“If it’s nothing from now, then you have to think back. The past can circle back on us no matter what kind of maze we build. We both know that. Part of yours is splashing around in your swimming pool right now.”
“True enough.”
“Roarke.” She hesitated, then leaped. “You haven’t seen him for a long time. You don’t know who he is now, or what he’s done in the years between. He shows up, right in the lobby of the hotel, hours, really, after the murder.”
“You’re looking at Mick in this?” He was able to smile again, shake his head. “He’s a thief, a grifter, a liar, certainly, and not one you’d trust farther than a good boot in the ass would
send him, but murder isn’t in him. This kind,” he continued before she could argue, “this cold and calculated kind is either in a man or isn’t, Eve. We both know that.”
“Maybe. But people change. And paying for murder can add a nice, cozy buffer for some.”
“For some. Not Mick.” On that point, at least, he hadn’t a doubt. “You’re right that he may have changed. But never on that most elemental level. He’d cheerfully cheat a grandmother, even his own, out of her life’s savings, but he wouldn’t kill a mongrel dog, or order it done, for rubies. He was the softest of us when it came to bloodshed.”
“Okay.” But she’d keep an eye on Mick Connelly nonetheless. “Someone else from back then. You need to put your mind to it. To deals from before, to deals right now. Something I can work with.”
“I’ll set my mind on it, I promise you.”
“Good. And you’ll increase your personal security.”
“Will I?”
She’d hoped to sneak that one in, but hadn’t really counted on it. “You’re the target. It’s possible Darlene French was just a warning shot. ‘Look how close I can get without really trying.’ The next step might be to go after you directly.”
“Or you,” he countered. “Are you increasing your personal security?”
“I don’t have any personal security.”
“Exactly.”
“I’m a cop.”
“And I sleep with one.” He snuck an arm around her waist. “Aren’t I lucky?”
“Cut it out. This isn’t a joke.”
“No, indeed it isn’t. But that crack about increasing my personal security I’ll take as one so I don’t become annoyed with my wife right before we have guests for dinner. Shut up,” he suggested as she opened her mouth, then insured she did so.
The kiss was long, and it was hard, and not particularly playful. So when she surfaced from it, her eyes narrowed.
“I can hang cops all over you.”
“You could,” he agreed. “And I could shake them right off again, as you well know. You’re the only cop I want hanging all over me, Lieutenant. In fact . . .” His clever fingers had her shirt half-unbuttoned before she slapped them away.
“Cut it out. I don’t have time for this.”
He grinned. “Then I’ll be quick.”
“I said—” But his teeth sunk lightly into her throat, shooting the thrill straight down the center of her body, right through the toes. Her eyes might have crossed, but she gave him a decent elbow jab. “Stop it.”
“I can’t. I have to hurry.” And he was laughing as he unfastened the hook of her trousers. Laughing when his mouth came back to cover hers.
She might have kicked him if her feet hadn’t gotten tangled, but her heart wouldn’t have been in it. Even her yelp as he plopped her onto her own desk didn’t register much of a protest.
Half-naked, already breathless, she levered herself on her elbows. “All right, just get it over with.”
He leaned over her, nipped her chin. “I heard that snicker.”
“That was the sound of a sneer.”