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“That’s right. You were reared Catholic yet you betrayed the IRA.”

“I would have betrayed the pope to get the ones who killed Sean.” His eyes narrowed at Matt. “You can probably dig that. You were pretty hot to find your evil stepfather. Didn’t you ever want to wring his neck?”

Matt nodded. “And now I’d like to wring the neck of whoever hurt Vassar.”

“You, ah,” Max said cautiously, “can’t offer any insight on her last hours on earth?”

“Nothing except that she was alive and well when I left her.”

Max refrained from asking how well, for which Temple gave him full credit. The conversation was getting unbearable for all-parties involved.

“I realize,” Matt said, looking steadfastly at the top of the coffee table, which was littered with sections from two days’ worth of newspapers, “that inquiring minds want to know what happened between Vassar and me. Sorry. No comment.”

“What did Molina say to that?” Max asked with his best Mr. Spock raised eyebrow.

“Nothing. She never asked.”

Max suddenly laughed. “I love it! You shut down Molina on a case where her own hide is at stake. I’ve heard of Teflon politicians, but you, Devine, have a Teflon sex life. Nothing sticks but mystery.”

“Yet,” Matt said. “She hasn’t asked me yet.”

“And if she does?”

“I tell her the same thing I tell you: no prurient details. Vassar deserves better than that. She deserves a heck of a lot better than what happened to her, however it happened. I didn’t know her like a cousin, but I did get to know her enough to realize that.”

Another awkward silence.

Temple broke in with her best nonintimidating small wee voice. “Can you tell us, Matt, if you had any reason to think she might commit suicide?”

He stared at the pages of newsprint again, one bearing a small front-page story about a plunge to death at the Goliath. Then his eyes met Temple’s.

“I don’t know. She had … issues. Doesn’t everybody?”

“Amen, brother,” Max agreed. “Okay. If I’m reading this right, you don’t know yourself whether she jumped or was pushed, and you’re the last known person to have seen her.”

“Yes.”

“When exactly was the ‘last time’?” Temple asked, eyeing the newspapers.

“Four A.M.”

“So you spent, what, six hours with her?”

“More like eight. Call it a shift, if you like.”

“I’m not calling it anything,” Temple said carefully. “You must have gotten to know her … talked … in all that time.”

He nodded.

“Tell us about her,” Max said in a surprisingly calm voice. “She’s just a role to most people in a town filled with hookers and call girls and boys and private dancers. Tell us about her, not about what she did for a living.”

Matt nodded, seeming to welcome the chance. He leaned back, clasped his tanned hands around one khaki-clad knee. The casual pose couldn’t disguise the darkness in his voice.

“Molina … misrepresented her to me. Not her fault. She gave me the best advice she could.”

“Humph!” Temple couldn’t resist inserting. “You didn’t hear anything of the kind from me!”

“I heard it from you, though,” he said with a glance at Max. “And Leticia at work. Everybody said this was the best thing to do.”

“Not me,” Temple said.

Matt finally met her glance. “I wish to God now I’d listened to what you didn’t tell me to do. Anyway, Molina swore that this level of call girl would be smart, comfortable with herself and her … job, impersonally personal, the solution I so desperately needed. And I don’t think even you”—he eyed Max—“know what it’s really like to have Kitty O’Connor on your case, day in and night out. She was beginning to seem omniscient.”

“Like God,” Max suggested, “or your own conscience. The Hound of Hell. Impossible to flee.”

“And she’d made enough threatening gestures at females I knew … Mariah, even Electra, that I was pretty paranoid and ripe for her manipulation. And for drastic solutions.” Matt shook his head. “The idea was that she couldn’t track me to a call girl the bellman sent up, and I ran all over Las Vegas to lose her.”

“Not enough,” Max said. “I saw you go into the Goliath that night.”

“You!”

Max managed to shrug indifferently and look sheepish at the same time. “I knew Kathleen was stalking you. I wanted to catch a glimpse of how she looks today. You did a damn fine job of trying to lose a tail. If I hadn’t known you, I might have lost you.”

“Max!” Temple didn’t mean to sound exasperated, but she did. “Are you telling us you were at the Goliath, that you saw Matt going into the hotel?”

“It was earlier in the evening … sixish, wasn’t it? Right. I followed him in, checked the surroundings. Certainly didn’t see Kitty O’Connor, and then I split, because I was worried about you and the Stripper Killer. If I’d been able to stay …” He nodded at Matt. “I might have been curious enough to hang around after you left and seen something. So we get to share the riches of guilt this time, if that makes you feel any better.”

“It doesn’t and I think you know that. Misery loves company is a sop to the poor of heart.”

Another silence.

Temple felt like someone trying to herd a glacier toward the Tropic of Cancer.

“So what did you see, Max?”

“I saw our fair-haired boy check in and go up in the elevator. I saw no one who looked like Kathleen, or Kathleen in disguise, but it’s been almost twenty years, Temple. She could look like your grandmother by now.”

“She doesn’t,” Matt said dryly. “You saw the sketch.”

“Wouldn’t it have been weird,” Temple speculated, “if Vassar had been Kitty the Cutter?”

“You mean,” Max said, getting it at once, “if she had followed our man Flint into the Goliath and arranged to ring his bell, metaphorically speaking, when the bellman ordered a call girl. That would make her dead, and I can’t say I’d be sorry.”

Matt shook his head at their lavish scenarios. “Vassar was a tall woman; Kitty was petite. You can’t fake that.”

“How petite?” Temple asked.

“A bit bigger than you.”

“Oh. I always imagine her as bigger than life. Like Wonder Woman.”

“No,” said Max, “she’s a wee bit of a thing, rather like a plastic explosive.” But he was thinking so hard he was frowning again. “It’s possible Kathleen was there. Certainly she could fool me after all these years. It’s possible she followed you to the room and killed Vassar after you left. Did you notice anything suspicious?”

“Everything felt suspicious, everybody I had contact with was out of a B movie. The accommodating desk clerk, who let me pay cash for a room and then change the number at the last moment, all by the book according to Molina, by the way.”

Max grinned meanly. “She sure knows how to read the wrong side of the law for such an upstanding policewoman.”

Matt went on, as if needing to relive each sleazy step toward disaster. “And there was the lurking bellman, happy to pocket a big tip to provide X-rated entertainment. It was like some hokey formula. I felt unreal.”

“I’ve got a news flash for you, Devine. Hiring a hooker is not a ‘real’ experience.”

“I know that. I can’t believe I listened to everybody, including you, and did this. I thought you worldly sophisticates knew what you were doing.”

“We don’t. And we just look worldly. It’s all an act, Devine. Magic. Don’t believe in magic. It’s not real.”

“Vassar was more real than any of you,” Matt commented bitterly.

That hurt. Temple felt it like a punch to the stomach. She hadn’t led him down this particular garden path … but she could have made the whole charade unnecessary, she knew that now. And that was another punch to the gut.