”
“Yeah. Most efficient way to go through the statements. You okay with that?”
“Oh, I guess. Actually, it’s kind of exciting. I’ve never been in a police station before.”
“We’ll sign off on Bobby’s statements at the hotel, seeing as he’s injured. But we can get yours out of the way, start moving you back toward Texas. Have a seat.”
“Have you brought many criminals in here?”
“My share.”
“I don’t know how you do it. Did you always want to?”
“As long as I can remember.” Eve sat across the table from her, slouched back. “I guess Trudy’s part of that.”
“I don’t understand.”
“That lack of control I felt when I was with her. Being defenseless. It was a pretty rough time for me.”
Zana lowered her eyes. “Bobby told me she wasn’t very nice to you. And now, here you are, working so hard to find out who killed her. It’s…”
“Ironic? That’s crossed my mind.” She glanced over as Peabody stepped in.
“Got you a cherry,” she told Zana. “Tube of Pepsi for you, Dallas.”
“I love cherry, thanks.” Zana accepted the tube, and a straw. “What do we do now?”
“To keep everything official—and part of the formality, Zana, is my former relationship with Trudy—I’m going to read out the Revised Miranda.”
“Oh. Oh, well, gee.”
“It’s for your protection, and mine,” Eve explained. “If this case ends up in the cold file—”
“Cold file?”
“Unsolved.” Eve shook her head. “It’s tough to realize that may be what happens. But if it does, it’s better all around if we have everything very official.”
“Well, okay.”