'Since you're at the station I assume you brought Maxine in,' Morelli said.

'I always get my man.'

'That's a scary thought.'

'I was speaking professionally.'

'I need a rundown on what happened at the house here.'

I skipped over the part about using Kuntz's key to get into the house and told him the rest.

'How did you get to me so fast today?' I asked.

'I was back on surveillance at the Seven-Eleven.' There was a moment of silence between us when I could hear people talking in the background. 'Kuntz is being cooperative,' Morelli said. 'He's so pissed off he's willing to tell us anything we want to know. He said Maxine was on her way to the airport.'

'Yeah. I got her on Route One.'

'She alone?'

'Nope. '

'I'm waiting,' Morelli said.

'Margie and Mrs. Nowicki were with her.'

'And?'

'And I let them go. I wasn't authorized to arrest them.' And I didn't especially want to see them caught. I had a hard time believing they were involved in the counterfeiting. For that matter, I hadn't especially wanted to bring Maxine in, either. What I suspected was that they'd extorted money from Leo and were on their way to the good life. This was really terrible, but something inside me wanted them to succeed.

'You should have told me right away. You knew I wanted to talk to Maxine's mother.'

Morelli was mad. He was using his cop voice.

'Anything else?' I asked.

'That's it for now.'

I stuck out my tongue at the phone and hung up. I was feeling very mature.

*    *    *    *    *

MY FATHER was slouched in his chair, watching baseball on television. My grandmother was asleep sitting up, head back on the couch, and my mother was next to her, crocheting. This was a nightly pattern, and there was comfort in the ritual. Even the house itself seemed to fall into a satisfied stupor when the dishes were done and the only sound was the drone of the ball game.

I was outside, on my parents' steps, doing nothing. I could have been doing something deep, like thinking about my life, or Mother Teresa's life, or life in general, but I couldn't get turned on by that. What turned me on right now was the luxury of doing nothing.

After I'd handed Maxine over, I'd gone to see my apartment and had been surprised to find repairs were already underway. I'd visited with Mrs. Karwatt and Mrs. Delgado, and then I'd gone back to Morelli's house and packed up my few possessions. The threat of danger was gone, and staying with Morelli now would have smacked of relationship. What was wrong was that there was no relationship. There was great sex and some genuine affection, but the future was too far in the future to feel comfortable. And on top of that, Morelli made me nuts. Morelli pushed all my buttons without even trying. Not to mention Grandma Bella. Not to mention all those Morelli sperms swimming upstream, trying to bash their way through the end of the condom. My eye started to twitch, and I put my finger to it. You see? That's what Morelli does to me . . . gives me an eye twitch.

Better to live with my parents than Morelli. If I could just make it through a few weeks with my parents, I could move back into my own apartment, and then my life will get back to normal. And then my eye will stop twitching.

It was almost ten, and there was no activity on the street. The air was still and dense. The temperature had dropped. There were a few stars overhead, struggling to shine through Trenton's light pollution, not having much luck with it.

Someone was bouncing a basketball blocks away. Air conditioners hummed, and a lone cricket chirped in the side yard.

I heard the whine of a motorcycle, and I thought there was a slim chance I knew the biker. The sound was mesmerizing. Not the thunder of a hog. This was the sound of a crotch rocket. The bike drew closer, and finally I saw the outline under the streetlight at the end of the block. It was a Ducati. All speed and agility and Italian sexiness. The perfect bike for Morelli.

He eased the Duc to the curb and removed his helmet. He was wearing jeans and boots and a black T-shirt, and he looked like the sort of man a woman had to worry about. He kicked the stand out and strolled over to me.

'Nice night to be sitting out,' he said.

I was reminded of the time I went to Girl Scout camp and sat too close to the fire and my boots started smoking.

'Thought you'd want to know how the interrogation went.'

I leaned forward, greedy with curiosity. Of course I wanted to know!

'It was a total bitchfest,' Morelli said. 'I've never seen so many people so eager to incriminate themselves. It turns out that Leo Glick has a record a mile long. He grew up in Detroit, working for the Angio family. Was an enforcer. Twenty years ago he decided he was getting too old to do muscle work, so he apprenticed himself to a printer he met in prison. The printer, Joe Costa, had a set of really good plates. Leo spent three years with Costa,

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