house?â Once again those dark eyes narrowed. âThe senator went at him, didnât he? Couldnât push Mr. Dennis around with words, so he went at him.
Senator
Edward Mira. Heâs Mr. Dennisâs cousin, though you wouldnât know they shared blood. Different as wet to dry.â
âWhy would you think Edward Mira would attack Mr. Mira?â
âBecause that man wants his own way, in everything. Nothing but a bully, and always was, if you ask me. I donât think much of him or his snooty wife. They have nice kids, though. Good people, and the kidsâ kids are as sweet as cherry pie. Did you arrest him?â
âNo. He didnât attack Mr. Mira, and was, in fact, attacked himself. And heâs missing.â
âI donât understand.â
âMr. Mira walked in on the attack and was knocked unconscious. When he came to, Edward Mira was gone, as were the attackers.â
Sila took a gulp of wine, breathed out hard. âIâm sorry for what I said about himâitâs the truth, but Iâm sorry. Was someone trying to rob them? Theyâve got really good security on that house. I never worried a minute about being there alone or with Mama or my girl.â
âWhen were you there last?â
âJust today, from about seven-thirty to about two-thirty. My daughter and I cleaned there today, and my mama came, too. She canât clean likeshe used to, but she loves that house. We went over bright anâ early, gave it top to bottomâthatâs once a month rotation. I swear to you, we set the alarms and the locks when we finished up.â
âDid anyone come to the door?â
âNo, maâam.â
âHave you noticed anyone, today or otherwise, who shouldnât be in the neighborhood? You know what I mean.â
âYes, I do, and no, I havenât. Itâs a nice neighborhood. A few retired folks like the judge, and professionals, mostly. Doctors and lawyers and the like. Mr. Dennis came by every few weeks, just to say hello and spend some time in the house.â
âHow about the senator?â
Her nose wrinkled. âMore lately, with dollar signs in his eyes.â
âSila.â
âI canât help it. He took some of the furnitureâhad it taken,â she corrected, âbut Mr. Dennis said it was left to him and it was all right. I didnât tell Mr. Dennis how I overheard the senator talking on his âlink about appraisals for the pieces he took. It would have hurt Mr. Dennisâs feelings to know what his grandparents loved was being sold to strangers.â
Eve asked more questions, digging into what she already sensed was fallow ground. When they rose to leave, Sila touched her arm.
âI want to contact Mr. Dennis, just want to hear his voice. I donât think I can settle down until I do. Is that all right?â
âSure.â Eve hesitated. âGive this about a week, but if you get a chance, maybe you could go back over there, clean the study. Crime Scene leaves dust.â
âYou can bet I will.â
Eve brooded on their way uptown, then turned to Roarke.
âSelling furniture, wanting to sell the house. Some people are just greedy, but maybe you can take a good look at his finances. It could begambling debts, blackmail over an affair. Maybe he doesnât just want to sell. Maybe he needs to sell.â
âPermission to wiggle my fingers in someone elseâs finances is always delightful. Permission in this case, a veritable treat.â
âYou really donât like him.â
âNot in the least.â
âCould he force Mr. Mira to sell?â
Smoothly, Roarke maneuvered around a mini, fishtailing on the slick streets. âI donât know the particulars, but if they own equal shares, I think it would be a considerable battle. Dennis could buy Edward out.â
âSure, if he has ten million lying around gathering dust.â
âTen
Rachel van Dyken, Leah Sanders