Tags:
Fiction,
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detective,
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Women Sleuths,
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Mystery & Detective - Women Sleuths,
Fiction - Mystery,
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Eve (Fictitious character),
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Policewomen - New York (State) - New York,
Dallas; Eve (Fictitious Character)
didn’t.” Eve shut the door, reengaged the locks. “Forgot what?”
“Dinner, dancing, debauchery.” With a heavy sigh, Mavis dropped her slinkily attired ninety-eight pounds onto the sofa where she could eye Eve’s simple gray suit with disdain. “You can’t be going out in that.”
Feeling drab, as she often did within twenty feet of Mavis’s outrageous color, Eve looked down at her suit. “No, I guess not.”
“So.” Mavis gestured with one emerald-tipped finger. “You forgot.”
She had, but she was remembering now. They had made plans to check out the new club Mavis had discovered at the space docks in Jersey. According to Mavis, the space jocks were perennially horny. Something to do with extended weightlessness.
“Sorry. You look great.”
It was true, inevitably. Eight years before, when Eve had busted Mavis for petty theft, she’d looked great. A silk swirling street urchin with quick fingers and a brilliant smile.
In the intervening years, they’d somehow become friends. For Eve, who could count on one hand the number of friends she had who weren’t cops, the relationship was precious.
“You look tired,” Mavis said, more in accusation than sympathy. “And you’re missing a button.”
Eve’s fingers went automatically to her jacket, felt the loose threads. “Shit. I knew it.” In disgust she shrugged out of the jacket, tossed it aside. “Look, I’m sorry. I did forget. I had a lot on my mind today.”
“Including the reason you needed my black coat?”
“Yeah, thanks. It came in handy.”
Mavis sat a minute, tapping those emerald-tipped nails on the arm of the couch. “Police business. Here I was hoping you had a date. You really need to start seeing men who aren’t criminals, Dallas.”
“I saw that image consultant you fixed me up with. He wasn’t a criminal. He was just an idiot.”
“You’re too picky — and that was six months ago.”
Since he’d tried to get her in the sack by offering a free lip tattoo, Eve thought it was not nearly long enough, but kept the opinion to herself. “I’ll go change.”
“You don’t want to go out and bump butts with the space boys.” Mavis sprang up again, the shoulder-length crystals at her ears sparkling. “But go ahead and get out of that ugly skirt. I’ll order Chinese.”
Relief had Eve’s shoulders sagging. For Mavis, she would have tolerated an evening at a loud, crowded, obnoxious club, peeling randy pilots and sex-starved sky station techs off her chest. The idea of eating Chinese with her feet up was like heaven.
“You don’t mind?”
Mavis waved the words away as she tapped in the restaurant she wanted on the computer. “I spend every night in a club.”
“That’s work,” Eve called out as she went into the bedroom.
“You’re telling me.” Tongue between her teeth, Mavis perused the menu on-screen. “A few years ago I’d have said singing for my supper was the world’s biggest scam, the best grift I could run. Turns out I’m working harder than I ever did bilking tourists. You want egg rolls?”
“Sure. You’re not thinking of quitting, are you?”
Mavis was silent a moment as she made her choices. “No. I’m hooked on applause.” Feeling generous, she charged dinner to her World Card. “And since we renegotiated my contract so I get ten percent of the gate, I’m a regular businesswoman.”
“There’s nothing regular about you,” Eve disagreed. She came back in, comfortable in jeans and a NYPSD sweatshirt.
“True. Got any of that wine I brought over last time?”
“Most of the second bottle.” Because it sounded like the best idea she’d had all day, Eve detoured into the kitchen to pour it. “So, are you still seeing the dentist?”
“Nope.” Idly, Mavis wandered to the entertainment unit and programmed in music. “It was getting too intense. I didn’t mind him falling in love with my teeth, but he decided to go for the whole package. He wanted to get
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