But the admin?â Peabody hissed air in between her teeth. âSizzling.â
âSure, if youâre another guy.â
âHuh?â
âGay, Peabody.â
âUh-uh. Why?â
âCould be bi.â With another shrug Eve leaned against the wall. âEither way, heâs got a serious man crush on his boss.â
âI didnât get that. I did not get that.â
âBecause you were too busy being sizzled. Myself, I was practically buried in the unrequited love/lust vibes. Sizzling Leopold had them in check, until Forrest fell apart. Must be tough.â
âMaybe the love/lust isnât unrequited?â
Eve shook her head. âForrest is clueless to that part of it. Didnât even notice Leopoldâs quick flinch when he mentioned sleeping with the alibi. Letâs run the sizzler, too.â She pushed off the wall as the doors slid open. âLove makes you do the wacky.â
Yes, indeed it did, she thought a moment later when she saw Roarke leaning casually on her weâre-on-a-budget police vehicle. Tall, lean, with a mane of black hair framing a face blessed by the gods, he shifted those killer blue eyes toward her. It was ridiculous, she thought, to feel that burn in the belly, that thump of the heart over a lookâbut no more ridiculous than a man who owned a fat chunk of the known universe passing the time on his PPC while he loitered in a parking garage.
He slipped the PPC into his pocket, smiled. âLieutenant. Hello, Peabody.â
âShouldnât you be upstairs buying Alaska?â
âI did that last week. I got wind cops were in the house. What can I do for the NYPSD that I havenât already done?â
Oh yeah, she thought, the voice was another killer, hinting of Irelandâs misty green hills. And she supposed she should have known heâd get wind . Nothing got by Roarke.
âThis one isnât on you, since youâre alibied for the time in question.â
âPretty solid,â Peabody put in, âsleeping with the primary.â At Eveâs cool stare, Peabody hunched. âJust saying.â
Roarke grinned at her. âAnd the primary was up and out early as duty called.â He looked back at Eve. âSo whoâs dead then?â
âThomas A. Anders of Anders Worldwide.â
The grin faded. âIs he? Well, thatâs a shame.â
âYou knew him?â
âA bit. Liked what I knew well enough. Youâve been up to his office then, seen BenâBenedict Forrest.â
âPoints for you. How well do you know Forrest?â
âCasually. Heâs a casual sort of man. Agreeable, and smarter than a lot take him for.â
âHow about the widow?â
Roarke cocked his head. âSeems weâre having ourselves an interview after all. You shouldâve come up, and weâd have done this in more pleasant surroundings.â
âI have to get to the morgue.â
âHow many men are married to women who say that routinely, I wonder? Well.â He glanced at his wrist unit. âAs it happens, I have some business downtown. You could give me a lift, and question me ruthlessly along the way.â
The idea had its merits. Eve uncoded the car. âYou can ride as far as the morgue, then youâre on your own.â
âAgain, how many are as blessed as I?â He opened the door for Peabody, but she waved him on.
âIâll take the back. Iâve got work anyway.â
âTrack down Forrestâs alibi first,â Eve ordered, then took the wheel.
âHow was Anders killed?â Roarke asked her.
âGive me impressions first. The vic, the widow, anyone else who applies.â
âAnders wouldâve been the second generation of the companyâtaking it over from his father, who I believe died a year or so ago. A bit longer maybe. It does quite well, good quality products at a reasonable price point.â
âNot the