He was on the 'link when she came back. His broker, she imagined from the bits and pieces of conversation she caught. She snagged a muffin, intending to stuff it into her mouth as she dressed, but Roarke grabbed her hand, pulled her down on the sofa.
"I'll get back to you by noon," he told his broker, then ended transmission. "What's your hurry?" he asked Eve.
"I've got to meet Whitney in an hour and a half and convince him there's a link between three unrelated victims, talk him into letting me pursue the matter, and to accept data I accessed illegally. Then I'm due in court, again, to testify so that a lowlife pimp, who ran an unlicensed stable of minors and beat one of them to death with his hands, goes into a cage and stays there."
He kissed her lightly. "Just another day at the office. Have some strawberries."
She had a weakness for them and plucked one out of the bowl. "We don't have any – you know – thing scheduled for tonight, do we?"
"No. What did you have in mind?"
"I was thinking we could just hang." She moved her shoulders. "Unless I'm in Interview being kicked because of breaching government security."
"You should have let me do it for you." He grinned at her. "A little time, and I could have accessed the data from here."
She closed her eyes. "Don't tell me that. I really don't want to know that."
"What do you say to watching some old videos, eating popcorn, and necking on the sofa?"
"I say, thank you, God."
"It's a date then." He topped off their coffee. "Maybe we'll even manage to have dinner together. This case – or these cases – are troubling you."
"I can't get a hook, a focal point. There's no why, there's no how. Other than Fitzhugh's spouse and his associate, no one's been even one step out of line. And they're both just idiots." She moved her shoulders. "It's not homicide when it's self-termination, but it feels like homicide." She huffed out a disgusted breath. "And if that's all I've got to convince Whitney, I'm going to be dragging my ass out of his office after he stomps it."
"You trust your instincts. He strikes me as a man who's smart enough to trust them as well."
"We'll soon see."
"If they arrest you, darling, I'll wait for you."
"Ha ha."
"Summerset said you had visitors last night," Roarke added as she rose to go to the closet.
"Oh, shit, I forgot." Dumping the robe on the floor, she pawed naked through her clothes. It was a process Roarke never failed to enjoy. She found a shirt of plain blue cotton, shrugged it on. "I had a couple of guys over for a quick orgy after work."
"Did you take pictures?"
She chuckled and found some jeans, remembered court, and switched to tailored slacks. "It was Leonardo and Jess. They're looking for a favor. From you."
Roarke watched as Eve started to pull on the slacks, remembered underwear, and yanked open a drawer. "Oh-oh. Will it hurt?"
"I don't think so. And actually, I'm kind of for it. They were thinking you could throw a party for Mavis here. Let her perform. The demo disc is done. I watched it myself last night and it's really good. It would give her a chance to, like, premiere it before they start hawking it."
"All right. We could probably do it in a week or two. I'll check my schedule."
Half dressed, she turned to him. "Just like that?"
"Why not? It's not a problem."
She pouted a little. "I figured I'd have to persuade you."
Anticipation lit wickedly in his eyes. "Would you like to?"
She fastened her slacks, kept her face bland. "Well, I really appreciate it. And since you're being so accommodating, I guess this is a good time to hit you with part two."
Idly, he poured more coffee, flicked a glance at the monitor as the off planet agriculture reports began to scroll. He'd recently bought a minifarm on Space Station Delta.
"What's part two?"
"Well, Jess has worked out this one number. He ran it by me last night." She looked at Roarke, making it up as she went along. "It's a duet, really impressive. And we thought, if for the party – the live portion of the performance – you could do it with Mavis."
He blinked, lost all interest in crops. "Do what with Mavis?"
"Perform it. Actually it was my idea," she continued, nearly losing it when he paled. "You've got a nice voice. In the shower, anyway. The Irish comes out. I mentioned it, and Jess thought it was fabulous."
He managed to shut his mouth, but it wasn't easy. Slowly he reached over to disengage the monitor. "Eve – "
"Really, it would be great. Leonardo has a terrific design for your costume."
"For my – " Thoroughly shaken, Roarke got to his feet. "You want me to wear a costume and sing a duet with Mavis? In public?"
"It would mean so much to her. Just think of the press we could get."
"Press." Now he blanched. "Christ Jesus, Eve."
"It's really a sexy number." Testing them both, she walked over, began to toy with the buttons of his shirt as she looked hopefully up into his eyes. "It could put her right over the top."
"Eve, I'm fond of her, really I am. I just don't think – "
"You're so important." She trailed her finger down the center of his chest "So influential. And so… gorgeous."
It was just a little too thick. He narrowed his eyes, caught the laughter in hers. "You're putting me on."
Her laughter burst out. "You bought it. Oh, you should have seen your face." She pressed a hand to her belly, yelping when he yanked her ear. "I would have talked you into it."
"I don't think so." Not at all sure of himself, he turned away, started to reach for his coffee again.
"I could have. You'd have done it if I'd played it right." All but doubled over with laughter, she threw her arms around him, hugged herself to his back. "Oh, I love you."
He went very still as emotion delivered a hard, bruising punch to his heart. Shaken, he turned, gripped her arms.
"What?" The laughter died out of her face. He looked stunned, and his eyes were dark and fierce. "What is it?"
"You never say it." Swamped, he dragged her close and buried his face in her hair. "You never say it," he repeated.
She could do nothing but hold on, rocked by the emotions pulsing from him. Where had this come from? she wondered. Where had he hidden it? "Yes, I do. Sure I do."
"Not like that." He hadn't known how much he'd needed to hear her say it, just like that. "Not without prompting. Without thinking about it first."
She opened her mouth to deny it, then closed it again. It was true, and it was foolish, cowardly. "I'm sorry. It's hard for me. I do love you," she said quietly. "Sometimes it scares me because you're the first. And the only."
He held her there until he was sure he could speak, then eased her back, looked into her eyes. "You've changed my life. Become my life." He touched his lips to hers, let the kiss deepen slowly, silkily. "I need you."
She linked her arms around his neck, pressed close. "Show me. Now."
CHAPTER ELEVEN
Eve started off to work humming. Her body felt soft and strong, her mind rested. She took it as an omen when her vehicle purred to life on the first attempt, and the temperature control hung at a pleasant seventy-two degrees.
She felt ready to face her commander and convince him she had a case to pursue.
Then she got to Fifth and Forty-seventh and hit the jam. Street traffic was stopped, air traffic was circling like vultures, and no one was paying any heed to the noise pollution laws. The horns, shouts, curses, catcalls screamed out and echoed. The minute she stopped, her temperature control gleefully pumped up to ninety-five.
Eve slammed out of her car and joined the melee.
The glide-cart hawkers were taking advantage of the moment, slipping and sliding through the pack and doing a monster business on frozen fruit sticks and coffee. She didn't bother to flash her badge and remind any of them they weren't allowed the vend off the curbs. Instead, she snagged a vendor, bought a tube of Pepsi, and asked what the hell was going on.