When I spotted Detective Cotton, who was lolling near a stairwell, jotting something into a small loose-leaf notebook, I grunted, got his attention. I wasn’t happy with my own attitude, to be sure. Certainly the law had no obligation to fill me in on every myriad detail of the case; certainly not. I was a civilian, an East Coast interloper no less; and, frankly, a little too nosy sometimes. Yet Cotton had confided, or seemed to. He had proffered information and seemed to respect me as a confidante. No, I told myself, I feared I’d misread him. I’d thought I might like him. But now I was back to disliking the self-assured, smug warden of the law. He nodded at me, still intent on his jottings. “Sir,” I said, drawing myself up to my imagined height. “Good morning.” “Miss Ferber, a pleasant surprise.” “I don’t know what’s pleasant about it.” He tucked the pad into a side pocket of his sports jacket. “Something wrong?” “Frankly, yes.