“What’s the Sings’ apartment?”
“They’re in five-ten if you want the main. It’s a nice two-level job. The whole family’s up there now, if you want to talk to them. I can buzz up, let them know.”
“Why don’t you do that? After, we’ll be working in Mr. Minnock’s for a while.”
“It’s good you’re keeping on it. That’s good. Whoever hurt that boy…” His lips thinned as he looked away. “Well, I can’t even say what I think about it. We get fired for that kind of language.”
Roarke keyed up his PPC as they got in the elevator. “Sing,
Dr. David-neurologist. His wife’s a pediatric surgeon. Susan. Boys, Steven and Michael, ages ten and eight respectively. Married twelve years. Both graduated from Harvard Medical School, and both are attendings at Mount Sinai. No criminal on either.”
“Since when do you access criminal records on that?”
“Since I consult with my lovely wife.” Roarke slipped the PPC back in his pocket.
“I’ve got a guy in a cage right now for accessing proprietary information.”
Roarke merely smiled, held his hands out, wrists up. “Want to take me in, darling?”
The elevator doors opened and spared her from an answer. “I just want a look, a sense. Maybe the whole deal was some sort of accident. Everybody’s playing, having fun, until somebody gets their head chopped off.”
“And a couple of kids clean up after themselves, reset the security, reprogram a very sophisticated droid?”
“No, but they have really smart parents. I assume smart given the Harvard Medical. It’s not likely, but-”
“You can’t write it off,” Roarke finished, and pressed the bell for 510 himself.
“Try to look like Peabody.”
“Sorry?”
“Serious, official, yet approachable.”
“You forgot adorable.”
“Peabody is not adorable.”
“She is from my perspective. Besides, I was talking about me.”
She barely smothered the laugh before the door opened.
David Sing wore jeans and a spotless white shirt. In her boots Eve had an inch on him, and his weary eyes skimmed from her to Roarke.
He spoke with a precision that told her English wasn’t his first language, but he’d learned it very well.
“You’re the police. I’m David Sing. Please, come in.”
There were touches of his Asian heritage in the decor-the pretty colors, the collection of carved dragons, the pattern of the silk throws. He ushered them to a bright blue sofa that showed both care and wear.
“We’ll have tea,” he said. “My sons’ nanny is preparing it. She stayed late this evening as our children are very upset by what happened to our friend. Please sit. Tell me how I might help you.”
He hadn’t asked for ID, but Eve took out her badge. “I’m Lieutenant Dallas. I’m primary investigator in the matter of Bart Minnock’s murder.”
“Yes. Jackie explained when he called up. And I recognize you. Both of you. We heard of Bart’s death this afternoon, and my wife and I took leave immediately. We didn’t want our sons to hear of it before we could speak with them, prepare them. Ah, here is our tea. Min, this is Lieutenant Dallas and Roarke.”
The woman who rolled in the tray was tiny and hadn’t seen seventy for a number of years. She bowed slightly, then spoke in a quiet voice in a language Eve didn’t understand. Then she laid a hand on Sing’s shoulder in a gesture that spoke clearly of a long and deep connection.
“I’ll pour, Min.” He reached up, gave the hand on his shoulder a light squeeze. “Go, put your feet up awhile.” He added something in their native language.
The woman kissed the top of his head, then left them.
“Min was my nanny when I was a boy. Now she helps take care of our boys.” He poured pale gold tea into handleless cups. “My wife is upstairs with the children. We can speak freely.”
“It would be helpful to speak to your wife, and your sons.”
“Yes, they’ll come down shortly. I thought, if you needed to give any details… I hope you can spare the children some of it. They’re very young, and they were very fond of Bart.”
She wished briefly for Peabody. Peabody was better than she was with kids. Well, anybody was, she decided, and considered Roarke.
“We’ll be as sensitive as possible with your children, Dr. Sing.”
“They understand death, as well as a child can. Their parents are doctors, after all. But it’s difficult for them, for any of us to understand how their friend could be upstairs one day, and gone the next. Can you tell me if there are plans for any sort of service? I think attending would be helpful for them.”
“I don’t have that information at this time, but I’ll see that you get the details when I do.”
“Thank you. I understand you’re very busy. I’ll get my family.”
When he left the room, Eve shifted to Roarke. “I think you should talk to the kids.”
“Funny. I don’t.”
“They’re boys. They’d probably relate better to you.”
Face placid, body at ease, he sampled the tea. “Coward.”
“Yes, but that doesn’t mean I’m not right. Besides, I’m primary. I get to call the shots.”
He smiled at her. “I’m just a civilian.”
“Since when?” she retorted.
“Try the tea. It’s very nice.”
“I’ll show you what you can do with the tea.” But she postponed the demonstration as she watched the Sing family come in.
The woman had the dark skin, the ice-edged cheekbones, and regal bearing of an African princess. She must have topped out at six feet, and she carried it on a lush and admirable body. She and her husband flanked the boys, a hand on each shoulder indicating a united front.
Eve didn’t know much about kids, but she was pretty sure she was looking at two of the most beautiful examples of the species. They had their father’s black, almond-shaped eyes, their mother’s cheekbones, and skin of an indescribable tone that somehow blended their parents to golden, glowing perfection.
The boys held hands, a gesture that gave her heart one hard wrench. Beside her, she heard Roarke sigh, and understood.
Such youth, such beauty should never have to face the senseless violence of murder.
“My wife, Susan, and our sons, Steven and Michael.”
“Lieutenant. Sir. You’re here to help Bart.” Susan stroked a hand gently up and down Steven’s back.
“Yes. Thank you for your time.” Eve braced herself, looked at the children. “I’m very sorry you lost your friend.”
“The police find the bad people,” the younger boy, Michael, said. “And arrest them. Then they go to jail.”
Someone, she thought, had given the kids the basic pecking order. “That’s right.”
“Sometimes they don’t.” Steven’s jaw tightened. “Sometimes they don’t find them and arrest them. And sometimes when they do they don’t go to jail.”
And, the reality. “That’s right, too.”
“Lieutenant Dallas always finds the bad people,” Roarke told the boy, “because she never stops looking. She never stops looking because even though she didn’t know Bart before, he’s her friend now, too.”
“How can she be his friend if she didn’t know him?”
“Because after he died, she went to him, and looked at him, and promised him her help. That’s what friends do. They help.”
“He helped me with compu-science for school,” Michael piped up.
“And he let us play his games and let us have fizzies…” He slanted a look up at his mother.
She smiled. “It’s all right.”
“We’re not supposed to have too many fizzies,” Michael explained. “They’re not really good for you. How do you catch the bad people? Don’t they hide and run away?”
Okay, Eve decided, she could handle this. “They try to. You might be able to help me find them.”
“You need clues.”
“Sure. Sometimes I get clues by talking to people. So why don’t you tell me about the last time you saw Bart?”
“It wasn’t yesterday or the day before, but the day before that.” Michael looked at his brother for verification.
“It was raining a lot so we couldn’t go to the park after our music lesson. We got to go up to Bart’s and be a test study.”