"Robb, J D - In Death 01 - Naked in Death 1.1" - читать интересную книгу автора (Robb J D)
Eve Dallas 01 - Naked In Death
[Version 1.0 - 12/31/01 - Scanned, OCR'ed and spell-checked; Version 1.1
- 01/12/02 - read through and additional typos corrected]
NAKED IN DEATH
by J. D. Robb
Copyright (c) 1995
-=O=-***-=O=-
What's past is prologue.
-- WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
Violence is as American as cherry pie.
-- RAP (HUBERT GEROLD) BROWN
*** CHAPTER ONE ***
She woke in the dark. Through the slats on the window shades, the first
murky hint of dawn slipped, slanting shadowy bars over the bed. It was
like waking in a cell.
For a moment she simply lay there, shuddering, imprisoned, while the
dream faded. After ten years on the force, Eve still had dreams.
Six hours before, she'd killed a man, had watched death creep into his
eyes. It wasn't the first time she'd exercised maximum force, or
dreamed. She'd learned to accept the action and the consequences.
But it was the child that haunted her. The child she hadn't been in time
to save. The child whose screams had echoed in the dreams with her own.
All the blood, Eve thought, scrubbing sweat from her face with her
hands. Such a small little girl to have had so much blood in her. And
she knew it was vital that she push it aside.
Standard departmental procedure meant that she would spend the morning
in Testing. Any officer whose discharge of weapon resulted in
termination of life was required to undergo emotional and psychiatric
clearance before resuming duty. Eve considered the tests a mild pain in
the ass.
She would beat them, as she'd beaten them before.
When she rose, the overheads went automatically to low setting, lighting
her way into the bath. She winced once at her reflection. Her eyes were
swollen from lack of sleep, her skin nearly as pale as the corpses she'd
delegated to the ME.
Rather than dwell on it, she stepped into the shower, yawning.
"Give me one oh one degrees, full force," she said and shifted so that
the shower spray hit her straight in the face.
She let it steam, lathered listlessly while she played through the
events of the night before. She wasn't due in Testing until nine, and
would use the next three hours to settle and let the dream fade away
completely.
Small doubts and little regrets were often detected and could mean a
second and more intense round with the machines and the owl-eyed
technicians who ran them.
Eve didn't intend to be off the streets longer than twenty-four hours.
After pulling on a robe, she walked into the kitchen and programmed her
AutoChef for coffee, black; toast, light. Through her window she could
hear the heavy hum of air traffic carrying early commuters to offices,
late ones home. She'd chosen the apartment years before because it was
in a heavy ground and air pattern, and she liked the noise and crowds.
On another yawn, she glanced out the window, followed the rattling
journey of an aging airbus hauling laborers not fortunate enough to work
in the city or by home-links.
She brought the New York Times up on her monitor and scanned the
headlines while the faux caffeine bolstered her system. The AutoChef had
burned her toast again, but she ate it anyway, with a vague thought of
springing for a replacement unit.
She was frowning over an article on a mass recall of droid cocker
spaniels when her tele-link blipped. Eve shifted to communications and
watched her commanding officer flash onto the screen.
"Commander."
"Lieutenant." He gave her a brisk nod, noted the still wet hair and
sleepy eyes. "Incident at Twenty-seven West Broadway, eighteenth floor.
You're primary."
Eve lifted a brow. "I'm on Testing. Subject terminated at twenty-two
thirty-five."
"We have override," he said, without inflection. "Pick up your shield
and weapon on the way to the incident. Code Five, lieutenant."
"Yes, sir." His face flashed off even as she pushed back from the
screen. Code Five meant she would report directly to her commander, and
there would be no unsealed interdepartmental reports and no cooperation
with the press.
In essence, it meant she was on her own.
-=O=-***-=O=-
Broadway was noisy and crowded, a party where rowdy guests never left.
Street, pedestrian, and sky traffic were miserable, choking the air with
bodies and vehicles. In her old days in uniform she remembered it as a
hot spot for wrecks and crushed tourists who were too busy gaping at the
show to get out of the way.
Even at this hour there was steam rising from the stationary and
portable food stands that offered everything from rice noodles to
soydogs for the teeming crowds. She had to swerve to avoid an eager
merchant on his smoking Glida-Grill, and took his flipped middle finger
as a matter of course.
Eve double-parked and, skirting a man who smelled worse than his bottle
of brew, stepped onto the sidewalk. She scanned the building first,
fifty floors of gleaming metal that knifed into the sky from a hilt of
concrete. She was propositioned twice before she reached the door.
Since this five-block area of Broadway was affectionately termed
Prostitute's Walk, she wasn't surprised. She flashed her badge for the
uniform guarding the entrance.
"Lieutenant Dallas."
"Yes, sir." He skimmed his official compu-seal over the door to keep out
the curious, then led the way to the bank of elevators. "Eighteenth
floor," he said when the doors swished shut behind them.
"Fill me in, officer." Eve switched on her recorder and waited.
"I wasn't first on the scene, lieutenant. Whatever happened upstairs is
being kept upstairs. There's a badge inside waiting for you. We have a
Homicide, and a Code Five in number Eighteen-oh-three."
"Who called it in?"
"I don't have that information."
He stayed where he was when the elevator opened. Eve stepped out and was
alone in a narrow hallway. Security cameras tilted down at her and her
feet were almost soundless on the worn nap of the carpet as she
approached 1803. Ignoring the handplate, she announced herself, holding
her badge up to eye level for the peep cam until the door opened.
"Dallas."
"Feeney." She smiled, pleased to see a familiar face. Ryan Feeney was an
old friend and former partner who'd traded the street for a desk and a
top level position in the Electronics Detection Division. "So, they're
sending computer pluckers these days."
"They wanted brass, and the best." His lips curved in his wide, rumpled
face, but his eyes remained sober. He was a small, stubby man with
small, stubby hands and rust-colored hair. "You look beat."
"Rough night."
"So I heard." He offered her one of the sugared nuts from the bag he
habitually carried, studying her, and measuring if she was up to what
was waiting in the bedroom beyond.
She was young for her rank, barely thirty, with wide brown eyes that had
never had a chance to be naive. Her doe-brown hair was cropped short,
for convenience rather than style, but suited her triangular face with
its razor-edge cheekbones and slight dent in the chin.
She was tall, rangy, with a tendency to look thin, but Feeney knew there
were solid muscles beneath the leather jacket. More, there was a brain,
and a heart.
"This one's going to be touchy, Dallas."
"I picked that up already. Who's the victim?"
"Sharon DeBlass, granddaughter of Senator DeBlass."
Neither meant anything to her. "Politics isn't my forte, Feeney."
"The gentleman from Virginia, extreme right, old money. The
granddaughter took a sharp left a few years back, moved to New York, and
became a licensed companion."
"She was a hooker." Dallas glanced around the apartment. It was
furnished in obsessive modern -- glass and thin chrome, signed holograms
on the walls, recessed bar in bold red. The wide mood screen behind the
bar bled with mixing and merging shapes and colors in cool pastels.
Neat as a virgin, Eve mused, and cold as a whore. "No surprise, given
her choice of real estate."
"Politics makes it delicate. Victim was twenty-four, Caucasian female.
She bought it in bed."
Eve only lifted a brow. "Seems poetic, since she'd been bought there.
How'd she die?"
"That's the next problem. I want you to see for yourself."
As they crossed the room, each took out a slim container, sprayed their
hands front and back to seal in oils and fingerprints. At the doorway,
Eve sprayed the bottom of her boots to slicken them so that she would
pick up no fibers, stray hairs, or skin.
Eve was already wary. Under normal circumstances there would have been
two other investigators on a homicide scene, with recorders for sound
and pictures. Forensics would have been waiting with their usual snarly
impatience to sweep the scene.
The fact that only Feeney had been assigned with her meant that there
were a lot of eggshells to be walked over.
"Security cameras in the lobby, elevator, and hallways," Eve commented.
"I've already tagged the discs." Feeney opened the bedroom door and let
her enter first.
It wasn't pretty. Death rarely was a peaceful, religious experience to
Eve's mind. It was the nasty end, indifferent to saint and sinner. But
this was shocking, like a stage deliberately set to offend.
The bed was huge, slicked with what appeared to be genuine satin sheets
the color of ripe peaches. Small, soft focused spotlights were trained
on its center where the naked woman was cupped in the gentle dip of the
floating mattress.
The mattress moved with obscenely graceful undulations to the rhythm of
programmed music slipping through the headboard.
She was beautiful still, a cameo face with a tumbling waterfall of
flaming red hair, emerald eyes that stared glassily at the mirrored
ceiling, long, milk white limbs that called to mind visions of Swan Lake
as the motion of the bed gently rocked them.
They weren't artistically arranged now, but spread lewdly so that the
dead woman formed a final X dead center of the bed.
There was a hole in her forehead, one in her chest, another horribly
gaping between the open thighs. Blood had splattered on the glossy
sheets, pooled, dripped, and stained.
There were splashes of it on the lacquered walls, like lethal paintings
scrawled by an evil child.
So much blood was a rare thing, and she had seen much too much of it the
night before to take the scene as calmly as she would have preferred.
She had to swallow once, hard, and force herself to block out the image
of a small child.
"You got the scene on record?"
"Yep."
"Then turn that damn thing off." She let out a breath after Feeney
located the controls that silenced the music. The bed flowed to
stillness. "The wounds," Eve murmured, stepping closer to examine them.
"Too neat for a knife. Too messy for a laser." A flash came to her --
old training films, old videos, old viciousness.
"Christ, Feeney, these look like bullet wounds."
Feeney reached into his pocket and drew out a sealed bag. "Whoever did
it left a souvenir." He passed the bag to Eve. "An antique like this has
to go for eight, ten thousand for a legal collection, twice that on the
black market."
Fascinated, Eve turned the sealed revolver over in her hand. "It's
heavy," she said half to herself. "Bulky."
"Thirty-eight caliber," he told her. "First one I've seen outside of a
museum. This one's a Smith & Wesson, Model Ten, blue steel." He looked
at it with some affection. "Real classic piece, used to be standard
police issue up until the latter part of the twentieth. They stopped
making them in about twenty-two, twenty-three, when the gun ban was
passed."
"You're the history buff." Which explained why he was with her. "Looks
new." She sniffed through the bag, caught the scent of oil and burning.
"Somebody took good care of this. Steel fired into flesh," she mused as
she passed the bag back to Feeney. "Ugly way to die, and the first I've
seen it in my ten years with the department."
"Second for me. About fifteen years ago, Lower East Side, party got out
of hand. Guy shot five people with a twenty-two before he realized it
wasn't a toy. Hell of a mess."
"Fun and games," Eve murmured. "We'll scan the collectors, see how many
we can locate who own one like this. Somebody might have reported a
robbery."
"Might have."
"It's more likely it came through the black market." Eve glanced back at
the body. "If she's been in the business for a few years, she'd have
discs, records of her clients, her trick books." She frowned. "With Code
Five, I'll have to do the door-to-door myself. Not a simple sex crime,"
she said with a sigh. "Whoever did it set it up. The antique weapon, the
wounds themselves, almost ruler straight down the body, the lights, the
pose. Who called it in, Feeney?"
"The killer." He waited until her eyes came back to him. "From right
here. Called the station. See how the bedside unit's aimed at her face?
That's what came in. Video, no audio."
"He's into showmanship." Eve let out a breath. "Clever bastard,
arrogant, cocky. He had sex with her first. I'd bet my badge on it. Then
he gets up and does it." She lifted her arm, aiming, lowering it as she
counted off, "One, two, three."
"That's cold," murmured Feeney.
"He's cold. He smooths down the sheets after. See how neat they are? He
arranges her, spreads her open so nobody can have any doubts as to how
she made her living. He does it carefully, practically measuring, so
that she's perfectly aligned. Center of the bed, arms and legs equally
apart. Doesn't turn off the bed 'cause it's part of the show. He leaves
the gun because he wants us to know right away he's no ordinary man.
He's got an ego. He doesn't want to waste time letting the body be
discovered eventually. He wants it now. That instant gratification."
"She was licensed for men and women," Feeney pointed out, but Eve shook
her head.
"It's not a woman. A woman wouldn't have left her looking both beautiful
and obscene. No, I don't think it's a woman. Let's see what we can find.
Have you gone into her computer yet?"
"No. It's your case, Dallas. I'm only authorized to assist."
"See if you can access her client files." Eve went to the dresser and
began to carefully search drawers.
Expensive taste, Eve reflected. There were several items of real silk,
the kind no simulation could match. The bottle of scent on the dresser
was exclusive, and smelled, after a quick sniff, like expensive sex.
The contents of the drawers were meticulously ordered, lingerie folded
precisely, sweaters arranged according to color and material. The closet
was the same.
Obviously the victim had a love affair with clothes and a taste for the
best and took scrupulous care of what she owned.
And she'd died naked.
"Kept good records," Feeney called out. "It's all here. Her client list,
appointments -- including her required monthly health exam and her
weekly trip to the beauty salon. She used the Trident Clinic for the
first and Paradise for the second."
"Both top of the line. I've got a friend who saved for a year so she
could have one day for the works at Paradise. Takes all kinds."
"My wife's sister went for it for her twenty-fifth anniversary. Cost
damn near as much as my kid's wedding. Hello, we've got her personal
address book."
"Good. Copy all of it, will you, Feeney?" At his low whistle, she looked
over her shoulder, glimpsed the small gold-edged palm computer in his
hand. "What?"
"We've got a lot of high-powered names in here. Politics, entertainment,
money, money, money. Interesting, our girl has Roarke's private number."
"Roarke who?"
"Just Roarke, as far as I know. Big money there. Kind of guy that
touches shit and turns it into gold bricks. You've got to start reading
more than the sports page, Dallas."
"Hey, I read the headlines. Did you hear about the cocker spaniel
recall?"
"Roarke's always big news," Feeney said patiently. "He's got one of the
finest art collections in the world. Arts and antiques," he continued,
noting when Eve clicked in and turned to him. "He's a licensed gun
collector. Rumor is he knows how to use them."
"I'll pay him a visit."
"You'll be lucky to get within a mile of him."
"I'm feeling lucky." Eve crossed over to the body to slip her hands
under the sheets.
"The man's got powerful friends, Dallas. You can't afford to so much as
whisper he's linked to this until you've got something solid."
"Feeney, you know it's a mistake to tell me that." But even as she
started to smile, her fingers brushed something between cold flesh and
bloody sheets. "There's something under her." Carefully, Eve lifted the
shoulder, eased her fingers over.
"Paper," she murmured. "Sealed." With her protected thumb, she wiped at
a smear of blood until she could read the protected sheet.
ONE OF SIX
"It looks hand printed," she said to Feeney and held it out. "Our boy's
more than clever, more than arrogant. And he isn't finished."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Eve spent the rest of the day doing what would normally have been
assigned to drones. She interviewed the victim's neighbors personally,
recording statements, impressions.
She managed to grab a quick sandwich from the same Glida-Grill she'd
nearly smashed before, driving across town. After the night and the
morning she'd put in, she could hardly blame the receptionist at
Paradise for looking at her as though she'd recently scraped herself off
the sidewalk.
Waterfalls played musically among the flora in the reception area of the
city's most exclusive salon. Tiny cups of real coffee and slim glasses
of fizzling water or champagne were served to those lounging on the
cushy chairs and settees. Headphones and discs of fashion magazines were
complementary.
The receptionist was magnificently breasted, a testament to the salon's
figure sculpting techniques. She wore a snug, short outfit in the
salon's trademark red, and an incredible coif of ebony hair coiled like
snakes.
Eve couldn't have been more delighted.
"I'm sorry," the woman said in a carefully modulated voice as empty of
expression as a computer. "We serve by appointment only."
"That's okay." Eve smiled and was almost sorry to puncture the disdain.
Almost. "This ought to get me one." She offered her badge. "Who works on
Sharon DeBlass?"
The receptionist's horrified eyes darted toward the waiting area. "Our
clients' needs are strictly confidential."
"I bet." Enjoying herself, Eve leaned companionably on the U-shaped
counter. "I can talk nice and quiet, like this, so we understand each
other -- Denise?" She flicked her gaze down to the discreet studded
badge on the woman's breast. "Or I can talk louder, so everyone
understands. If you like the first idea better, you can take me to a
nice quiet room where we won't disturb any of your clients, and you can
send in Sharon DeBlass's operator. Or whatever term you use."
"Consultant," Denise said faintly. "If you'll follow me."
"My pleasure."
And it was.
Outside of movies or videos, Eve had never seen anything so lush. The
carpet was a red cushion your feet could sink blissfully into. Crystal
drops hung from the ceiling and spun light. The air smelled of flowers
and pampered flesh.
She might not have been able to imagine herself there, spending hours
having herself creamed, oiled, pummeled, and sculpted, but if she were
going to waste such time on vanity, it would certainly have been
interesting to do so under such civilized conditions.
The receptionist showed her into a small room with a hologram of a
summer meadow dominating one wall. The quiet sound of birdsong and
breezes sweetened the air.
"If you'd just wait here."
"No problem." Eve waited for the door to close then, with an indulgent
sigh, she lowered herself into a deeply cushioned chair. The moment she
was seated, the monitor beside her blipped on, and a friendly, indulgent
face that could only be a droid's beamed smiles.
"Good afternoon. Welcome to Paradise. Your beauty needs and your comfort
are our only priorities. Would you like some refreshment while you wait
for your personal consultant?"
"Sure. Coffee, black, coffee."
"Of course. What sort would you prefer? Press C on your keyboard for the
list of choices."
Smothering a chuckle, Eve followed instructions. She spent the next two
minutes pondering over her options, then narrowed it down to French
Riviera or Caribbean Cream.
The door opened again before she could decide. Resigned, she rose and
faced an elaborately dressed scarecrow.
Over his fuchsia shirt and plum colored slacks, he wore an open,
trailing smock of Paradise red. His hair, flowing back from a painfully
thin face echoed the hue of his slacks. He offered Eve a hand, squeezed
gently, and stared at her out of soft doe eyes.
"I'm terribly sorry, officer. I'm baffled."
"I want information on Sharon DeBlass." Again, Eve took out her badge
and offered it for inspection.
"Yes, ah, Lieutenant Dallas. That was my understanding. You must know,
of course, our client data is strictly confidential. Paradise has a
reputation for discretion as well as excellence."
"And you must know, of course, that I can get a warrant, Mr. -- ?"
"Oh, Sebastian. Simply Sebastian." He waved a thin hand, sparkling with
rings. "I'm not questioning your authority, lieutenant. But if you could
assist me, your motives for the inquiry?"
"I'm inquiring into the motives for the murder of DeBlass." She waited a
beat, judged the shock that shot into his eyes and drained his face of
color. "Other than that, my data is strictly confidential."
"Murder. My dear God, our lovely Sharon is dead? There must be a
mistake." He all but slid into a chair, letting his head fall back and
his eyes close. When the monitor offered him refreshment, he waved a
hand again. Light shot from his jeweled fingers. "God, yes. I need a
brandy, darling. A snifter of Trevalli."
Eve sat beside him, took out her recorder. "Tell me about Sharon."
"A marvelous creature. Physically stunning, of course, but it went
deeper." His brandy came into the room on a silent automated cart.
Sebastian plucked the snifter and took one deep swallow. "She had
flawless taste, a generous heart, rapier wit."
