thousand square feet, and in this neighborhood? I expect Iâd offer about ten. If I were selling, Iâd ask fifteen.â
âThatâs million?â
âIt is, yes.â
âThatâs a big bunch of money.â
âDo you fancy it? Does Dennis want to sell?â
âNoâI mean, sure, itâs a nice house, but we have one. Iâm fine with one. And no, he doesnât want to sell, which is part of the deal here.â
She filled him in as she searched, knew heâd take in every detail even when he stopped to admire a piece of furniture, some woodwork, or a ceiling medallion.
âI could get twenty, with the right buyer, and careful staging,â he mused. âBut back to the matter at hand. You know the senatorâs a complete burkeâat least from my personal leanings.â
âHeâs a complete burke from my perspective from what I got out of Mira, and what Mr. Mira didnât say. But itâll be nice to find him alive.â
âAgreed.â
With Roarke she walked back to the study. It smelled of sweeper dust and chemicals now.
âI knew Bradley Mira, a little.â
âGet out.â
âA very little,â Roarke added. âAnd mostly by reputation. He was respected and admired. Have you run his background?â
âNo, not immediately applicable.â
âThe prosecuting attorney for New Yorkâbefore your time and mine. I believe there was some family money, and he made more. He became Judge Mira, and retired more than a decade agoâlikely closer to two decades, if memory serves. He spent the last part of his life doinggood works, as you see here from all the plaques displayed. An admirable man who, by all accounts, lived a good and productive life.â
âMr. Mira loved him, that comes through loud and clear. Twenty million?â
With those wild and canny blue eyes, Roarke scanned. âWith the right buyer, yes.â
âHalf of thatâs big motivation to find the right buyer. I need to talk to this Realtor, which means I have to talk to whoever made the appointment for Edward Mira. But now, I want to talk to the housekeeper and the wife. Housekeeperâs on the way to the wife.â
âWhy donât I drive, and you can run backgrounds?â
âItâs a plan. Let me check on the canvass first.â
Sila Robarts lived with her husband of twenty-seven years a few blocks away in the second-floor apartment of a converted townhome. She ran a cleaning company, Maid to Order, while her husband owned and operated Weâre Handyâa handyman business.
Theyâd raised two children, both of whom worked within the two companies, and had three grandchildren.
âThey own the place.â Eve nodded at the white brick townhouse after Roarke parked. âUse the first floor for their businesses, live on the second.â She pressed the buzzer for the apartment at the front entrance.
A womanâs voice, brisk and impatient, said, âYes?â
âNYPSD, Mrs. Robarts. We need to speak with you.â
âWhat the hell for? Let me see ID. Hold it up for the camera.â
Eve held up her badge.
âWhat happened? Is one of my kids hurt?â
âNo, maâam. We just need to speak with you. Dennis Mira gave me your name and address.â
âMr. Dennis? Is he okay? Whatâs thisâ Hell.â The woman cut herself off, buzzed them in.
A hallway cut the first floor in half, with doors to the maid service and the handyman business on either side. Another door at the back was marked PRIVATE .
It, too, buzzed open.
They took the stairs up to the second floor, and a pair of double doors. One of them swung open.
âAre you sure Mr. Dennis is okay? Who are you?â
âNYPSD,â Eve repeated, and once again offered her badge. âLieutenant Dallas.â
âDallas? Dallas?â The woman had enormous eyes of bitter-chocolate brown and hair