continued the dignity with navy and cream tiles for the floor, navy walls with cream trim, a discreet security desk—currently unmanned—a couple of curved padded benches, and fresh, springy-looking flowers in tall, slim vases.
Eve called for an elevator while she filled in Peabody.
“Wit’s coming home from a girl party, sees McEnroy on the sidewalk, runs in, gets Vance, her fianc é . He goes out, verifies, calls it in. Nine-one-one logged at four-thirty-eight, first on scene arrived in two minutes. Vic’s also a resident of this building—or has a residence here. He’s a Brit, owns, with partners, some sort of international, interplanetary headhunter firm. Married, two offspring.”
“Wife,” Peabody said.
“Yeah.” She stepped into the elevator. “We’ll see if she’s in residence after we talk to the wits.”
“Didn’t keep his marriage vows,” Peabody said. “If she did it, she left a really big clue with that note.”
“Yeah, well, people do the weird when they’re pissed, and Lady Justice was seriously pissed. But … unless the wife’s a moron, she’s going to have a damn good alibi.”
Eve stepped off, started down the quiet corridor on long legs. She noted security cams. “Let’s get the security feed for the vic’s floor, for the elevators, the lobby, the exterior.”
She rang the bell at 603, flashed her badge for the uniform—young, male, fresh of face—who answered the door. “I’ve got this, Officer Rigby. Contact the building security or supervisor. We want the feed for the cams on the victim’s floor, the elevators, the lobby, and the exterior.”
“For what period of time, sir?”
“Forty-eight hours if they have it. Then start the knock-on-doors.”
“Yes, sir.”
She let him go, gave the couple huddled together on a long, shimmery green gel sofa a quick study.
The female—late twenties—had long, curly, coppery hair. Eyes nearly the same color showed signs of weeping and shock in a face pale and scrubbed clean of the enhancements she’d surely have worn for the night out.
She wore simple gray cotton pants, a long-sleeved shirt, and house skids as she clung to the buff, mixed-race male of about the same age.
He cast soulful brown eyes at Eve. “I hope this won’t take long. Tish needs to sleep.”
“I’m afraid to close my eyes. I know I’ll see…” She pressed her face into Vance’s broad shoulder.
“I know this is difficult, Ms. Feinstein, and we’ll keep this as brief as possible. I’m Lieutenant Dallas, this is Detective Peabody. We’re Homicide.”
“I guess I know. My friend Lydia’s brother’s a cop in Queens. I almost called him. We sort of dated when we were in high school, but…”
“Why don’t you just tell us what happened? Start with where you were tonight.”
“We were all over,” Feinstein began.
“I’m sorry,” Vance interrupted. “Please sit down. Do you want coffee or anything?”
“That’d be great.” And would give him something to do, Eve thought. “Black for me, coffee regular for my partner.”
“How about some more tea, cutes?”
Feinstein smiled. “Thanks, Clip. I don’t know what I’d do without you.”
“Never have to find out. Just take me a minute.”
He rose, moved quietly from the room. Feinstein curled up defensively.
“So, your evening?”
“We were all over. It was my stag party. We’re getting married next Friday. The limo picked me up about nine. There were fourteen of us, and we club hopped, you know? Clip’s deal is tomorrow night. So anyway, we finished up with the all-male revue at Spinner’s downtown. I know it sounds like—”
“A fun time with girlfriends,” Peabody finished with a smile.
“It was.” Feinstein’s eyes filled. “It really was. Some of us have been friends since forever, and I’m the first of our group to get married. So we did it big, and we drank a lot and laughed a lot, and the limo started dropping us off. I was the last one, and I had