He turned the doe eyes on Eve again. "I saw her only two days ago."
"Professionally?"
"She had a standing weekly appointment, half day. Every other week was a
full day." He whipped out a butter yellow scarf and dabbed at his eyes.
"Sharon took care of herself, believed strongly in the presentation of
self."
"It would be an asset in her line of work."
"Naturally. She only worked to amuse herself. Money wasn't a particular
need, with her family background. She enjoyed sex."
"With you?"
His artistic face winced, the rosy lips pursing in what could have been
a pout or pain. "I was her consultant, her confidant, and her friend,"
Sebastian said stiffly and draped the scarf with casual flare over his
left shoulder. "It would have been indiscreet and unprofessional for us
to become sexual partners."
"So you weren't attracted to her, sexually?"
"It was impossible for anyone not to be attracted to her sexually.
She..." He gestured grandly. "Exuded sex as others might exude an
expensive perfume. My God." He took another shaky sip of brandy. "It's
all past tense. I can't believe it. Dead. Murdered." His gaze shot back
to Eve. "You said murdered."
"That's right."
"That neighborhood she lived in," he said grimly. "No one could talk to
her about moving to a more acceptable location. She enjoyed living on
the edge and flaunting it all under her family's aristocratic noses."
"She and her family were at odds?"
"Oh definitely. She enjoyed shocking them. She was such a free spirit,
and they so... ordinary." He said it in a tone that indicated ordinary
was more mortal a sin than murder itself. "Her grandfather continues to
introduce bills that would make prostitution illegal. As if the past
century hasn't proven that such matters need to be regulated for health
and crime security. He also stands against procreation regulation,
gender adjustment, chemical balancing, and the gun ban."
Eve's ears pricked. "The senator opposes the gun ban?"
"It's one of his pets. Sharon told me he owns a number of nasty antiques
and spouts off regularly about that outdated right to bear arms
business. If he had his way, we'd all be back in the twentieth century,
murdering each other right and left."
"Murder still happens," Eve murmured. "Did she ever mention friends or
clients who might have been dissatisfied or overly aggressive?"
"Sharon had dozens of friends. She drew people to her, like..." He
searched for a suitable metaphor, used the corner of the scarf again.
"Like an exotic and fragrant flower. And her clients, as far as I know,
were all delighted with her. She screened them carefully. All of her
sexual partners had to meet certain standards. Appearance, intellect,
breeding, and proficiency. As I said, she enjoyed sex, in all of its
many forms. She was... adventurous."
That fit with the toys Eve had unearthed in the apartment. The velvet
handcuffs and whips, the scented oils and hallucinogens. The offerings
on the two sets of colinked virtual reality headphones had been a shock
even to Eve's jaded system.
"Was she involved with anyone on a personal level?"
"There were men occasionally, but she lost interest quickly. Recently
she'd spoken about Roarke. She'd met him at a party and was attracted.
In fact, she was seeing him for dinner the very night she came in for
her consultation. She'd wanted something exotic because they were dining
in Mexico."
"In Mexico. That would have been the night before last."
"Yes. She was just bubbling over about him. We did her hair in a gypsy
look, gave her a bit more gold to the skin -- full body work. Rascal Red
on the nails, and a charming little temp tattoo of a red-winged
butterfly on the left buttock. Twenty-four-hour facial cosmetics so that
she wouldn't smudge. She looked spectacular," he said, tearing up. "And
she kissed me and told me she just might be in love this time. 'Wish me
luck, Sebastian.' She said that as she left. It was the last thing she
ever said to me."
*** CHAPTER TWO ***
No sperm. Eve swore over the autopsy report. If she'd had sex with her
killer, the victim's choice of birth control had killed the little
soldiers on contact, eliminating all trace of them within thirty minutes
after ejaculation.
The extent of her injuries made the tests for sexual activity
inconclusive. He'd blown her apart either for symbolism or for his own
protection.
No sperm, no blood but for the victim's. No DNA.
The forensic sweep of the murder site turned up no fingerprints -- none:
not the victim's, not her weekly cleaning specialist, certainly not the
murderer's.
Every surface had been meticulously wiped, including the murder weapon.
Most telling of all, in Eve's judgment, were the security discs. Once
again, she slipped the elevator surveillance into her desk monitor.
The discs were initialed.
Gorham Complex. Elevator A. 2-12-2058. 06:00.
Eve zipped through, watching the hours fly by. The elevator doors opened
for the first time at noon. She slowed the speed, giving her unit a
quick smack with the heel of her hand when the image hobbled, then
studied the nervous little man who entered and asked for the fifth
floor.
A jumpy John, she decided, amused when he tugged at his collar and
slipped a breath mint between his lips. Probably had a wife and two kids
and a steady white-collar job that allowed him to slip away for an hour
once a week for his nooner.
He got off the elevator at five.
Activity was light for several hours, the occasional prostitute riding
down to the lobby, some returning with shopping bags and bored
expressions. A few clients came and went. The action picked up about
eight. Some residents went out, snazzily dressed for dinner, others came
in to keep their appointments.
At ten, an elegant-looking couple entered the car together. The woman
allowed the man to open her fur coat, under which she wore nothing but
stiletto heels and a tattoo of a rosebud with the stem starting at the
crotch and the flower artistically teasing the left nipple. He fondled
her, a technically illegal act in a secured area. When the elevator
stopped on eighteen, the woman drew her coat together, and they exited,
chatting about the play they'd just seen.
Eve made a note to interview the man the following day. It was he who
was the victim's neighbor and associate.
The glitch happened at precisely 12:05. The image shifted almost
seamlessly, with only the faintest blip, and returned to surveillance at
02:46.
Two hours and forty-one minutes lost.
The hallway disc of the eighteenth floor was the same. Nearly three
hours wiped. Eve picked up her cooling coffee as she thought it through.
The man understood security, she mused, was familiar enough with the
building to know where and how to doctor the discs. And he'd taken his
time, she thought. The autopsy put the victim's death at two A. M.
He'd spent nearly two hours with her before he'd killed her, and nearly
an hour more after she'd been dead. Yet he hadn't left a trace.
Clever boy.
If Sharon DeBlass had recorded an appointment, personal or professional,
for midnight, that, too, had been wiped.
So he'd known her intimately enough to be sure where she kept her files
and how to access them.
On a hunch, Eve leaned forward again. "Gorham Complex, Broadway, New
York. Owner."
Her eyes narrowed as the date flashed onto her screen.
Gorham Complex, owned by Roarke Industries, headquarters 500 Fifth
Avenue. Roarke, president and CEO. New York residence, 222 Central Park
West.
"Roarke," Eve murmured. "You just keep turning up, don't you. Roarke?"
she repeated. "All data, view and print."
Ignoring the incoming call on the 'link beside her, Eve sipped her
coffee and read.
Roarke -- no known given name -- born 10-06-2023, Dublin, Ireland. ID
number 33492-ABR-50. Parents unknown. Marital status, single. President
and CEO of Roarke Industries, established 2042. Main branches New York,
Chicago, New Los Angeles, Dublin, London, Bonn, Paris, Frankfurt, Tokyo,
Milan, Sydney. Off-planet branches. Station 45, Bridgestone Colony,
Vegas II, Free-Star One. Interests in real estate, import-export,
shipping, entertainment, manufacturing, pharmaceuticals, transportation.
Estimated gross worth, three billion, eight hundred million.
Busy boy, Eve thought, lifting a brow as a list of his companies clicked
on-screen.
"Education," she demanded.
Unknown.
"Criminal record?"
No data.
"Access Roarke, Dublin."
No additional data.
"Well, shit. Mr. Mystery. Description and visual." Roarke. Black hair,
blue eyes, 6 feet, 2 inches, 173 pounds.
Eve grunted as the computer listed the description. She had to agree
that in Roarke's case, a picture was worth a couple hundred words.
His image stared back at her from the screen. He was almost ridiculously
handsome: the narrow, aesthetic face; the slash of cheekbones; and
sculpted mouth. Yes, his hair was black, but the computer didn't say it
was thick and full and swept back from a strong forehead to fall inches
above broad shoulders. His eyes were blue, but the word was much too
simple for the intensity of color or the power in them.
Even on an image, Eve could see this was a man who hunted down what or
who he wanted, bagged it, used it, and didn't bother with frivolities
such as trophies.
And yes, she thought, this was a man who could kill if and when it
suited him. He would do so coolly, methodically, and without breaking a
sweat.
Gathering up the hard data, she decided she'd have a talk with Roarke.
Very soon.
-=O=-***-=O=-
By the time Eve left the station to head home, the sky was miserably
spitting snow. She checked her pockets without hope and found she had
indeed left her gloves in her apartment. Hatless, gloveless, with only
her leather jacket as protection against the biting wind, she drove
across town.
She'd meant to get her vehicle into repair. There just hadn't been time.
But there was plenty of time to regret it now as she fought traffic and
shivered, thanks to a faulty heating system.
She swore if she got home without turning into a block of ice, she'd
make the appointment with the mechanic.
But when she did arrive home, her primary thought was food. Even as she
unlocked her door, she was dreaming about a hot bowl of soup, maybe a
mound of chips, if she had any left, and coffee that didn't taste like
someone had spilled sewage into the water system.
She saw the package immediately, the slim square just inside the door.
Her weapon was out and in her hand before she drew the next breath.
Sweeping with weapon and eyes, she kicked the door shut behind her. She
left the package where it was and moved from room to room until she was
satisfied she was alone.
After bolstering her weapon, she peeled out of her jacket and tossed it
aside. Bending, she picked up the sealed disc by the edges. There was no
label, no message.
Eve took it into the kitchen, tapping it carefully out of its seal, and
slipped it into her computer.
And forgot all about food.
The video was top quality, as was the sound. She sat down slowly as the
scene played on her monitor.
Naked, Sharon DeBlass lounged on the lake-size bed, rustling satin
sheets. She lifted a hand, skimming it through that glorious tumbled
mane of russet hair as the bed's floating motion rocked her.
"Want me to do anything special, darling?" She chuckled, rose up on her
knees, cupped her own breasts. "Why don't you come back over here..."
Her tongue flicked out to wet her lips. "We'll do it all again." Her
gaze lowered, and a little cat smile curved her lips. "Looks like you're
more than ready." She laughed again, shook back her hair. "Oh, we want
to play a game." Still smiling, Sharon put her hands up. "Don't hurt
me." She whimpered, shivering even as her eyes glinted with excitement.
"I'll do anything you want. Anything. Come on over here and force me. I
want you to." Lowering her hands, she began to stroke herself. "Hold
that big bad gun on me while you rape me. I want you to. I want you to
-- "
The explosion had Eve jolting. Her stomach twisted as she saw the woman
fly backward like a broken doll, the blood spurting out of her forehead.
The second shot wasn't such a shock, but Eve had to force herself to
keep her eyes on the screen. After the final report there was silence,
but for the quiet music, the fractured breathing. The killer's
breathing.
The camera moved in, panned the body in grisly detail. Then, through the
magic of video, DeBlass was as Eve had first seen her, spread-eagled in
a perfect x over bloody sheets. The image ended with a graphic overlay.
ONE OF SIX
It was easier to watch it through the second time. Or so Eve told
herself. This time she noticed a slight bobble of the camera after the
first shot, a quick, quiet gasp. She ran it back again, listening to
each word, studying each movement, hoping for some clue. But he was too
clever for that. And they both knew it.
He'd wanted her to see just how good he was. Just how cold.
And he wanted her to know that he knew just where to find her. Whenever
he chose.
Furious that her hands weren't quite steady, she rose. Rather than the
coffee she'd intended, Eve took out a bottle of wine from the small cold
cell, poured half a glass.
She drank it down quickly, promised herself the other half shortly, then
punched in the code for her commander.
It was the commander's wife who answered, and from the glittering drops
at her ears and the perfect coiffure, Eve calculated that she'd
interrupted one of the woman's famous dinner parties.
"Lieutenant Dallas, Mrs. Whitney. I'm sorry to interrupt your evening,
but I need to speak to the commander."
"We're entertaining, lieutenant."
"Yes, ma'am. I apologize." Fucking politics, Eve thought as she forced a
smile. "It's urgent."
"Isn't it always?"
The machine hummed on hold, mercifully without hideous background music
or updated news reports, for a full three minutes before the commander
came on.
"Dallas."
"Commander, I need to send you something over a coded line."
"It better be urgent, Dallas. My wife's going to make me pay for this."
"Yes, sir." Cops, she thought as she prepared to send the image to his
monitor, should stay single.
She waited, folding her restless hands on the table. As the images
played again, she watched again, ignoring the clenching in her gut. When
it was over, Whitney came back on-screen. His eyes were grim.
"Where did you get this?"
"He sent it to me. A disc was here, in my apartment, when I got back
from the station." Her voice was flat and careful. "He knows who I am,
where I am, and what I'm doing."
Whitney was silent for a moment. "My office, oh seven hundred. Bring the
disc, lieutenant."
"Yes, sir."
When the transmission ended, she did the two things her instincts
dictated. She made herself a copy of the disc, and she poured another
glass of wine.
-=O=-***-=O=-
She woke at three, shuddering, clammy, fighting for the breath to
scream. Whimpers sounded in her throat as she croaked out an order for
lights. Dreams were always more frightening in the dark.
Trembling, she lay back. This one had been worse, much worse, than any
she'd experienced before.
She'd killed the man. What choice had she had? He'd been too buzzed on
chemicals to be stunned. Christ, she'd tried, but he'd just keep coming,
and coming, and coming, with that wild look in his eyes and the already
bloodied knife in his hand.
The little girl had already been dead. There was nothing Eve could have
done to stop it. Please God, don't let there have been anything that
could have been done.
The little body hacked to pieces, the frenzied man with the dripping
knife. Then the look in his eyes when she'd fired on full, and the life
had slipped out of them.
But that hadn't been all. Not this time. This time he'd kept coming. And
she'd been naked, kneeling in a pool of satin. The knife had become a
gun, held by the man whose face she'd studied hours before. The man
called Roarke.
He'd smiled, and she'd wanted him. Her body had tingled with terror and
sexual desperation even as he'd shot her. Head, heart, and loins.
And somewhere through it all, the little girl, the poor little girl, had
been screaming for help.
Too tired to fight it, Eve simply rolled over, pressed her face into her
pillow and wept.
-=O=-***-=O=-
"Lieutenant." At precisely seven A. M., Commander Whitney gestured Eve
toward a chair in his office. Despite the fact, or perhaps due to the
fact that he'd been riding a desk for twelve years, he had sharp eyes.
He could see that she'd slept badly and had worked to disguise the signs
of a disturbed night. In silence, he held out a hand.
She'd put the disc and its cover into an evidence bag. Whitney glanced
at it, then laid it in the center of his desk.
"According to protocol, I'm obliged to ask you if you want to be
relieved from this case." He waited a beat. "We'll pretend I did."
"Yes, sir."
"Is your residence secure, Dallas?"
"I thought so." She took hard copy out of her briefcase. "I reviewed the
security discs after I contacted you. There's a ten minute time lapse.
As you'll see in my report, he has the capability of undermining
security, a knowledge of videos, editing, and, of course, antique
weapons."
Whitney took her report, set it aside. "That doesn't narrow the field
overmuch."
"No, sir. I have several more people I need to interview. With this
perpetrator, electronic investigation isn't primary, though Captain
Feeney's help is invaluable. This guy covers his tracks. We have no
physical evidence other than the weapon he chose to leave at the scene.
Feeney hadn't been able to trace it through normal channels. We have to
assume it was black market. I've started on her trick books and her
personal appointments, but she wasn't the retiring kind. It's going to
take time."
"Time's part of the problem. One of six, lieutenant. What does that say
to you?"
"That he has five more in mind, and wants us to know it. He enjoys his
work and wants to be the focus of our attention." She took a careful
breath. "There's not enough for a full psychiatric profile. We can't say
how long he'll be satisfied by the thrill of this murder, when he'll
need his next fix. It could be today. It could be a year from now. We
can't bank on him being careless."
Whitney merely nodded. "Are you having problems with the rightful
termination?"
The knife slicked with blood. The small ruined body at her feet.
"Nothing I can't handle."
"Be sure of it, Dallas. I don't need an officer on a sensitive case like
this who's worried whether she should or shouldn't use her weapon."
"I'm sure of it."
She was the best he had, and he couldn't afford to doubt her. "Are you
up to playing politics?" His lips curved thinly. "Senator DeBlass is on
his way over. He flew into New York last night."
"Diplomacy isn't my strong suit."
"I'm aware of that. But you're going to work on it. He wants to talk to
the investigating officer, and he went over my head to arrange it.
Orders came down from the chief. You're to give the senator your full
cooperation."
"This is a Code Five investigation," Eve said stiffly. "I don't care if
orders came down from God Almighty, I'm not giving confidential data to
a civilian."
Whitney's smile widened. He had a good, ordinary face, probably the one
he was born with. But when he smiled and meant it, the flash of white
teeth against the cocoa colored skin turned the plain features into the
special.
"I didn't hear that. And you didn't hear me tell you to give him no more
than the obvious facts. What you do hear me tell you, Lieutenant Dallas,
is that the gentleman from Virginia is a pompous, arrogant asshole.
Unfortunately, the asshole has power. So watch your step."
"Yes, sir."
He glanced at his watch, then slipped the file and disc into his safe
drawer. "You've got time for a cup of coffee... and, lieutenant," he
added as she rose. "If you're having trouble sleeping, take your
authorized sedative. I want my officers sharp."
"I'm sharp enough."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Senator Gerald DeBlass was undoubtedly pompous. He was unquestionably
arrogant. After one full minute in his company, Eve agreed that he was
undeniably an asshole.
He was a compact, bull of a man, perhaps six feet, two hundred and
twenty. His crop of white hair was cut sharp and thin as a razor so that
his head seemed huge and bullet sleek. His eyes were nearly black, as
were the heavy brows over them. They were large, like his nose, his
mouth.
His hands were enormous, and when he clasped Eve's briefly on
introduction, she noted they were smooth and soft as a baby's.
He brought his adjutant with him. Derrick Rockman was a whiplike man in
his early forties. Though he was nearly six-five, Eve gave DeBlass
twenty pounds on him. Neat, tidy, his pin-striped suit and slate blue
tie showed not a crease. His face was solemn, attractively even
featured, his movements restrained and controlled as he assisted the
more flamboyant senator out of his cashmere overcoat.
"What the hell have you done to find the monster who killed my
granddaughter?" DeBlass demanded.
"Everything possible, senator." Commander Whitney remained standing.
Though he offered DeBlass a seat, the man prowled the room, as he was
given to prowl the New Senate Gallery in East Washington.
"You've had twenty-four hours and more," DeBlass shot back, his voice
deep and booming. "It's my understanding you've assigned only two
officers to the investigation."
"For security purposes, yes. Two of my best officers," the commander
added. "Lieutenant Dallas heads the investigation and reports solely to
me."
DeBlass turned those hard black eyes on Eve. "What progress have you
made?"
"We identified the weapon, ascertained the time of death. We're
gathering evidence and interviewing residents of Ms. DeBlass's building,
and tracking the names in her personal and business logs. I'm working to
reconstruct the last twenty-four hours of her life."
"It should be obvious, even to the slowest mind, that she was murdered
by one of her clients." He said the word in a hiss.
"There was no appointment listed for several hours prior to her death.
