waffles. Roarke just waved the cat away. âIs it a wonder I adore you? âMr. Phant.ââ
âYeah, it seems funny now, but I was pretty serious. I think the damn elephantâs the only tangible thing Iâve got here, and it was nothing more than handy. It doesnât apply.â
âIt was used to hurt someone who matters a great deal to you.â
âYeah, I guess. Iâm going to try to swing by there sometime today, depending on how things go.â Since they were there, she plucked a fatblackberry out of the little bowl, frowned. âAm I supposed to take something? Like, I donât know, flowers or something?â
âI wouldnât think itâs necessary, but flowers or a small token? Never wrong.â
âOkay, well, weâll see how it goes.â She polished off the waffles. âIâm going to review a couple things, check in with Mira, and get going.â
âLet me know if the senator shows up, one way or the other, would you?â
âSure.â
âIâll be seeing Nadine later today,â he said when Eve rose to strap on her weapon harness, toss a jacket over it. âSheâs got where she wants to be down to a warehouse space prime for conversion and a triplex on the Upper West Side.â
âTriplexâa penthouse kind of thing, slick building, fully secured, lots of amenities?â
âIt is, yes.â
âTell her to take the triplex. She might think a warehouse is frosty, and how she can renovate it, make it slick and sleek, but the process would make her crazy. Plus, when? Sheâs got her gigs at Channel Seventy-five, the book thing, blah blah.â
She glanced back at him. âBoth of them yours?â
âThey areâshe eliminated several other locations and properties, then asked me to suggest two of mine. And asked if Iâd take her through both today. Sheâs been having nightmares and wants to get out of her apartment.â
âTold her not to open the damn door,â Eve muttered. âTriplex, done.â She walked back, leaned over, and kissed him. âLater.â
He tugged her back for another kiss. âTake care of my cop.â
âI gotta, since youâve got something to tell me about thirty years from now. Triplex,â she repeated as she started out. âTell her to stop fucking around and do it.â
â
S heâd assumed sheâd left in plenty of timeâeven earlyâbut traffic snarled and stalled the entire way. She reached the Chrysler Building, wondering why more people didnât work from home and leave the streets to those who really needed them. She hunted up parking, then traveled two blocks on foot.
Roarke had been correct about the bitter morning. The sky was a bowl of hard, pale blue, and the air was just as hard and pale. She stuffed her hands in the pockets of her coat, searching for warmth, and found gloves.
New gloves, with some sort of lining that felt like a warm cloud. It wouldnât take her long to lose them, she thought, but for the moment, they were welcome.
She started to tag Peabody to get an ETA, then spotted her partner at the crosswalk.
There was no mistaking that pink coat in a sea of blacks, grays, and dark blues. Add the multicolored hat on the short flip of dark hair, the mile of scarfâin bleeding blues todayâand she couldâve spotted Peabody six blocks off.
She waited while her partner joined the river surge across the street.
âHowâs Mr. Mira?â Peabody asked immediately. âDid you check this morning?â
âNot yet. I donât want to bother them if theyâre sleeping.â
âYeah, but if he has a concussionââ
âMira will haul him to the hospital if he needs it. He looked okay yesterday by the time I sent them home.â
âI hate that somebody hurt him.â
âThey couldâve done worseâbe glad they