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Chapter no 8

Payback in Death

While the building housing Open Doors sat only blocks from Greenleafโ€™s apartment, the neighborhood crossed the line into the edge of shabby. Low- rent tat parlors and bars dominated street level with, for the most part, flops overhead.

A dingy twenty-four/seven squatted on the corner. Eve watched a pack of teenage boys stroll out, slurping on fizzies and looking for something to do. Eve predicted what they looked for began and ended with trouble.

But at the moment, that wasnโ€™t her problem.

Open Doors stood mid-block, squeezed between one of those tat parlors and a bar named, accurately Eve assumed, the Dirty Glass.

The building, one tossed up on the cheap post-Urbans, hadnโ€™t been built to last. Somehow it had, and she could see patches of repair on the exterior. It bore no sign to indicate what went on inside.

Probably smart, she thought, to keep it low-key.

โ€œTheyโ€™ve tried to make it pretty,โ€ Peabody observed, then shrugged at Eveโ€™s raised brows. โ€œThey painted the door that nice blue, even painted the riot bars the blue. Theyโ€™ve got those window boxes on the windows of a couple of upper floorsโ€”where nobody can steal them. Those look like fresh patches on the prefab, so somebodyโ€™s trying to maintain the building.โ€

Peabody scanned up. โ€œI didnโ€™t see how much of it Open Doors has.โ€ โ€œAll of it.โ€

โ€œSeriously? Itโ€™s โ€ฆ eight floors.โ€

โ€œLetโ€™s see what theyโ€™re doing inside that. High-end securityโ€”one of Roarkeโ€™s systems. Smartโ€”and pricey.โ€

She pressed the buzzer.

A human voiceโ€”female, not computerizedโ€”answered.

โ€œGood afternoon. How can we help?โ€

Eve held her badge up for the cam. โ€œNYPSD, Lieutenant Dallas and Detective Peabody. We need to speak with Serene Brenner.โ€

โ€œUm. Iโ€™m supposed to scan your ID, butโ€”I canโ€™t remember how. Bibi! Sorry! I need some help! Itโ€™s cops, and I canโ€™t remember how to do the scan thing.โ€

Eve heard another female voiceโ€”older, patient. โ€œOkay. You see how the officer is holding up her badge? You capture thatโ€”thatโ€™s right. Now click for scan and verify. Thatโ€™s the way! See how it verified her badge number, her name and rank?โ€

โ€œYeah, yeah. So sheโ€™s all good. There are two of them.โ€

โ€œI see that. And now see the second officer holding up her badge? Do the same thing.โ€

โ€œI got it. Iโ€™m sorry.โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t be sorry. You did good. Now you can buzz them in.โ€ โ€œI remember that!โ€

The buzzer sounded; locks clicked and thumped.

Inside, a kind of lobbyโ€”buffed clean and smelling lightly of whatever little flowers stood in a jar-type vase on the counterโ€”had fake wood floors and bright white walls.

On the walls hung paintingsโ€”street scenes, still lifesโ€”some showing genuine talent. A dark-skinned woman, early twenties with perfect rows of braids, sat behind a waist-high counter biting her full bottom lip.

The older woman, one looking behind her at sixty, stood next to the younger, had one narrow hand on the girlโ€™s shoulder. The girl wore a white collared shirt, the woman a round-necked floral one.

โ€œGreet our guests, Shonda.โ€

โ€œUm. Welcome to Open Doors. How can we help?โ€

โ€œLieutenant Dallas, Detective Peabody to speak with Serene Brenner.โ€ โ€œDonโ€™t sayย um,โ€ Bibi murmured. โ€œTake a breath instead.โ€

Full of obvious nerves, Shonda did so. โ€œMs. Brennerโ€™s in a session.โ€ She glanced at Bibi for approval.

โ€œThatโ€™s right. You can check the schedule on-screen, see when sheโ€™ll be finished so you can tell our guests.โ€

Eve could see the nextย umย forming before Shonda caught herself, took a breath. โ€œMs. Brenner should be available shortly. Would you like to wait?โ€

โ€œYeah, we can wait.โ€

โ€œExcuse me a minute.โ€ Shonda gestured Bibi down so she could whisper in her ear.

