"Who told you?"
"I don't want him to get in trouble." She clasped her hands together, all but wrung them as she weighed confidentiality against justice for her husband. "Jerry Vernon. Detective Vernon. But he was only trying to help."
"I see. Was he a close friend of your husband's?"
"I don't think so. Not particularly. Taj didn't socialize a great deal with his co-workers. There were a few who came here to dinner, and some whose wives I got together with now and then."
"It would help me to know who his friends were."
"Oh, all right." She listed off a few names, seemed to relax a little more as she spoke.
"You're going to hurt my feelings, Patsy," Clooney said.
"Of course, you, Art." She took his hand, seemed to anchor to it.
"Taj was friendly with my son," Clooney explained. "Now and again they let the old man tag along for a beer on a boys' night out. For the most part, Taj was a homebody."
"Mrs. Kohli, you told me Taj called you that night, told you he was meeting someone after he'd finished at Purgatory."
"Yes, but he didn't tell me who, and I didn't ask. I guess I was getting a little tired of the long hours he was putting in. I was a bit short with him at first, but he brought me around. He always could," she said with a smile. "He promised it wouldn't be for too much longer, that he was close to having what he needed. I thought he meant the extra money for the new place we wanted. Then he told me to kiss the babies for him, and he said, 'I love you, Patsy.' It was the last thing he said to me. It was like him for that to be the last thing."
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
The assailant with the polite voice and the natty topcoat went by the name of Elmore Riggs. A quick search proved that it had been the name he'd been born with, some thirty-nine years before, in Vancouver, Canada.
There had been a small dispute with the Canadian authorities over smuggling explosive devices across the border, and Elmore had done some time before he'd been considered rehabilitated and had moved to New York.
His address was listed in a tidy, moderately wealthy enclave north of the city, and his profession was reported to be security consultant.
A fancy name for a hired hammer, Eve decided.
Armed with this data, she headed toward the Interview level to link up with Feeney and put Elmore Riggs through his paces.
Vernon stepped in front of her when she reached the top of the glide.
"A little out of your territory, aren't you, Detective?"
"You think you can shake me?" He gave her a body bump that had a number of the cops moving through the area pausing.
Eve simply waved the hand she held at her side to keep them back. "I don't know, Jerry. You look shaken."
"Everybody knows you're trying to throw trash at the squad. IAB sow's what you are. If you think you can dump on me like you're doing on Kohli and Mills, think again. I've contacted my union rep, and we're coming down on you."
"Gee, Vernon, now you're scaring me. Not the union rep." She gave a deliberate shudder.
"You won't be so smart when you're hit with a lawsuit, and I start bleeding that rich husband you hooked."
"My God, Peabody, a lawsuit. I feel faint."
"Don't worry, Lieutenant, I'll catch you."
"They'll take your badge." Vernon sneered. "Like they did before, only this time they'll keep it. Before I'm done, you'll wish you never heard my name."
"We aren't close to done, and I already wish that, Jerry." She grinned at him. "I've got you cold, and when Ricker gets wind of it, when he starts worrying how I'm tracing those numbered accounts you set up back to him, he's going to be very unhappy with you. I don't think your union rep's going to be much help where he's concerned."
"You got nothing. You're just trying to set me up. I figure you want Roth's job over the One two-eight, so you're messing us up so she gets the boot, and you can sail in. That's what she thinks, too."
"Make sure you put that in your lawsuit. How I pulled your name out of a hat and decided to dedicate myself to destroying you and your squad, so I can sit behind a desk. That ought to fly."
She shifted a little closer, her eyes drilling into his. "Only you'd better start thinking how to cover yourself. The money you've been taking isn't going to help much, since I'm arranging to have those accounts frozen. And while you're dealing with that, remember I'm the only one coming at you who has even a marginal interest in keeping you breathing. While I'm coming at your face, Ricker's going to be at your back. And there's a cop killer hunting dirty cops. You won't know which direction he's coming from."
"That's a rash of shit."
He lifted his fists, she cocked her chin. "I wouldn't," she said softly. "But you go right ahead."
"I'm taking you down." He stepped back, clenched those fists at his sides. "You're finished." He shoved past her, hopped on the downward glide.
"No, but I'm getting there," Eve murmured. "Let's put some men on him. I don't want him rabbiting." She rolled her shoulders. "You know what I'm in the mood for now?"
"Kicking righteous ass, sir?"
"Got it in one. Let's go sweat Riggs."
"You're limping again."
"I am not. And shut up."
She limped, damn it, to Interview A, where Feeney was waiting and popping nuts in his mouth. "What kept you?"
"Just a little kissy-face with a close personal friend. Did Riggs lawyer?"
"Nope. Made his phone call. Claimed it was to his wife. I gotta say, he's a cucumber. And polite with it. Cool and well mannered, that's our boy."
"He's Canadian."
"Oh. I guess that explains it."
They walked in to where Riggs sat patiently in a miserably uncomfortable chair.
"Good afternoon, Mr. Riggs," Eve said and moved to the table.
"Lieutenant. Nice to see you." He glanced down at the rip in her pants. "A pity about those trousers. They look so well on you."
"Yeah, I'm pretty torn up about it. Record on." She read in the information as she took her seat. "No lawyer, Riggs?"
"Not at this time, though thank you for asking."
"You do, then, understand your rights and obligations in this matter?"
"Perfectly. First let me say I'm full of remorse for my actions."
Clever, she thought. This was no moron. "Are you?"
"Absolutely. I regret what happened today. It was, of course, never my intention to cause any injury. I see now how reckless and foolish it was to approach you in the manner I did. I'd like to apologize."
"That's really big of you. How did it happen you were armed with banned weapons while traveling on a New York street with the intention of abducting and/or assaulting a police officer?"
"I fell in with bad companions," he said with a soft smile. "I have no excuse for having illegal weapons in my possession. I would like to say, however, that in my line of work, security consultation, it's often part of the routine to rub shoulders with criminal elements and to find oneself in possession of illegal weapons. Naturally, I should have turned those weapons over to the proper authorities."
"Where did you acquire those weapons?"
"From the man you killed. I was hired by him, you see, just this morning."
"The dead guy hired you."
"Yes. I was unaware, of course, that you were a police officer when I accepted the commission. I was told that you were a dangerous individual who had threatened him and his family with bodily harm. Obviously, I was deceived, and I'm afraid I accepted his story and the weapons at face value. Very poor judgment on my part."
"If you weren't aware I was a police officer, why did you call me Lieutenant at the scene?"
"I have no recollection of having done so."
"So you just took this job. What was the name of the guy who hired you?"