After sheโd gathered what she needed, Eve met Peabody outside Interview B.
โYou take him,โ Eve said, and handed Peabody the evidence box and files.
โWhat? Me? Oh, you want me to soften him up, play good, caring cop so you can come in hard.โ
โNo. I want you to take him, hard, soft, however you need to take him.โ Eve opened the door. From the table, Robards looked up with red-
rimmed eyes.
โRecord on. Dallas, Lieutenant Eve, and Peabody, Detective Delia, entering Interview with Robards, Denzel, on the matter of case files H- 6759, FA-12829, CM-4921, and related charges.โ
Eve took a seat.
โHave you been read your rights, Mr. Robards?โ Peabody asked. โI donโt know whatโs going on. Iโโ
โPlease answer the question.โ She snapped it out, whip sharp. โYeah, they did that, butโโ
โDo you understand your rights and obligations in these matters?โ
โI understand that, but I donโt understand anything else. I need to talk to Elva. Nobody will let me talk to her.โ
โWe might be able to arrange that later.โ Peabody chose the brisk, all- business cop. โRight now, you need to talk to us.โ
Peabody opened a file. โHow long have you known Elva Arnez?โ โNineteen months. And two weeks,โ he added.
โAnd how, in that amount of time, did she convince you to kill Captain Greenleaf and his son, Benjamin Greenleaf?โ
โSheโhowโโ He pressed his lips together. Hugged his elbows. โThatโs crazy! Thatโs just batshit. Sheโd never, never do that. Elvaโs a beautiful soul, aโa tender heart.โ
Peabody folded her hands over the file. โAre you claiming you convinced her to murder these people?โ
โWe didnโt kill anybody! I donโt know howโwhy,โ he corrected, โyouโd say something like that. We were friends with Martin and Ben.โ
โMakes it worse, doesnโt it, Lieutenant? Even worse that these two shit stains would use friendship, a family that opened their homes to them, in order to kill.โ
โIt does. What do you figure, Detective? Two consecutive life terms, off- planet? They could actually end up with three.โ
โI figure the three. Either way, neither of them will ever get out of a cage. An off-planet cage.โ
โWe didnโt do anything! Itโs whacked, totally whacked you think we did.โ
Obviously shaken, he leaned forward as if desperate to explain.
โJesus, Elva wasnโt even there when Martin died. Youย knowย that. And youโre trying to say murder when it was suicide. Because he was a cop, like you. And Beth wonโt get the insurance money if you say he killed himself. Weโre sorry it happened, butโโ
He broke off, jolted when Peabody shoved to her feet. โBullshit!โ She tossed crime scene printouts on the table. He winced, looked away.
โWhat? Youโre shy about looking at your handiwork? Canโt look at the dead body of a man you called friend? You think we donโt know what weโre doing? You really think weโre so stupid weโd buy your half-assed setup?โ
โI donโt know what youโre talking about.โ A line of sweat dribbled down his left temple, and his gaze jumped everywhere except for the photos of the dead.
โReally? Then Iโll walk your lying ass through it. Your Elva unlocked the bedroom window in yourย friendโsย apartment. And when she gave you the all clearโweโve got your โlinks, assholeโyou went down the fire escape, went through the window. You walked through the apartment where youโd been welcomed, put a stunner on high against yourย friendโsย throat, and murdered him in cold blood.โ
โThatโs crazy.โ And while sweat continued to roll, he began to shudder as if he sat in a brisk winter wind. โYouโll never prove that because itโs crazy. Martin killed himself. Itโs sad, but itโsโโ
โYou put his fingers on the weapon, dropped it, just like Elva told you. But youโre idiots who know squat about basic science and forensics. Look how clear these two prints are on the weapon.โ
Peabody jabbed her finger on the crime scene shot.
โNo prints to show heโd handled the weapon, no prints to show heโd checked or set the weapon on high. What, you think weโd buy heโd wiped the stunner clean before he used it?โ
โHeโhe must have. Heโโ
โBullshit. Just two prints, so clear and pristine on the weapon? Couldnโt be clear and pristine, physically impossible, with a self-termination.โ
โI donโt understand whatโโ
โDamn right you donโt, even though you stood there and watched him convulse, you donโt understand. Thatโs why you fucked it up.