โ€œThatโ€™s okay. Thatโ€™s fine. Now, do you remember how to give Serene a tap so she knows she has visitors waiting?โ€

โ€œI got that. I got that.โ€

As she worked, the door buzzed. A woman came in, sliding her swipe back in her pocket. Mid-thirties, very thin, and tired eyes that made Eve and Peabody as cops instantly.

โ€œWelcome back, Tonya. Howโ€™d it go today?โ€

Tonya flicked those tired eyes toward Bibi. โ€œGood enough.โ€ She held up a takeaway bag. โ€œBoss let me bring home some potato salad. Iโ€™m going to put it back in the kitchen.โ€

โ€œDid you make it?โ€

The woman flushed a little, nodded.

โ€œYou label that, โ€™cause I want a sample. Now, Shonda, since Sereneโ€™s nearly finished, Iโ€™m going to take our guests up to her office. You know how to give me a tap if you need help?โ€

โ€œSure. Iโ€™m supposed to log Tonya in, right?โ€ โ€œThatโ€™s exactly right.โ€

โ€œHow long have you been training on the desk?โ€ Peabody asked Shonda. โ€œItโ€™s my second day. Iโ€™m sorry Iโ€”โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re doing really well,โ€ Peabody interrupted.

โ€œYeah?โ€ Shonda beamed like a spotlight. โ€œThanks. If I learn everything and get good at it, I can get a job on the outside.โ€ She bit her lip again, sent Bibi a sidelong look. โ€œI mean in the city.โ€

โ€œGood luck.โ€

โ€œDo you mind if we take the stairs?โ€ Bibi asked. โ€œBoth elevators are acting up. We have someone working on them right now, but I donโ€™t trust them.โ€

โ€œStairs are fine,โ€ Eve told her, and followed her into the stairwell.

โ€œThat was kind of you,โ€ Bibi said to Peabody. โ€œShonda needs to build her confidence.โ€

โ€œI remember what it was like to start training, and be terrified youโ€™d screw everything up.โ€

โ€œI think the trainer bears some responsibility if that happens. She was extra nervous because youโ€™re police. So was Tonya. Iโ€™m sure you know that.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™re not here to hassle yourโ€ฆโ€

โ€œWe call them clients, Lieutenant. It lets them know weโ€™re providing them with a service. It takes awhile to lose the instinct to run at the sight of a cop.โ€

โ€œHow long did it take you?โ€

Now Bibi let out a laugh. โ€œOh, there are still times.โ€ They came out on the second floor.

โ€œWe have counseling rooms, some classrooms, some offices on this level. Downstairs, as you saw, the reception/check-in, a common area for gathering, the kitchen and communal dining hall. We have a sorting area on the second floor. For donations. Clothes, shoes, toiletries. In any case, Iโ€™m sure Serene will give you a tour if you want one.

โ€œShe should be finishing up.โ€ Bibi gestured to a closed door on three. โ€œA group session. Her office is at the end of the hall.โ€

Before they started down the hall, Eve glanced up. โ€œDo I hear singing?โ€ โ€œOld building, no soundproofing. But itโ€™s nice, actually. More

classrooms on the next level. Thatโ€™s our Songbirds. We have some good, strong voices, and some with hopes of making a living using theirs. We put on shows, here at Open Doors, at homeless shelters, rehab centers, convalescent centers, and so on.

