Immortal in Death (In Death #3)(34)



“You can, after you eat your oatmeal.”

Eyes hot, she shoveled in a mouthful. “We’re really going to talk.”

“You guys are great together. I’m really glad I’ve had this chance to see it up close and personal. Not that I didn’t think it was great all along, but mostly I was just jazzed that Dallas had landed a rich one.” Mavis beamed at Roarke.

“That’s what friends are for.”

“Yeah, but it’s so mag the way you keep her in line. Nobody ever could before.”

“Shut up, Mavis. You think, and think hard, but you don’t tell me anything until you’ve cleared it with your lawyers.”

“They already advised me of that. I figure it’s going to work just like it does when I’m trying to remember a name or where I put something. You stop thinking about it, start doing other stuff, then zip, it pops into your head. So, I’m doing other stuff, and the big one is the wedding. Leonardo said you need to do your first fitting very soon.”

“Leonardo?” Eve all but lunged out of the chair. “You’ve been talking to Leonardo?”

“The lawyers cleared it. They think it’s a good thing for us to resume our relationship. It adds a sympathy and romance factor in the public awareness.” Mavis leaned an elbow on the table and began to toy with the trio of earrings she’d hung in her left lobe. “You know, they only ditched the truth detection test and hypnosis because they can’t be sure what I’ll remember. They mostly believe me, but they can’t take chances. But they said seeing Leonardo is cool. So we need to set up that fitting.”

“I don’t have time to think about fittings. Christ, Jesus, Mavis, you think I’m going to fuss with designs and flowers now? I’m not getting married until this is cleared up. Roarke understands that.”

Roarke took out a cigarette, studied it. “No, he doesn’t.”

“Now, listen — “

“No, you listen.” Mavis stood up, her bright blue hair glinting in the sunlight. “I’m not letting this mess screw up something this important to me. Pandora did her best to f**k with my life and Leonardo’s. And she did worse by dying. She is not going to f**k with this. These plans are not on hold, Dallas, and you just better make time in your schedule for the fitting.”

She couldn’t argue, not with the sheen of tears in Mavis’s eyes. “Okay, fine. Great. I’ll deal with the stupid dress.”

“It’s not a stupid dress. It’s going to be a sensational dress.”

“That’s what I meant.”

“Better.” She sniffed, sat. “When can I tell him we’ll get together for it?”

“Ah… listen. It’s better for your case, and your fancy lawyers would back me up, if you and I aren’t seen running around together. Primary investigator and defendant. It doesn’t look good.”

“You mean I can’t — ” Mavis shut her mouth, regrouped. “All right then, we won’t go running around together. Leonardo can work here. Roarke won’t mind, will you?”

“On the contrary.” He took a satisfied drag on his cigarette. “I think it’s a perfect solution.”

“One big happy family,” Eve mumbled. “The primary, the defendant, and the tenant of the murder scene, who also happens to be the victim’s former lover and the defendant’s current. Are you all insane?”

“Who’s to know? Roarke has excellent security. And if there’s even the smallest chance that things could go wrong, I want to spend whatever time I can with Leonardo.” Mavis set her mouth in a stubborn pout. “So that’s what I’m going to do.”

“I’ll have Summerset arrange for a work space.”

“Thanks. We appreciate it.”

“While you people orchestrate your mad tea party, I’ve got a murder to solve.”

Roarke winked at Mavis and called after Eve as she stormed away, “What about your crepe?”

“Stuff it.”

“She’s crazy about you,” Mavis commented.

“It’s almost embarrassing, the way she fawns. Want another crepe?”

Mavis patted her stomach. “Why the hell not?”

A downed circuit at Ninth and Fifty-sixth played hell with street traffic. Both pedestrians and drivers ignored the noise pollution laws and honked, shouted, and buzzed out their frustrations. Eve would have rolled up her windows to cut the din, but her temperature controls were on the fritz again.

To add to the fun, Mother Nature had decided to body slam New York with a humature of a hundred and ten. To pass the time, Eve watched the heat waves dance up from the concrete. At this rate, more than a few computer chips were going to fry by noon.

She considered taking to the air, though her control panel seemed to have developed a mind of its own. But several other harried drivers had already done so. The traffic overhead was in a nasty snarl. A couple of one-man traffic copters were trying to deal with it and instead added to the mess with the bee swarm buzz of their blades and the irritating drone of voices.

She caught herself snarling at the I LOVE NEW YORK hologram sticker on the bumper jammed in front of hers.

The sanest idea, she decided, was to get some work done in her car.

“Peabody,” she ordered the ‘link, and after a few frustrating hisses of static, it engaged.

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