โHow did it feel?โ she demanded. โHow did it feel to jam that stunner against his throat, jam it hard, hold it there while his body convulsed? While you watched him die. How did it feel?โ
Tears streamed to plop like rain on the table. โNo. I didnโt.โ
โYes, you did. You jammed that stunner so hard, held it there so the probes lacerated the skin. Did it seem quick to you, those few seconds it took?โ
Squeezing his eyes shut, Robards shook his head.
โAnd when his body stopped convulsing, you pressed his fingers to the weapon for those two clear, perfect prints, just like Elva told you. You wrote what sheโd told you to write. Then you went back upstairs, signaled her it was done, just like she told you. You didnโt know Detective Webster was coming, didnโt know weโd discover his body so quickly. You barely missed each other.โ
She circled the table, stood behind him. โEven that wouldnโt have mattered because youโreย stupid.โ
โAnd cruel,โ Eve murmured.
โOh yeah, canโt forget the cruel. You left him there for the woman whoโd loved him for decades and decades to find. The woman whoโd cooked for you, invited you to family dinners, holidays. You wanted to hurt her.โ
Tears ran down his face, mixed with the sweat. โI never wanted to hurt Beth!โ
โBut you had to, didnโt you? You had to hurt Beth to give Elva what she wanted. I mean, hell, what choice did you have? But even that wasnโt enough. You stood at the captainโs memorial, pretending to feel griefโyou donโt have feelings. And in his daughterโs home, you used a childโaย child
โto try to kill his son.โ
โNo. No. You donโt know that. Youโre just making things up. Thatโs what cops do.โ
Peabody tossed a photo of the rope taken from the kitchen closet. โWe found this in your apartment.โ
โIโitโs just some rope.โ
โItโs cut from the rope used when you tried to hang Ben Greenleaf.โ โItโs not.โ
โIt is. Our lab verified.โ Not yet, Peabody thought, but they would. โOh, and how about these? You had these in your closet.โ
She set the two โlinks on the table. โIโฆโ
โWhere did you get them?โ
โI just found them. I found them.โ
โReally, you found this one in Dory Greenleafโs little purse, on the bar in the family room of her auntโs house? And this one? You just happened to find that in her fatherโs pocket before you put a noose around his neck?โ
โNo, no, I โฆ found them on the street.โ โWhen?โ
โYesterday, I think.โ
โYou think?โ she snapped out. โYou think?โ
โYesterday!โ Terror in his eyes, he shouted it. โI found them yesterday.โ โWhen yesterday? Where exactly on the street?โ
โIโฆโ
โQuick! Two disabled โlinks that just happen to belong to the man you tried to murder and his daughter. Where, when, how?โ
โI donโt know! I want to talk to Elva!โ
โYouโre not going to talk to Elva. Maybe, just maybe, when sheโs in the womenโs lockup off-planet and youโre in the menโs, theyโll let you write love letters to each other.โ
โSheโs not going to prison. You canโt do that to her. You wonโt!โ
โOh, yes. Yes, she is. Yes, we can and, yes, we will. She planned it all out, she told you just what to do, and you obeyed like a lovesick puppy. You did this for a woman who doesnโt love you. She still loves the boy who died nearly ten years ago.โ
โThatโs a lie!โ Fury burned through the tears, and the hands heโd clutched together pounded on the table. โYouโre a liar, like all cops are liars. Weโre going to get married. Weโre going to make a family.โ
โNo conjugal visits between inmates off-planet. Tell us how it went down, Denzel. Maybe we can work it so you do the time on-planet, so your mother, your sisters can visit. Sheโs going down, no way to change that.โ
โSheโs not! She didnโt do anything. IโI did it all. I killed Martinโ youโre covering it up. Youโre covering up everything he did to ruin her life. I hung Ben. I did it all. She had nothing to do with it. She didnโt even know.โ
โIs that right? Howโd you get the window open? Howโd you manage to lift a hundred-and-eighty-five-pound unconscious man up to hang him? Whereโd you get the service weapon?โ
Tears still ran, but he folded his lips. โI did what I did. Iโm not saying anything else. I killed Martin and I tried to kill Ben. Elva wasnโt part of it.โ
โYouโre going to take the fall for a woman who doesnโt love you. Who used you to do her dirty work.โ
โShe loves me. I saved her. Thatโs all Iโm going to say.โ
โYour white charger looks really tired, Denzel. Interview end.โ As he laid his head on the table and wept, they stepped out. โGood work, mean-ass Peabody.โ
Peabody rubbed at the back of her neck. โI started feeling sorry for him
โbut I didnโt let it stop me. Itโs what you expected him to do.โ
โYeah. We can trip him up on the details later, because none of itโs going to hold. Have him taken back down; have her brought up. Seriously, good work.โ
โThanks.โ
Reo stepped out of Observation with Mira. โA fool for love,โ she said.