โ€œThe fourth floor centers on the arts, vocal and instrumental musicโ€”we have some donated instrumentsโ€”arts and crafts, while here, itโ€™s counseling and some staff rooms. Rudimentary education on five. A lot of clients come to us barely literate, and many without enough English to get a decent- paying job. So reading, language, math skills.โ€

โ€œHow long have you worked here?โ€

Bibi paused outside another closed door. โ€œI did twelve years insideโ€”two stretches. They took my boy away, and were right to. I was an addict, doing more product than selling, selling my body to make up the difference, putting my boy through that. Stealing when I could. When I got out the first time, I went right back to it. Just one hit to smooth things over, right? I went back inside and, when I got out again, I knew I couldnโ€™t go back in. I knew Iโ€™d die if I went back.โ€

She opened the door to an office smaller than Eveโ€™s at Central, one with an old metal desk covered with disc files, a comp system that looked like somebody had cobbled it together the previous century, a single plastic visitorโ€™s chair.

A narrow counter held an old coffee makerโ€”no AutoChefโ€”and a small water bubbler.

โ€œMy parole officer told me about Open Doors. They were just really getting off the ground, but she thought it might work for me. I came here. Iโ€™d hit bottom, had nowhere else to go. I figured Iโ€™d put in a little time, just get my feet back under me again. That was twenty-six years ago. Open Doors saved my life, I absolutely know that as fact. I was twenty-two the first time I went in, and thirty-six when I buzzed in the first time downstairs. My son was just three when they took him from the woman I was. Took awhile for him to forgive me, and awhile for me to deserve that forgiveness. Heโ€™s a good man despite what I did to and didnโ€™t do for him. Iโ€™ve got two grandbabies, a family, a life, and a purpose. I wouldnโ€™t have any of that without Open Doors.โ€

Bibi glanced back at the sound of a door opening, of voices, footsteps. โ€œLooks like Sereneโ€™s finished. If youโ€™d wait a minute, Iโ€™ll go tell her youโ€™re at her office.โ€

She took a step away, hesitated. โ€œBack in the bad old days, one of my best customers was a cop.โ€

โ€œGot a name?โ€

Bibiโ€™s eyebrows winged up. โ€œIt was over forty years ago.โ€ โ€œGot a name?โ€ Eve repeated.

โ€œWell. Well. Let me think about that. Iโ€™ll get Serene.โ€ โ€œI wonder what their success rate is.โ€

โ€œThereโ€™s one.โ€ Eveโ€™s chin pointed after Bibi. โ€œIโ€™d say the one on the desk downstairs has a better than decent shot.โ€

She watched the woman walking toward them. She recognized Brenner from her mug shot, her ID shots. Mixed raced, dark brown hair pulled back in a tail, a thin face with wide, hooded hazel eyes and a blank expression as she approached.

โ€œLieutenant, Detective, Iโ€™m Serene Brenner. What can I do for you?โ€ โ€œWhy donโ€™t we take it in your office?โ€

โ€œAll right. Iโ€™ve got a one-on-one session in twenty minutes.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™ll try to keep it brief.โ€

โ€œI can offer you terrible coffee or water,โ€ she said, then gave Eve a long look as Eve closed the door behind them.

โ€œWeโ€™re good, thanks.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m having terrible coffee. Our budget doesnโ€™t stretch to what youโ€™re used to anyway. I know who you are. You were already Captain Feeneyโ€™s pet when I went inside.โ€

Eve thought that made the second time in one day someone called her a pet. โ€œPet?โ€

โ€œNo offense. I think youโ€™d already made detective before the cage door locked behind me. Come on, you bastard,โ€ she said to the coffee machine. โ€œOne more time. Iโ€™ve been out for two years, so I know your rep. There it is, one more cup of sludge.โ€

She took it, leaned back against her desk. โ€œAnd since I do, I have to figure youโ€™re here to talk to me about Captain Greenleaf.โ€

โ€œThen we can cut through it. Your whereabouts last night?โ€ โ€œMedia didnโ€™t give a TOD.โ€

Eve didnโ€™t hesitate. โ€œTwenty hundred hours.โ€

โ€œWell, shit.โ€ Fear snapped into her eyes before she closed them. โ€œI was out about that time. I live and work in the building. Sometimes you need to get out. I took a walk.โ€

โ€œAlone?โ€

โ€œThat was the point of the walk. Alone. Finished my last session, did some paperwork, had some dinner downstairs. Weโ€™ve got clients in training for food services. The foodโ€™s hit-and-miss, but we get plenty of hits. It had to be about seven-thirty when I went out. We have cams on the doors, so you can review that.โ€

