After signaling Roarke to stay with Webster, Eve went into the crime scene to consult with the sweepers.
โNo prints on the bedroom window lock,โ the head sweeper told her. โNone on the window, or any window in that room, inside or out. Clean as they come. We bagged the glass and contents. Victimโs and his spouseโs prints there.โ
โShe brought him the drink.โ
โLogically, yeah. The only prints on the victimโs workstation, the D and C, his โlink are his own. Same with the weapon recovered on scene. But I want a closer look at the prints on the weapon in the lab.โ
โBecause?โ
โTheyโre perfect. Right thumb, right index finger.โ The sweeper cocked her fingers as if on a trigger. โOne print each, one print only. Otherwise, itโs clean.โ
โOkay.โ Eve nodded. โA guyโs going to self-terminate this way, heโs likely to handle the weapon more than once. Heโs going to check, make sure itโs on full. Heโs probably going to hesitate, no matter how committed.โ
โThatโs my but.โ
โItโs a good but, Frowicki.โ
โPilates,โ she said, patting her own ass. โThree times a week.โ โFunny. Other prints, bedroom, crime scene.โ
โElizabeth Greenleaf. Several of hers on the bedroom closet, the dressers, nightstands, the bedroom lamp to the right of the bed. A few on the doorjamb to the crime scene. Some hair on the bedroom floor, a few strays that match the strays in the brush on the dresser.โ
The sweeper looked around. โNot much to sweep, Dallas. The place is seriously clean. Weโre picking up traces of whatโs going to be furniture polish and over-the-counter cleaners, so somebody did the job recently. But weโll keep at it.โ
โYouโre going to find Websterโs prints on the front door. Let me know if you find them anywhere else.โ
โWill do.โ
โDid you know the victim?โ
โOnly by rep. A hard case is what you hear.โ โYeah.โ
As she stepped back into the living area, she heard a trill of female laughter outside the door, and the slide of the lock. Webster surged to his feet.
โPlease, let me.โ
At her nod, he moved to the door. More laughter spilled in when it opened. โIโdโve paid twice as much, she says. I canโt get over it. Don! Youโre still here.โ
Beth Greenleaf, a small, trim woman, had ashy blond hair that curved toward both cheeks. Laughter still lit her bright blue eyes as she threw her arms around Webster.
โIโve missed your face!โ โBeth.โ
โI donโt think youโve met my friend Elva Arnez. Elva and Denzel live upstairs. Sheโs seeing the old lady to her door.โ
โI donโt see any old lady.โ Elva, a beauty in her late twenties, stood back, just a step.
Mixed race, curvy in black skin pants and a hip-swinging white tank, she smiled with the statement. Then her gaze shifted over Websterโs shoulder, skimmed over Eve to Roarke.
โYouโve got company,โ she began. โIโll get going.โ
โDonโs not company. Heโs family.โ As Beth pulled back, she spotted Eve, and those bright blue eyes reflected recognition and confusion.
Then fear as one of the sweepers moved into view. โWhatโDon? What is this? Whereโs Martin?โ
โWe need to sit down.โ
โWhat are they doing here? What happened? Martin.โ As she called her husbandโs name, she tried to pull away from Webster. He held her fast.
โBeth, Iโm sorry. Iโm sick and Iโm sorry. Heโs dead.โ
โDonโt you say that! Donโt you say that! Heโs fine, heโs fine. Iโve only been out a couple hours. Heโs fine.โ
She struggled against him when he wrapped around her. โI found him when I got here.โ He rocked her as he spoke. โHe was gone. He was already gone.โ
The struggle stopped. Eve saw her sag as the hard truth hit, as it had to hitโmind, body, heart, soul. She let out one long wail as Webster picked her up like a child, carried her to a chair, and cradled her while she wept.
