Loyalty In Death - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"I'm sorry." She kept her head lowered. "I'm sorry."
"B. D." Suzanna paused, casting Clarissa a glance of quiet sympathy. "Would you like me to stop for a few moments?" "No." Jaw set, mouth grim, he kept his arm firmly around his wife and stared straight ahead. "Please, let's finish."
"All right. To my brother and partner, B. Donald Branson." Suzanna took a breath. "The disposition of my share of the business we ran together is set down in a separate doc.u.ment. I acknowledge here that all my interest in Branson Toys and Tools is to be transferred into his name upon my death should he survive me. If he should predecease me, that interest is to be transferred to his spouse or any children of that union. In addition, I hereby bequeath to my brother the emerald ring and diamond cufflinks that were our father's, my disc library including but not exclusive to all family images, my boat the T and T, and my air cycle in the hopes he'll finally try it out. Unless, of course, he was right, and my cras.h.i.+ng it is the reason this will is being read."
Branson made a sound, something that might have been a short, strained laugh, then closed his eyes.
"To Lisbeth Cooke." Suzanna's voice chilled several degrees as she spared Mantz one glimmering stare of dislike. "I leave all the rest of my personal possessions, including all cash, bank and credit accounts, real estate, financial holdings, furnis.h.i.+ngs, art, and personal property. Lissy my love," Suzanne continued, biting off the words, "don't grieve too long."
"Millions." Branson got slowly to his feet. His face was deathly pale, his eyes brilliant. "She murders him and stands to gain millions. I'll fight this." Hands clenched, he turned on Mantz. "I'll fight this with everything I have."
"I understand your distress." Mantz rose as well. "However, your brother's wishes were clearly and legally outlined. Ms. Cooke has not been charged with murder but with second-degree manslaughter. There are legal precedents that protect her inheritance."
Branson bared his teeth. Even as he lunged. Eve sprang up to block him.
Before she could, Roarke was doing so.
"B. D." Roarke spoke calmly, but he had Branson's arms pinned firmly to his sides. "This won't help you. Let your lawyer handle it. Your wife's very distraught," he continued as Clarissa curled into a ball and wept wildly. "She should lie down. Why don't you take her upstairs, give her a soother."
The bones in Branson's face stood out in sharp relief, so keen it seemed they might cut right through the flesh. "Get out of my house," he ordered Mantz. "Get the h.e.l.l out of my house."
"I'll see him out," Roarke said. "Take care of your wife."
For one long moment, Branson strained against Roarke's hold; then he nodded, turned. He gathered his wife up, cradling her as he would a child, and carried her from the room.
"You're done here, Mantz." Eve faced him. "Unless you want to see if the Bransons have a dog you could kick." He acknowledged this, picked up his own briefcase. "We all do our jobs, Lieutenant."
"Right, and yours is to run to a murderer and tell her she just got rich."
His eyes never wavered. "Life is very rarely black and white." He nodded to Suzanna. "Good evening, Counselor," he murmured and left. "He's right."
Suzanna sighed and sat again. "He's only doing his job."
"Will she inherit?" Eve demanded.
Suzanna pinched the bridge of her nose. "As things stand, yes. With charges of second-degree manslaughter, it can be argued she killed J. C. in a moment of jealous pa.s.sion. His will was a sealed doc.u.ment. We can't prove she had prior knowledge of its contents or that those contents in any way influenced her. Under current law, she can gain by his death."
"If the charges are b.u.mped up?"
Suzanna dropped her hand into her lap, regarding Eve thoughtfully. "Then things change. Is there a chance of that? I was under the impression the case was closed."
"Closed doesn't mean locked."
"I hope you'll keep me updated," Suzanna said as she rose and walked out with them to where the maid waited with their coats.
"I'll let you know what I can when I can." When they stepped outside, Eve slid her hands into her pockets. The limo was waiting. She struggled not to be embarra.s.sed by it.
"Can we give you a lift home, Ms. Day?" Roarke asked.
"No, thanks. I could use a walk." She paused a moment and her sigh puffed out a thin stream of white. "As an estate lawyer, I deal with this sort of thing all the time. Grief and greed. But it's rare it hits this close to home. I really liked J. C. Some people you think will live forever." Shaking her head, she walked away.
"Well, that was fun." Eve started toward the car. "Wonder if Lissy my love will shed half as many tears over this guy as Clarissa. You know her very well?"