Her last client has an alibi for the critical hour."
"Break it," DeBlass demanded. "A man who would pay for sexual favors
would have no compunction about murder."
Though Eve failed to see the correlation, she remembered her job and
nodded. "I'm working on it, senator."
"I want copies of her appointment books."
"That's not possible, senator," Whitney said mildly. "All evidence of a
capital crime is confidential."
DeBlass merely snorted and gestured toward Rockman.
"Commander." Rockman reached in his left breast pocket and drew out a
sheet of paper affixed with a holographic seal. "This document from your
chief of police authorizes the senator access to any and all evidence
and investigative data on Ms. DeBlass's murder."
Whitney barely glanced at the document before setting it aside. He'd
always considered politics a coward's game, and hated that he was forced
to play it. "I'll speak to the chief personally. If the authorization
holds, we'll have copies to you by this afternoon." Dismissing Rockman,
he looked back at DeBlass. "The confidentiality of evidence is a major
tool in the investigative process. If you insist on this, you risk
undermining the case."
"The case, as you put it, commander, was my flesh and blood."
"And as such, I'd hope your first priority would be assisting us to
bring her killer to justice."
"I've served justice for more than fifty years. I want that information
by noon." He picked up his coat, tossed it over one beefy arm. "If I'm
not satisfied that you're doing everything in your power to find this
maniac, I'll see that you're removed from this office." He turned toward
Eve. "And that the next thing you investigate, lieutenant, will be
sticky fingered teenagers at a shop-corn."
After he stormed out, Rockman used his quiet, solemn eyes to apologize.
"You must forgive the senator. He's overwrought. However much strain
there was between him and his granddaughter, she was family. Nothing is
more vital to the senator than his family. Her death, this kind of
violent, senseless death, is devastating to him."
"Right," Eve muttered. "He looked all choked up."
Rockman smiled; he managed to look amused and sorrowful at once. "Proud
men often disguise their grief behind aggression. We have every
confidence in your abilities and your tenacity, lieutenant. Commander,"
he nodded. "We'll expect the data this afternoon. Thank you for your
time."
"He's a smooth one," Eve muttered when Rockman shut the door quietly
behind him. "You're not going to cave, commander."
"I'll give them what I have to." His voice was sharp and edged with
suppressed fury. "Now, go get me more."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Police work was too often drudgery. After five hours of staring at her
monitor as she ran makes on the names in DeBlass's books, Eve was more
exhausted than she would have been after a marathon race.
Even with Feeney taking a portion of the names with his skill and
superior equipment, there were too many for such a small investigative
unit to handle quickly.
Sharon had been a very popular girl.
Feeling discretion would gain her more than aggression, Eve contacted
the clients by 'link and explained herself. Those who balked at the idea
of an interview were cheerfully invited to come into Cop Central,
charged with obstruction of justice.
By midafternoon she had spoken personally with the first dozen on the
client list, and took a detour back to the Gorham.
DeBlass's neighbor, the elegant man from the elevator, was Charles
Monroe. Eve found him in, and entertaining a client.
Slickly handsome in a black silk robe, and smelling seductively of sex,
Charles smiled engagingly.
"I'm terribly sorry, lieutenant. My three o'clock appointment has
another fifteen minutes."
"I'll wait." Without invitation, Eve stepped inside. Unlike DeBlass's
apartment, this one ran to deep, cushy chairs in leather and thick
carpets.
"Ah..." Obviously amused, Charles glanced behind him, where a door was
discreetly closed at the end of a short hallway. "Privacy and
confidentiality are, you understand, vital to my profession. My client
is apt to be disconcerted if she discovers the police on my doorstep."
"No problem. Got a kitchen?"
He let out a weighty sigh. "Sure. Right through that doorway. Make
yourself at home. I won't be long."
"Take your time." Eve strolled off to the kitchen. In contrast to the
elaborate living area, this was spartan. It seemed Charles spent little
time eating in. Still, he had a full-size friggie unit rather than a
cold cell, and she found the treasure of a Pepsi chilling. Satisfied for
the moment, she sat down to enjoy it while Charles finished off his
three o'clock.
Soon enough, she heard the murmur of voices, a man's, a woman's, a light
laugh. Moments later, he came in, the same easy smile on his face.
"Sorry to keep you waiting."
"No problem. Are you expecting anyone else?"
"Not until later this evening." He took out a Pepsi for himself, broke
the freshness seal from the tube, and poured it into a tall glass. He
rolled the tube into a ball and popped it into the recycler. "Dinner,
the opera, and a romantic rendezvous."
"You like that stuff? Opera?" she asked when he flashed a grin.
"Hate it. Can you think of anything more tedious than some big-chested
woman screaming in German half the night?"
Eve thought it over. "Nope."
"But there you are. Tastes vary." His smile faded as he joined her at
the little nook under the kitchen window. "I heard about Sharon on the
news this morning. I've been expecting someone to come by. It's
horrible. I can't believe she's dead."
"You knew her well?"
"We've been neighbors more than three years -- and occasionally we
worked together. Now and again, one of our clients would request a trio,
and we'd share the business."
"And when it wasn't business, did you still share?"
"She was a beautiful woman, and she found me attractive." He moved his
silk-clad shoulders, his eyes shifting to the tinted glass of the window
as a tourist tram streamed by. "If one of us was in the mood for a
busman's holiday, the other usually obliged." He smiled again. "That was
rare. Like working in a candy store, after a while you lose your taste
for chocolate. She was a friend, lieutenant. And I was very fond of
her."
"Can you tell me where you were the night of her death between midnight
and three A. M. ?"
His brows shot up. If it hadn't just occurred to him that he could be
considered a suspect, he was an excellent actor. Then again, Eve
thought, people in his line of work had to be.
"I was with a client, here. She stayed overnight."
"Is that usual?"
"This client prefers that arrangement. Lieutenant, I'll give you her
name if absolutely necessary, but I'd prefer not to. At least until I've
explained the circumstances to her."
"It's murder, Mr. Monroe, so it's necessary. What time did you bring
your client here?"
"About ten. We had dinner at Miranda's, the sky cafe above Sixth."
"Ten." Eve nodded, and saw the moment he remembered.
"The security camera in the elevator." His smile was all charm again.
"It's an antiquated law. I suppose you could bust me, but it's hardly
worth your time."
"Any sexual act in a secured area is a misdemeanor, Mr. Monroe."
"Charles, please."
"It's a nitpick, Charles, but they could suspend your license for six
months. Give me her name, and we'll clear it up as quietly as possible."
"You're going to lose me one of my best clients," he muttered. "Darleen
Howe. I'll get you the address." He rose to get his electronic datebook,
then read off the information.
"Thanks. Did Sharon talk about her clients with you?"
"We were friends," he said wearily. "Yeah, we talked shop, though it's
not strictly ethical. She had some funny stories. I'm more conventional
in style. Sharon was... open to the unusual. Sometimes we'd get together
for a drink, and she'd talk. No names. She had her own little terms for
them. The emperor, the weasel, the milkmaid, that kind of thing."
"Was there anyone she mentioned who worried her, made her uneasy?
Someone who might have been violent?"
"She didn't mind violence, and no, nobody worried her. One thing about
Sharon, she always felt in control. That's the way she wanted it because
she said she'd been under someone else's control most of her life. She
had a lot of bitterness toward her family. She told me once she'd never
planned on making a career out of professional sex. She'd only gotten
into it to make her family crazy. But then, after she got into it, she
decided she liked it."
He moved his shoulders again, sipped from his glass. "So she stayed in
the life, and killed two birds with one fuck. Her phrase."
He lifted his eyes again. "Looks like one of the fucks killed her."
"Yeah." Eve rose, tucked her recorder away. "Don't take any out-of-town
trips, Charles. I'll be in touch."
"That's it?"
"For the moment."
He stood as well, smiled again. "You're easy to talk to for a cop...
Eve." Experimentally, he skimmed a fingertip down her arm. When her
brows lifted, he took the fingertip over her jawline. "In a hurry?"
"Why?"
"Well, I've got a couple of hours, and you're very attractive. Big
golden eyes," he murmured. "This little dip right in your chin. Why
don't we both go off the clock for awhile?"
She waited while he lowered his head, while his lips hovered just above
hers. "Is this a bribe, Charles? Because if it is, and you're half as
good as I think you are..."
"I'm better." He nibbled at her bottom lip, let his hand slide down to
toy with her breast. "I'm much better."
"In that case... I'd have to charge you with a felony." She smiled as he
jerked back. "And that would make both of us really sad." Amused, she
patted his cheek. "But, thanks for the thought."
He scratched his chin as he followed her to the door. "Eve?"
She paused, hand on the knob, and glanced back at him. "Yes?"
"Bribes aside, if you change your mind, I'd be interested in seeing more
of you."
"I'll let you know." She closed the door and headed for the elevator.
It wouldn't have been difficult, she mused, for Charles Monroe to slip
out of his apartment, leaving his client sleeping, and slip into
Sharon's. A little sex, a little murder...
Thoughtful, she stepped into the elevator.
Doctor the discs. As a resident of the building, it would have been
simple for him to gain access to security. Then he could have popped
back into bed with his client.
It was too bad that the scenario was plausible, Eve thought as she
reached the lobby. She liked him. But until she checked his alibi
thoroughly, Charles Monroe was now at the top of her short list.
*** CHAPTER THREE ***
Eve hated funerals. She detested the rite human beings insisted on
giving death. The flowers, the music, the endless words and weeping.
There might be a God. She hadn't completely ruled such things out. And
if there were, she thought, It must have enjoyed a good laugh over Its
creations' useless rituals and passages.
Still, she had made the trip to Virginia to attend Sharon DeBlass's
funeral. She wanted to see the dead's family and friends gathered
together, to observe, and analyze, and judge.
The senator stood grim-faced and dry-eyed, with Rockman, his shadow, one
pew behind. Beside DeBlass was his son and daughter-in-law.
Sharon's parents were young, attractive, successful attorneys who headed
their own law firm.
Richard DeBlass stood with his head bowed and his eyes hooded, a trimmer
and somehow less dynamic version of his father. Was it coincidence, Eve
wondered, or design that he stood at equal distance between his father
and wife?
Elizabeth Barrister was sleek and chic in her dark suit, her waving
mahogany hair glossy, her posture rigid. And, Eve, noted, her eyes
red-rimmed and swimming with constant tears.
What did a mother feel, Eve wondered, as she had wondered all of her
life, when she lost a child?
Senator DeBlass had a daughter as well, and she flanked his right side.
Congresswoman Catherine DeBlass had followed in her father's political
footsteps. Painfully thin, she stood militarily straight, her arms
looking like brittle twigs in her black dress. Beside her, her husband
Justin Summit stared at the glossy coffin draped with roses at the front
of the church. At his side, their son Franklin, still trapped in the
gangly stage of adolescence, shifted restlessly.
At the end of the pew, somehow separate from the rest of the family, was
DeBlass's wife, Anna.
She neither shifted nor wept. Not once did Eve see her so much as glance
at the flower-strewn box that held what was left of her only
granddaughter.
There were others, of course. Elizabeth's parents stood together, hands
linked, and cried openly. Cousins, acquaintances, and friends dabbed at
their eyes or simply looked around in fascination or horror. The
President had sent an envoy, and the church was packed with more
politicians than the Senate lunchroom.
Though there were more than a hundred faces, Eve had no trouble picking
Roarke out of the crowd. He was alone. There were others lined in the
pew with him, but Eve recognized the solitary quality that surrounded
him. There could have been ten thousand in the building, and he would
have remained aloof from them.
His striking face gave away nothing: no guilt, no grief, no interest. He
might have been watching a mildly inferior play. Eve could think of no
better description for a funeral.
More than one head turned in his direction for a quick study or, in the
case of a shapely brunette, a not so subtle flirtation. Roarke responded
to both the same way: he ignored them.
At first study, she would have judged him as cold, an icy fortress of a
man who guarded himself against any and all. But there must have been
heat. It took more than discipline and intelligence to rise so high so
young. It took ambition, and to Eve's mind, ambition was a flammable
fuel.
He looked straight ahead as the dirge swelled, then without warning, he
turned his head, looked five pews back across the aisle and directly
into Eve's eyes.
It was surprise that had her fighting not to jolt at that sudden and
unexpected punch of power. It was will that kept her from blinking or
shifting her gaze. For one humming minute they stared at each other.
Then there was movement, and mourners came between them as they left the
church.
When Eve stepped into the aisle to search him out again, he was gone.
-=O=-***-=O=-
She joined the long line of cars and limos on the journey to the
cemetery. Above, the hearse and the family vehicles flew solemnly. Only
the very rich could afford body internment. Only the obsessively
traditional still put their dead into the ground.
Frowning, her fingers tapping the wheel, she relayed her observations
into her recorder. When she got to Roarke, she hesitated and her frown
deepened.
"Why would he trouble himself to attend the funeral of such a casual
acquaintance?" She murmured into the recorder in her pocket. "According
to data, they had met only recently and had a single date. Behavior
seems inconsistent and questionable."
She shivered once, glad she was alone as she drove through the arching
gates of the cemetery. As far as Eve was concerned, there should be a
law against putting someone in a hole.
More words and weeping, more flowers. The sun was bright as a sword but
the air had the snapping bite of a petulant child. Near the gravesite,
she slipped her hands into her pockets. She'd forgotten her gloves
again. The long, dark coat she wore was borrowed. Beneath it, the single
gray suit she owned had a loose button that seemed to beg her to tug at
it. Inside her thin leather boots, her toes were tiny blocks of ice.
The discomfort helped distract her from the misery of headstones and the
smell of cold, fresh earth. She bided her time, waiting until the last
mournful word about everlasting life echoed away, then approached the
senator.
"My sympathies, Senator DeBlass, to you and your family."
His eyes were hard; sharp and black, like the hewed edge of a stone.
"Save your sympathies, lieutenant. I want justice."
"So do I. Mrs. DeBlass." Eve held out a hand to the senator's wife and
found her fingers clutching a bundle of brittle twigs.
"Thank you for coming."
Eve nodded. One close look had shown her Anna DeBlass was skimming under
the edge of emotion on a buffering layer of chemicals. Her eyes passed
over Eve's face and settled just above her shoulder as she withdrew her
hand.
"Thank you for coming," she said in exactly the same flat tone to the
next offer of condolence.
Before Eve could speak again, her arm was taken in a firm grip. Rockman
smiled solemnly down at her. "Lieutenant Dallas, the Senator and his
family appreciate the compassion and interest you've shown in attending
the service." In his quiet manner, he edged her away. "I'm sure you'll
understand that, under the circumstances, it would be difficult for
Sharon's parents to meet the officer in charge of their daughter's
investigation over her grave."
Eve allowed him to lead her five feet away before she jerked her arm
free. "You're in the right business, Rockman. That's a very delicate and
diplomatic way of telling me to get my ass out."
"Not at all." He continued to smile, smoothly polite. "There's simply a
time and place. You have our complete cooperation, lieutenant. If you
wish to interview the senator's family, I'd be more than happy to
arrange it."
"I'll arrange my own interviews, at my own time and place." Because his
placid smile irked her, she decided to see if she could wipe it off his
face. "What about you, Rockman? Got an alibi for the night in question?"
The smile did falter -- that was some satisfaction. He recovered
quickly, however. "I dislike the word alibi."
"Me, too," she returned with a smile of her own. "That's why I like
nothing better than to break them. You didn't answer the question,
Rockman."
"I was in East Washington on the night Sharon was murdered. The senator
and I worked quite late refining a bill he intends to present next
month."
"It's a quick trip from EW to New York," she commented.
"It is. However, I didn't make it on that particular night. We worked
until nearly midnight, then I retired to the senator's guest room. We
had breakfast together at seven the next morning. As Sharon, according
to your own reports, was killed at two, it gives me a very narrow window
of opportunity."
"Narrow windows still provide access." But she said it only to irritate
him as she turned away. She'd held back the information on the doctored
security discs from the file she'd given DeBlass. The murderer had been
in the Gorham by midnight. Rockman would hardly use the victim's
grandfather for an alibi unless it was solid. Rockman's working in East
Washington at midnight slammed even that narrow window closed.
She saw Roarke again, and watched with interest as Elizabeth Barrister
clung to him, as he bent his head and murmured to her. Not the usual
offer and acceptance of sympathy from strangers, Eve mused.
Her brow lifted as Roarke laid a hand on Elizabeth's right cheek, kissed
her left before stepping back to speak quietly to Richard DeBlass.
He crossed to the senator, but there was no contact between them, and
the conversation was brief. Alone, as Eve had suspected, Roarke began to
walk across the winter grass, between the cold monuments the living
raised for the dead.
"Roarke."
He stopped, and as he had at the service, turned and met her eyes. She
thought she caught a flash of something in them: anger, sorrow,
impatience. Then it was gone and they were simply cool, blue, and
unfathomable.
She didn't hurry as she walked to him. Something told her he was a man
too used to people -- women certainly -- rushing toward him. So she took
her time, her long, slow strides flapping her borrowed coat around her
chilly legs.
"I'd like to speak with you," she said when she faced him. She took out
her badge, watched him give it a brief glance before lifting his eyes
back to hers. "I'm investigating Sharon DeBlass's murder."
"Do you make a habit of attending the funerals of murder victims,
Lieutenant Dallas?"
His voice was smooth, with a whisper of the charm of Ireland over it,
like rich cream over warmed whiskey. "Do you make a habit of attending
the funerals of women you barely know, Roarke?"
"I'm a friend of the family," he said simply. "You're freezing,
lieutenant."
She plunged her icy fingers into the pockets of the coat. "How well do
you know the victim's family?"
"Well enough." He tilted his head. In a minute, he thought, her teeth
would chatter. The nasty little wind was blowing her poorly cut hair
around a very interesting face. Intelligent, stubborn, sexy. Three very
good reasons in his mind to take a second look at a woman. "Wouldn't it
be more convenient to talk someplace warmer?"
"I've been unable to reach you," she began.
"I've been traveling. You've reached me now. I assume you're returning
to New York. Today?"
"Yes. I have a few minutes before I have to leave for the shuttle.
So..."
"So we'll go back together. That should give you time enough to grill
me."
"Question you," she said between her teeth, annoyed that he turned and
walked away from her. She lengthened her stride to catch up. "A few
simple answers now, Roarke, and we can arrange a more formal interview
in New York."
"I hate to waste time," he said easily. "You strike me as someone who
feels the same. Did you rent a car?"
"Yes."
"I'll arrange to have it returned." He held out a hand, waiting for the
key card.
"That isn't necessary."
"It's simpler. I appreciate complications, lieutenant, and I appreciate
simplicity. You and I are going to the same destination at the same
approximate time. You want to talk to me, and I'm willing to oblige." He
stopped by a black limo where a uniformed driver waited, holding the
rear door open. "My transport's routed for New York. You can, of course,
follow me to the airport, take public transportation, then call my
office for an appointment. Or you can drive with me, enjoy the privacy
of my jet, and have my full attention during the trip."
She hesitated only a moment, then took the key card for the rental from
her pocket and dropped it into his hand. Smiling, he gestured her into
the limo where she settled as he instructed his driver to deal with the
rental car.
"Now then." Roarke slid in beside her, reached for a decanter. "Would
you like a brandy to fight off the chill?"
"No." She felt the warmth of the car sweep up from her feet and was
afraid she'd begin to shiver in reaction.