โWhat should I do?โ Elva stood in the doorway, hands clasped tight between her breasts. โCan I help? Should I go? Oh God.โ
โClose the door,โ Eve told her. โTake a seat.โ Eve took out her badge. โLieutenant Dallas, NYPSD. Youโre Elva Arnez. You live upstairs?โ
โIโyesโIโmy cohab and I live two floors up. He was fine. Absolutely fine. HeโMartinโhe let me in when I came to get Beth.โ
โYou were in the apartment tonight?โ
โYes. I mean, just to get Beth to go out with some friends.โ โWhat time did you get here? What time did you leave?โ
โUm, God. About eight-thirty. A little after, I guess. We were supposed to leave at eight-thirty, but Beth tends to run late. I was actually a little behind anyway, so maybe eight-thirty-five or so. Martin let me in, and he was fine. He joked how Beth was still putting her game face on, something like that. And she called me back.โ
โTo the bedroom?โ
โYes. She couldnโt decide on what earrings she wanted to wear. Or shoes. Itโs her way.โ Tears started to leak. โAndโandโandโโ Elva stopped, closed her eyes, held up a hand while she drew a couple breaths. โIโm sorry. This is so horrible. I helped her decide. Ten minutes? I donโt know, really. Then she went in to say goodbye to Martin.โ
โIn where?โ
โOh, in the little office he has. He called out โByeโ to me, and โHave a good time.โ I donโt understand what happened. Did he have an accident? Did somebody break in and hurt him?โ
โWe need to determine that. Whereโd you go?โ
โBistro. Itโs a fancy little bar about three blocks from here. Can I do something for her? For Beth?โ
โYou are,โ Eve said. โRight now. Who did you meet there?โ
โOkay. Okay.โ She closed her eyes again and gave Eve a list of three names.
โDid anyone leave between nine and nine-thirty?โ โNo, we all stayed until about eleven, I guess.โ โNo one left the table?โ
โWell, to go to the restroom. We were all having fun. Having some drinks, some bar munchies, thatโs all. Did he have an accident? But there are so many police so I donโtโโ
โWeโre investigating. I appreciate your cooperation, Ms. Arnez. Please stay available, as I may have follow-up questions.โ
โIโ Yes. Of course. We live upstairs.โ โYouโre free to go.โ
โAll right, butโฆโ As she rose, she looked over at Beth. โPlease, please, tell her Iโm here for her, for whatever she needs. Iโm so sorry.โ
When she left, Eve turned to Webster.
โBeth.โ He murmured it, pressed his lips to her temple. โLieutenant Dallas needs to ask some questions.โ
โI know it.โ She patted his arm as she got to her feet. โWould you get me some water?โ As he rose, she took the chair, then opened the little purse she wore cross-strapped, took out tissues. She mopped her face, lifted the purse off to set it on the table beside her.
โI know who you are, both of you, and youโre here because someone murdered my husband.โ
โI canโt, at this time, verify homicide, Mrs. Greenleaf.โ
โYou sure as hell wouldnโt be here if Martin had slipped in the shower. Which he wouldnโt. Martinโs rock steady. Youโve got questions. Iโm a copโs wife, and I know how this works. But I have one first. How was my husband killed?โ
Those blue eyes werenโt bright now, but piercing, and rage was slowly smothering the grief in them.
โLieutenant Webster let himself in when Captain Greenleaf failed to answer his knock. He found Captain Greenleaf at his workstation, deceased. There was a stunner on the floor by his chair, burn marks of a contact stun,
on full, on his throat, and a note on his comp screen. โBeth, Iโm sorry but I just canโt go on this way. Too many good copsโ lives ruined, their families broken. My fault. Forgive me because I canโt forgive myself.โโ
She waved the water away when Webster brought it and kept her eyes on Eve. โYouโre looking at suicide? Thatโs nonsense, complete nonsense. Every bit of it. And if you believe that for one hot minute, youโre not as good as everybody thinks you are.โ
โYou asked the question, Ms. Greenleaf. Thatโs the answer I can give you at this time.โ
Beth looked up at Webster. โDo you think Martin killed himself?โ
โNo.โ He pressed the water on her, then sat on the arm of her chair. โBeth, I contacted Dallas, asked her to lead the investigation because sheโs not just as good as everyone thinks, sheโs probably better. Martin deserves the best.โ
โHe wouldnโt do this, not to himself, never, never to me or the children.
And he believed in the work he did for the NYPSD. You know that, Don.โ โI do know that.โ
โHe weeded out bad cops, wrong cops, dirty cops. He had no regrets. Iโd know. I was his sounding board. Arenโt you that to her?โ she asked Roarke.
