‘Oh.’ She frowned. ‘That’s weird, because you don’t
have any coffee here. Nowhere in the house. I remember
thinking it was odd. A caffeine addict notices these things.’
Right, just something you happened to notice
, I
thought.
I knew a cop named Boney Moronie … Her traps
are so obvious, they’re clearly phony
…
‘I had a leftover cup in the fridge I heated up.’ I
shrugged again:
No big deal
.
‘Huh. Must have been there a long time – I noticed
there’s no coffee container in the trash.’
‘Few days. Still tastes good.’
We both smiled at each other:
I know and you know.
Game on
. I actually thought those idiotic words:
Game on
.
Yet I was pleased in a way: The next part was starting.
Boney turned to Gilpin, hands on knees, and gave a
little nod. Gilpin chewed his lip some more, then finally
pointed: toward the ottoman, the end table, the living room
now righted. ‘See, here’s our problem, Nick,’ he started.
‘We’ve seen dozens of home invasions—’
‘Dozens
upon
dozens
upon
dozens,’
Boney
interrupted.
‘Many home invasions. This – all this area right there,
in the living room – remember it? The upturned ottoman,
the overturned table, the vase on the floor’ – he slapped
down a photo of the scene in front of me – ‘this whole area,
it was supposed to look like a struggle, right?’
My head expanded and snapped back into place.
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