โAnd a killer with it.โ
โHe didnโt plan any of it.โ Mira walked with Eve as she stared holes through a vending machine. โHeโs a follower. And he feels remorse.โ
โShe wonโt. I donโt trust this machine. Or any of them. Iโm getting a cold drink from my AC.โ
โAllow me. Youโre handing me a solid case on two cop killers. Whatโll it be?โ Reo asked.
โPepsi.โ
โRemorse or notโโReo plugged in coinsโโheโs going off-planet, and heโll never get out.โ She handed the tube to Eve.
โThanks.โ
โPeabody kicked butt in there.โ
โSheโs got it in her. Somebody like him though? It costs her some.โ She cracked the tube, drank deep.
โYou, too,โ Mira said.
โNo, doesnโt cost me. Iโm just tired of the whole fucking mess. Itโs so senseless. A lot of them are, but this? Sheโs spent nearly ten years of her life plotting and planning and calculating how to murder, to revenge a dirty cop and a boy who didnโt love her. Any more than she loves the stupid fuck who killed for her.
โI need to set up for Arnez.โ
As she walked to her office, she pulled out her โlink.
โWe have them,โ she said to Webster without preamble. โYou made an arrest?โ
โTwo. Have one confessionโhalf bullshit. Weโre about to bring the second into Interview. If you want to observe, get here.โ
โWho?โ
โThe Greenleafsโ friends and upstairs neighbors. I donโt have time to brief you, Webster. Interview B, Observation. Hear it for yourself.โ
She cut him off, and cooled her throat with Pepsi.
Sheโd take a few minutes to collect herself, she thought. Just level off. Maybe, as usual, Mira had it right. Maybe the interview with Robards had cost herโa little.
But mostly it infuriated her.
She could go into the box with Arnez pissed off. As long as the anger held well under the surface. The job wasnโt about her feelings, but about law, about justice.
So sheโd take a few minutes to collect herself, to drink the damn Pepsi, to stand at her window and look out at New York.
Street traffic snarled, and the airtrams glided by. Drivers, passengers heading home after the workday. Her work wasnโt done, but when it was, sheโd go home. And sheโd shake it all off.
One more time.
She didnโt hear him come, not when he moved, always, like the cat burglar heโd been. But she sensed him as he stepped into her office.
He angled his head, those wild blue eyes on her face. โYou donโt look like a woman who was right all along and made two arrests.โ
โI am a woman who was right and made two arrests. Iโve got Arnez and her lawyer coming up to Interview. Iโm finished with Robards.โ
โIโm sorry I missed it.โ
โDonโt be. Heโs pathetic, pitiful. Heโs an idiot.โ She set the tube down before she hurled it.
โI had Peabody take him. She did good. She broke him.โ โAll right.โ
โIt was all there. All of it.โ She walked to her comp when it signaled. โIncluding this. Lab report on the rope we found in the goddamn kitchen closet of their apartment. Rope cut from the length they used to try to hang Ben Greenleaf. He had their โlinksโBenโs and his kidโsโin his closet. Not the bedroom, because that closetโs all hers. The home office closet where he keeps his clothes, and pictures of his family because she doesnโt want to see them.
