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Caro turned to Roarke. “You’re conferencing again at eleven with the engineers on the project. And have a one o’clock with Yule Hiser that we’ve switched to ’link. Your two o’clock is Ava McCoy and her team. Then you’re clear for your five o’clock. The Fitch Communications meeting is tentatively scheduled for nine p.m., via holo.”

“Thank you, Caro. Anything urgent, you know where to reach me.”

She nodded. “Lieutenant,” she said, and winked out.

“Who were the suits?” Eve asked.

“Architects. I’m still making some refinements on a new development on Olympus.”

“Six architects for one development.”

“A rather large and complex one—and that includes buildings, landscape, water, interiors . . . And you don’t care.”

She felt a little pinch of guilt, right between the shoulder blades. “Not much, but that’s not the same as not being interested. Which I am, in a supportive kind of way.”

He chuckled. “What do you need?”

Now annoyance slapped over the guilt. “Just because I said I was interested and supportive doesn’t mean I need something from you.”

“It doesn’t, no.” He leaned back on his desk. “But you came in here because you did. There’s no need to feel guilty about it, or to start worrying that I’m carving off my own worktime to help with yours. I wouldn’t if I didn’t want to do it.”

“Well, how do you feel about giving me a building downtown?”

“Which would you like?”

This time she chuckled. “Showoff. Have you got something untenanted? Something we can secure and wire up within twenty-four?”

“I imagine we can come up with something. That’s your trap. Why downtown?”

“Because I know they’re based uptown. Because when this goes down, I want it as far away from the kid as I can make it and stay in the city. I need a place where I can post up to a dozen men inside, where I can place snipers and tech response in select locations. I need to make it look like a safe house—cop security on doors and windows. And I need to be able to lock the place down tight as soon as I have them inside.”

“I’ll give you some possibilities by this afternoon. That soon enough?”

“Good. There’s this other thing. I’ll make it quick. You said Richard and Elizabeth were coming today.”

“Yes, at four. I’ll take care of that.”

“Much as I’d like to let you, it’s not right.” She didn’t have to be told the meetings Caro had rattled off weren’t all he had on the big, shiny plate of Roarke Industries. “I dumped her here, I’ve got to do my part in it. I figure you’ve dealt with their security.”

“It’s done.”

“I’m bringing Mavis in.”

“Excuse me?”

“The kid’s a big fan. She brightened up when she heard I knew Mavis, and before I knew it I’d said something about yeah, she could meet her. Anyway, it seems like if I had Mavis come in, Mira—we’d need Mira to give an opinion on the kid’s reaction to the fostering—it would look more causal. Like we’re having guests over.”

His communication system beeped and buzzed, lights signalling incoming data. She wondered how he stood all the interruptions. Of which, she

knew, she was one.

“In the real world of good and evil, good doesn’t have a party if they’ve got a reason to think evil might try to crash.”

He gave her an easy nod. “Thereby giving the impression that there’s certainly no young girl evil might want to get its hands on around here.”

“It’s sort of braining a lot of birds with one stone. Leonardo’s in Milan or Paris or someplace over there.” She gestured vaguely in what might’ve been the direction of Europe. “So if I bring her in, it’d be best to keep her here. Just in case.”

“I’d say the more the merrier—and merrier it tends to be with Mavis around—but it’s not quite the phrase that comes to mind with a houseful of cops.”

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