"Ah. On duty. Coffee perhaps."
"Great."
Gold winked at his wrist as he pressed his choice for two coffees on the
AutoChef built into the side panel. "Cream?"
"Black."
"A woman after my own heart." Moments later, he opened the protective
door and offered her a china cup in a delicate saucer. "We have more of
a selection on the plane," he said, then settled back with his coffee.
"I bet." The steam rising from her cup smelled like heaven. Eve took a
tentative sip -- and nearly moaned.
It was real. No simulation made from vegetable concentrate so usual
since the depletion of the rain forests in the late twentieth. This was
the real thing, ground from rich Columbian beans, singing with caffeine.
She sipped again, and could have wept.
"Problem?" He enjoyed her reaction immensely, the flutter of the lashes,
the faint flush, the darkening of the eyes -- a similar response, he
noted, to a woman purring under a man's hands.
"Do you know how long it's been since I had real coffee?"
He smiled. "No."
"Neither do I." Unashamed, she closed her eyes as she lifted the cup
again. "You'll have to excuse me, this is a private moment. We'll talk
on the plane."
"As you like."
He gave himself the pleasure of watching her as the car traveled
smoothly over the road.
Odd, he thought, he hadn't pegged her for a cop. His instincts were
usually keen about such matters. At the funeral, he'd been thinking only
what a terrible waste it was for someone as young, foolish, and full of
life as Sharon to be dead.
Then he'd sensed something, something that had coiled his muscles,
tightened his gut. He'd felt her gaze, as physical as a blow. When he'd
turned, when he'd seen her, another blow. A slow motion one-two punch he
hadn't been able to evade.
It was fascinating.
But the warning blip hadn't gone off. Not the warning blip that should
have relayed cop. He'd seen a tall, willowy brunette with short, tumbled
hair, eyes the color of honeycombs and a mouth made for sex.
If she hadn't sought him out, he'd intended to seek her.
Too damn bad she was a cop.
She didn't speak again until they were at the airport, stepping into the
cabin of his JetStar 6000.
She hated being impressed, again. Coffee was one thing, and a small
weakness was permitted, but she didn't care for her goggle-eyed reaction
to the lush cabin with its deep chairs, sofas, the antique carpet, and
crystal vases filled with flowers.
There was a viewing screen recessed in the forward wall and a uniformed
flight attendant who showed no surprise at seeing Roarke board with a
strange woman.
"Brandy, sir?"
"My companion prefers coffee, Diana, black." He lifted a
brow until Eve nodded. "I'll have brandy."
"I've heard about the JetStar." Eve shrugged out of her coat, and it was
whisked away along with Roarke's by the attendant. "It's a nice form of
transportation."
"Thanks. We spent two years designing it."
"Roarke Industries?" she said as she took a chair.
"That's right. I prefer using my own whenever possible. You'll need to
strap in for takeoff," he told her, then leaned forward to flip on an
intercom. "Ready."
"We've been cleared," they were told. "Thirty seconds."
Almost before Eve could blink, they were airborne, in so smooth a
transition she barely felt the g's. It beat the hell, she thought, out
of the commercial flights that slapped you back in your seat for the
first five minutes of air time.
They were served drinks and a little plate of fruit and cheese that had
Eve's mouth watering. It was time, she decided, to get to work.
"How long did you know Sharon DeBlass?"
"I met her recently, at the home of a mutual acquaintance."
"You said you were a friend of the family."
"Of her parents," Roarke said easily. "I've known Beth and Richard for
several years. First on a business level, then on a personal one. Sharon
was in school, then in Europe, and our paths didn't cross. I met her for
the first time a few days ago, took her to dinner. Then she was dead."
He took a flat gold case from his inside pocket. Eve's eyes narrowed as
she watched him light a cigarette. "Tobacco's illegal, Roarke."
"Not in free air space, international waters, or on private property."
He smiled at her through a haze of smoke. "Don't you think, lieutenant,
that the police have enough to do without trying to legislate our
morality and personal lifestyles?"
She hated to admit even to herself that the tobacco smelled enticing.
"Is that why you collect guns? As part of your personal lifestyle?"
"I find them fascinating. Your grandfather and mine considered owning
one a constitutional right. We've toyed quite a bit with constitutional
rights as we've civilized ourselves."
"And murder and injury by that particular type of weapon is now an
aberration rather than the norm."
"You like rules, lieutenant?"
The question was mild, as was the insult under it. Her shoulders
stiffened. "Without rules, chaos."
"With chaos, life."
Screw philosophy, she thought, annoyed. "Do you own a thirty-eight
caliber Smith & Wesson, Model Ten, circa 1990?"
He took another slow, considering drag. The tobacco burned expensively
between his long, elegant fingers. "I believe I own one of that model.
Is that what killed her?"
"Would you be willing to show it to me?"
"Of course, at your convenience."
Too easy, she thought. She suspected anything that came easily. "You had
dinner with the deceased the night before her death. In Mexico."
"That's right." Roarke crushed out his cigarette and settled back with
his brandy. "I have a small villa on the west coast. I thought she'd
enjoy it. She did."
"Did you have a physical relationship with Sharon DeBlass?"
His eyes glittered for a moment, but whether with amusement or with
anger, she couldn't be sure. "By that, I take you to mean did I have sex
with her. No, lieutenant, though it hardly seems relevant. We had
dinner."
"You took a beautiful woman, a professional companion, to your villa in
Mexico, and all you shared with her was dinner."
He took his time choosing a glossy green grape. "I appreciate beautiful
women for a variety of reasons, and enjoy spending time with them. I
don't employ professionals for two reasons. First, I don't find it
necessary to pay for sex." He sipped his brandy, watching her over the
rim. "And second, I don't choose to share." He paused, very briefly. "Do
you?"
Her stomach fluttered, was ignored. "We're not talking about me."
"I was. You're a beautiful woman, and we're quite alone, at least for
the next fifteen minutes. Yet all we've shared has been coffee and
brandy." He smiled at the temper smoldering in her eyes. "Heroic, isn't
it, what restraint I have?"
"I'd say your relationship with Sharon DeBlass had a different flavor."
"Oh, I certainly agree." He chose another grape, offered it.
Appetite was a weakness, Eve reminded herself even as she accepted the
grape and bit through its thin, tart skin. "Did you see her after your
dinner in Mexico?"
"No, I dropped her off about three A. M. and went home. Alone."
"Can you tell me your whereabouts for the forty-eight hours after you
went home -- alone?"
"I was in bed for the first five of them. I took a conference call over
breakfast. About eight-fifteen. You can check the records."
"I will."
This time he grinned, a quick flash of undiluted charm that had her
pulse skipping. "I have no doubt of it. You fascinate me, Lieutenant
Dallas."
"After the conference call?"
"It ended about nine. I worked out until ten, spent the next several
hours in my midtown office with various appointments." He took out a
small, slim card that she recognized as a daybook. "Shall I list them
for you?"
"I'd prefer you to arrange to have a hard copy sent to my office."
"I'll see to it. I was back home by seven. I had a dinner meeting with
several members of my Japanese manufacturing firm -- in my home. We
dined at eight. Shall I send you the menu?"
"Don't be snide, Roarke."
"Merely thorough, lieutenant. It was an early evening. By eleven I was
alone, with a book and a brandy, until about seven A. M., when I had my
first cup of coffee. Would you like another?"
She'd have killed for another cup of coffee, but she shook her head.
"Alone for eight hours, Roarke. Did you speak with anyone, see anyone
during that time?"
"No. No one. I had to be in Paris the next day and wanted a quiet
evening. Poor timing on my part. Then again, if I were going to murder
someone, it would have been ill advised not to protect myself with an
alibi."
"Or arrogant not to bother," she returned. "Do you just collect antique
weapons, Roarke, or do you use them?"
"I'm an excellent shot." He set his empty snifter aside. "I'll be happy
to demonstrate for you when you come to see my collection. Does tomorrow
suit you?"
"Fine."
"Seven o'clock? I assume you have the address." When he leaned over, she
stiffened and nearly hissed as his hand brushed her arm. He only smiled,
his face close, his eyes level. "You need to strap in," he said quietly.
"We'll be landing in a moment."
He fastened her harness himself, wondering if he made her nervous as a
man, or a murder suspect, or a combination of both. Just then, any
choice had its own interest -- and its own possibilities.
"Eve," he murmured. "Such a simple and feminine name. I wonder if it
suits you."
She said nothing while the flight attendant came in to remove the
dishes. "Have you ever been in Sharon DeBlass's apartment?"
A tough shell, he mused, but he was certain there would be something
soft and hot beneath. He wondered if -- no, when -- he'd have the
opportunity to uncover it.
"Not while she was a tenant," Roarke said as he sat back again. "And not
at all that I recall, though it's certainly possible." He smiled again
and fastened his own harness. "I own the Gorham Complex, as I'm sure you
already know."
Idly, he glanced out the window as earth hurtled toward them. "Do you
have transportation at the airport, lieutenant, or can I give you a
lift?"
*** CHAPTER FOUR ***
Eve was more than tired by the time she filed her report for Whitney and
returned home. She was pissed. She'd wanted, badly, to zing Roarke with
the fact that she knew he owned the Gorham. His telling her in the same
carelessly polite tone he used to offer her coffee had ended their first
interview with him one point up.
She didn't like the score.
It was time to even things up. Alone in her living room, and technically
off the clock, she sat down in front of her computer.
"Engage, Dallas, Code Five access. ID 53478Q. Open file DeBlass.
Voice print and ID recognized, Dallas. Proceed.
"Open subfile Roarke. Suspect Roarke -- known to victim. According to
Source C, Sebastian, victim desired suspect. Suspect met her
requirements for sexual partner. Possibility of emotional involvement
high.
"Opportunity to commit crime. Suspect owns victim's apartment building,
equaling easy access and probably knowledge of security of murder scene.
Suspect has no alibi for eight-hour period on the night of the murder,
which includes the time span erased from security discs. Suspect owns
large collection of antique weapons, including the type used on victim.
Suspect admits to being expert marksman.
"Factor in personality of suspect. Aloof, confident, self-indulgent,
highly intelligent. Interesting balance between aggressive and charming.
"Motive."
And there, she ran into trouble. Calculating, she rose, did a pass
through the room while the computer waited for more data. Why would a
man like Roarke kill? For gain, in passion? She didn't think so. Wealth
and status he would, and could gain by other means. Women -- for sex and
otherwise -- certainly he could win without breaking a sweat. She
suspected he was capable of violence, and that he would execute it
coldly.
Sharon DeBlass's murder had been charged with sex. There had been a
crudeness overlaying it. Eve couldn't quite reconcile that with the
elegant man she'd shared coffee with.
Perhaps that was the point.
"Suspect considers morality a personal rather than legislative area,"
she continued, pacing still. "Sex, weapon restriction, drug, tobacco,
and alcohol restrictions, and murder deal with morality that has been
outlawed or regulated. The murder of a licensed companion, the only
daughter of friends, the only granddaughter of one of the country's most
outspoken and conservative legislators, by a banned weapon. Was this an
illustration of the flaws the suspect considers are inherent in the
legal system?
"Motive," she concluded, settling again. "Self-indulgence." She took a
deep, satisfied breath. "Compute probability."
Her system whined, reminded her it was one more piece of hardware that
needed replacement, then settled into a jerky hum.
Probability Roarke perpetrator given current data and supposition,
eighty-two point six per cent.
Oh, it was possible, Eve thought, leaning back in her chair. There was a
time, in the not so distant past, when a child could be gunned down by
another child for the shoes on his feet.
What was that if not obscene self-indulgence?
He had the opportunity. He had the means. And if his own arrogance could
be taken into account, he had the motive.
So why, Eve thought as she watched her own words blink on the monitor,
as she studied her computer's impersonal analysis, couldn't she make it
play in her own head?
She just couldn't see it, she admitted. She just couldn't visualize
Roarke standing behind the camera, aiming the gun at the defenseless,
naked, smiling woman, and pumping steel into her perhaps only moments
after he'd pumped his seed into her.
Still, certain facts couldn't be overlooked. If she could gather enough
of them, she could issue a warrant for a psychiatric evaluation.
Wouldn't that be interesting? she thought with a half smile. Traveling
into Roarke's head would be a fascinating journey.
She'd take the next step at seven the following evening.
The buzz at her door brought a frown of annoyance to her eyes. "Save and
lock on voice print, Dallas. Code Five. Disengage."
The monitor blipped off as she rose to see who was interrupting her. A
glance at her security screen wiped the frown away.
"Hey, Mavis."
"You forgot, didn't you?" Mavis Freestone whirled in, a jangle of
bracelets, a puff of scent. Her hair was a glittery silver tonight, a
shade that would change with her next mood. She flipped it back where it
sparkled like stars down to her impossibly tiny waist.
"No, I didn't." Eve shut the door, reengaged the locks. "Forgot what?"
"Dinner, dancing, debauchery." With a heavy sigh, Mavis dropped her
slinkily attired ninety-eight pounds onto the sofa where she could eye
Eve's simple gray suit with disdain. "You can't be going out in that."
Feeling drab, as she often did within twenty feet of Mavis's outrageous
color, Eve looked down at her suit. "No, I guess not."
"So." Mavis gestured with one emerald-tipped finger. "You forgot."
She had, but she was remembering now. They had made plans to check out
the new club Mavis had discovered at the space docks in Jersey.
According to Mavis, the space jocks were perennially horny. Something to
do with extended weightlessness.
"Sorry. You look great."
It was true, inevitably. Eight years before, when Eve had busted Mavis
for petty theft, she'd looked great. A silk swirling street urchin with
quick fingers and a brilliant smile.
In the intervening years, they'd somehow become friends. For Eve, who
could count on one hand the number of friends she had who weren't cops,
the relationship was precious.
"You look tired," Mavis said, more in accusation than sympathy. "And
you're missing a button."
Eve's fingers went automatically to her jacket, felt the loose threads.
"Shit. I knew it." In disgust she shrugged out of the jacket, tossed it
aside. "Look, I'm sorry. I did forget. I had a lot on my mind today."
"Including the reason you needed my black coat?"
"Yeah, thanks. It came in handy."
Mavis sat a minute, tapping those emerald-tipped nails on the arm of the
couch. "Police business. Here I was hoping you had a date. You really
need to start seeing men who aren't criminals, Dallas."
"I saw that image consultant you fixed me up with. He wasn't a criminal.
He was just an idiot."
"You're too picky -- and that was six months ago."
Since he'd tried to get her in the sack by offering a free lip tattoo,
Eve thought it was not nearly long enough, but kept the opinion to
herself. "I'll go change."
"You don't want to go out and bump butts with the space boys." Mavis
sprang up again, the shoulder-length crystals at her ears sparkling.
"But go ahead and get out of that ugly skirt. I'll order Chinese."
Relief had Eve's shoulders sagging. For Mavis, she would have tolerated
an evening at a loud, crowded, obnoxious club, peeling randy pilots and
sex-starved sky station techs off her chest. The idea of eating Chinese
with her feet up was like heaven.
"You don't mind?"
Mavis waved the words away as she tapped in the restaurant she wanted on
the computer. "I spend every night in a club."
"That's work," Eve called out as she went into the bedroom.
"You're telling me." Tongue between her teeth, Mavis perused the menu
on-screen. "A few years ago I'd have said singing for my supper was the
world's biggest scam, the best grift I could run. Turns out I'm working
harder than I ever did bilking tourists. You want egg rolls?"
"Sure. You're not thinking of quitting, are you?"
Mavis was silent a moment as she made her choices. "No. I'm hooked on
applause." Feeling generous, she charged dinner to her World Card. "And
since we renegotiated my contract so I get ten percent of the gate, I'm
a regular businesswoman."
"There's nothing regular about you," Eve disagreed. She came back in,
comfortable in jeans and a NYPSD sweatshirt.
"True. Got any of that wine I brought over last time?"
"Most of the second bottle." Because it sounded like the best idea she'd
had all day, Eve detoured into the kitchen to pour it. "So, are you
still seeing the dentist?"
"Nope." Idly, Mavis wandered to the entertainment unit and programmed in
music. "It was getting too intense. I didn't mind him falling in love
with my teeth, but he decided to go for the whole package. He wanted to
get married."
"The bastard."
"You can't trust anybody," Mavis agreed. "How's the law and order
business?"
"It's a little intense right now." She glanced up from the wine she was
pouring when the buzzer sounded. "That can't be dinner already." Even as
she said it, she heard Mavis clipping cheerfully toward the door in her
five-inch spikes. "Check the security screen," she said quickly and was
halfway to the door herself when Mavis pulled it open.
She had one moment to curse, another to reach for the weapon she wasn't
wearing. Then Mavis's quick, flirtatious laugh had her adrenaline
draining again.
Eve recognized the uniform of the delivery company, saw nothing but
embarrassed pleasure in the young, fresh face of the boy who handed the
package to Mavis.
"I just love presents," Mavis said with a flutter of her silver-tipped
lashes as the boy backed away, blushing. "Don't you come with it?"
"Leave the kid alone." With a shake of her head, Eve took the package
from Mavis and closed the door again.
"They're so cute at that age." She blew a kiss at the security screen
before turning to Eve. "What are you so nervous about, Dallas?"
"The case I'm working on has me jumpy, I guess." She eyed the gold foil
and elaborate bow on the package she held with more suspicion than
pleasure. "I don't know who'd be sending me anything."
"There's a card," Mavis pointed out dryly. "You could always read it.
There might be a clue."
"Now look who's cute." Eve tugged the card out of its gold envelope.
Roarke
As she read over Eve's shoulder, Mavis let out a low whistle. "Not the
Roarke! The incredibly wealthy, fabulous to look at, sexily mysterious
Roarke who owns approximately twenty-eight percent of the world, and its
satellites?"
All Eve felt was irritation. "He's the only one I know."
"You know him." Mavis rolled her green shadowed eyes. "Dallas, I've
underestimated you unforgivably. Tell me everything. How, when, why? Did
you sleep with him? Tell me you slept with him, then give me every tiny
detail."
"We've had a secret, passionate affair for the last three years, during
which time I bore him a son who's being raised on the far side of the
moon by Buddhist monks." Brows knit, Eve shook the box. "Get a grip,
Mavis. It has to do with a case, and," she added before Mavis could open
her mouth, "it's confidential."
Mavis didn't bother to roll her eyes again. When Eve said confidential,
no amount of cajoling, pleading or whining could budge her an inch.
"Okay, but you can tell me if he looks as good in person as he does in
pictures."
"Better," Eve muttered.
"Jesus, really?" Mavis moaned and let herself fall onto the sofa. "I
think I just had an orgasm."
"You ought to know." Eve set the package down, scowled at it. "And how
did he know where I live? You can't pluck a cop's address out of the
directory file. How did he know?" she repeated quietly. "And what's he
up to?"
"For God's sake, Dallas, open it. He probably took a shine to you. Some
men find the cool, disinterested, and understated attractive. Makes them
think you're deep. I bet it's diamonds," Mavis said, pouncing on the box
as her patience snapped. "A necklace. A diamond necklace. Maybe rubies.
You'd look sensational in rubies."
She ripped ruthlessly through the pricey paper, tossed aside the lid of
the box, and plunged her hand through the gold-edged tissue. "What the
hell is this?"
