just dropped on the floor. He looked as though he was about to be sick.
“You know, Peeping Toms have a way of going on to other things,” said Korsak, unrelenting. “Bad things.”
Joey went to the boom box and shut it off. In the silence that followed, he stood with his back turned to them, staring out the window at the cemetery across the road. “You’re trying to fuck up my life,” he said.
“No, Joey. We’re just trying to have a frank conversation here.”
“Mr. Whitney doesn’t know.”
“And he doesn’t have to.”
“Unless?”
“Where were you on Sunday night?”
“At home.”
“By yourself?”
Joey sighed. “Look, I know what this is all about. I know what you’re trying to do. But I told you, I hardly knew Mrs. Yeager. All I did was take care of her mother. I did a good job, you know. Everyone told me so, afterward. How alive she looked.”
“You mind if we take a peek in your car?”
“Why?”
“Just to check it out.”
“Yes, I mind. But you’re going to do it anyway, aren’t you?”
“Only with your permission.” Korsak paused. “You know, cooperation is a two-way street.”
Joey just kept staring out the window. “There’s a burial out there today,” he said softly. “See all the limousines? Ever since I was a kid, I’ve loved watching funeral processions. They’re so beautiful. So dignified. It’s the one thing people still do right. The one thing they haven’t ruined. Not like weddings, where they do stupid things like jumping out of planes. Or saying their vows on national television. At funerals, we still show respect for what’s proper. . . .”
“Your car, Joey.”
At last, Joey turned and crossed to one of the cabinet drawers. Reaching inside, he pulled out a set of keys, which he handed to Korsak. “It’s the brown Honda.”
Rizzoli and Korsak stood in the parking lot, staring down at the taupe carpet that lined the trunk of Joey Valentine’s car.
“Shit.” Korsak slammed down the trunk hood. “I’m not through with this guy.”
“You haven’t got a thing on him.”
“You see his shoes? Looked to me like size eleven. And the hearse has navy-blue carpet.”
“So do thousands of other cars. It doesn’t make him your man.”
“Well, it sure ain’t old Whitney.” Joey’s boss, Leon Whitney, was sixty-six years old.
“Look, we already got the unsub’s DNA,” said Korsak. “All we need is Joey’s.”
“You think he’ll just spit in a cup for you?”
“If he wants to keep his job. I think he’ll sit up and beg like a dog for me.”
She looked across the road, shimmering with heat, and gazed at the cemetery, where the funeral procession was now winding its dignified way toward the exit. Once the dead are buried, life moves on, she thought. Whatever the tragedy, life must always move on.
And so should I.
“I can’t afford to spend any more time on this,” she said.
“What?”
“I’ve got my own caseload. And I don’t think the Yeager case has anything to do with Warren Hoyt.”
“That’s not what you thought three days ago.”
“Well, I was wrong.” She crossed the parking lot to her car, opened the door, and rolled down the windows.
Waves of heat rushed out at her from the baking interior.
“Did I tick you off or something?” he asked.
“No.”
“So why are you bailing out?”
She slid behind the wheel. The seat felt searing, even through her slacks. “I’ve spent the last year trying to get over the Surgeon,” she said. “I’ve got to let go of him. I’ve got to stop seeing his hand in everything I run across.”
“You know, sometimes your gut feeling’s the best thing you can go with.”
“Sometimes, that’s all it is. A feeling, not a fact. There’s nothing sacred about a cop’s instinct. What the hell is instinct, anyway? How many times does a hunch turn out dead wrong?” She turned on the engine. “Too damn often.”
“So I didn’t tick you off?”
She slammed her door