Brenner took a long hit of coffee. โ€œIt had to be about that time. Iโ€™m going to tell you, without expecting you to believe me, I donโ€™t know where the captain lived.โ€

โ€œAbout three and a half blocks from here. Easy walk.โ€

โ€œI repeat, well, shit. Of course, close to Central. Makes sense.โ€

It came into her eyes, first the fear again, then a kind of resignation. โ€œHell of a time for me to take a walk. Thereโ€™s a park a few blocks south.

More of a playground, really, with benches for parents or nannies if youโ€™ve got one. I headed there, bought whatโ€™s actually pretty decent lemonade from

a cart, sat on a bench, let the day fall away. I do that a couple nights a week in good weather. Especially on a hard day.โ€

She swallowed some coffee. โ€œIt was a hard day. One of our clients got busted. Shoplifting, for fuckโ€™s sake, and she had illegals on her. Stupid, stupid. Iโ€™d worked hard with her, and thought weโ€™d made good progress. I was wrong, and I needed to let the day fall away.โ€

โ€œWhat time did you get back?โ€

โ€œBefore dark. Maybe about eight-thirty, I guess. Iโ€™d had enough alone. Bibi lives here, so does Kit. Weโ€™ve got an excuse for a staff room on three, separate from the common areas.โ€

She shrugged, but kept staring into her coffee.

โ€œSometimes the clients donโ€™t want you around, sometimes we donโ€™t want to be around the clients. The three of us sat in there, bitching to each other about Asterโ€”the busted clientโ€”then Kit said fuck this, went down, made popcorn, got tubes of Coke from our stashโ€”we have a stashโ€”and we watched some screen. A comedy. We needed to laugh. Iโ€™d say we all turned in about ten-thirty. I felt better. Then this morning, I heard about Greenleaf, and knew youโ€™d work your way to me.

โ€œDirty deeds leave a stain no matter how much you wash it out. And I did dirty deeds. No excuse.โ€

Could be bullshitting me, Eve thought, just like I bullshitted her on the time.

โ€œYou threatened him, and his family.โ€

โ€œDid I?โ€ Brenner shook her head, looked up to the ceiling. โ€œYeah, I probably did. Probably meant it at the time. I was scared, and I was pissed. A lot easier to be pissed than scared. Not my fault, right? Never my fault, because circumstances. So, obviously, his fault. Iโ€™m sure I threatened him. Probably offered to blow him, too, if he looked the other way. And I would have.โ€

Now she set the coffee aside. โ€œI fucked up, Lieutenant, Detective. I fucked up and I found out. I wanted to be a cop. I really wanted to be a cop, and I threw it away because I couldnโ€™t stop gamblingโ€”and losingโ€”and finding ways to justify what I did to pay off the losses and gambling some more.โ€

She shook her head. โ€œI fucked it all up. One of the things I found out inside? Mine wasnโ€™t the toughest. Women lost kidsโ€”I didnโ€™t have kids. Or

they ended up inside because theyโ€™d done desperate things just to survive. I had a job I wanted and worked and trained to get. A decent place to live. And I tossed it all aside, and I hurt people, stained the badge Iโ€™d wanted so much.โ€

She looked up again as thumping sounded above. โ€œDance class,โ€ she murmured.

She walked over for a tube of water as the thumpingโ€”reasonably rhythmicโ€”continued.