โI am, yes. When she needs it. Itโs part of the promise we make, isnโt it?
Or it should be.โ
โDo you love her?โ
โMadly,โ Roarke said before Eve could object to the question.
โIf itโs real and true and deep, it only grows with time. We loved each other. Heโd never leave me this way. He loved Don like a son. Heโd never have left Don to find him this way.โ
She laid her head back a moment. โI donโt understand how he died in his chair. If heโd opened the door to anyone and there was a threat, heโd have fought. Thereโd be signs of that.โ
Slowly sipping the water, she glanced around. โEverythingโs exactly as I left it.โ
โI need you to verify the timing and activities from your neighborโs statement, Mrs. Greenleaf. What time did she arrive tonight?โ
โI canโt tell you exactly. I knew I was running lateโand thatโs when I refuse to look at the time, as stressing over that will only make me later. It was probably about eight-thirty, or a few minutes later.โ On a sigh, she said,
โProbably a few minutes later, because Elva knows Iโm always late. I called her back to the bedroom when I heard her and Martin talking, so she could help me decide what to wear. We were meeting friends at Bistroโitโs just a few blocks away. I knew I was running late because after dinner, after the dishes, I put together some snacks. I made some salsa. Donโs fond of my salsa.โ
โBest there is.โ
โDid you mention to anyone that Webster was expected tonight?โ
โI donโt think so. Martin told me at dinner. Iโd been out shopping. Bought the new shoes I decided not to wear tonight after all. He was looking forward to spending some time with you, Don. Heโd never have done this. Never.โ
โDid anyone in your party leave the table for any length of time?โ
โNo. A couple of bathroom breaks. We had fancy drinks and fancy bar snacks and lots of laughs.โ Her eyes welled again; she shut them tight, willed the tears back. โWe all left at the same time. Anja caught a cab, the rest of us walked. Elva always walks me to the door after a girlsโ night. Itโs sweet of her.โ
โWas she ever alone in your bedroom?โ
โWhat? No. Fashion consult, thatโs all. Why?โ โWhenโs the last time you had the apartment cleaned?โ
โThis morning, when I cleaned it. I clean my own home.โ
โLike nobodyโs business.โ Webster lifted her hand, kissed it. โI may be a little obsessive about it, but I need a clean home.โ โDoes that include the windows?โ
โOf course.โ
โDid you clean them this morning?โ
โNo. Thatโs a once-every-four-to-six-weeks job. And I do it when Martinโs out of the house because he frets about me washing the outside. As if Iโd fall out.โ
โYou keep the windows locked.โ
โYes. Martinโs obsessive there. When I do the windows, and he always knows when I do, he checks every blessed one.โ
โHave you had any visitors recently, any repair or maintenance people in the apartment?โ
โOur children, grandchildren visit regularly. We havenโt had any repair people in since โฆ early April. The dishwasher went out. He tried to fix it,โ she said to Don.
He smiled. โNaturally.โ โHe failed.โ โNaturally.โ
โYouโve washed the windows since early April.โ
โYes. The middle of May, toward the end of June.โ She set the water aside, gripped Websterโs hand.
โAn unlocked windowโs how someone got in and did this to Martin. Someone got in and unlocked a window. We wouldnโt notice. I donโt think weโd have noticed.โ
โDid you check them nightly?โ
โNo. No, after Iโd wash them, heโd check. They stayed locked because he wanted them locked. Which window was unlocked? You can tell me that. Itโll come out anyway.โ
โThe bedroom window, facing east. It has a privacy screen engaged.โ
โYes, always. Itโs our bedroom. We have a door cam, you needโฆโ She broke off. โYouโll have that by now. But if someone got in a week ago, two weeks ago, it wouldnโt be on there. It overwrites every seventy-two hours.โ
โMrs. Greenleaf, did your husband keep a weapon, a stunner?โ
โNo. He turned in his service weapon when he retired. And he gave me that. No weapons in our home for the first time since we married. I didnโt have to ask for him to give me that. The stunner you found wasnโt his. Martin wasnโt suicidal.โ
At the head sweeperโs signal, Eve rose. โExcuse me.โ
When she came back, she remained standing. โThe Crime Scene Unitโs finished for now. We will have to keep this apartment sealed for the time being. Is there somewhere you can stay, maโam? Someone we can contact for you?โ
โIโll take you to Carlieโs.โ Webster pressed her fingers to his lips again. โWeโll tell her together. Iโll contact Ben and Luke.โ
โYes, yes, that would be best. God, oh God, our poor babies.โ A tear escaped this time, and she swiped it away. โI need to pack a few things.โ
โIโll help you.โ
โNo. Webster.โ Eve shook her head. โIt would be best if I went with you, Ms. Greenleaf.โ
โTo make sure I donโt try to sneak any evidence away.โ
โTo go by the book,โ Eve countered. โSomething I believe the captain would value.โ
โYouโre right about that.โ
โMrs. Greenleaf.โ Roarke rose as she did. โIโm very sorry for your loss.โ โI believe you are, and thank you. Weโre a different breed, arenโt we?