But Eve had already scented it, already -- despite herself -- begun to
smile. "It's coffee," she murmured, unaware of the way her voice
softened as she reached for the simple brown bag Mavis held.
"Coffee." Illusions shattered, Mavis stared. "The man's got more money
than God, and he sends you a bag of coffee?"
"Real coffee."
"Oh, well then." In disgust, Mavis waved a hand. "I don't care what the
damn stuff costs a pound, Dallas. A woman wants glitter."
Eve brought the bag to her face and sniffed deep. "Not this woman. The
son of a bitch knew just how to get to me." She sighed. "In more ways
than one."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Eve treated herself to one precious cup the next morning. Even her
temperamental AutoChef hadn't been able to spoil the dark, rich flavor.
She drove to the station, with her faulty heater, under sleeting skies,
in a wild chill that came in just under five degrees, with a smile on
her face.
It was still there when she walked into her office and found Feeney
waiting for her.
"Well, well." He studied her. "What'd you have for breakfast, ace?"
"Nothing but coffee. Just coffee. Got anything for me?"
"Ran a full check on Richard DeBlass, Elizabeth Barrister, and the rest
of the clan." He handed her a disc marked Code Five in bold red. "No
real surprises. Nothing much out of the ordinary on Rockman, either. In
his twenties, he belonged to a paramilitary group known as SafeNet."
"SafeNet," Eve repeated, brow wrinkling.
"You'd have been about eight when it was disbanded, kid," Feeney told
her with a smirk. "Should have heard of it in your history lessons."
"Rings a distant bell. Was that one of the groups that got worked up
when we had that skirmish with China?"
"It was, and if they'd had their way, it would have been a lot more than
a skirmish. A disagreement over international space could have gotten
ugly. But the diplomats managed to fight that war before they could. Few
years later, they were disbanded, though there are rumors on and off
about a faction of SafeNet going underground."
"I've heard of them. Still hear about them. You think Rockman's involved
with a fanatic splinter group like that?"
It only took Feeney a moment to shake his head. "I think he watches his
step. Power reflects power, and DeBlass has plenty. If he ever gets into
the White House, Rockman would be right beside him."
"Please." Eve pressed a hand to her stomach. "You'll give me
nightmares."
"It's a long shot, but he's got some backing for the next election."
Feeney moved his shoulders.
"Rockman's alibied, anyway. By DeBlass. They were in East Washington. "'
She sat. "Anything else?"
"Charles Monroe. He's had an interesting life, nothing shady that shows.
I'm working on the victim's logs. You know, sometimes if you're careless
in altering files, you leave shadows floating. Seems to me somebody just
kills a woman could get careless."
"You find a shadow, Feeney, clear away the gray, and I'll buy you a case
of that lousy whiskey you like."
"Deal. I'm still working on Roarke," he added. "There's a guy who isn't
careless. Every time I think I've gotten over one wall of security, I
hit another. Whatever data there is on him is well guarded."
"Keep scaling those walls. I'll try digging under them."
When Feeney left, Eve shifted to her terminal. She hadn't wanted to
check in front of Mavis, and preferred, in this case, using her office
unit. The question was simple.
Eve entered the name and address of her apartment complex. Asked: Owner?
And so the answer was simple: Roarke.
-=O=-***-=O=-
Lola Starr's license for sex was only three months old. She'd applied
for it on her eighteenth birthday, the earliest possible date. She liked
to tell her friends she'd been an amateur until then.
It was the same day she'd left her home in Toledo, the same day she'd
changed her name from Alice Williams. Both home and name had been far
too boring for Lola.
She had a cute, pixie face. She'd nagged and begged and wept until her
parents had agreed to buy her a more pointed chin and a tip-tilted nose
for her sixteenth birthday.
Lola had wanted to look like a sexy elf and thought she'd succeeded. Her
hair was coal black, cut in short, sassy spikes. Her skin was milk white
and firm. She was saving for enough money to have her eyes changed from
brown to emerald green, which she thought would suit her image better.
But she'd been lucky enough to have been born with a lush little body
that needed no more than basic maintenance.
She'd wanted to be a licensed companion all of her life. Other girls
might have dreamed of careers in law or finance, studied their way into
medicine or industry. But Lola had always known she was born for sex.
And why not make a living from what you did best?
She wanted to be rich and desired and pampered. The desire part she
found easy. Men, particularly older men, were willing to pay well for
someone with Lola's attributes. But the expenses of her profession were
more stringent than she'd anticipated when she'd dreamed away in her
pretty room in Toledo.
The licensing fees, the mandatory health exams, the rent, and sin tax
all ate into profits. Once she'd finished paying for her training, she'd
only had enough left to afford a small, one-room apartment at the ragged
edges of Prostitute Walk.
Still, it was better than working the streets as many still did. And
Lola had plans for bigger and better things.
One day she'd live in a penthouse and take only the cream of clients.
She'd be wined and dined in the best restaurants, jetted to exotic
places to entertain royalty and wealth.
She was good enough, and she didn't intend to stay at the bottom of the
ladder for long.
The tips helped. A professional wasn't supposed to accept cash or credit
bonuses. Not technically. But everyone did. She was still girl enough to
prefer the pretty little gifts some of her clients offered. But she
banked the money religiously and dreamed of her penthouse.
Tonight, she was going to entertain a new client, one who had requested
she call him Daddy. She'd agreed, and had waited until the arrangements
were made before she allowed herself a smirk. The guy probably thought
he was the first one to want her to be his little girl. The fact was,
after only a few short months on the job, pedophilia was rapidly
becoming her specialty.
So, she'd sit on his lap, let him spank her, while telling her solemnly
that she needed to be punished. Really, it was like playing a game, and
most of the men were kind of sweet.
With that in mind, she chose a flirty skirted dress with a scalloped
white collar. Beneath she wore nothing but white stockings. She'd
removed her pubic hair, and was as bare and smooth as a ten year old.
After studying the reflection, she added a bit more color to her cheeks
and clear gloss on her pouty lips.
At the knock on the door she grinned, and her young and still guileless
face grinned back in the mirror.
She couldn't yet afford video security, and used the Judas hole to check
her visitor.
He was handsome, which pleased her. And, she assumed, old enough to be
her father, which would please him.
She opened the door, aimed a shy, coy smile. "Hi, Daddy."
He didn't want to waste time. It was the one asset he had little of at
the moment. He smiled at her. For a whore, she was a pretty little
thing. When the door was shut at his back, he reached under her skirt
and was pleased to find her naked. It would speed matters along if he
could become aroused quickly.
"Daddy!" Playing her part, Lola let out a shrieking giggle. "That's
naughty."
"I've heard you've been naughty." He removed his coat and set it neatly
aside while she pouted at him. Though he'd taken the precaution of clear
sealing his hands, he would touch nothing in the room but her.
"I've been good, Daddy. Very good. "
"You've been naughty, little girl." From his pocket he took a small
video camera, which he set up, aimed toward the narrow bed she'd piled
with pillows and stuffed animals.
"Are you going to take pictures?"
"That's right."
She'd have to tell him that would cost him extra, but decided to wait
until the deed was done. Clients didn't care to have their fantasies
broken with reality. She'd learned that in training.
"Go lie down on the bed."
"Yes, Daddy." She lay among the pillows and grinning animals.
"I've heard you've been touching yourself."
"No, Daddy."
"It isn't good to tell lies to your Daddy. I have to punish you, but
then I'll kiss it and make it better." When she smiled, he walked to the
bed. "Lift your skirt, little girl, and show me how you touched
yourself."
Lola didn't care for this part. She liked being touched, but the feel of
her own hands brought her little excitement. Still, she lifted her
skirt, stroked herself, keeping her movements shy and hesitant as she
expected he wanted.
It excited him, the glide of her small fingers. After all, that was what
a woman was made for. To use herself, to use the men who wanted her.
"How does it feel?"
"Soft," she murmured. "You touch, Daddy. Feel how soft."
He laid a hand over hers, felt himself harden satisfactorily as he
slipped a finger inside her. It would be quick, for both of them.
"Unbutton your dress," he ordered, and continued to manipulate her as
she opened it from its prim collar down. "Turn over."
When she did, he brought his hand down on her pert bottom in smart slaps
that reddened the creamy flesh while she whimpered in programmed
response.
It didn't matter if he hurt her or not. She'd sold herself to him.
"That's a good girl." He was fully erect now, beginning to throb. Still,
his movements were careful and precise as he undressed. Naked, he
straddled her, slipped his hands beneath her so that he could squeeze
her breasts. So young, he thought, and let himself shudder from the
pleasure of flesh that had yet to need refining.
"Daddy's going to show you how he rewards good girls."
He wanted her to take him into her mouth, but couldn't risk it. The
birth control her file listed she used would eradicate his sperm
vaginally, but not orally.
Instead, he vaulted up her hips, taking the time to stroke his hands
over that firm, young flesh as he drove himself into her.
He was rougher than either of them expected. After that first violent
thrust, he held himself back. He had no wish to hurt her to the point
where she would cry out. Though in a place such as this, he doubted
anyone would notice or care.
Still, she was rather charmingly unskilled and naive. He settled on a
slower, more gentle rhythm, which he discovered drew out his own
pleasure.
She moved well, meeting him, matching him. Unless he was very mistaken,
not all her groans and cries were simulated. He felt her tense, shudder,
and he smiled, pleased that he'd been able to bring a whore to a genuine
climax.
He closed his eyes and let himself come.
She sighed and cuddled into one of the pillows. It had been good, much,
much better than she'd expected. And she hoped she'd found another
regular.
"Was I a good girl, Daddy?"
"A very, very good girl. But we're not done. Roll over."
As she shifted, he rose and moved out of camera range. "Are we going to
watch the video, Daddy?"
He only shook his head.
Remembering her role, she pouted. "I like videos. We can watch, and then
you can show me how to be a good girl again." She smiled at him, hoping
for a bonus. "I could touch you this time. I'd like to touch you."
He smiled and took the SIG 210 with silencer out of his coat pocket. He
watched her blink in curiosity as he aimed the gun.
"What's that? Is it a toy for me to play with?"
He shot her in the head first, the weapon barely making more than a pop
as she jerked back. Coolly, he shot again, between those young, firm
breasts, and last, as the silencer eroded, into her smooth, bare pubis.
Switching the camera off, he arranged her carefully among blood-soaked
pillows and soiled, smiling animals while she stared up at him in
wide-eyed surprise.
"It was no life for a young girl," he told her gently, then went back to
the camera to record the last scene.
*** CHAPTER FIVE ***
All Eve wanted was a candy bar. She'd spent most of the day testifying
in court, and her lunch break had been eaten up by a call from a snitch
that had cost her fifty dollars and gained her a slim lead on a
smuggling case that had resulted in two homicides, which she'd been
beating her head against for two months.
All she wanted was a quick hit of sugar substitute before she headed
home to prep for her seven o'clock meeting with Roarke.
She could have zipped through any number of drive-through InstaStores,
but she preferred the little deli on the corner of West Seventy-eighth
-- despite, or perhaps because of the fact that it was owned and run by
Francois, a rude, snake-eyed refugee who'd fled to America after the
Social Reform Army had overthrown the French government some forty years
before.
He hated America and Americans, and the SRA had been dispatched within
six months of the coup, but Francois remained, bitching and complaining
behind the counter of the Seventy-eighth Street deli where he enjoyed
dispensing insults and political absurdities.
Eve called him Frank to annoy him, and dropped in at least once a week
to see what scheme he'd devised to try to short credit her.
Her mind on the candy bar, she stepped through the automatic door. It
had no more than begun to whisper shut behind her when instinct kicked
in.
The man standing at the counter had his back to her, his heavy, hooded
jacket masking all but his size, and that was impressive.
Six-five, she estimated, easily two-fifty. She didn't need to see
Francois's thin, terrified face to know there was trouble. She could
smell it, as ripe and sour as the vegetable hash that was today's
special.
In the seconds it took the door to clink shut, she'd considered and
rejected the idea of drawing her weapon.
"Over here, bitch. Now."
The man turned. Eve saw he had the pale gold complexion of a multiracial
heritage and the eyes of a very desperate man. Even as she filed the
description, she looked at the small round object he held in his hand.
The homemade explosive device was worry enough. The fact that it shook
as the hand that held it trembled with nerves was a great deal worse.
Homemade boomers were notoriously unstable. The idiot was likely to kill
all of them by sweating too freely.
She shot Francois a quick, warning look. If he called her lieutenant,
they were all going to be meat very quickly. Keeping her hands in plain
sight, she crossed to the counter.
"I don't want any trouble," she said, letting her voice tremble as
nervously as the thief's hand. "Please, I got kids at home."
"Shut up. Just shut up. Down on the floor. Down on the fucking floor."
Eve knelt, slipping a hand under her jacket where the weapon waited.
"All of it," the man ordered, gesturing with the deadly little ball. "I
want all of it. Cash, credit tokens. Make it fast."
"It's been a slow day," Francois whined. "You must understand business
is not what it was. You Americans -- "
"You want to eat this?" the man invited, shoving the explosive in
Francois's face.
"No, no." Panicked, Francois punched in the security code with his
shaking fingers. As the till opened, Eve saw the thief glance at the
money inside, then up at the camera that was busily recording the entire
transaction.
She saw it in his face. He knew his image was locked there, and that all
the money in New York wouldn't erase it. The explosive would, tossed
carelessly over his shoulder as he raced out to the street to be
swallowed in traffic.
She sucked in a breath, like a diver going under. She came up hard,
under his arm. The solid jolt had the device flying free. Screams,
curses, prayers. She caught it in her fingertips, a high fly, shagged
with two men out and the bases loaded. Even as she closed her hand
around it, the thief swung out.
It was the back of his hand rather than a fist, and Eve considered
herself lucky. She saw stars as she hit a stand of soy chips, but she
held on to the homemade boomer.
Wrong hand, goddamn it, wrong hand, she had time to think as the stand
collapsed under her. She tried to use her left to free her weapon, but
the two hundred and fifty pounds of fury and desperation fell on her.
"Hit the alarm, you asshole," she shouted as Francois stood like a
statue with his mouth opening and closing. "Hit the fucking alarm." Then
she grunted as the blow to her ribs stole her breath. This time he'd
used his fist.
He was weeping now, scratching and clawing up her arm in an attempt to
reach the explosive. "I need the money. I got to have it. I'll kill you.
I'll kill you all."
She managed to bring her knee up. The age old defense bought her a few
seconds, but lacked the power to debilitate.
She saw stars again as her head smacked sharply into the side of a
counter. Dozens of the candy bars she'd craved rained down on her.
"You son of a bitch. You son of a bitch." She heard herself saying it,
over and over as she landed three hard short arm blows to his face.
Blood spurting from his nose, he grabbed her arm.
And she knew it was going to break. Knew she would feel that sharp,
sweet pain, hear the thin crack as bone fractured.
But just as she drew in breath to scream, as her vision began to gray
with agony, his weight was off her.
The ball still cupped in her hand, she rolled over onto her haunches,
struggling to breathe and fighting the need to retch. From that position
she saw the shiny black shoes that always said beat cop.
"Book him." She coughed once, painfully. "Attempted robbery, armed,
carrying an explosive, assault." She'd have liked to have added
assaulting an officer and resisting arrest, but as she hadn't identified
herself, she'd be skirting the line.
"You all right, ma'am? Want the MTs?"
She didn't want the medi-techs. She wanted a fucking candy bar.
"Lieutenant," she corrected, pushing herself up and reaching for her ID.
She noted that the perp was in restraints and that one of the two cops
had been wise enough to use his stunner to take the fight out of him.
"We need a safe box -- quick." She watched both cops pale as they saw
what she held in her hand. "This little boomer's had quite a ride. Let's
get it neutralized."
"Sir." The first cop was out of the store in a flash. In the ninety
seconds it took him to return with the black box used for transporting
and deactivating explosives, no one spoke.
They hardly breathed.
"Book him," Eve repeated. The moment the explosive was contained, her
stomach muscles began to tremble. "I'll transmit my report. You guys
with the Hundred and twenty-third?"
"You bet, lieutenant."
"Good job." She reached down, favoring her injured arm and chose a
Galaxy bar that hadn't been flattened by the wrestling match. "I'm going
home."
"You didn't pay for that," Francois shouted after her.
"Fuck you, Frank," she shouted back and kept going.
-=O=-***-=O=-
The incident put her behind schedule. By the time she reached Roarke's
mansion, it was 7:10. She'd used over the counter medication to ease the
pain in her arm and shoulder. If it wasn't better in a couple of days,
she knew she'd have to go in for an exam. She hated doctors.
She parked the car and spent a moment studying Roarke's house. Fortress,
more like, she thought. Its four stories towered over the frosted trees
of Central Park. It was one of the old buildings, close to two hundred
years old, built of actual stone, if her eyes didn't deceive her.
There was lots of glass, and lights burning gold behind the windows.
There was also a security gate, behind which evergreen shrubs and
elegant trees were artistically arranged.
Even more impressive than the magnificence of architecture and
landscaping was the quiet. She heard no city noises here. No traffic
snarls, no pedestrian chaos. Even the sky overhead was subtly different
than the one she was accustomed to farther downtown. Here, you could
actually see stars rather than the glint and gleam of transports.
Nice life if you can get it, she mused, and started her car again. She
approached the gate, prepared to identify herself. She saw the tiny red
eye of a scanner blink, then hold steady. The gates opened soundlessly.
So, he'd programmed her in, she thought, unsure if she was amused or
uneasy. She went through the gate, up the short drive, and left her car
at the base of granite steps.
A butler opened the door for her. She'd never actually seen a butler
outside of old videos, but this one didn't disappoint the fantasy. He
was silver haired, implacably eyed and dressed in a dark suit and
ruthlessly knotted old-fashioned tie.
"Lieutenant Dallas."
There was an accent, a faint one that sounded British and Slavic at
once. "I have an appointment with Roarke."
"He's expecting you." He ushered her into a wide, towering hallway that
looked more like the entrance to a museum than a home.
There was a chandelier of star-shaped glass dripping light onto a glossy
wood floor that was graced by a boldly patterned rug in shades of red
and teal. A stairway curved away to the left with a carved griffin for
its newel post.
There were paintings on the walls -- the kind she had once seen on a
school field trip to the Met. French Impressionists from what century
she couldn't quite recall. The Revisited Period that had come into being
in the early twenty-first century complimented them with their pastoral
scenes and gloriously muted colors.
No holograms or living sculpture. Just paint and canvas.
"May I take your coat?"
She brought herself back and thought she caught a flicker of smug
condescension in those inscrutable eyes. Eve shrugged out of her jacket,
watched him take the leather somewhat gingerly between his manicured
fingers.
Hell, she'd gotten most of the blood off it.
"This way, Lieutenant Dallas. If you wouldn't mind waiting in the
parlor, Roarke is detained on a transpacific call."
"No problem."
The museum quality continued there. A fire was burning sedately. A fire
out of genuine logs in a hearth carved from lapis and malachite. Two
lamps burned with light like colored gems. The twin sofas had curved
backs and lush upholstery that echoed the jewel tones of the room in
sapphire. The furniture was wood, polished to an almost painful gloss.
Here and there objets d'art were arranged. Sculptures, bowls, faceted
glass.
Her boots clicked over wood, then muffled over carpet.
"Would you like a refreshment, lieutenant?"