โ€œI heard about this place inside, from my counselor, my rehab counselor. When I got out, I came here because I was afraid Iโ€™d start gambling again. I wanted to. Still want to, but I didnโ€™t. And I havenโ€™t. I trained to counsel others, and Iโ€™m good at it. Better at it than I was on the job. You can look at my record here, talk to Dellaโ€”Della McRoy, the founder. This is hers. Sheโ€™s the reason for Open Doors.โ€

She scrubbed her hands over her face. โ€œI didnโ€™t go after Greenleaf. I canโ€™t say I wouldnโ€™t have years ago if Iโ€™d had the chance, because I convinced myself it was his fault. It had to be. Iโ€™ve long since accepted and acknowledged it was my fault. All of it. My choices, my actions. And I paid for those choices, those actions. I did my time.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™ll need to see the security feed for last night.โ€ โ€œSure. I canโ€™t remember whoโ€™s on the desk right now.โ€ โ€œThe trainee.โ€

โ€œRight, right, Shonda. She wonโ€™t know how to do that yet, and you wonโ€™t want me doing it. Bibi can get that for you.โ€

โ€œAll right. And will she and this Kit verify your whereabouts and actions from twenty-one hundred until twenty-one-thirty?โ€

โ€œYeah, butโ€”โ€

โ€œCaptain Greenleafโ€™s TOD was between twenty-one and twenty-one- thirty hours.โ€

Eve saw the shock that widened Brennerโ€™s eyes, then the relief that filled them. โ€œYou bullshitted me. Smart.โ€

โ€œMaybe. But we need to see the feed, and speak with the two people you were with at the time in question.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll set it up.โ€ She pressed her fingers to her eyes. โ€œOkay, okay. Iโ€™ll go set it up. Bibi can bring a copy of the feed in here, and you can use the office to interview her. Iโ€™ll find Kit.โ€

When she went out, Peabody looked at Eve. โ€œYou believe her.โ€ โ€œDo you?โ€

โ€œYes, and so do you.โ€ โ€œWhy?โ€

โ€œFor one thing, she went paleโ€”just lost her color when you gave her the earlier TOD, and her walk to the park rings true.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™ll check on this Aster, make sure of that.โ€

โ€œRight, but thatโ€™s going to check, and so is the hang out with her two coworkers, the vid, the whole thing. She didnโ€™t get pissy or try to evade, didnโ€™t say: Lawyer.โ€

โ€œAnd all of that could just be strategy.โ€

โ€œCouldโ€”and sheโ€™d have to have doctored the feed and convinced her two coworkers to cover for herโ€”for murder. You donโ€™t believe any of that.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t believe any of that. But we check, and we verify.โ€ And when they had, they moved on.

Another Chance and Darlie Tanaka didnโ€™t have an eight-story building. She ran her organization out of an oldโ€”post-Urban againโ€”warehouse. It didnโ€™t have a cheerful blue door, but it boasted exterior walls covered in graffiti and street art oddly lacking in obscenities and sexual content.

Decent security, Eve noted. Not high-end, just decent. No palm plates, no cams, but good, solid locksโ€”currently disengaged.

They walked into what struck Eve as a mash-up between a casual living room and friendly medical waiting area.

Tables, chairs, a small sofaโ€”all on the shabby sideโ€”a kidsโ€™ play area with cubbies holding various toys.

People sat around talking, sipping from short, clear glasses.

A long, scarred table served as a reception desk, currently manned by a male too young to buy a legal brew. His orange hair flopped down over one eye as he pecked carefully at the keyboard of an ancient comp, and with the focus of someone defusing a bomb.

When she stepped up, he studied her with one vividly green eye. โ€œDarlie Tanaka.โ€

โ€œOkay.โ€ He slid his rolly chair to the end of the table, shouted down a hallway. โ€œHey, Darlie. Iโ€™m sending a couple cops back to see you. Intercomโ€™s busted,โ€ he added to Eve.

โ€œWe didnโ€™t identify ourselves as police.โ€

He snorted. โ€œCome on, man.โ€

โ€œHow long have you worked here?โ€ โ€œOn staff? Like six months.โ€

โ€œHow old are you?โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll be nineteen in November. Iโ€™m legal. Whatโ€™re you hassling me for?โ€ โ€œNot. Just curious.โ€

โ€œDarlieโ€™s three down, on the left.โ€

With Peabody she walked down the hall. She judged it had once been an open area. To separate it into offices, storage, what looked like a small break room, theyโ€™d thrown up partitions, more or less like cube walls.