โAnd what does he do when Peabody breaks him? When tears are running down his face? He claims Arnez had nothing to do with it, no knowledge of it. He did it all on his own. Just him, in his shiny, blood- streaked armor.โ
โYou wonโt let that stand.โ
โFucking A. Itโs all her, just like that apartmentโs all her. They live where she wanted, how she wanted. He can have his things, as long as she doesnโt have to see them. She has a man who loves her enough to kill for her, and she uses that. You better believe she recognized that and exploited it. And she uses him to kill, to exact revenge for a dirty, corrupt cop who couldnโt face the consequences, and a boy who decided heโd rather blame everyone else and die.โ
She shut her eyes. โThe boy didnโt have to die. Shouldnโt have died. But nobody saw he was on the edge, not even the mother who loved him and was trying so hard to hold her family together.โ
She opened eyes full of rage and pity. โAnd Arnez, because she couldnโt see past it, kept him on the edge with her drumbeat of payback. Her need to be the one the boy turned to, held on to.
โThe boy didnโt love her; the man she used to kill did. It didnโt matter. Doesnโt matter. Sheโd let the man who loves her take the fall for her. I wonโt.โ
Saying nothing, Roarke stepped to her, put his arms around her. โIโm fine. Iโm okay.โ
โYou will be.โ
โRobards loves her. Instead of saying, โSorry, donโt feel the same,โ so he could move on, or building a real life with him, she uses him to get what she wants. What sheโs wanted for almost ten years. Now heโll spend the rest of his life in a cage.โ
โYouโll see she does as well. Iโve no doubt youโre right and she used and exploited his feelings for and about her. But he chose, Eve.โ
โHe chose.โ Nodding, she drew back. โHis life, as he knew it, is over.
Now itโs her turn.โ
โGo take her down, Lieutenant.โ
She walked back to Interview B. โReady, Peabody?โ
โReady. Her lawyerโs Marcelle Congera. I did a quick search and sheโs low-rent. Sheโs handled some misdemeanorsโpublic intoxication, disturbing the peace, and a bunch of civil suits. Nothing heavy.โ
โLetโs make sure Arnez gets what she paid for.โ โYou donโt want me to take her.โ
โNot this time. Sheโs mine.โ
Eve opened the door. โRecord on,โ she began, and read the details for the record before she sat.
If she felt a smug little thrill seeing Arnez in the orange jumpsuit, well โฆ she could be petty.
The lawyer wore a pale blue suit. About forty, Eve judged, with a long, thin neck, her shoulder-length black hair swept back from a sharp-featured, disapproving face.
โYou humiliated my client at her place of employment, an act that could cost her her position, and did so in your aggressive attempt to find a scapegoat over a retired police officerโs death. We intend to pursue a civil suit.โ
โOh, well, in that case โฆ Bring it. Your client will be pursuing her bullshit civil suit from a cage on Omega.โ
โDonโt be ridiculous.โ Congera pursed her thin lips. โI intend to file a motion of dismissal, all charges, and another for false arrest.โ
โFile all the motions you wantโbut Iโd get a solid retainer before I did any work. Iโve got this feeling, Peabodyโdo you have this feeling?โthat Ms. Congeraโs client hasnโt been fully truthful and forthcoming with her legal representative.โ
โI share that feeling.โ
โFor instance,โ Eve said, โI wonder if Ms. Congeraโs client disclosed that she had a close connection to Louis Noy and his familyโincluding his son, Brice. She sure as hell didnโt disclose same when questioned after Captain Greenleafโs murder.โ
โI fail to seeโโ
โThen get your eyes fixed,โ Eve suggested. โCaptain Greenleaf investigated Louis Noyโformerly Captain Louis Noy of the NYPSDโfor corruption, extortion, witness and evidence tampering, among other things.โ
โThatโs hardlyโโ
โNot quite finished. Louis Noy killed himself, at his desk, in his home office, with his service weapon. Brice Noy, at nineteen, hanged himself. They remembered youโEllieโElla and Taylor Noy remembered you very well. Funny you didnโt mention this connection.โ
โWhy would I? It was years ago. They were acquaintances. How would I possibly know Martin investigated Captain Noy? Why would I care?โ
โAcquaintances?โ She took out the prom photo, the preserved corsage.