She glanced back, saw with amusement that he continued to hold her
jacket between his fingers like a soiled rag. "Sure. What have you got,
Mr. -- ?"
"Summerset, lieutenant. Simply Summerset, and I'm sure we can provide
you with whatever suits your taste."
"She's fond of coffee," Roarke said from the doorway, "but I think she'd
like to try the Montcart forty-nine."
Summerset's eyes flickered again, with horror, Eve thought. "The
forty-nine, sir?"
"That's right. Thank you, Summerset."
"Yes, sir." Dangling the jacket, he exited, stiff-spined.
"Sorry I kept you waiting," Roarke began, then his eyes narrowed,
darkened.
"No problem," Eve said as he crossed to her. "I was just... Hey -- "
She jerked her chin as his hand cupped it, but his fingers held firm,
turning her left cheek to the light. "Your face is bruised." His voice
was cool on the statement, icily so. His eyes as they flicked over the
injury betrayed nothing.
But his fingers were warm, tensed, and jolted something in her gut. "A
scuffle over a candy bar," she said with a shrug.
His eyes met hers, held just an instant longer than comfortable. "Who
won?"
"I did. It's a mistake to come between me and food."
"I'll keep that in mind." He released her, dipped the hand that had
touched her into his pocket. Because he wanted to touch her again. It
worried him that he wanted, very much, to stroke away the bruise that
marred her cheek. "I think you'll approve of tonight's menu."
"Menu? I didn't come here to eat, Roarke. I came here to look over your
collection."
"You'll do both." He turned when Summerset brought in a tray that held
an uncorked bottle of wine the color of ripened wheat and two crystal
glasses.
"The forty-nine, sir."
"Thank you. I'll pour out." He spoke to Eve as he did so. "I thought
this vintage would suit you. What it lacks in subtlety..." He turned
back, offering her a glass. "It makes up for in sensuality." He tapped
his glass against hers so the crystal sang, then watched as she sipped.
God, what a face, he thought. All those angles and expressions, all that
emotion and control. Just now she was fighting off showing both surprise
and pleasure as the taste of the wine settled on her tongue. He was
looking forward to the moment when the taste of her settled on his.
"You approve?" he asked.
"It's good." It was the equivalent of sipping gold.
"I'm glad. The Montcart was my first venture into wineries. Shall we sit
and enjoy the fire?"
It was tempting. She could almost see herself sitting there, legs angled
toward the fragrant heat, sipping wine as the jeweled light danced.
"This isn't a social call, Roarke. It's a murder investigation."
"Then you can investigate me over dinner." He took her arm, lifting a
brow as she stiffened. "I'd think a woman who'd fight for a candy bar
would appreciate a two-inch fillet, medium rare."
"Steak?" She struggled not to drool. "Real steak, from a cow?"
A smile curved his lips. "Just flown in from Montana. The steak, not the
cow." When she continued to hesitate, he tilted his head. "Come now,
lieutenant, I doubt if a little red meat will clog your considerable
investigative skills."
"Someone tried to bribe me the other day," she muttered, thinking of
Charles Monroe and his black silk robe.
"With?"
"Nothing as interesting as steak." She aimed one long, level look. "If
the evidence points in your direction, Roarke, I'm still bringing you
down."
"I'd expect nothing less. Let's eat."
He led her into the dining room. More crystal, more gleaming wood, yet
another shimmering fire, this time cupped in rose-veined marble. A woman
in a black suit served them appetizers of shrimp swimming in creamy
sauce. The wine was brought in, their glasses topped off.
Eve, who rarely gave a thought to her appearance, wished she'd worn
something more suitable to the occasion than jeans and a sweater.
"So, how'd you get rich?" she asked him.
"Various ways." He liked to watch her eat, he discovered. There was a
single-mindedness to it.
"Name one."
"Desire," he said, and let the word hum between them.
"Not good enough." She picked up her wine again, meeting his eyes
straight on. "Most people want to be rich."
"They don't want it enough. To fight for it. Take risks for it."
"But you did."
"I did. Being poor is... uncomfortable. I like comfort." He offered her
a roll from a silver bowl as their salads were served -- crisp greens
tossed with delicate herbs. "We're not so different, Eve."
"Yeah, right."
"You wanted to be a cop enough to fight for it. To take risks for it.
You find the breaking of laws uncomfortable. I make money, you make
justice. Neither is a simple matter." He waited a moment. "Do you know
what Sharon DeBlass wanted?"
Her fork hesitated, then pierced a tender shoot of endive that had been
plucked only an hour before. "What do you think she wanted?"
"Power. Sex is often a way to gain it. She had enough money to be
comfortable, but she wanted more. Because money is also power. She
wanted power over her clients, over herself, and most of all, she wanted
power over her family."
Eve set her fork down. In the firelight, the dancing glow of candle and
crystal, he looked dangerous. Not because a woman would fear him, she
thought, but because she would desire him. Shadows played in his eyes,
making them unreadable.
"That's quite an analysis of a woman you claim you hardly knew."
"It doesn't take long to form an opinion, particularly if that person is
obvious. She didn't have your depth, Eve, your control, or your rather
enviable focus."
"We're not talking about me." No, she didn't want him to talk about her
-- or to look at her in quite that way. "Your opinion is that she was
hungry for power. Hungry enough to be killed before she could take too
big a bite?"
"An interesting theory. The question would be, too big a bite of what?
Or whom?"
The same silent servant cleared the salads, brought in oversize china
plates heavy with sizzling meat and thin, golden slices of grilled
potatoes.
Eve waited until they were alone again, then cut into her steak. "When a
man accumulates a great deal of money, possessions, and status, he then
has a great deal to lose."
"Now we're speaking of me -- another interesting theory." He sat there,
his eyes interested, yet still amused. "She threatened me with some sort
of blackmail and, rather than pay or dismiss her as ridiculous, I killed
her. Did I sleep with her first?"
"You tell me," Eve said evenly.
"It would fit the scenario, considering her choice of profession. There
may be a blackout on the press on this particular case, but it takes
little deductive power to conclude sex reared its head. I had her, then
I shot her... if one subscribes to the theory." He took a bite of steak,
chewed, swallowed. "There's a problem, however."
"Which is?"
"I have what you might consider an old-fashioned quirk. I dislike
brutalizing women, in any form."
"It's old-fashioned in that it would be more apt to say you dislike
brutalizing people, in any form."
He moved those elegant shoulders. "As I say, it's a quirk. I find it
distasteful to look at you and watch the candlelight shift over a bruise
on your face."
He surprised her by reaching out, running a finger down the mark, very
gently.
"I believe I would have found it even more distasteful to kill Sharon
DeBlass." He dropped his hand and went back to his meal. "Though I have,
occasionally, been known to do what is distasteful to me. When
necessary. How is your dinner?"
"It's fine." The room, the light, the food, was all more than fine. It
was like sitting in another world, in another time. "Who the hell are
you, Roarke?"
He smiled and topped off their glasses. "You're the cop. Figure it out."
She would, she promised herself. By God she would, before it was done.
"What other theories do you have about Sharon DeBlass?"
"None to speak of. She liked excitement and risk and didn't flinch from
causing those who loved her embarrassment. Yet she was..."
Intrigued, Eve leaned closer. "What? Go ahead, finish."
"Pitiable," he said, in a tone that made Eve believe he meant no more
and no less that just that. "There was something sad about her under all
that bright, bright gloss. Her body was the only thing about herself she
respected. So she used it to give pleasure and to cause pain."
"And did she offer it to you?"
"Naturally, and assumed I'd accept the invitation."
"Why didn't you?"
"I've already explained that. I can elaborate and add that I prefer a
different type of bedmate, and that I prefer to make my own moves."
There was more, but he chose to keep it to himself.
"Would you like more steak, lieutenant?"
She glanced down, saw that she'd all but eaten the pattern off the
plate. "No. Thanks."
"Dessert?"
She hated to turn it down, but she'd already indulged herself enough.
"No. I want to look at your collection."
"Then we'll save the coffee and dessert for later." He rose, offered a
hand.
Eve merely frowned at it and pushed back from the table. Amused, Roarke
gestured toward the doorway and led her back into the hall, up the
curving stairs.
"It's a lot of house for one guy."
"Do you think so? I'm more of the opinion that your apartment is small
for one woman." When she stopped dead at the top of the stairs, he
grinned. "Eve, you know I own the building. You'd have checked after I
sent my little token."
"You ought to have someone out to look at the plumbing," she told him.
"I can't keep the water hot in the shower for more than ten minutes."
"I'll make a note of it. Next flight up."
"I'm surprised you don't have elevators," she commented as they climbed
again.
"I do. Just because I prefer the stairs doesn't mean the staff shouldn't
have a choice."
"And staff," she continued. "I haven't seen one remote domestic in the
place."
"I have a few. But I prefer people to machines, most of the time. Here."
He used a palm scanner, coded in a key, then opened carved double doors.
The sensor switched on the lights as they crossed the threshold.
Whatever she'd been expecting, it hadn't been this.
It was a museum of weapons: guns, knives, swords, crossbows. Armor was
displayed, from medieval ages to the thin, impenetrable vests that were
current military issue. Chrome and steel and jeweled handles winked
behind glass, shimmered on the walls.
If the rest of the house seemed another world, perhaps a more civilized
one than what she knew, this veered jarringly in the other direction. A
celebration of violence.
"Why?" was all she could say.
"It interests me, what humans have used to damage humans through
history." He crossed over, touching a wickedly toothed ball that hung
from a chain. "Knights farther back than Arthur carried these into
jousts and battles. A thousand years..." He pressed a series of buttons
on a display cabinet and took out a sleek, palm-sized weapon, the
preferred killing tool of twenty-first century street gangs during the
Urban Revolt. "And we have something less cumbersome and equally lethal.
Progression without progress."
He put the weapon back, closed and secured the case. "But you're
interested in something newer than the first, and older than the second.
You said a thirty-eight, Smith & Wesson. Model Ten."
It was a terrible room, she thought. Terrible and fascinating. She
stared at him across it, realizing that the elegant violence suited him
perfectly.
"It must have taken years to collect all of this."
"Fifteen," he said as he walked across the uncarpeted floor to another
section. "Nearly sixteen now. I acquired my first handgun when I was
nineteen -- from the man who was aiming it at my head."
He frowned. He hadn't meant to tell her that.
"I guess he missed," Eve commented as she joined him.
"Fortunately, he was distracted by my foot in his crotch. It was a
nine-millimeter Baretta semiautomatic he'd smuggled out of Germany. He
thought to use it to relieve me of the cargo I was delivering to him and
save the transportation fee. In the end, I had the fee, the cargo, and
the Baretta. And so, Roarke Industries was born out of his poor
judgment. The one you're interested in," he added, pointing as the wall
display opened. "You'll want to take it, I imagine, to see if it's been
fired recently, check for prints, and so forth."
She nodded slowly while her mind worked. Only four people knew the
murder weapon had been left at the scene. Herself, Feeney, the
commander, and the killer. Roarke was either innocent or very, very
clever.
She wondered if he could be both.
"I appreciate your cooperation." She took an evidence seal out of her
shoulder bag and reached for the weapon that matched the one already in
police possession. It took her only a heartbeat to realize it wasn't the
one Roarke had pointed to.
Her eyes slid to his, held. Oh, he was watching her all right,
carefully. Though she let her hand hesitate now over her selection, she
thought they understood each other. "Which?"
"This." He tapped the display just under the. 38. Once she'd sealed it
and slipped it into her bag, he closed the glass. "It's not loaded, of
course, but I do have ammo, if you'd like to take a sample."
"Thanks. Your cooperation will be noted in my report."
"Will it?" He smiled, took a box out of a drawer, and offered it. "What
else will be noted, lieutenant?"
"Whatever is applicable." She added the box of ammo to her bag, took out
a notebook, and punched in her ID number, the date, and a description of
everything she'd taken. "Your receipt." She offered him the slip after
the notebook spit it out. "These will be returned to you as quickly as
possible unless they're called into evidence. You'll be notified one way
or the other."
He tucked the paper into his pocket, fingered what else he'd tucked
there. "The music room's in the next wing. We can have coffee and brandy
there."
"I doubt we'd share the same taste in music, Roarke."
"You might be surprised," he murmured, "at what we share." He touched
her cheek again, this time sliding his hand around until it cupped the
back of her neck. "At what we will share."
She went rigid and lifted a hand to shove his arm away. He simply closed
his fingers over her wrist. She could have had him flat on his back in a
heartbeat -- so she told herself. Still, she only stood there, the
breath backing up in her lungs and her pulse throbbing hard and thick.
He wasn't smiling now.
"You're not a coward, Eve." He said it softly when his lips were an inch
from hers. The kiss hovered there, a breath away until the hand she'd
levered against his arm changed its grip. And she moved into him.
She didn't think. If she had, even for an instant, she would have known
she was breaking all the rules. But she'd wanted to see, wanted to know.
Wanted to feel.
His mouth was soft, more persuasive than possessive. His lips nibbled
hers open so that he could slide his tongue over them, between them, to
cloud her senses with flavor.
Heat gathered like a fireball in her lungs even before he touched her,
those clever hands molding over the snug denim over her hips, slipping
seductively under her sweater to flesh.
With a kind of edgy delight, she felt herself go damp.
It was the mouth, just that generous and tempting mouth he'd thought
he'd wanted. But the moment he'd tasted it, he'd wanted all of her.
She was pressed against him; that tough, angular body beginning to
vibrate. Her small, firm breast weighed gloriously in his palm. He could
hear the hum of passion that sounded in her throat, all but taste it as
her mouth moved eagerly on his.
He wanted to forget the patience and control he'd taught himself to live
by, and just ravage.
Here. The violence of the need all but erupted inside him. Here and now.
He would have dragged her to the floor if she hadn't struggled back,
pale and panting.
"This isn't going to happen."
"The hell it isn't," he shot back.
The danger was shimmering around him now. She saw it as clearly as she
saw the tools of violence and death surrounding them.
There were men who negotiated when they wanted something. There were men
who just took.
"Some of us aren't allowed to indulge ourselves."
"Fuck the rules, Eve."
He stepped toward her. If she had stepped back, he would have pursued,
like any hunter after the prize. But she faced him squarely, and shook
her head.
"I can't compromise a murder investigation because I'm physically
attracted to a suspect."
"Goddamn it, I didn't kill her."
It was a shock to see his control snap. To hear the fury and frustration
in his voice, to witness it wash vividly across his face. And it was
terrifying to realize she believed him, and not be sure, not be
absolutely certain if she believed because she needed to.
"It's not as simple as taking your word for it. I have a job to do, a
responsibility to the victim, to the system. I have to stay objective,
and I -- "
Can't, she realized. Can't.
They stared at each other as the communicator in her bag began to beep.
Her hands weren't quite steady as she turned away, took the unit out.
She recognized the code for the station on the display and entered her
ID. After a deep breath, she answered the request for voice print
verification.
"Dallas, Lieutenant Eve. No audio please, display only."
Roarke could just see her profile as she read the transmission. It was
enough to measure the change in her eyes, the way they darkened, then
went flat and cool.
She put the communicator away, and when she turned back to him, there
was very little of the woman who'd vibrated in his arms in the woman who
faced him now.
"I have to go. We'll be in touch about your property."
"You do that very well," Roarke murmured. "Slide right into the cop's
skin. And it fits you perfectly."
"It better. Don't bother seeing me out. I can find my way."
"Eve."
She stopped at the doorway, looked back. There he was, a figure in black
surrounded by eons of violence. Inside the cop's skin, the woman's heart
stuttered.
"We'll see each other again."
She nodded. "Count on it."
He let her go, knowing Summerset would slip out of some shadow to give
her the leather jacket, bid her good night.
Alone, Roarke took the gray fabric button from his pocket, the one he'd
found on the floor of his limo. The one that had fallen from the jacket
of that drab gray suit she'd worn the first time he'd seen her.
Studying it, knowing he had no intention of giving it back to her, he
felt like a fool.
*** CHAPTER SIX ***
A rookie was guarding the door to Lola Start's apartment. Eve pegged him
as such because he barely looked old enough to order a beer, his uniform
looked as if it had just been lifted from the supply rack, and from the
faint green cast of his skin.
A few months of working this neighborhood, and a cop stopped needing to
puke at the sight of a corpse. Chemi-heads, the street LCs, and just
plain bad asses liked to wale on each other along these nasty blocks as
much for entertainment as for business profits. From the smell that had
greeted her outside, someone had died out there recently, or the recycle
trucks hadn't been through in the last week.
"Officer." She paused, flashed her badge. He'd gone on alert the moment
she'd stepped out of the pitiful excuse for an elevator. Instinct warned
her, rightly enough, that without the quick ID, she'd have been treated
to a stun from the weapon his shaky hand was gripping.
"Sir." His eyes were spooked and unwilling to settle on one spot.
"Give me the status."
"Sir," he said again, and took a long unsteady breath. "The landlord
flagged down my unit, said there was a dead woman in the apartment."
"And is there..." Her gaze flicked down to the name pinned over his
breast pocket. "Officer Prosky?"
"Yes, sir, she's..." He swallowed, hard, and Eve could see the horror
flit over his face again.
"And how did you determine the subject is terminated, Prosky? You take
her pulse?"
A flush, no healthier than the green hue, tinted his cheeks. "No, sir. I
followed procedure, preserved crime scene, notified headquarters. Visual
confirmation of termination, the scene is uncorrupted."
"The landlord went in?" All of this she could learn later, but she could
see that he was steadying as she forced him to go over the steps.
"No, sir, he says not. After a complaint by one of the victim's clients
who had an appointment for nine P. M., the landlord checked the
apartment. He unlocked the door and saw her. It's only one room,
Lieutenant Dallas, and she's -- You see her as soon as you open the
door. Following the discovery, the landlord, in a state of panic, went
down to the street and flagged down my patrol unit. I immediately
accompanied him back to the scene, made visual confirmation of
suspicious death, and reported in."
"Have you left your post, officer? However briefly?"
His eyes settled finally, met hers. "No, sir, lieutenant. I thought I'd
have to, for a minute. It's my first, and I had some trouble
maintaining."
"Looks like you maintained fine to me, Prosky." Out of the crime bag
she'd brought up with her, she took out the protective spray, used it.
"Make the calls to forensics and the ME. The room needs to be swept, and
she'll need to be bagged and tagged."
"Yes, sir. Should I remain on post?"
"Until the first team gets here. Then you can report in." She finished
coating her boots, glanced up at him. "You married, Prosky?" she asked
as she snapped her recorder to her shirt.
"No, sir. Sort of engaged though."
"After you report in, go find your lady. The ones who go for the liquor
don't last as long as the ones who have a nice warm body to lose it in.
Where do I find the landlord?" she asked and turned the knob on the
unsecured door.
"He's down in one-A."
"Then tell him to stay put. I'll take his statement when I'm done here."
She stepped inside, closed the door. Eve, no longer a rookie, didn't
feel her stomach revolt at the sight of the body, the torn flesh, or the
blood-splattered child's toys.
But her heart ached.
Then came the anger, a sharp red spear of it when she spotted the
antique weapon cradled in the arms of a teddy bear.
"She was just a kid."
-=O=-***-=O=-
It was seven A. M. Eve hadn't been home. She'd caught one hour's rough
and restless sleep at her office desk between computer searches and
reports. Without a Code Five attached to Lola Starr, Eve was free to
access the data banks of the International Resource Center on Criminal
Activity. So far, IRCCA had come up empty on matches.