They found Darlie Tanaka in one of the makeshift offices, sitting at a desk that might just have come over on the ark. Notices, flyers, uplifting sayings, old posters of rockers (Avenue A featured) plastered the walls.

She held up a finger as she continued a conversation on her โ€™link.

โ€œJust two large, Nicko. Itโ€™d make a huge difference right now. Everybody poops, right? If we donโ€™t get the plumbing fixed, and fixed right this time, weโ€™re going to be swimming in it.โ€

She sat, swiveling in her chair as she talked. Her streaky hairโ€”white and grayโ€”fell in wildly careless waves past the shoulders of a T-shirt that read:

ALWAYS ONE MORE FUCK TO GIVE.

Sheโ€™d dyed her lips a bold red, had sharp dark eyes, and wore hoop earrings Eve thought she could put a fist through.

Those bold lips spread in a smile. โ€œI knew youโ€™d come through, Nicko. I dedicate my next poop to you. Cha.โ€

She clicked off, set down the โ€™link on a pile of folders.

โ€œSo, Dallas and Peabody. Have a seat. Itโ€™s begging day, which means I leave my pride at home. But youโ€™re here about Martin. I spoke with Beth right before she and the family left to see him. My wife and I are going by Carlieโ€™s when I can break away from here.โ€

โ€œYou were with Ms. Greenleaf and others on the night Captain Greenleaf was killed.โ€

โ€œYeah, our monthly meetup. We started as a book club. Jesus, has to be twenty, twenty-five years back. Then we admitted that was just an excuse to sit around, talk, drink a lot of wine. So we cut out the book club portion. Beth and I, original members. We go back. Weโ€™ve known each other longer than she knew Martin.โ€

โ€œAnd you and the captain were friends?โ€

โ€œWe had our differences.โ€ She smiled as she said it, even when grief showed in her eyes. โ€œIโ€™m an old activist and he was a cop down to the marrow, so we sure as hell didnโ€™t always see eye-to-eye.

โ€œAnd still โ€ฆ still. He supported what we do here. This desk?โ€ She knocked a fist on it. โ€œWas his fatherโ€™s. His old man gave it to him when Martin got out of the Academy, and Martin gave it to me when I started up here. He helped us set up. Since he retired, heโ€™d come in now and then, do some little repairs.

โ€œI loved the son of a bitch.โ€

โ€œHow did you meet Ms. Greenleaf?โ€

โ€œGun ban rally. Back then, there wasnโ€™t a rally, protest, march Iโ€™d walk away from. But this was a particular mission of mine. And hers. She was a teacher. Young, Jesus, we were both so young. Sheโ€™d survived a school shooting. One of her coworkers and two of her studentsโ€”twelve years old

โ€”didnโ€™t. So it was a particular mission of hers, too. She spokeโ€”passionate, eloquent. And I admit I found her very attractive.โ€

โ€œDid you have an intimate relationship?โ€

โ€œHoney, I donโ€™t hit on the straight, and she clearly was. But we hit it off, ended up going out for a drink after the rally. And that, as the line goes, was the beginning of a beautiful friendship. I stood up for her when she married Martin. She stood up for me when Flora and I got married.โ€

โ€œYou said you and Ms. Greenleaf were the original members of this group. How did the others come into it?โ€

โ€œOh, well, some have come and gone. Moved away, lost interest, got too busy. Thereโ€™s Pru, for instance. Pru wasnโ€™t there. She and her family spend the summer in Maine. I went to college with Pru. She married richโ€”nice guy, too. And itโ€™s a benefit for me, as she and her guy helped us buy this building. She swings in, mostly when we get together in the spring and fall. They spend most of the winter in Belize. Anyway, I brought Pru in, and Beth brought Anja in. Anjaโ€™s a hoot and a holler. A pediatrician who ought to be a comic. Beth met her when Anja came in to give a presentation at Bethโ€™s school. Then I brought Cass in. Cass is the daughter of the gallery owner where my wife shows her work. And of our current gang of girls, thereโ€™s Elva. Beth brought her in. She lives in Bethโ€™s building.โ€