โTheyโve been through my things, my personal things.โ Fury rose red and hot over Arnezโs cheeks. Her eyes blazed with it.
โA duly executed search.โ Eve set the warrant on the table. โAnd look here. You even kept the prom dress.โ Eve plopped the bagged dress on the table. โAnd oh, hereโs another thing.โ She took out the sealed โlink. โTags and texts on this old model you kept in your treasure box.โ
โThose are my personal property. You have no right to my personal property.โ She rounded on Congera. โFix this!โ
โA duly executed search,โ Eve repeated. โTags and texts between you and Brice Noy. Intense tags and texts after his fatherโs disgrace, after the suicide. You knew who Martin Greenleaf was when you moved into the building.โ
Congera looked a bit off-balance, but she rallied. โSouvenirs from nearly a decade ago are hardly evidence of a crime. Any more than my clientโs acquaintance with someone Martin Greenleaf once investigated is evidence of a crime. Youโve overreached, Lieutenant.โ
โThey went through my things.โ Arnez pounded a hand on the table. โDo something! Do your job.โ
โMs. Arnez.โ Congera patted her arm as if to soothe. โThey had a warrant, but this? This means nothing. Mementos from your teenage years. Theyโre reaching.โ
โYeah, we reached into that treasure box and found all these photos. Lots of themโall of the Noy family. Nobody else but you and the Noy family. No other friends, no other families, teachers, pets, whatever. Just you and your โฆ acquaintances.โ
โIf this is all you have, Lieutenant, Iโll go file my motion to dismiss.โ
โI wouldnโt be too hasty,โ Eve warned as Congera started to rise. โYou want something more current? Letโs see what we have in our NYPSD treasure box. What do you think, Peabody?โ
โOh yeah.โ Peabody nodded when Eve took out the photos. โThose are gold.โ
โI canโt show you the actual ropes, as theyโre on their way into Evidence from the lab. Got the lab report right here though. See this length of rope? Thatโs the one used to hang Ben Greenleaf in his sisterโs home at their fatherโs memorial. And this one?โ
Eve nudged them both over. โThatโs the rope we found in your clientโs kitchen closet during our duly authorized search. As you see in the lab report, same rope, and the cuts on the end of each? Perfect match.โ
โIโve never seen that rope before. I wasnโt even there when Ben was attacked.โ
โSure you were, because you attacked him. How about these?โ Eve took out the two โlinks. โThis one you took out of Benโs pocket after you bashed
him in the head with his nieceโs baseball trophy. And this one? His daughterโs, the one you took from her purse and used to text him, as if from her, to lure him upstairs so you could kill him.โ
โThese are outrageous accusations.โ But Congera no longer looked convinced.
โIโve never seen those โlinks. Obviously they planted them. Fix this! You fix this or youโre fired!โ
โWeโre not Louis Noy,โ Eve snapped. โThe dirty cop you made into a hero, a daddy substitute. And you were there. You shut down the security, stole the kidโs โlink, said your goodbyes before you slipped upstairs. Texted Ben, knocked him unconscious from behind, and, while he was out, put the noose around his neck, left him hanging. You went out through the master bedroom, the terrace doors, and out through the side gate.
โThe trouble?โ Eve continued. โWebster, again. He went up to check on Ben, found him, saved his life.โ
โI was nowhere near Carlieโs house when Ben was attacked. Denzel will swear to that.โ
โWellโฆโ Eve shrugged. โHe had his chance, didnโt. We already interviewed him.โ
โThen heโsย lying! Lying to protect himself. If heโs done these horrible things, itโs not my fault.โ
โHuh. If heโs lying and he tried to kill Ben, how could he have done it alone if you were together?โ
Arnezโs eyes flicked once before she dug in. โAfter we left the memorial, Denzel told me to go on home, that he had to run a few errands. I had a terrible headache, so I went home, took a sleeping pill.โ
Sheโd bury him without a secondโs hesitation, Eve thought. Because itโs all about her.
