‘No,’ Mavis murmured and stared blindly over Eve’s shoulder.
‘This concludes Interview One, Mavis Freestone, Homicide file, Pandora. Dallas, Lieutenant Eve.’ She noted the date and time, disengaged the recorder, took a leveling breath. ‘I’m sorry, Mavis. I’m so sorry.’
‘How could you do that? How could you say those things to me?’
‘I have to say those things to you. I have to ask those questions, and you have to answer them.’ She put a firm hand over Mavis’s. ‘I may have to ask them again, and you’ll have to answer them again. Look at me, Mavis.’ She waited until Mavis shifted her gaze. ‘I don’t know what the sweepers will pull in, what the lab reports will say. But if we don’t get real lucky, you’re going to need a lawyer.’
The color faded from Mavis’s face, even her lips, until she resembled a corpse with hurting eyes. ‘You’re going to arrest me?’
‘I don’t know if it’s going to come to that, but I want you to be prepared. Now, I want you to go home with Roarke, and get some sleep. I want you to try hard, real hard, to remember times and places and people. If you remember anything, you’re going to record it for me.’
‘What are you going to do?’
‘I’m going to do my job. I’m damn good at my job, Mavis. You remember that, too, and trust me to clear this up.’
‘Clear this up,’ Mavis repeated, bitterness in her voice. ‘Clear me, you mean. I thought it was “innocent until proven guilty.”’
‘That’s just one of the bigger lies we live by.’ Standing, Eve ushered Mavis into the corridor. ‘I’ll do my best to close the case quickly. That’s all I can tell you.’
‘You could tell me you believe me.’
‘I can tell you that, too.’ She just couldn’t let it get in the way.
There was always paperwork and procedure. Within an hour she had Mavis signed out and under voluntary holding at Roarke’s. Officially, Mavis Freestone was listed as a witness. Unofficially, Eve knew, she was the prime suspect. Intending to begin amending that immediately, she walked into her office.
‘Okay, what’s this shit about Mavis whacking some fancy-faced model?’
‘Feeney.’ Eve could have kissed every rumpled inch of him. He sat at her desk, his ubiquitous bag of sugared nuts in his lap, and a scowl on his wrinkled face. ‘Word travels.’
‘It was the first thing I heard when I made my stop at the eatery. One of our top cop’s pals gets collared, it makes a buzz.’
‘She hasn’t been collared. She’s a witness. For now.’
‘Media’s picked it up already. They don’t have Mavis’s name yet, but they’ve got the victim’s face splashed all over the screen. The wife dragged me out of the shower to hear about it. Pandora was a BFD.’
‘Big fucking deal, alive or dead.’ Weary, Eve eased a hip onto the corner of her desk. ‘Want a rundown of Mavis’s statement?’
‘What do you think I’m here for, the ambience?’
She gave it to him in t
he cop shorthand they both understood, and left him frowning. ‘Damn, Dallas, it doesn’t look good for her. You saw them going at it yourself.’
‘Alive and in person. Why the hell she got it into her mind to confront Pandora again . . .’ Rising, she paced the room. ‘It makes it worse. I’m hoping the lab comes back with something, anything. But I can’t count on it. What’s your caseload like, Feeney?’
‘Don’t ask.’ He waved that away. ‘What do you need?’
‘I need a run on her credit account. The first place she remembers going into is ZigZag. If we can place her there, or at one of the other joints at time of death, she’s clear.’
‘I can handle that for you, but . . . We got somebody hanging around the murder scene, bopping Mavis on the head. Chances are there won’t be much of a time lag.’
‘I know. I’ve got to cover all the bases. I’m going to track down the people Mavis recognized at the victim’s house, get statements. I’ve got to find a table dancer with a big dick and a tattoo.’
‘The fun never ends.’
She nearly smiled. ‘I need to find people who can testify she was really ripped. Even with a dose of Sober Up, she couldn’t have been clean enough to have taken out Pandora if she’d been drinking her way downtown.’
‘She claims Pandora was using.’