Now, pale with fatigue, jittery with the false energy of false caffeine,
she faced Feeney.
"She was a pro, Dallas."
"Her fucking license was barely three months old. There were dolls on
her bed. There was Kool-Aid in her kitchen."
She couldn't get past it -- all those silly, girlish things she'd had to
paw through while the victim's pitiful body lay on the cheap, fussy
pillows and dolls. Enraged, Eve slapped one of the official photos onto
her desk.
"She looks like she should have been leading cheers at the high school.
Instead, she's running tricks and collecting pictures of fancy
apartments and fancier clothes. You figure she knew what she was getting
into?"
"I don't figure she thought she'd end up dead," Feeney said evenly. "You
want to debate the sex codes, Dallas?"
"No." Wearily, she looked down at her hard copy again. "No, but it bums
me, Feeney. A kid like this."
"You know better than that, Dallas."
"Yeah, I know better." She forced herself to snap back. "Autopsy should
be in this morning, but my prelim puts her dead for twenty-four hours
minimum at discovery. You've identified the weapon?"
"SIG two-ten -- a real Rolls-Royce of handguns, about 1980, Swiss
import. Silenced. Those old timey silencers were only good for a couple,
three shots. He'd have needed it because the victim's place wasn't
soundproofed like DeBlass's."
"And he didn't phone it in, which tells me he didn't want her found as
quickly. Had to get himself someplace else," she mused. Thoughtful, she
picked up a small square of paper, officially sealed.
TWO OF SIX
"One a week," she said softly. "Jesus Christ, Feeney, he isn't giving us
much time."
"I'm running her logs, trick book. She had a new client scheduled, 8:00
P. M., night before last. If your prelim checks, he's our guy." Feeney
smiled thinly. "John Smith."
"That's older than the murder weapon." She rubbed her hands hard over
her face. "IRCCA's bound to spit our boy out from that tag."
"They're still running data," Feeney muttered. He was protective, even
sentimental about the IRCCA.
"They're not going to find squat. We got us a time traveler, Feeney."
He snorted. "Yeah, a real Jules Verne."
"We've got a twentieth-century crime," she said through her hands. "The
weapons, the excessive violence, the hand-printed note left on scene. So
maybe our killer is some sort of historian, or buff anyway. Somebody who
wishes things were what they used to be."
"Lots of people think things would be better some other way. That's why
the world's lousy with theme parks."
Thinking, she dropped her hands. "IRCCA isn't going to help us get into
this guy's head. It still takes a human mind to play that game. What's
he doing, Feeney? Why's he doing it?"
"He's killing LCs."
"Hookers have always been easy targets, back to Jack the Ripper, right?
It's a vulnerable job, even now with all the screening, we still get
clients knocking LCs around, killing them."
"Doesn't happen much," Feeney mused. "Sometimes with the S and M trade
you get a party that gets too enthusiastic. Most LCs are safer than
teachers."
"They still run a risk, the oldest profession with the oldest crime. But
things have changed, some things. People don't kill with guns as a rule
anymore. Too expensive, too hard to come by. Sex isn't the strong
motivator it used to be, too cheap, too easy to come by. We have
different methods of investigation, and a whole new batch of motives.
When you brush all that away, the one fact is that people still
terminate people. Keep digging, Feeney. I've got people to talk to."
"What you need's some sleep, kid."
"Let him sleep," Eve muttered. "Let that bastard sleep." Steeling
herself, she turned to her tele-link. It was time to contact the
victim's parents.
-=O=-***-=O=-
By the time Eve walked into the sumptuous foyer of Roarke's midtown
office, she'd been up for more than thirty-two hours. She'd gotten
through the misery of having to tell two shocked, weeping parents that
their only daughter was dead. She'd stared at her monitor until the data
swam in front of her eyes.
Her follow-up interview with Lola's landlord had been its own adventure.
Since the man had had time to recover, he'd spent thirty minutes whining
about the unpleasant publicity and the possibility of a drop-off in
rentals.
So much, Eve thought, for human empathy.
Roarke Industries, New York, was very much what she'd expected. Slick,
shiny, sleek, the building itself spread one hundred fifty stories into
the Manhattan sky. It was an ebony lance, glossy as wet stone, ringed by
transport tubes and diamond-bright skyways.
No tacky Glida-Grills on this corner, she mused. No street hawkers with
their hot pocket PCs dodging security on their colorful air boards.
Out-of-doors vending was off limits on this bite of Fifth. The zoning
made things quieter, if a little less adventuresome.
Inside, the main lobby took up a full city block, boasting three tony
restaurants, a high priced boutique, a handful of specialty shops, and a
small theater that played art films.
The white floor tiles were a full yard square and gleamed like the moon.
Clear glass elevators zipped busily up and down, people glides zigzagged
left and right, while disembodied voices guided visitors to various
points of interest or, if there was business to be conducted, the proper
office.
For those who wanted to wander about on their own, there were more than
a dozen moving maps.
Eve marched to a monitor and was politely offered assistance.
"Roarke," she said, annoyed that his name hadn't been listed on the main
directory.
"I'm sorry." The computer's voice was that overly mannered tone that was
meant to be soothing, and instead grated on Eve's already raw nerves.
"I'm not at liberty to access that information."
"Roarke," Eve repeated, holding up her badge for the computer to scan.
She waited impatiently as the computer hummed, undoubtedly checking and
verifying her ID, notifying the man himself.
"Please proceed to the east wing, Lieutenant Dallas. You will be met."
"Right."
Eve turned down a corridor, passed a marble run that held a forest of
snowy white impatiens.
"Lieutenant." A woman in a killer red suit and hair as white as the
impatiens smiled coolly. "Come with me, please."
The woman slipped a thin security card into a slot, laid her palm
against a sheet of black glass for a handprint. The wall slid open,
revealing a private elevator.
Eve stepped inside with her, and was unsurprised when her escort
requested the top floor.
Eve had been certain Roarke would be satisfied with nothing but the top.
Her guide was silent on the ride up and exuded a discreet whiff of
sensible scent that matched her sensible shoes and neat, sleek coif. Eve
secretly admired women who put themselves together, top to toe, with
such seeming effortlessness.
Faced with such quiet magnificence, she tugged selfconsciously at her
worn leather jacket and wondered if it was time she actually spent money
on a haircut rather than hacking away at it herself.
Before she could decide on such earth-shattering matters, the doors
whooshed open into a silent, white carpeted foyer the size of a small
home. There were lush green plants -- real plants: ficus, palm, what
appeared to be a dogwood flowering off season. There was a sharp spicy
scent from a bank of dianthus, blooming in shades of rose and vivid
purple.
The garden surrounded a comfortable waiting area of mauve sofas and
glossy wood tables, lamps that were surely solid brass with jeweled
colored shades.
In the center of this was a circular workstation, equipped as
efficiently as a cockpit with monitors and keyboards, gauges and
tele-links. Two men and a woman worked at it busily, with a seamless
ballet of competence in motion.
She was led past them into a glass-sided breezeway. A peek down, and she
could see Manhattan. There was music piped in she didn't recognize as
Mozart. For Eve, music began sometime after her tenth birthday.
The woman in the killer suit paused again, flashed her cool, perfect
smile, then spoke into a hidden speaker. "Lieutenant Dallas, sir."
"Send her in, Caro. Thank you."
Again Caro pressed her palm to a slick black glass. "Go right in,
lieutenant," she invited as a panel slid open.
"Thanks." Out of curiosity, Eve watched her walk away, wondering how
anyone could stride so gracefully on three-inch heels. She walked into
Roarke's office.
It was, as she expected, as impressive as the rest of his New York
headquarters. Despite the soaring, three-sided view of New York, the
lofty ceiling with its pinprick lights, the vibrant tones of topaz and
emerald in the thickly cushioned furnishings, it was the man behind the
ebony slab desk that dominated.
What in hell was it about him? Eve thought again as Roarke rose and
slanted a smile at her.
"Lieutenant Dallas," he said in that faint and fascinating Irish lilt,
"a pleasure, as always."
"You might not think so when I'm finished."
He lifted a brow. "Why don't you come the rest of the way in and get
started? Then we'll see. Coffee?"
"Don't try to distract me, Roarke." She walked closer. Then, to satisfy
her curiosity, she took a brief turn around the room. It was as big as a
heliport, with all the amenities of a first-class hotel: automated
service bar, a padded relaxation chair complete with VR and mood
settings, an oversize wall screen, currently blank. To the left, there
was a full bath including whirl tub and drying tube. All the standard
office equipment, of the highest high-tech, was built in.
Roarke watched her with a bland expression. He admired the way she
moved, the way those cool, quick eyes took in everything.
"Would you like a tour, Eve?"
"No. How do you work with all this..." Using both hands, she gestured
widely at the treated glass walls. "Open."
"I don't like being closed in. Are you going to sit, or prowl?"
"I'm going to stand. I have some questions to ask you, Roarke. You're
entitled to have counsel present."
"Am I under arrest?"
"Not at the moment."
"Then we'll save the lawyers until I am. Ask."
Though she kept her eyes level on his, she knew where his hands were,
tucked casually in the pockets of his slacks. Hands revealed emotions.
"Night before last," she said, "between the hours of eight and ten P. M.
Can you verify your whereabouts?"
"I believe I was here until shortly after eight." With a steady hand he
touched his desk log. "I shut down my monitor at 8:17. I left the
building, drove home."
"Drove," she interrupted, "or were driven?"
"Drove. I keep a car here. I don't believe in keeping my employees
waiting on my whims."
"Damned democratic of you." And, she thought, damned inconvenient. She'd
wanted him to have an alibi. "And then?"
"I poured myself a brandy, had a shower, changed. I had a late supper
with a friend."
"How late, and what friend?"
"I believe I arrived at about ten. I like to be prompt. At Madeline
Montmart's townhouse."
Eve had a quick vision of a curvy blond with a sultry mouth and almond
eyes. "Madeline Montmart, the actress?"
"Yes. I believe we had squab, if that's helpful."
She ignored the sarcasm. "No one can verify your movements between
eight-seventeen and ten P. M. ?"
"One of the staff might have noticed, but then, I pay them well and
they're likely to say what I tell them to say." His voice took on an
edge. "There's been another murder."
"Lola Starr, licensed companion. Certain details will be released to the
media within the hour."
"And certain details will not."
"Do you own a silencer, Roarke?"
His expression didn't change. "Several. You look exhausted, Eve. Have
you been up all night?"
"Goes with the job. Do you own a Swiss handgun, SIG two-ten, circa
1980?"
"I acquired one about six weeks ago. Sit down."
"Were you acquainted with Lola Starr?" Reaching into her briefcase, she
pulled out a photo she'd found in Lola's apartment. The pretty, elfin
girl beamed out, full of sassy fun.
Roarke lowered his gaze to it as it landed on his desk. His eyes
flickered. This time his voice was tinged with something Eve thought
sounded like pity.
"She isn't old enough to be licensed."
"She turned eighteen four months ago. Applied on her birthday."
"She didn't have time to change her mind, did she?" His eyes lifted to
Eve's. And yes, it was pity. "I didn't know her. I don't use prostitutes
-- or children." He picked up the photo, skirted the desk, and offered
it back to Eve. "Sit down."
"Have you ever -- "
"Goddamn it, sit down." In sudden fury, he took her shoulders, pushed
her into a chair. Her case tipped, spilling out photos of Lola that had
nothing to do with sassy fun.
She might have reached them first -- her reflexes were as good as his.
Perhaps she wanted him to see them. Perhaps she needed him to.
Crouching, Roarke picked up a photo taken at the scene. He stared at it.
"Christ Jesus," he said softly. "You believe I'm capable of this?"
"My beliefs aren't the issue. Investigating -- " She broke off when his
eyes whipped to hers.
"You believe I'm capable of this?" he repeated in an undertone that cut
like a blade.
"No, but I have a job to do."
"Your job sucks."
She took the photos back, stored them. "From time to time."
"How do you sleep at night, after looking at something like this?"
She flinched. Though she recovered in a snap, he'd seen it. As intrigued
as he was by her instinctive and emotional reaction, he was sorry he'd
caused it.
"By knowing I'll take down the bastard who did it. Get out of my way."
He stayed where he was, laid a hand on her rigid arm. "A man in my
position has to read people quickly and accurately, Eve. I'm reading you
as someone close to the edge."
"I said, get out of my way."
He rose, but shifting his grip on her arm, pulled her to her feet. He
was still in her way. "He'll do it again," Roarke said quietly. "And
it's eating at you wondering when and where and who."
"Don't analyze me. We've got a whole department of shrinks on the
payroll for that."
"Why haven't you been to see one? You've been slipping through loopholes
to avoid Testing."
Her eyes narrowed.
He smiled, but there was no amusement in it.
"I have connections, lieutenant. You were due in Testing several days
ago, standard department procedure after a justifiable termination, one
you executed the night Sharon was killed."
"Keep out of my business," she said furiously. "And fuck your
connections."
"What are you afraid of? What are you afraid they'll find if they get a
look inside of that head of yours? That heart of yours?"
"I'm not afraid of anything." She jerked her arm free, but he merely
laid his hand on her cheek. A gesture so unexpected, so gentle, her
stomach quivered.
"Let me help you."
"I -- " Something nearly spilled out, as the photos had. But this time
her reflexes kept it tucked away. "I'm handling it." She turned away.
"You can pick up your property anytime after nine A. M. tomorrow."
"Eve."
She kept her eyes focused on the doorway, kept walking. "What?"
"I want to see you tonight."
"No."
He was tempted -- very tempted -- to lunge after her. Instead, he stayed
where he was. "I can help you with the case."
Cautious, she stopped, turned back. If he hadn't been experiencing an
uncomfortable twist of sexual frustration, he might have laughed aloud
at the combination of suspicion and derision in her eyes.
"How?"
"I know people Sharon knew." As he spoke, he saw the derision alter to
interest. But the suspicion remained. "It doesn't take a long mental
leap to realize you'll be looking for a connection between Sharon and
the girl whose photos you're carrying. I'll see if I can find one."
"Information from a suspect doesn't carry much weight in an
investigation. But," she added before he could speak, "you can let me
know."
He smiled after all. "Is it any wonder I want you naked, and in bed?
I'll let you know, lieutenant." And walked back behind his desk. "In the
meantime, get some sleep."
When the door closed behind her, the smile went out of his eyes. For a
long moment he sat in silence. Fingering the button he carried in his
pocket, he engaged his private, secure line.
He didn't want this call on his log.
*** CHAPTER SEVEN ***
Eve stepped up to the peep screen at Charles Monroe's door and started
to announce herself when it slid open. He was in black tie, a cashmere
cape swung negligently over his shoulders, offset by the cream of a silk
scarf. His smile was every bit as well turned out as his wardrobe.
"Lieutenant Dallas. How lovely to see you again." His eyes, full of
compliments she knew she didn't deserve, skimmed over her. "And how
unfortunate I'm just on my way out."
"I won't keep you long." She stepped forward, he stepped back. "A couple
of questions, Mr. Monroe, here, informally, or formally, at the station
with your representative or counsel."
His well shaped brows shot up. "I see. I thought we'd progressed beyond
that. Very well, lieutenant, ask away." He let the door slide shut
again. "We'll keep it informal."
"Your whereabouts night before last, between the hours of eight and
eleven?"
"Night before last?" He slipped a diary out of his pocket, keyed it in.
"Ah, yes. I picked up a client at seven-thirty for an eight o'clock
curtain at the Grande Theater. They're doing a reprise of Ibsen --
depressing stuff. We sat third row, center. It ended just before eleven,
and we had a late supper, catered. Here. I was engaged with her until
three A. M."
His smile flashed as he tucked the diary away again. "Does that clear
me?"
"If your client will corroborate."
The smile faded into a look of pain. "Lieutenant, you're killing me."
"Someone's killing people in your profession," she snapped back. "Name
and number, Mr. Monroe." She waited until he'd mournfully given the
data. "Are you acquainted with a Lola Starr?"
"Lola, Lola Starr... doesn't sound familiar." He took out the diary
again, scanning through his address section. "Apparently not. Why?"
"You'll hear about it on the news by morning," was all Eve told him as
she opened the door again. "So far, it's only been women, Mr. Monroe,
but if I were you, I'd be very careful about taking on new clients."
With a headache drumming at her, she strode to the elevator. Unable to
resist, she glanced toward the door of Sharon DeBlass's apartment, where
the red police security light blinked.
She needed to sleep, she told herself. She needed to go home and empty
her mind for an hour. But she was keying in her ID to disengage the
seal, and walking into the home of a dead woman.
It was silent. And it was empty. She'd expected nothing else. Somehow
she hoped there would be some flash of intuition, but there was only the
steady pounding in her temples. Ignoring it, she went into the bedroom.
The windows had been sealed as well with concealing spray to prevent the
media or the morbidly curious from doing fly-bys and checking out the
scene. She ordered lights, and the shadows bounced back to reveal the
bed.
The sheets had been stripped off and taken into forensics. Body fluids,
hair, and skin had already been analyzed and logged. There was a stain
on the floating mattress where blood had seeped through those satin
sheets.
The pillowed headboard was splattered with it. She wondered if anyone
would care enough to have it cleaned.
She glanced toward the table. Feeney had taken the small desktop PC so
that he could search through the hard drive as well as the discs. The
room had been searched and swept. There was nothing left to do.
Yet Eve went to the dresser, going methodically through the drawers
again. Who would claim all these clothes? she wondered. The silks and
lace, the cashmeres and satins of a woman who had preferred the textures
of the rich against her skin.
The mother, she imagined. Why hadn't she sent in a request for the
return of her daughter's things?
Something to think about.
She went through the closet, again going through skirts, dresses,
trousers, the trendy capes and caftans, jackets and blouses, checking
pockets, linings. She moved onto shoes, all kept neatly in acrylic
boxes.
The woman had only had two feet, she thought with some annoyance. No one
needed sixty pairs of shoes. With a little snort, she reached into toes,
deep inside the tunnel of boots, into the springy softness of inflatable
platforms.
Lola hadn't had so much, she thought now. Two pairs of ridiculously high
heels, a pair of girlish vinyl straps, and a simple pair of air pump
sneakers, all jumbled in her narrow closet.
But Sharon had been an organized as well as a vain soul. Her shoes were
carefully stacked in rows of --
Wrong. Skin prickling, Eve stepped back. It was wrong. The closet was as
big as a room, and every inch of space had been ruthlessly utilized.
Now, there was a full foot empty on the shelves. Because the shoes were
stacked six high in a row of eight.
It wasn't the way Eve had found them or the way she'd left them. They'd
been organized according to color and style. In stacks, she remembered
perfectly, of four, a row of twelve.
Such a little mistake, she thought with a small smile. But a man who
made one was bound to make another.
-=O=-***-=O=-
"Would you repeat that, lieutenant?"
"He restacked the shoe boxes wrong, commander." Negotiating traffic,
shivering as her car heater offered a tepid puff of air around her toes,
Eve checked in. A tourist blimp crept by at low altitude, the guide's
voice booming out tips on sky walk shopping as they crossed toward
Fifth. Some idiotic road crew with a special daylight license power
drilled a tunnel access on the corner of Sixth and Seventy-eighth. Eve
pitched her voice above the din.
