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Ry decided he'd been polite long enough, and took out a cigarette.
He lit it, flipped the match into a spotless crystal ashtray. "I'd say anybody who makes captain on the force should be able to figure that out for himself."
Gage smothered a laugh with a cough as Boyd's eyes narrowed.
"Natalie's not a tossaway," Boyd said carefully.
"I know what she is," Ry returned. "And I know what she isn't. If you want to grill someone on what's going on between us, Captain, you'd better start with her."
Boyd considered, nodded. "Fair enough. Give me a rundown on the arson investigation."
That he could, and would, do. Ry related the sequence, the facts, his own steps and conclusions, answering Boyd's terse questions with equal brevity.
"I'm betting on Clarence," he finished. "I know his pattern, and how his warped mind works. And I'll get him," he said, and blew out a last stream of smoke. "That's a promise."
"In the meantime, Natalie needs to beef up security." Boyd's mouth thinned. "I'll see to that."
Ry tapped out his cigarette. "I already have."
"I was talking about personal security, not business."
"So was I. I'm not going to let anything happen to her," he continued as Boyd studied him. "That's another promise."
Boyd let out a snort. "Do you really think she'll listen to you?"
"Yeah. She's not going to get a choice."
Boyd paused, reevaluated. "Maybe I'm going to like you after all,
Inspector."
"Okay, break it up," Deborah ordered as she wheeled in a cart laden with a huge silver coffee urn and Meissen china. "I know you're talking shop."
Gage rose to take the cart from her and kiss her. "You're just mad because you might have missed something."
"Exactly."
''Jacoby,'' Boyd tossed at her. "Clarence Robert. Ring any bells?''
Her brow furrowed as she poured coffee. "Jacoby. Also known as Jack Jacoby?" She served Boyd, took another cup to Ry. "Skipped bail a couple of years ago on an arson charge."
"I like your wife," Ry said to Gage. "There's nothing quite like a sharp mind in a first-cla.s.s package."
"Thanks." Gage poured a cup for himself. "I often think the same."
"Jacoby," Deborah repeated, focusing on Ry. "You think he's the one?"
"That's right."
"We'd have a file on him." She glanced at her husband. The computers in Gage's hidden room could access everything about Jacoby, right down to his shoe size. "I'm not sure who had the case, but I can find out on Monday, see that you get whatever we have."
"I'd appreciate it."
"How'd he manage bail?" Boyd wanted to know.
"I can't tell you until I see the file," Deborah began.
"I can tell you about him." Ry drank his coffee, keeping one ear out for Natalie's return. He wasn't sure she'd appreciate having her business discussed while she was out of the room. "His pattern's empty buildings, warehouses, condemned apartments. Sometimes the owners hire him for the insurance, sometimes he does it for kicks. We only tried him twice, convicted him once. There wasn't any loss of life either time. Clarence doesn't burn people, just things."
"So now he's loose," Boyd said in disgust.
"For the time being," Ry returned. "We're ready for him." He picked up his cup again when he heard Natalie and Cilia laughing in the hallway.
"You're a softie, Nat."
"It's my duty, and my privilege, to spoil them."
They entered together. Cilia immediately headed for Boyd and dropped into his lap. "They had her jumping through hoops."
"They did not." Natalie poured her coffee, then laughed again.
"Not exactly." She smiled at Ry before settling beside him. "So,"
she began, "have you finished discussing my personal and business life?"
"A sharp mind," Ry commented. "In a first-cla.s.s package."
Later, as they drove away from the Guthrie mansion, Natalie studied Ry's profile. "Should I apologize for Boyd?"
"He didn't pull out the rubber hoses." Ry shrugged. "He's okay.
I've got a couple of sisters, I know how it is."
"Oh." Frowning, she looked out the window. "I didn't realize you had siblings."
"I'm Polish and Irish, and you figured me for an only child?" He grinned at her. "Two older sisters, one in Columbus, the other down in Baltimore. And a brother, a year younger than me, living in Phoenix."
"Four of you," she murmured.
"Until you count the nieces and nephews. There were eight of them, last time I checked, and my brother has another on the way."
Which probably explained why he was so easy around children.
"You're the only one who stayed in Urbana."
"Yeah, they all wanted out. I didn't." He turned down her street, slowed. "Am I staying tonight, Natalie?"
She looked at him again. How could he be so much of a stranger, she wondered, and so much of a need? "I want you to," she said. "I want you."
Chapter 8
"Can I slide down the pole, Mr. Pisessy? Please, can I slide down it?"