Copsโ spouses. Nobody else quite fully understands.โ โNo, I donโt suppose they do.โ
Eve followed her to the bedroom, waited in the doorway to be as unintrusive as possible.
โOh, come in. Donโt hover. I need some clothes, and Iโll need some things out of the bathroom.โ
She wrenched open the closet, then just froze.
โJust look at us,โ she murmured. โIโm the one who canโt stand dirt or clutter, but in here? My clothes are jumbled, and his lined up straight as an arrow. What a pair we areโwereโalways will be. I canโt reach the damn shelf for my bag. Martin always got it down for me.โ
โLet me help you.โ
Eve got the bag, set it on the bed while Beth pulled out some clothes. โI loved him with every fiber of my being. Can you understand that?โ โYes, I can.โ
She looked back as she pulled some things out of a dresser. โI believe you can.โ She lifted a framed photo from the dresser top, one of the two of them grinning at the camera. โHold on to that. Hold on tight.โ
She laid the photo in the bag. โHe admired you.โ โIโm sorry?โ
โMartin admired you. You had some trouble several years back, had to turn in your badge and weapon until it cleared up.โ
โYes.โ It still stung. A wasp bite in the gut.
โHe knew about that and, though he was retired, followed the investigation. And he told meโhis sounding boardโthat you were an exceptional police officer, one of honor, of duty and integrity. I hope youโll remember that, because you hold him in your hands now.โ
โMrs. Greenleaf, I promise you Iโll do everything I can, as will the whole of my department as needed, to find out the truth of what happened here tonight.โ
โI believe you because he would. Will you let Don help?โ
โIโll keep Lieutenant Webster apprised of the progress on the investigation. I canโt let him in more than that.โ
She opened a drawer Eve had identified as the victimโs, took out a precisely folded white handkerchief. Pressed it to her cheek before she packed it.
โDon loved Martin, so heโll push some. He was in love with you once.โ โNo, he wasnโt.โ
Now she smiled. โNo, he wasnโt, but he thought he was, and thatโs nearly the same. What heโs found with Darcia, that has a good chance. I hate that Iโm glad Don found him before I did. I think it wouldโve broken me. Shattered me so Iโd never find all the pieces again.โ
โNo, it wouldnโt.โ Eve said it almost casually, because she knew it for truth. โYouโre a copโs wife.โ
โThatโs right. Thatโs right.โ She pressed her fingers to her eyes as if pushing tears back, then let them fall. โI need a few things from the bathroom, then Iโll get out of your way. I need to see Martin tomorrow. All of us do.โ
โIโll contact you as soon as possible.โ
Nodding, Beth walked around the bed, laid a hand for a moment on the pillow on the left, then carried her bag from the room.
When Webster led her out the front door, she didnโt look back.
