Holiday in Death (In Death #7)(21)



“Stop, confirm. Business in question is owned by Rudy and Piper Hoffman?”

Affirmative. Rudy and Piper Hoffman, fraternal twins, age twenty-eight. Residence 500 Fifth Avenue. Continue scan on Personally Yours?

“No, search and report, full data on owners.”

Searching…

While her computer juggled its chips, she rose to get a cup of coffee. Fraternal twins, she thought as the AutoChef filled her request. Brother and sister. She’d tagged them as lovers. And now, thinking back, remembering the way they’d touched, moved together, the looks exchanged, she wondered if both she and the computer were right.

It was a thought that didn’t sit well in her gut.

A movement in the adjoining doorway caught the corner of her eye an instant before Roarke stepped into full view.

“Good morning. You’re up and about early.”

“I want to get my prelim report to Whitney first thing.” She took her coffee from the AutoChef, shook back her hair. “You want a cup of this?”

“Yes, I do.” He took hers, smiling when she frowned at him. “I’ll be in meetings most of the day.”

“What else is new,” she muttered and programmed the unit for a second cup of coffee.

“But you can reach me, if you need.”

She grunted, then glanced over as her computer signaled data search was complete. “Good. Okay, I’ve got — ” She yelped in surprise as he grabbed the front of her shirt and tugged. “Hey, what — Hold data,” she called out and shoved at her husband.

“I like the way you smell in the morning.” He leaned in and sniffed at her hair as he spoke.

“It’s just soap.”

“I know.”

“Get ahold of yourself.” But damn it, he had her blood up and pumping fast. “I’ve got work,” she muttered even as her arms came around him.

“So do I. I miss you, Eve.” He set his cup aside so he could hold her, just hold her.

“I guess we’ve both been busy the last couple of weeks.” It felt so good to lean against him and just be. “I can’t back off this case now.”

“I don’t expect you to.” For the pleasure of it, he rubbed his cheek against hers. “I wouldn’t want you to.” But it was the last case, what it had done to her, that weighed on his mind and his heart. “I’m content to steal a moment here and there.” He eased back, brushed his lips over hers. “I’ve always had a good hand at stealing… whatever.”

“You’re not supposed to remind me.” And, smiling, she framed his face with her hands.

From the doorway, Peabody watched them. It was too late to step back, too soon to step forward. Though they were only standing, his hands on Eve’s shoulders, hers on his cheeks, Peabody found it a wrenchingly intimate moment that had her face heating and her heart sighing with envy.

At a loss, she did the only thing she could think of and worked up the fake, faintly embarrassed cough of the intruder.

Roarke ran his hands down Eve’s arms, and smiled toward the doorway. “Good morning, Peabody. Coffee?”

“Um, yeah. Thanks. Uh… it’s pretty cold out.”

“Really?” Roarke said as Eve moved back toward her desk.

“Yeah, it’s not supposed to get up to freezing. We might get some snow flurries this afternoon.”

“What are you, the National Weather Service?” Eve demanded, then took a good look at her aide. Peabody’s face was flushed, her eyes soft, her hands busily plucking at her brass buttons. “What’s wrong with you?”

“Nothing. Thanks,” she said when Roarke brought her a cup of coffee.

“You’re welcome. I’ll leave you to work.”

When he walked through the adjoining doorway and closed it off, Peabody sighed. “I don’t know how you can remember your name when he looks at you the way he does.”

“If I forget it, he reminds me.”

Though she heard the wry humor in Eve’s voice, Peabody stepped closer. “What’s it like?”

“What?” Glancing up, Eve caught the intensity in her aide’s eyes and shrugged uncomfortably. “Peabody, we’ve got work here.”

“Isn’t that what it’s about?” Peabody interrupted. “Isn’t what you’ve got what those two women were looking for?”

Eve opened her mouth, then shut it again. She glanced toward the connecting doors, saw that Roarke had closed them, but hadn’t engaged locks on either side. “It’s more than you think it can be,” she heard herself say. “It changes everything, and fixes everything that matters. Maybe you’re never going to be the same, and maybe part of you is always afraid of what will happen if… but he’s always going to be there. All you have to do is reach out, and he’s going to be there.”

Surprised at herself, she slipped her hands into her pockets. “Can you find that by pumping data into a computer system and letting it run personality and lifestyle matches? I don’t know. But we’ve got two dead women who thought it was worth a try. Pull up a chair, Peabody, and we’ll see what we’ve got.”

“Yes, sir.”

“We’ll run a full search of Jeremy Vandoren. Instincts aside, we need to confirm or eliminate. Once we have full data on all five matches on the Hawley list, we’ll pay another visit to Personally Yours.”

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