Изменить стиль страницы

“For the last three days, with Duncan Hatcher.”

He was taken aback, then gave a burst of laughter. “Delicious. Positively delicious. The last time I saw him, he was at wits’ end. I teased him about his crush on you. I thought it was unrequited.” He arched his eyebrow eloquently. “I guess not.”

Laughing again, he said, “I can understand why he would want in your pants. But for the life of me, I can’t imagine what you find attractive about him. Granted, he has a certain animal magnetism. Those shoulders. The square jaw. But he’s so tiresomely good, Elise,” he said with a shade of pity.

Then his smile turned reptilian. “Or rather he was. Until he met you. No wonder he began behaving irrationally. He’d been waging war on his lust, and it seems lust won out over duty.” He licked his lips as though savoring the taste of Duncan’s fall from grace. “How does it feel, Elise, to have a man give up his soul for you?”

“Duncan didn’t give up anything for me.”

“A pint or two of his self-righteousness, surely.”

“Temporarily, maybe.” She lowered her gaze to her hands, which were clasped in her lap. “He wants you more than he wants me.”

Savich leaned forward, resting his forearms on the edge of his desk. “I’m not following.”

She raised her head and looked at him. “You are what he desires, Savich. No one holds a place in his heart like you do. There’s no room in it for anything or anyone else. He has devoted himself to destroying you…one way or the other.”

He studied her for a moment, then stood up and came around the desk. “Yes. One way or the other. Stand up, Elise.”

She did so with hesitation and, guessing the reason for the request, held her arms straight out to her sides. “You think Duncan sent me here? He’d kill me if he knew I was here.”

“Forgive me my suspicious nature.” He patted her down, then raised her top to check her brassiere for hidden microphones.

She stared at him coldly as he pressed his hands against her.

He flashed a grin, then lowered her top and returned to his chair behind his desk. “It’s no news flash to me that Duncan Hatcher has wet dreams about my capture.”

“But now he has a way to make it happen.”

“Oh?”

“I survived Napoli and made it off the bridge that night…”

Since that much was obvious, he waited expectantly for the rest of it.

“But not before I saw you shoot him point-blank.”

“Ahh.” He leaned back in his chair, appearing not at all upset by the bold revelation.

“Based on my eyewitness, Duncan is on his way here to arrest you.”

“Is he?”

“He’s meeting with Cato now, threatening reprisals if Cato goes easy on you and lets you leave his courtroom a free man. Then he’s coming after you.”

Savich kept his gaze trained on her as he ruminated on what she’d told him. “By warning me, you’re betraying Duncan Hatcher.”

“That’s right.”

“Lovers’ quarrel?”

“Duncan and I have different goals. He wants you.”

“And what do you want, sweet Elise?”

“I’m here to offer you a deal.”

“This conversation becomes more bizarre by the moment. I’m intrigued. What sort of deal?”

“If I testify to what I witnessed, you’ll be convicted of murder.”

“Or?”

“Or I’ll recant the story I told Duncan. I’ll claim that I shot Napoli in self-defense, as I did Trotter.”

“Hatcher didn’t believe the self-defense scenario then. He would find it even harder to believe you now.”

“I’ll say that’s why I made up this story about you, because I knew he wouldn’t believe me. In any case, without my eyewitness account, Duncan has nothing on you. No hard evidence with which to charge you. Without me, he can’t get you.”

He sat perfectly still, his eyes unblinking as he stared at her. Long moments passed. Finally he said, “This is an incredibly generous offer, Elise. By recanting, you not only make an enemy out of your new beau, you also risk incriminating yourself.”

“I’ll accept the risk, if you’ll accept my offer.”

He eyed her shrewdly, knowing that such an offer wouldn’t come free, or even cheaply. “What do you want in return? It must be something awfully important to you. Something you want very badly.”

“Yes. And it’s yours to give.”

“Ask.”

She leveled a look on him. “Give me Cato.”

As DeeDee relinquished the key to the Lexus to the judge, she avoided making eye contact, as though that would somehow distance her from what had taken place. On principle, she agreed with Duncan. But his rough handling of the judge was unacceptable. He had crossed a line. And Elise Laird was the reason.

They watched the judge drive away, then returned to her car. “That went exactly as planned,” Duncan remarked cheerfully as he got into the passenger seat.

“Have you lost all sense of what we’re about, Duncan?”

“We’re about getting Savich and then this asshole judge.”

“Getting them by any means, fair or foul?”

“We’ve tried fair. It didn’t work.”

“He could have you arrested for assault.”

“He could. He won’t. He’ll cover his ass and protect his reputation.” He checked his wristwatch. “We’re even ahead of schedule. We’ll easily make it to his office before he leaves. Let’s go.”

“Now?”

“Sure, now. What’d you think?”

“I thought you would follow procedure,” she exclaimed. “Get an arrest warrant. Consult our superior officer. Remember Captain Gerard? Worley? We’re not vigilantes. We’re police officers. We need backup and-”

“No,” he said, cutting her off emphatically.

They glared at each other across the car’s console. She was the first to relent and try another tactic. “You’ve lost your perspective, Duncan. Please stop and think about what you’re doing.”

“I have thought about it. I’ve thought about it until I’m sick of thinking about it. It’s time to act.”

“I agree, but we need to act responsibly and legally.”

“Fine,” he said curtly, “if you’re too squeamish for this, I’ll do it alone. If the shit comes down-”

“When the shit comes down.”

“Okay, when the shit comes down, you don’t want to be standing under it. I asked for this. You didn’t. Being a loyal partner only extends so far. I’m officially relieving you of any obligation to me. Leave and go with a clear conscience. But I’m going to do this, and I’m going to do it my way.”

He turned and reached for the door handle; she grabbed his sleeve. “Damn you, Duncan! You know I can’t let you barge in on Savich alone.”

He flashed her a brief smile. “Okay, then. Let’s go.”

They drove in silence. When they were a block from Savich’s machine shop, Duncan unzipped a gym bag at his feet, took out a.357 revolver, and tucked it into the waistband of his trousers.

DeeDee looked at him with surprise. “Where’d you get that?”

“My house when I stopped to change clothes.”

“Where’s your nine-millimeter?”

“This fits my purpose better.”

“How so?”

He never answered. Instead he made a strangled sound of utter disbelief.

DeeDee followed his gaze.

His car, which he’d left with Elise Laird on Lady’s Island, was parked outside Savich’s building.