And when the door closed behind them, Eve breathed out, shoved both hands through her hair. โAll right. Okay.โ
โA hard night all around.โ
โYeah. Listen, I appreciate you.โ His eyebrows lifted. โI know it.โ
โI appreciate you keeping Webster contained while I dealt with this.โ โIs that what I did? Contain him?โ
โYou gave him someone to unload on, someone to listenโand you kept him out of my way. He did it right, he gets that, and it couldnโtโve been easy. Greenleaf was a father to him, and he walks in, finds him dead.โ
Eve circled the room as she spoke. โFinds what looks like self- termination. He couldโve tried to cover it up, not that hard to do. Stage a break-in, a struggle, get rid of the message on the comp.โ
โYouโd have seen through that like polished glass.โ
โYeah, but he couldโve tried; he didnโt. He called it in, got uniforms and the MTs on scene. He requested me through channels. He kept his head, and it couldnโt have been easy.โ
โAnd still, as he discovered the body, had a connection to the victim and a key to get in, you have to eliminate him as a suspect.โ
โHis statement holds up, and the security feedโs going to cover the rest. They came in through the window in the bedroom, which means someone got in and unlocked it between the last time Ms. Greenleaf washed it and tonight. And since the upstairs neighbor was in there tonight, sheโs on the list.โ
โYouโre ruling out suicide.โ
โOfficially, not yet. Canโt. But this was staged, planned out, timed to hit when he was alone in the apartment. Do it quick so he doesnโt have time to react or fight, press his fingers to the stunner, drop it, get the message up. Time stamp on the message is less than a minute after TOD, but you canโt hang a case on that. Time stamp could be off, gauges arenโt a hundred percent to-the-minute accurate. Itโs close enough to hold.โ
She walked back to the bedroom. โYou have to know heโll be alone for two or three hours, so you time it for well after the wifeโs out. Donโt want her doing a: Shit, forgot my whatever, and running back. Then itโs up or down the fire escape, depending. Do you know heโs a little hard of hearing? Bet you do. You know how he lives, his habits, his basic schedule.
โHeโs got the game on-screen,โ Eve added as she envisioned it. โNot too loud, but loud enough. Still, youโre quiet as you cross the room, look out, listen.โ
She went back to the door, walked out. โStop, check the stunner, make sure his backโs to the office door. Step behind him.โ Eve stopped behind the chair. โJab the stunner to his throat, deploy. Done. He convulses for a few seconds, then slumps.
โNow, first mistake. You press his thumb and index finger on the stunner, firm, clear, perfect prints. But they wouldnโt be if Greenleaf had deployed it. Why werenโt his prints on any other part of the weapon? Am I
going to buy he wiped it clean before he picked it up to kill himself? No, Iโm not. Am I going to buy his fingers wouldnโt shake a little when he held it to his own throat? And especially after, when his nervous system went wild? Negative on that, too. His hand didnโt sweat or shake, even a little?โ
โAnd thereโs something else.โ
She glanced back at Roarke. โIs there?โ
โThe note, itโs too impersonal, too brief and cold, really, when you understand what they were together, meant to each other, how long theyโd been together. It speaks of guilt and regret, asks for forgiveness, but says nothing of love, nothing of the children they made or the children who come from that.โ
โExactly.โ Eve fisted her hands on her hips as she paced. โYou know, if you donโt like being told you think like a cop, you shouldnโt analyze evidence like one.โ
โSo noted.โ
โWhoever left that message had a priority. The guiltโthe job Greenleaf did. A cop who took down cops. Thatโs the motive, or the one I see with what I have so far.โ
โThereโs little more for you to see tonightโthough your body clockโs likely telling you itโs morning.โ
โMay be why Iโve got a second wind.โ And was revved up with it, she realized. โBut no, nothing much more to do here tonight but seal it up.โ
She retrieved her field kit.
โIf you drive home, I can write up a brief report for Whitney to see when it actually is morning. Iโll send a text to Peabody, have her meet me here. Weโll go over the scene again, then I want another round with the neighbor, one with her cohab, after I run them both.โ
She picked up her field kit. โI want to take a look at the security feedโ apartment door, main door.โ
โYouโll use your second wind for all that, then get some sleep.โ
โThatโs the plan,โ she said as they stepped out of the apartment. โI didnโt really know him. Didnโt much like him, but didnโt really know him.โ
โYouโll know him now.โ In a gesture of understanding and support, he pressed a hand to the small of her back. โFew will know him better than you when youโre done. Whatever you learn, youโll stand for him. Webster reached out to you because he knows that.โ
โThe captain did his job as he saw it. Iโll do mine.โ She sealed the door.