โ€œYou know all of them well then.โ€

โ€œIโ€™d say. Well, Anja, weโ€™ve been friends for about thirty years. She makes me laugh, and our politics mesh. Not a requirement, but it doesnโ€™t hurt. I know if thereโ€™s a protest or march I want to support, I can count on Anja. Cass? Iโ€™ve known her since she was a kid, and I love every inch of her. Sheโ€™s here today, volunteering. Sheโ€™s got two kids, and sheโ€™s doing the pro parent thing. This gives her a chance to work, and we have a small day care set up for kids. Itโ€™s good for everyone.โ€

โ€œIs she available to speak with?โ€

โ€œSure. Sheโ€™d be next floor up, working with some of the Chancers on interview skills. One of our purposes is to help people find work, and stick.โ€

โ€œโ€˜Chancers.โ€™โ€

Darlie smiled. โ€œIt became a thing.โ€

โ€œPeabody, why donโ€™t you go talk to Ms. Bryer.โ€ Peabody rose. โ€œI really like your shirt, Ms. Tanaka.โ€ โ€œThanks. Somebodyโ€™s got to give a fuck.โ€

When Peabody went out, Darlieโ€™s โ€™link signaled. โ€œI really need to take this. Iโ€™ll be quick. Pru! I was just thinking about you. Yeah, yeah. I wasnโ€™t sure youโ€™d heard.โ€

Tears swam into her eyes again. She snatched up some tissues to wipe at them.

โ€œAs bad as it gets. Flora and I are going over tonight. I will,โ€ she said after a minute. โ€œIโ€™m talking to the police now.โ€

She let out a watery laugh, swiped at her damp eyes. โ€œYes, voluntarily. I will let you know, of course. Itโ€™ll mean a lot to her. No, babe, I really donโ€™t, butโ€” What?โ€

She sat back in her chair as if her limbs had gone weak. โ€œIโ€” Are you serious? Pruโ€” Oh my God, oh my God. Youโ€™re my goddess. Jesus, I canโ€™t tell you โ€ฆ Tell Sam โ€ฆ I donโ€™t have the words right now. Yes. Jesus, yes. Can I tag you back when Iโ€™m done here and can be more coherent? I love you. I love you both. Give me an hour, okay? Iโ€™ll tag you back. I love you,โ€ she said again.

When she clicked off, she pressed her fingers to her eyes. โ€œSorry, sorry,โ€ she said as they streamed. โ€œI need a minute. I just โ€ฆ this strange, wonderful, smack-talking girl I met in college just told me she and her

amazing husband, with the full support of their stupendous family, is giving us a quarter million dollars.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s very generous.โ€

โ€œShe saved us. They saved us. Shit, shit.โ€ She opened a drawer, pulled out more tissues. โ€œThis place is everything to me. This old building, in the last year, itโ€™s just โ€ฆ Get old, fall apart, you know. If you canโ€™t offer a safe place, you canโ€™t help. You must know, with Dochas, with An Didean, what it takes financially.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t. Roarke does.โ€

โ€œAnd I praise him for his combination of deep pockets, his glorious generosity, and his vision. I meant to tell you, you can check my bona fides with any of the staff at Dochas. We often work with them. Iโ€™m sorry for losing it. The combination of knowing she and Sam are going to come back for the memorialโ€”whenever it happensโ€”then this gift, it wiped me out.โ€

She dried her eyes, breathed out. โ€œSo, I donโ€™t know what else I can tell you.โ€

โ€œWe hadnโ€™t gotten to Elva Arnez. Sheโ€™d be the most recent addition to your group, right?โ€

โ€œYeah, just a year, if that. Gotta bring in that young, fresh blood, keeps us on our toes. Certainly I donโ€™t know Elva as well as the others, but weโ€™ve gotten to know one another. I give her grief for being a fashion plate and selling ridiculously expensive clothes to women who donโ€™t need more of them. She doesnโ€™t mind it. And sheโ€™s donated clothesโ€”damn good clothes the Chancers can use at interviews, at work. She even hired one of the women as a clerk about six months ago. Tawnyโ€™s still there, and doing very well.โ€

