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“Care to share your thoughts?”

“Of course.” He lowered his voice. “Body’s in the master bedroom. Blood has been tracked throughout, especially in the bedroom and attached bath. It’s a bloody mess, you’ll pardon the expression. Walls, sheets, hardwood floors. Victim was shot once in the head, once in the chest. Death appears to have been instantaneous. Ms. Tully was asleep in bed with the victim when he was shot.”

“Good to know,” she said, sliding a curious glance at Robin, who noticed her looking and shrank back into her chair.

Inspector Lee turned back to Derek. “Thanks for the info.”

I figured a rundown like that from a civilian would normally grate on her, but coming from Derek, Lee took it well. She was no fool, and Derek was no run-of-the-mill witness. As a former Royal Navy commander who’d gone on to work for Britain’s MI6 before starting his own private security company, he knew what he was doing, to say the least.

But with his brief recap of the crime scene, I could feel my eyes goggling as my brain painted some really gross mental images. There went my stomach again.

Derek noticed and swore under his breath.

Lee turned and looked at me with interest. “How you holding up, Wainwright?”

“Not well, thanks.” Seriously, with as many times as I’d landed in the middle of a murder scene, you’d think I’d be getting better at handling the sight of blood.

“Did you go inside the apartment with Commander Stone?”

“Not exactly.” I stood on unsteady legs, grabbed hold of the landing rail, and took deep breaths. It was getting bad when even the mere thought of blood made my stomach clench.

“Then what, exactly?” Inspector Lee asked, tapping the toe of her shoe against the wood floor.

I turned. “I just poked my head inside for a second or two.”

“Yeah, sometimes that’s all it takes,” she said philosophically. “Guess you got an eyeful.”

“Guess I did.”

With an evil chuckle, Inspector Lee turned from me to Derek. “Since you’ve been inside, we’ll need a print of your shoes for comparison. Probably be a good idea if you took them off right now.”

“Certainly,” he said.

She caught the eye of one of the cops and jerked her chin up. That was all it took for the officer to hurry downstairs to the squad car. He was back in less than a minute with an evidence envelope large enough to carry Derek’s shoes.

Finally, Lee turned to Robin. I was pleased to hear her use a gentler tone than she had with me or Derek as she said, “It’s Robin, right? We’ve met a few times.”

“Yes, hi.” Robin stood unsteadily and shook her hand. She tried to smile but it was a shaky effort. “I’m glad you’re here.”

“This your place?”

“Yes.”

“Okay, good. So what’s going to happen is, as soon as my partner arrives, he and I will go inside to look around. In the meantime, I’d like to get some preliminary information from you. I understand you’ve been through a bad time, so we’ll take it slow.”

“Thanks.”

“Now, I assume that since the commander and your good friend Ms. Wainwright are here, you called them first and they came over to keep you company.”

“No, I…” She glanced at Derek and me, and I noticed she looked as though she might fall over any second now. Lee seemed to notice the same thing.

“Let’s sit,” the inspector said as she maneuvered Robin down onto the director’s chair.

I watched Robin more carefully. I’d never seen my friend so wiped out before. It wasn’t just shock or grief. Her eyes were unfocused and she seemed unstable whenever she was standing. I was beginning to wonder if maybe she’d taken a sleeping pill or something. Was that why she’d slept through Alex’s death? But as Inspector Lee questioned her, she seemed to rally and was able to repeat the same story that she’d told us earlier, going into even greater detail than before.

As Robin finished, her upstairs neighbor Sharon, still wearing pajamas and a plaid bathrobe, opened her front door. She glanced around, her forehead lined with concern, until she spied Robin. “What’s going on out here?”

“Oh, Sharon, I’m sorry we disturbed you,” Robin said. “There’s been a… an accident in my apartment. The police are here to look into it.”

“An accident?” Sharon said, taking a step out onto the porch. “Are you all right?”

Robin waved her back as if she didn’t want her neighbor to get too close. “I’m okay.”

“Good morning, ma’am,” Inspector Lee said, standing up and pulling a business card from her pocket. “You live upstairs?”

“Yes.”

She handed Sharon the card. “We’ll need to ask you some questions in a little while. Will you be home all day today?”

“Yes, I’m off on Sundays.” She stared down at the card, then back at Lee. “You’re a homicide detective?”

“Yes,” Lee said. Before she could say anything else, she spied Inspector Jaglom strolling down the sidewalk.

“Nate,” Lee called, and waved. “Up here.”

He glanced up, saw me and Derek, and his eyebrows rose in mild disbelief. “What’s all this?”

I was grateful Inspector Lee didn’t shout something pithy like, If it’s Wainwright, it’s murder! Just because that little declaration was becoming uncomfortably true didn’t mean I wanted to hear the police stating it as fact. I wouldn’t be surprised to see them printing it up on bumper stickers one of these days.

As Jaglom walked toward Robin’s building, Lee turned to finish her conversation with Sharon. “As soon as one of my officers is free, he’ll come by and get some preliminary information from you.”

“Of course. I need to take a quick shower first. Then I’ll be available.”

“Appreciate it.”

Unsure what else to say or do, Sharon gave Robin another anxious look, then went back inside and closed the door.

“Commander, Brooklyn,” Inspector Jaglom said in greeting when he reached the top of the stairs. “This is quite a surprise.”

Was it a good thing or a bad thing that I was on a first-name basis with a homicide inspector?

“Good to see you, Inspector,” Derek said, shaking hands with Jaglom.

After introducing her partner to Robin, Inspector Lee said, “Ms. Tully, I’d appreciate it if you would remain on the premises for a while.”

“Sure.”

As Jaglom and Derek spoke with each other in hushed tones, Lee pulled two pairs of disposable rubber gloves from her bag. She handed one pair to her partner, cutting short the niceties. “Let’s do this, Nate. Watch where you’re stepping.”

“Lead on,” Jaglom said, and the two disappeared inside Robin’s flat.

Within forty-five minutes, the medical examiner and a number of crime lab people were crawling all over the property. Robin’s neighbor Sharon invited us to hang out at her place while the police combed through every inch of Robin’s home.

After one of the criminologists swabbed Robin’s bloodstained skin and hair, she was allowed to take a shower in Sharon’s bathroom. Nervous to be alone, Robin begged me to sit in the bathroom with her while she showered. We both relaxed a bit once she’d washed all the dried blood away.

Derek spoke to the police a while longer, then left to go back to my place to shower and dress for work. It was Sunday, but since he’d been gone all week, he’d arranged several meetings that couldn’t be canceled. Once he was gone, I dozed on Sharon’s couch.

At some point, Inspector Lee took Robin into Sharon’s kitchen to ask her a bunch of questions. After an hour or so, Lee went back downstairs and Robin curled up on Sharon’s recliner. She slept soundly, but not calmly as she tossed and turned and moaned every so often. Poor Sharon didn’t know what to do to help, and truthfully I didn’t either. We commiserated in her kitchen as she made a pot of soup. She said she always made soup when she was worried.