“Do you know of anyone who wished him harm, Mrs. Kohli?”
“He was a cop,” she said simply. “Do you know anyone who wishes you harm, Lieutenant?”
Fair enough, Eve thought and nodded. “Anyone specific? Someone he mentioned to you.”
“No. Taj didn’t bring work home. It was a point of honor for him, I think. He didn’t want anything to touch his family. I don’t even know what cases he was working on. He didn’t like to talk about it. But he was worried.”
She folded her hands tightly in her lap, stared down at them. Stared, Eve noted, at the gold band on her finger. “I could tell he was worried about something. I asked him about it, but he brushed it off. That was Taj,” she managed with a trembling smile. “He had, well some people would say it was a male dominant thing, but it was just Taj. He was old-fashioned about some things. He was a good man. A wonderful father. He loved his job.”
She pressed her lips together. “He would have been proud to die in the line of duty. But not like this. Not like this. Whoever did this to him took that away from him. Took him away from me and from his babies. How can that be? Lieutenant, how can that be?”
And as there was no answer to it; all Eve could do was ask more questions.
chapter two
“That was a rough one.”
“Yeah.” Eve pulled away from the curb and tried to shake the weight she’d carried out of the Kohli apartment with her. “She’ll hold it together for the kids. She’s got spine.”
“Great kids. The little boy’s a real piece of work. Conned me into a soy dog, three chocolate sticks, and a fudgy cone.”
“Bet he really had to twist your arm.”
Peabody’s smile was sweet. “I’ve got a nephew about his age.”
“You have nephews every possible age.”
“More or less.”
“Tell me something, through your vast experience with family. You got a husband and wife, seem pretty tight,
good, solid marriage, kids. Why would the wife, who appears to have a backbone and a brain, know next to nothing about her husband’s job? His business, his day-to-day routine?”
“Maybe he likes to check work at the door.”
“Doesn’t play for me,” Eve muttered. “You live with someone day after day, you have to know what they do, what they think, what they’re into. She said he was worried about something but doesn’t know what. Didn’t press it.”
She shook her head, frowning as she wove through crosstown traffic. “I don’t get that.”
“You and Roarke have a different couple dynamic.”
“What the hell does that mean?”
“Well.” Peabody slid her eyes over to Eve’s profile. “That was a nice way of saying neither one of you would let the other get away with holding back. Something’s going on with one of you, the other sniffs it out and hammers away until it’s all out there. You’re both nosy, and just mean enough not to let the other one slide by. Now, you take my aunt Miriam.”
“Do I have to?”
“What I’m saying is, she and Uncle Jim have been married for over forty years. He goes to work every day, comes home every night. They have four kids, eight, no, nine grand-kids, and a very happy life. She doesn’t even know how much he makes a year. He just gives her an allowance—”
Eve nearly back-ended a Rapid Cab. “A what?”
“Yeah, well, I said you have a different dynamic. Anyway, he gives her the house money and stuff. She’ll ask how his day was, he’ll say it was fine, and that’s the end of the topic of work.” She shrugged. “That’s how it goes for them. Now, my cousin Freida—”
“I get the point, Peabody.” Eve engaged the car-link and called the ME.
She was transferred directly to Morse, in autopsy.
“I’m still working on him, Dallas.” Morse’s face was uncharacteristically sober. “He’s a goddamn mess.”