โI wonder why the security cams at your apartment building donโt show you coming home alone. I wonder why they show both you and Robards entering the building, together, less than thirty minutes after Ben was attacked.โ
โIโI meant I took a walk to try to clear my head.โ Casting her eyes down, she rubbed her temple. โItโs been a terrible few days. I took a walk, and Denzel caught up with me. Then I went in, took the pill.โ
โSo, somehow he doubled backโon his ownโwent back into the house, set Ben up, bashed him, then managedโon his ownโto haul a hundred- and-eighty-five-pound unconscious man a foot off the ground. Then he left, and miraculously ran into you in time for the two of you to enter the apartment building together.โ
โIโm not saying he did any of that. Iโm saying I didnโt. I certainly didnโt kill Martin. I was with Beth and the others.โ
โItโs interesting, I think, that ninety-eight seconds after security shows you leaving the building on the night of Martin Greenleafโs murder, you texted Robards.ย All clear, you texted. We have your โlinks, too.โ
โSo what? Just letting him know we were on our way to the bar.โ
โRight. And also interesting, some seven minutes after time of death, Robards texted you.ย Itโs done.ย You answered with a heart emoji.โ
โI โฆ Iโd asked him to tidy up. Heโd left a mess, and I was annoyed. He just wanted me to know heโd done that.โ
โObviously, my client has already proven she was elsewhere when Captain Greenleaf was killed. Thereforeโโ
โYou unlocked the window. You know Bethโs habitsโyouโve made a point to. Into the bedroom, and sheโs fussing with shoes. Unlock the window with access to the fire escape. You text the all clear. Robards texts you itโs done.โ
โYou canโt prove any of that. Itโs absurd.โ
โYou used one of Noyโs drop weapons. Did he give it to youโfor protection maybeโthe way he slipped you money now and again? Men like him like to buy loyalty. He sure bought yours.โ
โSay nothing, Ms. Arnez. Lieutenant, I want to consult with my client.โ โHe never loved you. Brice never loved you.โ
Eve said it quietly, and saw it hit home.
โHe didnโt keep a box with photos of you, of mementos to take out and look at, and think of you. He brought you home because he felt sorry for youโโ
โLiar. Liar.โ
โHe liked people, liked being with them, helping them. He liked girls. He didnโt like you the way he liked other girlsโso many of them. You mustโve hated them, the girls he spent time with instead of spending it with you.โ
โYou donโt know anything about it.โ
โI think I do. He took you to the prom.โ Eve laid a hand on the dress. โAnd told his sister he was taking you because you didnโt have any friends. A pity date.โ
โThatโs a lie.โ She hissed it out. โYou didnโt know Brice. You donโt know anything about him.โ
โIโve been getting to know the boy he was, so handsome, so bright. Kind. A boy from a happy family with a father at the head of it. You wanted him, wanted that family, that father. So you stuck, you had a goal. Brice was the goal.โ
โLieutenant,โ Congera interrupted. โThis is pure speculation.โ
โConclusions based on evidence. You inserted yourself into his family to achieve that goalโand maybe found something in Noy you didnโt have. That daddy figure. You inserted yourself into the Greenleaf family because you had a goal. Kill Captain Greenleaf, make it look like suicide, mirror your hero. Pay Greenleaf back. Not finished yet. Kill the son, mirror the boy you loved, pay them all back.
โKill a good man, try to kill his son, all in memory of a boy who never loved you. He just felt sorry for you.โ
โHeย didย love me! You knowย nothing. Brice loved me. We were soul mates. We were going to get married, have a family. He wasย everythingย to me.โ
Sitting back, Eve smiled. โThat sounds like a lot more than an acquaintance.โ
โMs. ArnezโElvaโplease donโt say anything else. Let meโโ Arnez smacked Congeraโs hand away.
