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“Nah.” She swiped a hand over it. “Bit my own damn tongue.”

“Car’s on its way, sir,” Peabody reported. “Nice pedestrian-hurdling, by the way.”

Eve crouched down to have another word with the snatcher. “If you’d run the other way, we’d be at Central, out of this damn cold drizzle.”

“Yeah, like I’d be that stupid.”

“Stupid enough to do the grab right in front of the courthouse.”

He gave her a sorrowful look. “I couldn’t stop myself. The woman’s swinging the damn purse around, gabbing to the woman walking with her. She practically gave it to me.”

“Right. Tell it to your PD.”

“Lieutenant Dallas?” Nadine, huffing a little, stepped up. She had a hand clamped over the arm of a woman with huge brown eyes. “This is Leeanne Petrie, whose property you’ve just recovered.”

“Ma’am. I just don’t know how to thank you.”

“Start by not calling me ma’am. We’ll need you to come down to Central, Ms. Petrie, to make a statement and sign for your property.”

“I’ve never had so much excitement. Why, that man just shoved me right down on the ground! I’m from a little place called White Springs—just south of Wichita, Kansas. I’ve never had so much excitement.”

It had to be said. “You’re not in Kansas anymore.”

* * *

Because she pulled rank and ordered Peabody home, straightening out the mugging mess kept her at Central until after shift. Dark had the temperatures dropping, and the incessant drizzle turned into sleet. The now tricky streets turned the drive home into a marathon of annoyance.

Stuck in it, she sipped on ice water to soothe her sore tongue, and let her mind drift. She was a handful of blocks from home when it drifted to Trudy Lombard, and the light went off.

“Not me. Jesus, it’s not about me. Why would it be? Damn it, damn it, damn it.”

She flicked on sirens, shot into vertical. Cursing herself and the snarls that made the maneuver all but suicidal, she engaged her dash link.

“Roarke,” she snapped when Summerset came on. “Is he there yet? Put him on.”

“He’s just come through the gates, hasn’t yet reached the house. If there’s an emergency—”

“Tell him I’ll be there in ten. I need to talk to him. If anyone named Lombard contacts the house, don’t put her through to him. You got that? Don’t put her through.”

She flicked off, whipped her wheel, and nipped back down to the street to narrowly miss a trio offenders.

Son of a bitch! What else would she be after but money? Big, shiny piles of it. And who in the known universe had the biggest piles?

She wasn’t getting away with it. And if he even thought of paying her off to make her go away, Eve vowed she’d personally skin him.

She fishtailed, and roared through the gates of home. Roarke opened the door himself as she braked in front of the house.

“Am I under arrest?” he called out, and circled a ringer in the air. “Sirens, Lieutenant.”

She called them off, slammed the door. “I’m so stupid! I’m a goddamn idiot.”

“If you’re going to talk that way about the woman I love, I’m not going to offer you a drink.”

“It’s you. It was never me. If I hadn’t let her turn me inside out, I’d‘ve known it from the get. Lombard.”

“All right. And what’s this?” He skimmed a finger gently over the faint bruise on her jaw.

“Nothing.” Anger had smothered any lingering pain. “Are you listening to me? I know her. I know the type. She doesn’t do anything without a purpose. Maybe the purpose is jollies, but she didn’t go to all the trouble and expense to come here just to bust my balls. It’s about you.”

“You need to calm down. In the parlor.” He took her arm. “There’s a nice fire. You’ll have some wine.”

“Will you stop .” She slapped his hand off, but he simply shifted and tugged off her wet coat.

“Take a minute, catch your breath,” he advised. “You may not be wanting a drink, but I am. Filthy weather.”

She did take a breath, pressed her hands to her face to steady herself. “I couldn’t think, that was the trouble. Didn’t think. Just reacted. And I know better. She must’ve figured she’d come see me, try to play the reunion card. I was just a kid, and messed up with it. So maybe she banked that I didn’t remember what it had been like with her. Then she can be the long-lost mother, angel of mercy, whatever, grease those wheels so when she tapped me for money, I’d ask you to give it to her.”

“Underestimated you. Here.” He handed her a glass of wine.

“Backup plan.” She took the wine, paced to the hearth with its snapping fire, back again. “Someone like her has one. I’m not receptive, she’ll have a way to go straight to the source. Right to you. Try for sympathy, some hard-luck story. Move to threats if that doesn’t shake the money tree. She’d want a nice fat lump sum, come back for more later, but get a juicy bite right off…”

She took a moment to study his face. “And none of this is news to you.”

“As you said, you’d have come to it yourself right away if you hadn’t been so twisted up.” He lowered his head enough to brush his lips over her jaw. “Come, sit by the fire.”

“Wait, wait.” She grabbed his sleeve. “You didn’t go warn her off. You didn’t go see her.”

“I had and have no intention of going to her. Unless she continues to harass and upset you. Do you know she had eleven other children put in her care over the years? I wonder how many of them she tormented as she did you.”

“You ran her? Of course you ran her.” She turned away. “I’m really slow on this one.”

“It’s taken care of, Eve. Put it out of your mind.”

She kept her back to him, took a slow sip of the wine. “How is it taken care of?”

“She came to my office today. I made it clear that it would be best for all concerned if she went back to Texas and didn’t attempt to contact you again.”

“You spoke to her?” She squeezed her eyes shut against the helpless anger. “You knew who she was, what she was, but you let her in your office.”

“I’ve had worse in there. What did you expect me to do?”

“I expected you’d leave this to me. That you’d understand this is my problem. This is for me to handle.”

“It’s not your problem, but ours—or was. And it was for us to handle. Now it’s done.”

“I don’t want you dealing with my problems, my business.” She whirled around and before either of them knew she intended it, she let the glass fly. Wine and glass splatted and shattered. “This was my personal business.”

“You don’t have personal business from me any longer, any more than I do from you.”

“I don’t need to be shielded, I won’t be shielded. I won’t be tended to.”

“Oh, I see.” His voice softened, a dangerous sign. “So it’s perfectly fine, we’ll say, for me to see to those pesky little details. Can this get wrapped, for instance. But the things that matter, I’m to keep my nose out?”

“It’s not the same. I’m a lousy wife, I get that.” Her throat was clogging up, and her voice thickening as the words fought their way through. “I don’t remember to do things—don’t know how and don’t give a rat’s ass about finding out. But—”

“You’re not a lousy wife, and I’d be the one to judge that. But you are, Eve, an extremely difficult woman. She came to me, she tried to shake me down, and she won’t try it again. I have every right to protect you, and my own interests. So if you want to have one of your snits about it, you’ll have to have it alone.”

“Don’t you walk away from me.” Her fingers actually itched to pick up something precious to throw at him as he started for the doorway. But that was too female, and too foolish. “Don’t you walk away and flick off my feelings.”

He stopped, looked back at her with eyes searing with temper. “Darling Eve, if your feelings weren’t so important to me, we wouldn’t be having this conversation. If and when I walk away from you, it’s to prevent myself from taking the alternative, which at the moment would be to beat your head against some hard object until a little sense rattles into it again.”