hadnât been brother and sister, youâd expect them to fall in bed.â
âYeah, but . . .â
Lucas nodded. âThen thereâs the other thing.â
âWhatâs that?â
âHe says his sister quit modeling and now is a professional potter, big in the art world. Iâve met a couple of potters.â
âI wouldnât doubt it,â Sloan said. He had an exaggerated idea of Lucasâs love life.
âIâll tell you one thing about potters,â Lucas continued. âThey pick up this clay, and they throw it around, and they beat it and twist it and turn it. . . . a few years of that, and theyâve got arms and hands like wrestlers.â
âAlieâe was strangled,â Sloan said. âBe interesting to talk to the sister.â
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ALIEâEâS BOYFRIEND, A guy who insisted his only name was Jax, came through Homicideâs front door a few steps before Jael Corbeau came in with her lawyer. Lucas had to decide which interview to watch, and he went with Corbeau.
Sloan took the statement, with Lucas and Swanson sitting in; Lucas tried not to stare, but Jael Corbeau was somebody to stare at. Not immediatelyânot a flash thingâbut after a minute or so, he found it hard to stop looking at her. She had the same angular face as her brother, but was blond. And she had tracks on her face, scars; they did something unnatural: made it hard to breathe.
After the preliminariesâSloan read her the Miranda warning, and the lawyer said that he might ask his client not to reply to certain questions, and that was not to be taken as an indication of guiltâSloan said, âTell us about your relationship with Alieâe Maison.â
Jael looked at her lawyer, who nodded, and she said, âWell, I didnât kill her. Or the other woman.â
âIâm happy to hear that,â Sloan said, smiling at her. âDo you have any idea who might have?â
âNo. Really. Iâve been going over and over it in my head, and I canât figure out who would.â Her eyes drifted away from Sloan and stopped at Lucas. âNobody disliked her enough. I mean, I donât know about the other woman, but Alieâeâsome people probably disliked her, but not enough to hurt her.â
âHow about in New York? Anybody there?â Sloan asked.
âNo.â She was talking to Lucas now. âOf the top ten or fifteen models that you hear about, you know, the supermodels, sheâs like number seven or eight. She was very close to the topâmaybe she would have become number one, she had the look for itâbut there are other people who really are bigger. Who would be more likely to attract a crazy person, if thatâs what youâre thinking.â
âWe donât know quite what to think yet,â Sloan said. âSo you donât--â
Jael leaned forward, interrupting: âBut you know, she had a big following on the Internet. A lot of the . . . you know, engineer-type people were interested in her. They put up Internet pages, or whatever you call them, Websites, with her pictures. Some of them grafted porno pictures on her, so youâd see a woman fucking somebody, and the face would be Alieâeâs. . . . There are quite a few of those.â
âHmm. Interesting,â Sloan said. He looked at Lucas, then back at Jael, and asked, âDid she ever do any porn?â
âNo. Of course not. Aside from everything else, she couldnât afford to. If sheâd done any porn, the big courtiers would have dropped her like a hot rock.â
âOkay. . . . How about Lansing? Was she a friend of yours?â Sloan asked.
âNo. I knew herâshe came to partiesâbut she really wasnât part of the . . . I donât know what youâd call it. The art scene? That sounds pretentious and stupid at the same time.â
âSo she wasnât a friend, but you sort of