โSheโs not going to get away with saying those lies. Martin Greenleaf destroyed the best man I ever knew. He destroyed myย family! He killed the only one Iโll ever love. And for what? For what? For his rules, his regulations, his righteous line of right and wrong? Why should he have a life? Why should he have a happy family? Where is mine?โ
โYou used one of Noyโs drop weapons. Did he give it to you or did you take it?โ
โI took it. Why shouldnโt I have something? His wife, his daughter, all they could do was cry. They wereย ashamedย of Louis. Ashamed. I stood up for him. Brice and I stood up for him. I was more a daughter to him than
that sniveling little brat. And his wife? Saint fucking Ella? She just forgets him, forgets him and her own son? Marries someone else. They can go to hell, just like Greenleaf.โ
โYou planned it all out, the timing, the method. Did Denzel help with that?โ
โDenzel canโt plan his way out of a grease-soaked job in someone elseโs garage. I gave my father and the man I love justice.โ
It was all there, Eve thought, all there in that striking face. The fury, the hate, all the bitter years of them.
โStep one, get an apartment in the building. Step two, become friends. That leads to step three, get to know the family, earn their affection and trust, learn their routines. It really pissed you off when Ella Noy married Cal Rosen. She didnโt even invite you to the wedding.โ
โAs if Iโd have gone. Love is forever. She disgraced herself and the memory of her husband, her son. I thought better of her. I was wrong. She tossed them aside. Well, I didnโt.โ
โHow did you talk Denzel into going along with murder?โ
โNot murder. Justice. He understands what Martin did, how he destroyed my family. Heโll do anything for me.โ
โIโm withdrawing as counsel for Ms. Arnez. Ms. Arnez, I advise you to remain silent and consult another attorney immediately.โ
โOh, fuck you. You had one job and couldnโt do it.โ
โFormer counsel for Ms. Arnez exiting Interview,โ Eve said. โYouโre entitled to legal representation.โ
โAnd Iโll do better next time. Much better. I did what needed to be done, and Iโll find a lawyer whoโll make that clear. Louis and Brice would be proud of me.โ
Weโll play that tune, Eve thought.
โIโm sure Louis Noy would be proud, proud of how well you planned it out. You chose a night youโd have an unassailable alibi,โ Eve began. โYou unlocked the bedroom window to give Robards, your partner, access to Captain Greenleafโs apartment.โ
โYes, yes, yes.โ
โWhen you sent the all clear, Robards entered by that unlocked window via the fire escape. He used the weapon youโd taken from Noy after Noyโs death, and killed Martin Greenleaf. He left the drop piece, after putting the
captainโs prints on it, wrote the suicide note, and exited by the same window.โ
โThis is boring,โ Arnez decided.
โWonโt take much longer. The glitch in the plan. Detective Webster, who arrived shortly after, and brought me into it. And weโre there when you return with the widow. You canโt get back into the bedroom and lock the window.โ
โIt was perfect. It shouldโve been perfect. It didnโt matter about the damn lock. I wasnโt there.โ
โSince the suicide plan didnโt work, you felt you needed to move on Ben quickly. Is that right?โ
โWhy wait? Letโs not waste time now, either. Denzel shut down the security. I got the little bratโs โlink, sent the whiny text after we got upstairs. Daddy came right along. Bang on the headโthat was my pleasure. String the asshole up, go outโyou figured out how. That shouldโve worked, too. He should be dead, like my Brice.โ
โThe rope, the โlinks?โ
โOversights. We werenโt suspects, should never have been looked at twice. How did you connect me to Louis and Brice?โ
โWeโre cops. We do our job.โ
โCaptain Louis Noy was a cop, and wouldโve crushed you like a bug.โ
Now Eve smiled. โYouโre welcome to think so. Maybe itโll get you through the first few decades in an off-planet cage.โ
โI levied justice for two good men. My father and my lover. No one whoโs ever loved would convict me.โ
โHereโs a media bulletin,โ Eve said as she rose. โNoy was neither a good man nor your father. The subject has confessed on record, all charges. Have her taken down, Peabody. Sheโs entitled to other legal representation if she chooses. Interview End.โ
As she walked to the door, Eve glanced back. Yeah, she thought. She could be petty.
โI bet Brice Noy never banged you. Not even a pity bang.โ Arnez looked at her with dead eyes. โIโll kill you one day.โ
โYou go right ahead and believe that. Maybe itโll get you through the decades after the first few.โ