โ€œI suppose it would be natural for Ms. Arnez and Ms. Greenleaf to be closer, living in the same building.โ€

โ€œBeth jokes that Elva looks after herโ€”or tries. Checks when sheโ€™s doing any marketing to see if Beth needs something. Always walks with her to and from our get-togethers, that sort of thing. Itโ€™s sweet, but Bethโ€™s as self- sufficient as they come. Or was,โ€ she said. โ€œMartinโ€™s death will shake that. Sheโ€™ll be strong, but he was her true and abiding love. They were each otherโ€™s.โ€

โ€œWhenโ€™s the last time you were in Ms. Greenleafโ€™s bedroom?โ€

โ€œHer bedroom?โ€ Darlie looked blank. โ€œThatโ€™s a strange one. Iโ€™m not sure about that, butโ€” No, wait. Yes, I am, now that I think. Though I canโ€™t think why it matters. It had to be April, because Beth goes on a spring cleaning war. I mean war. As if her place isnโ€™t always spotless. But she goes to war, and part of the combat is cleaning out closets. She had clothes, shoesโ€”hers and Martinโ€™s. I went over to get them. Helped her box them up. It wouldโ€™ve been April. Why?โ€

โ€œJust details. Do you also work with Open Doors?โ€

โ€œYes, we do. Itโ€™s a wonderful and much-needed organization.โ€ โ€œSo you know Serene Brenner?โ€

โ€œAh โ€ฆ I donโ€™t think I do, but I work most directly with Della. Della and I also go back a few decades. Old activists. She founded Open Doors.โ€

When she heard Peabodyโ€™s clomp, Eve rose. โ€œI appreciate your time, your cooperation.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ve learned to cooperate with the cops when I have to. In this case, absolutely anything I can do. I loved Martin, truly loved him.โ€

โ€œDo you know of anyone whoโ€™d want to harm him?โ€

โ€œI imagine there were scores, and many of them once held badges. But you know that. I donโ€™t know specifics. Martin didnโ€™t talk about his work with me, not in detail. But Iโ€™m glad itโ€™s you, and your partner,โ€ she added as Peabody stepped into the doorway, โ€œwhoโ€™re looking for who did this. Iโ€™ve enjoyed Nadine Furstโ€™s books, very much.โ€

โ€œRight.โ€ Eve turned to go, turned back. โ€œDo you also work with Sebastian?โ€

As her lips curved, Darlie tapped a crooked finger on them. โ€œI believe Iโ€™m about to take the Fifth.โ€

โ€œFigured. Thanks again.โ€

Peabody waited until theyโ€™d walked outside. โ€œShe couldnโ€™t really add anything, Dallas. She cried a littleโ€”tried not to. She went over the night in question and all that. It all jibes. I asked her when she was last in the bedroom, and she said the week before Christmas. The Greenleafs had a party, and everybody put their coats on the bed in there.โ€

โ€œTheyโ€™re not in this. See if you can reach the last oneโ€”Anja Abbottโ€”by โ€™link. Run her through it. If you get any buzz, weโ€™ll follow up in person.โ€

โ€œYou got it.โ€

โ€œShit,โ€ she said when she checked the time. โ€œLook, what Iโ€™m going to do is drop you homeโ€”weโ€™re close enough. Then Iโ€™ll go home and finally update Whitney by holo, start digging more on the dead and disgraced cop list.โ€

โ€œOkay, but โ€ฆ Weโ€™re really close to the house, too. Maybe you could drop me there instead, and just take a quick look? Like, fifteen minutes? Iโ€™ll tag McNab and weโ€™ll put in more time on the list, get you more names.โ€

Since Eve considered it a pretty good deal, she pulled out her โ€™link. โ€œLet me tell Roarke what Iโ€™m doing. Weโ€™re already past end of shift.โ€

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