second-skin jeans, backless high-heeled sandals, oversized hoop earrings, gold-plated bangles cuffing their right wrists.

Both girls had eyebrow pierces, tongue studs, multiple holes in their ears. Selma sported a diamond between a perky mouth and a cute chin.

Brianna’s visible tattoos were: a left forearm sleeve filled with roses and thorns, a barbed-wire biceps ring, a female devil’s face in the hollow beneath her neck, Love inked in black gothic across one collarbone, Devotion stretching the length of the other.

Selma’s neck was circled by a blue-and-red-ink necklace of yellow diamonds and red links “supporting” a pear-shaped black pearl that was a masterpiece of trompe l’oeil. Both of her arms were slave-braceleted three times. Chinese characters rose up from where cleavage would be if her breasts could produce such.

Milo asked her, “What does that say?”

“Something about life.”

Cell phones confiscated and purses searched, the girls were placed in separate interview rooms and left to contemplate.

Fueled by adrenaline, detective room coffee, and a vending-machine roast beef sandwich that made him grumble about “turf that didn’t deserve surf,” Milo started with Brianna.

The girl, looking older than nineteen, eyes already running to crow’s-feet, kept her eyes on the table.

“Hi, Bri. Me, again. And this is Alex.”

“Uh-huh.”

We sat down, crowding her. “Tell us about Tristram and Quinn, Bri.”

“Don’t know ’em.”

“Actually, you do, Bri.”

“I don’t.”

Milo showed her pictures. “Tristram Wydette and Quinn Glover, hot guys, I can see the attraction. Hot rich guys, Tristram drives that Jaguar, Quinn’s got that yellow Hummer. They tip well for lap dances?”

The girl barely glanced at the images. “I still don’t know ’em.”

“Actually, you still do, Bri.”

He gave her a few seconds to reconsider. When she remained mute and sullen, he scooted even closer. She looked over her shoulder, searching for room to escape. Saw blank wall and exhaled.

“Bri, we already know a lot, so you might as well help yourself. Let’s start with you and Selma meeting Tristram and Quinn at the Hungry Lion, then partying together for months. We’ve got their credit card records, so we know when they started coming in, how much money they spent on you. We’ve got other sources, so we also know about the promises they made.”

Pausing to give her a chance.

Bri Blevins shook her head.

“Promises of amazing stuff,” he went on. “Like taking you guys on a private jet to Aspen. And all you had to do was be nice.”

He let the last word sink in. The taut flesh sheathing Bri Blevins’s scapulae turned rosy, bottoming the love- devotion message in rose.

She still had the capacity to blush.

Milo said, “We don’t care about that kind of nice, Bri. The only nice that interests us is a favor you did for them on a certain night. Something you worked out with Gilberto Chavez. Know who that is?”

“No.” Emphatic.

“He’s a Spanish guy you paid to buy dry ice, out in Van Nuys.”

False eyelashes quaked. The blush across her chest seeped out as if liposuctioned. “Remember that, Bri?”

No answer.

“Different kind of ice from what you’re used to,” said Milo. “We found that nice little chunk of meth in your purse. Selma said you’re the one always bought, she just shared.”

“That’s a lie!”

“Your word against Selma’s, Bri, and Selma’s being helpful. But honestly, Bri, the dope’s no big deal, I couldn’t care less about that kind of ice. What I do care about is dry ice. ’Cause that was used for something bad, Bri. You know what I’m talking about.”

The girl blinked, crossed her arms across her torso, and dropped her head. “Uh-uh.”

“Actually, you do, Bri. And unfortunately for you and Selma, you also knew the dry ice was going to be used for something really bad. And guess how we know that?”

Shrug.

“We know because Selma told us, Bri. How else would we know? You buy ice for some rich dudes, no problem. You buy ice knowing it’s going to be used to kill someone, big problem, that’s called accomplices before the fact. According to the law, that’s the same as committing murder.”

Bri Blevins looked up, tried to match his stare. Couldn’t handle five seconds before she dropped her head to the table.

“Selma’s already cooperating, Bri, and that’s buying her a lot of goodwill. She may be your homegirl, Bri, but she’s smart enough to realize that a life sentence for murder changes everything.”

The girl’s head shook from side to side. I’d heard moans like hers on the cancer ward.

Milo said, “It doesn’t need to be bad, Bri. You’ve got one chance to tell us your side. After that, it’s Selma being smart and you being stupid and ending up in the same situation as Tristram and Quinn. Up to you.”

The head shaking rotated in a strange way, morphing to a nod.

“They’re bad,” she said.

“Tristram and Quinn.”

“Yeah. Not the good kind of bad.”

CHAPTER

34

 We’ve been partying like… months,” said Brianna Blevins.

“Where’d you meet them?”

“They came into the Lion, paid for lap dances, bought champagne, got into the VIP room.”

“After that, then you started partying.”

“Yeah.”

“They party with anything besides meth?”

“Single malt,” she said. “They always had bottles of it.”

“Booze and ice,” said Milo. “Then there was a different kind of ice.”

Brianna Blevins grinned.

“Something funny, Bri?”

Her smile died. “Not, it’s just… when they asked us to buy it we’re like a different ice? Selma said it. Being funny.”

“Did Tristram and Quinn laugh?”

“Um… uh-huh, they laughed all the time.”

“Coupla happy guys.”

“Why not? They had everything.”

“What’s everything, Bri?”

“Money, cars, they could do what they want. They’re hot.”

“And on top of all that, they had you and Selma for partying.”

The girl’s eyes drooped as her face turned ancient. “We knew we were like… a game, you know? They were going to Stamford College, said they’d take us but we knew that was bullshit.”

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