"Hmm, no." Roarke slid into the car beside her. "In that false intimacy of social acquaintances, I run into the Branson brothers at events occasionally. Clarissa and Lisbeth were usually with them."
"I'd've reversed it."
Roarke sat back, lighted a cigarette. "Meaning?"
"I'd put Clarissa with J. C. Just going by what I've learned about him, he was lighter, less driven, more emotional than his brother. Clarissa comes off fragile, nearly tender -- seems a little... intimidated by Branson. She doesn't seem like your slick corporate wife. The man's running a big, international company. Why doesn't he have a slick corporate wife?" Even as she posed the question, Roarke was grinning, making her narrow her eyes. "What?"
"I was going to say that he might have fallen for a different type. It happens, even to the heads of big, international companies." Now her narrowed eyes glinted. "Are you saying I'm not a slick, corporate wife?" He drew contemplatively on his cigarette. "If I said you were, you'd try to hurt me, then we'd end up wrestling back here. One thing would lead to another and we'd be very late for a business dinner."
"I'd be real sorry about that," she muttered. "You're not exactly the typical cop's spouse either, pal."
"If you said I was, we'd end up wrestling back here, and so on." He stubbed out his cigarette, then trailed a fingertip down the center of her body from throat to waist. "Wanna?"
"I didn't get all polished up so you could leave fingerprints all over me." He smiled and cupped her breast. "Darling, I never leave prints."
During the evening of dinner and conversation, Eve managed to slip away long enough to request a warrant to access data on Lisbeth Cooke's finances. She cited the sizable inheritance as cause and got lucky with a judge who either agreed with her or was too tired to argue the point.
As a result, she was alert and edgy when they arrived home.
"I've got some stuff I want to check out," she told Roarke when they walked into the bedroom. "I'm going to change and work in my office awhile."
"On...?"
"I asked for a warrant to access Cooke's financial data." She wiggled out of the dress, tossed it aside, then stood there, much to her husband's interest, in two tiny sc.r.a.ps of black and high leather boots. "It came through during the dessert course."
"I must have a whip around here," he murmured. "A what?"
Grinning, he started toward her, amused when her eyes narrowed threateningly. "Keep your distance, ace. I said I have work." "I can access that information in half the time you can. I'll help you out."
"I didn't ask for help."
"No. But we both know I can do it faster and interpret it without getting a tension headache. And all I want in return is one little thing." "What little thing?"
"That when we're finished you're still wearing this very interesting getup."
"Getup?" She glanced over, caught a glimpse of herself in the mirror, and blinked in shock. "Jesus, I look like -- " "Oh yes," Roarke agreed. "Yes, you do."
She looked back at him, struggled to ignore the slick ball of l.u.s.t the gleam in his eyes caused. "Men are so weird." "Then have pity on us."
"I'm not parading around in my underwear so you can cook up some sordid little fantasy."
"That's all right," he said as she s.n.a.t.c.hed up a robe and bundled into it. "It's already cooked. We can do this faster in my office." As she belted the robe, she eyed him suspiciously. "Do what faster?" "Why, access the data, Lieutenant. What else?"
She refused to acknowledge the little tug of disappointment. "This is official business. I want the search initialized from my machine." "You're the boss."
He took her hand to lead her out.
"Just remember that."
"Darling, with what you're wearing under that robe forever imprinted on my memory, how could I forget?" "All roads," she said dryly, "don't lead back to s.e.x."
"The best ones do." He gave her b.u.t.t a friendly pat as she preceded him into her office.
Galahad was curled up in her sleep chair. The cat raised his head in obvious annoyance at the disturbance. Since neither of them headed for the kitchen, he closed his eyes again and ignored them.
She slid the warrant into a slot on her computer, engaged it. "I know how to do a financial search. You're just here to interpret and tell me if you think she's got anything buried under layers." "I'm here to serve."
"Cut that out." She dropped into the chair at her desk and called up Lisbeth Cooke's case file. "Hold current data," she ordered, "and initiate search of financial records on subject's name and identification number. All accounts, cash, credit, and debit. Start with one-year period back from this date."
Working....
"Personal property?" Roarke asked. "I'll get to it. We'll do the bucks first."
Data complete. Cooke, Lisbeth has four cash/credit accounts active. "Scroll data on-screen."
Acknowledged....