"You can review the discs of the scene. I know how the closet was
arranged. It made an impression on me that any one person should have so
many clothes, and keep them so organized. He went back."
"Returned to the scene of the crime?" Whitney's voice was dry as dust.
"Cliches have a basis in fact." Hoping for relative quiet, she jogged
west down a cross street and ended up fuming behind a clicking microbus.
Didn't anyone stay home in New York? "Or they wouldn't be cliches," she
finished and switched to automatic drive so that she could warm her
hands in her pockets. "There were other things. She kept her costume
jewelry in a partitioned drawer. Rings in one section, bracelets in
another, and so on. Some of the chains were tangled when I looked
again."
"The sweepers -- "
"Sir, I went through the place again after the sweepers. I know he's
been there." Eve bit back on frustration and reminded herself that
Whitney was a cautious man. Administrators had to be. "He got through
the security, and he went in. He was looking for something -- something
he forgot. Something she had. Something we missed."
"You want the place swept again?"
"I do. And I want Feeney to go back over Sharon's files. Something's
there, somewhere. And it concerns him enough to risk going back for it."
"I'll signature the authorization. The chief isn't going to like it."
The commander was silent for a moment. Then, as if he'd just remembered
it was a fully secured line, he snorted. "Fuck the chief. Good eye,
Dallas."
"Thank you -- " But he'd cut her off before she could finish being
grateful.
Two of six, she thought, and in the privacy of her car, she shuddered
from more than the cold. There were four more people out there whose
lives were in her hands.
After pulling into her garage, she swore she'd call the damn mechanic
the next day. If history ran true, it meant he'd have her vehicle in for
a week, diddling with some idiotic chip in the heater control. The idea
of the paperwork in accessing a replacement vehicle through the
department was too daunting to consider.
Besides, she was used to the one she had, with all its little quirks.
Everyone knew the uniforms copped the best air-to-land vehicles.
Detectives had to make do with clinkers.
She'd have to rely on public transportation or just hook a car from the
police garage and pay the bureaucratic price later.
Still frowning over the hassle to come and reminding herself to contact
Feeney personally to have him go through a week's worth of security
discs on the Gorham, she rode the elevator to her floor. Eve had no more
than unkeyed her locks when her hand was on her weapon, drawing it.
The silence of her apartment was wrong. She knew instantly she wasn't
alone. The prickle along her skin had her doing a quick sweep, arms and
eyes, shifting fluidly left then right.
In the dim light of the room, the shadows hung and the silence remained.
Then she caught a movement that had her tensed muscles rippling, her
trigger finger poised.
"Excellent reflexes, lieutenant." Roarke rose from the chair where he'd
been lounging. Where he'd been watching her. "So excellent," he
continued in that same mild tone as he touched on a lamp, "that I have
every faith you won't use that on me."
She might have. She very well might have given him one good jolt. That
would have wiped that complacent smile off his face. But any discharge
of a weapon meant paperwork she wasn't prepared to face for simple
revenge.
"What the fuck are you doing here?"
"Waiting for you." His eyes remained on hers as he lifted his hands.
"I'm unarmed. You're welcome to check for yourself if you won't take my
word for it."
Very slowly, and with some reluctance, she holstered her weapon. "I
imagine you have a whole fleet of very expensive and very clever
lawyers, Roarke, who would have you out before I finished booking you on
a B and E. But why don't you tell me why I shouldn't put myself to the
trouble, and the city to the expense of throwing you in a cage for a
couple of hours?"
Roarke wondered if he'd become perverse that he could so enjoy the way
she slashed at him. "It wouldn't be productive. And you're tired, Eve.
Why don't you sit down?"
"I won't bother to ask you how you got in here." She could feel herself
vibrating with temper, and wondered just how much satisfaction she'd
gain from clamping his elegant wrists in restraints. "You own the
building, so that question answers itself."
"One of the things I admire about you is that you don't waste time on
the obvious."
"My question is why."
"I found myself thinking about you, on professional and personal levels,
after you'd left my office." He smiled, quick and charming. "Have you
eaten?"
"Why?" she repeated.
He stepped toward her so that the slant of light from the lamp played
behind him. "Professionally, I made a couple of calls that might be of
interest to you. Personally..." He lifted a hand to her face, fingers
just brushing her chin, his thumb skimming the slight dip. "I found
myself concerned by that fatigue in your eyes. For some reason I feel
compelled to feed you."
Though she knew it was the gesture of a cranky child, she jerked her
chin free. "What calls?"
He merely smiled again, moved to her tele-link. "May I?" he said even as
he keyed in the number he wanted. "This is Roarke. You can send the meal
up now." He disengaged, smiled at her again. "You don't object to pasta,
do you?"
"Not on principle. But I object to being handled."
"That's something else I like about you." Because she wouldn't, he sat
and, ignoring her frown, took out his cigarette case. "But I find it
easier to relax over a hot meal. You don't relax enough, Eve."
"You don't know me well enough to judge what I do or don't do. And I
didn't say you could smoke in here."
He lighted the cigarette, eyeing her through the faint, fragrant haze.
"You didn't arrest me for breaking and entering, you're not going to
arrest me for smoking. I brought a bottle of wine. I left it to breathe
on the counter in the kitchen. Would you like some?"
"What I'd like -- " She had a sudden flash, and the fury came so quickly
she could barely see through it. In one leap, she was at her computer,
demanding access.
That annoyed him -- enough to have his voice tighten. "If I'd come in to
poke through your files, I'd hardly have waited around for you."
"The hell you wouldn't. That kind of arrogance is just like you." But
her security was intact. She wasn't sure if she was relieved or
disappointed. Until she saw the small package beside her monitor.
"What's this?"
"I have no idea." He blew out another stream of smoke. "It was on the
floor inside the door. I picked it up."
Eve knew what it was -- the size, the shape, the weight. And she knew
when she viewed the disc she would see Lola Stair's murder.
Something about the way her eyes changed had him rising again, had his
voice gentling. "What is it, Eve?"
"Official business. Excuse me."
She walked directly to the bedroom, closed and secured the door.
It was Roarke's turn to frown. He went into the kitchen, located
glasses, and poured the burgundy. She lived simply, he thought. Very
little clutter, very little that spoke of background or family. No
mementos. He'd been tempted to wander into her bedroom while he'd had
the apartment to himself and see what he might have discovered about her
there, but he'd resisted.
It was not so much respect for her privacy as it was the challenge she
presented that provoked him to discover her from the woman alone rather
than her surroundings.
Still, he found the plain colors and lack of fuss illuminating. She
didn't live here, as far as he could see, so much as she existed here.
She lived, he deduced, in her work.
He sipped the wine, approved it. After dousing his cigarette, he carried
both glasses back into the living room. It was going to be more than
interesting to solve the puzzle of Eve Dallas.
When she came back in, nearly twenty minutes later, a white-coated
waiter was just finishing setting up dishes on a small table by the
window. However glorious the scents, they failed to stir her appetite.
Her head was pounding again, and she'd forgotten to take medication.
With a murmur, Roarke dismissed the waiter. He said nothing until the
door closed and he was alone with Eve again. "I'm sorry."
"For what?"
"For whatever's upset you." Except for that one flush of temper, she'd
been pale when she'd come into the apartment. But her cheeks were
colorless now, her eyes too dark. When he started toward her, she shook
her head once, fiercely.
"Go away, Roarke."
"Going away's easy. Too easy." Very deliberately, he put his arms around
her, felt her stiffen. "Give yourself a minute." His voice was smooth,
persuasive. "Would it matter, really matter to anyone but you, if you
took one minute to let go?"
She shook her head again, but this time there was weariness in the
gesture. He heard the sigh escape, and taking advantage, he drew her
closer. "You can't tell me?"
"No."
He nodded, but his eyes flashed with impatience. He knew better; it
shouldn't matter to him. She shouldn't. But too much about her mattered.
"Someone else then," he murmured.
"There's no one else." Then realizing how that might be construed, she
pulled back. "I didn't mean -- "
"I know you didn't." His smile was wry and not terribly amused. "But
there isn't going to be anyone else, for either of us, not for some
time."
Her step back wasn't a retreat, but a statement of distance. "You're
taking too much for granted, Roarke."
"Not at all. Nothing for granted. You're work, lieutenant. A great deal
of work. Your dinner's getting cold."
She was too tired to make a stand, too tired to argue. She sat down,
picked up her fork. "Have you been to Sharon DeBlass's apartment during
the last week?"
"No, why would I?"
She studied him carefully. "Why would anyone?"
He paused a moment, then realized the question wasn't academic. "To
relive the event," he suggested. "To be certain nothing was left behind
that would be incriminating."
"And as owner of the building, you could get in as easily as you got in
here."
His mouth tightened briefly. Annoyance, she judged, the annoyance of a
man who was weary of answering the same questions. It was a small thing,
but a very good sign of his innocence. "Yes. I don't believe I'd have a
problem. My master code would get me in."
No, she thought, his master code wouldn't have broken the police
security. That would require a different level, or an expert on
security.
"I assume that you believe someone not in your department has been in
that apartment since the murder."
"You can assume that," she agreed. "Who handles your security, Roarke?"
"I use Lorimar for both my business and my home." He lifted his glass.
"It's simpler that way, as I own the company."
"Of course you do. I suppose you know quite a bit about security
yourself."
"You could say I have a long-standing interest in security matters.
That's why I bought the company." He scooped up the herbed pasta, held
the fork to her lips, and was satisfied when she took the offered bite.
"Eve, I'm tempted to confess all, just to wipe that unhappy look off
your face and see you eat with the enthusiasm I'd enjoyed last time. But
whatever my crimes, and they are undoubtedly legion, they don't include
murder."
She looked down at her plate and began to eat. It frazzled her that he
could see she was unhappy. "What did you mean when you said I was work?"
"You think things through very carefully, and you weigh the odds, the
options. You're not a creature of impulse, and though I believe you
could be seduced, with the right timing, and the right touch, it
wouldn't be an ordinary occurrence."
She lifted her gaze again. "That's what you want to do, Roarke? Seduce
me?"
"I will seduce you," he returned. "Unfortunately, not tonight. Beyond
that, I want to find out what it is that makes you what you are. And I
want to help you get what you need. Right now, what you need is a
murderer. You blame yourself," he added. "That's foolish and annoying."
"I don't blame myself."
"Look in the mirror," Roarke said quietly.
"There was nothing I could do," Eve exploded. "Nothing I could do to
stop it. Any of it."
"Are you supposed to be able to stop it, any of it? All of it?"
"That's exactly what I'm supposed to do."
He tilted his head. "How?"
She pushed away from the table. "By being smart. By being in time. By
doing my job."
Something more here, he mused. Something deeper. He folded his hands on
the table. "Isn't that what you're doing now?"
The images flooded back into her brain. All the death. All the blood.
All the waste. "Now they're dead." And the taste of it was bitter in her
mouth. "There should have been something I could have done to stop it."
"To stop a murder before it happens, you'd have to be inside the head of
a killer," he said quietly. "Who could live with that?"
"I can live with that." She hurled it back at him. And it was pure
truth. She could live with anything but failure. "Serve and protect --
it's not just a phrase, it's a promise. If I can't keep my word, I'm
nothing. And I didn't protect them, any of them. I can only serve them
after they're dead. Goddamn it, she was hardly more than a baby. Just a
baby, and he cut her into pieces. I wasn't in time. I wasn't in time,
and I should have been."
Her breath caught on a sob, shocking her. Pressing a hand to her mouth,
she lowered herself onto the sofa. "God," was all she could say. "God.
God."
He came to her. Instinct had him taking her arms firmly rather than
gathering her close. "If you can't or won't talk to me, you have to talk
to someone. You know that."
"I can handle it. I -- " But the rest of the words slid down her throat
when he shook her.
"What's it costing you?" he demanded. "And how much would it matter to
anyone if you let it go? For one minute just let it go."
"I don't know." And maybe that was the fear, she realized. She wasn't
sure if she could pick up her badge, or her weapon, or her life, if she
let herself think too deeply, or feel too much. "I see her," Eve said on
a deep breath. "I see her whenever I close my eyes or stop concentrating
on what needs to be done."
"Tell me."
She rose, retrieved her wine and his, and then returned to the sofa. The
long drink eased her dry throat and settled the worst of the nerves. It
was fatigue, she warned herself, that weakened her enough that she
couldn't hold it in.
"The call came through when I was a half block away. I'd just closed
another case, finished the data load. Dispatch called for the closest
unit. Domestic violence -- it's always messy, but I was practically on
the doorstep. So I took it. Some of the neighbors were outside, they
were all talking at once."
The scene came back to her, perfectly, like a video exactly cued. "A
woman was in her nightgown, and she was crying. Her face was battered,
and one of the neighbors was trying to bind up a gash on her arm. She
was bleeding badly, so I told them to call the MTs. She kept saying,
'He's got her. He's got my baby.'"
Eve took another drink. "She grabbed me, bleeding on me, screaming and
crying and telling me I had to stop him, I had to save her baby. I
should have called for backup, but I didn't think I could wait. I took
the stairs, and I could hear him before I got to the third floor where
he was locked in. He was raging. I think I heard the little girl
screaming, but I'm not sure."
She closed her eyes then, praying she'd been wrong. She wanted to
believe that the child had already been dead, already beyond pain. To
have been that close, only steps away... No, she couldn't live with
that.
"When I got to the door, I used the standard. I'd gotten his name from
one of the neighbors. I used his name, and the child's name. It's
supposed to make it more personal, more real if you use names. I
identified myself and said I was coming in. But he just kept raging. I
could hear things breaking. I couldn't hear the child now. I think I
knew. Before I broke down the door, I knew. He'd used the kitchen knife
to slice her to pieces."
Her hand shook as she raised the glass again. "There was so much blood.
She was so small, but there was so much blood. On the floor, on the
wall, all over him. I could see it was still dripping off the knife. Her
face was turned toward me. Her little face, with big blue eyes. Like a
doll's."
She was silent for a moment, then set her glass aside. "He was too wired
up to be stunned. He kept coming. There was blood dripping off the
knife, and splattered all over him, and he kept coming. So I looked in
his eyes, right in his eyes. And I killed him."
"And the next day," Roarke said quietly, "you dived straight into a
murder investigation."
"Testing's postponed. I'll get to it in another day or two." She moved
her shoulders. "The shrinks, they'll think it's the termination. I can
make them think that if I have to. But it's not. I had to kill him. I
can accept that." She looked straight into Roarke's eyes and knew she
could tell him what she hadn't been able to say to herself. "I wanted to
kill him. Maybe even needed to. When I watched him die, I thought, He'll
never do that to another child. And I was glad that I'd been the one to
stop him."
"You think that's wrong."
"I know it's wrong. I know anytime a cop gets pleasure of any sort out
of termination, she's crossed a line."
He leaned forward so that their faces were close. "What was the child's
name?"
"Mandy." Her breath hitched once before she controlled it. "She was
three."
"Would you be torn up this way if you'd killed him before he'd gotten to
her?"
She opened her mouth, closed it again. "I guess I'll never know, will
I?"
"Yes, you do." He laid a hand over hers, watched her frown and look down
at the contact. "You know, I've spent most of my life with a basic
dislike of police -- for one reason or another. I find it very odd that
I've met, under such extraordinary circumstances, one I can respect and
be attracted to at the same time."
She lifted her gaze again, and though the frown remained, she didn't
draw her hand free of his. "That's a strange compliment."
"Apparently we have a strange relationship." He rose, drawing her to her
feet. "Now you need to sleep." He glanced toward the dinner she'd barely
touched. "You can heat that up when you've gotten your appetite back."
"Thanks. Next time I'd appreciate you waiting until I'm home before you
come in."
"Progress," he murmured when they'd reached the door. "You accept
there'll be a next time." With a hint of a smile, he brought the hand he
still held to his lips. He caught bafflement, discomfort and, he
thought, a trace of embarrassment in her eyes as he brushed a light kiss
over her knuckles. "Until next time," he said, and left.
Frowning, Eve rubbed her knuckles over her jeans as she headed to the
bedroom. She stripped, letting her clothes lay wherever they dropped.
She climbed into bed, shut her eyes, and willed herself to sleep.
She was just dozing off when she remembered Roarke had never told her
who he'd called and what he'd discovered.
*** CHAPTER EIGHT ***
In her office, with the door locked, Eve reviewed the disc of Lola
Starr's murder with Feeney. She didn't flinch at the little popping
sound of the silenced weapon. Her system no longer recoiled at the
insult the bullet caused in flesh.
The screen held steady on the ending caption: Two of Six. Then it went
blank. Without a word, Eve cued up the first murder, and they watched
Sharon DeBlass die again.
"What can you tell me?" Eve asked when it was finished.
"Discs were made on a Trident MicroCam, the five thousand model. It's
only been available about six months, very pricey. Big seller last
Christmas, though. More than ten thousand moved in Manhattan alone
during the traditional shopping season, not to mention how many went
through the gray market. Not as much of a flood like less expensive
models, but still too many to trace."
He looked over at Eve with his drooping camel eyes. "Guess who owns
Trident?"
"Roarke Industries."
"Give the lady a bouquet. I'd say the odds were pretty good the boss man
owns one himself."
"He'd certainly have access." She made a note of it and resisted the
memory of how his lips had felt brushing over her knuckles. "The killer
uses a fairly exclusive piece of equipment he manufactures himself.
Arrogance or stupidity?"
"Stupidity doesn't fly with this boy."
"No, it doesn't. The weapon?"
"We've got a couple thousand out there in private collections," Feeney
began, nibbling on a cashew. "Three in the boroughs. Those are the ones
that've been registered," he added with a thin smile. "The silencer
doesn't have to be registered, as it doesn't qualify as deadly on its
own. No way of tracing it."
He leaned back, tapped the monitor. "As far as the first disc, I've been
running it. I came up with a couple of shadows. Makes me certain he
recorded more than the murder. But I haven't been able to enhance
anything. Whoever edited that disc knew all the tricks or had access to
equipment that knew them for him."
"What about the sweepers?"
"Commander ordered them for this morning, per your request." Feeney
glanced at his watch. "Should be there now. I picked up the security
discs on my way in, ran them. We've got a twenty-minute time lapse
starting at three-ten, night before last."
"Bastard waltzed right in," she muttered. "It's a shitty neighborhood,
Feeney, but an upscale building. Nobody noticed him either time, which
means he blends."
"Or they're used to seeing him."
"Because he was one of Sharon's regulars. Tell me why a man who was a
regular client for an expensive, sophisticated, experienced prostitute,
chose a green, low-scale what do you call it, ingenue like Lola Starr
for his second hit?"
Feeney pursed his lips. "He likes variety?"
Eve shook her head. "Maybe he liked it so much the first time, he's not
going to be choosy now. Four more to go, Feeney. He told us right off
the bat we had a serial killer. He announced it, letting us know Sharon
wasn't particularly important. Just one of six."
She blew out a breath, unsatisfied. "So why'd he go back?" she said to
herself. "What was he looking for?"
"Maybe the sweepers'll tell us."
"Maybe." She picked up a list from her desk. "I'm going to check out
Sharon's client list again, then hit Lola's."
Feeney cleared his throat, chose another cashew from his little bag. "I
hate to be the one to tell you, Dallas. The senator's demanding an
update."
"I have nothing to tell him."
"You're going to have to tell him this afternoon. In East Washington."
She stopped a pace in front of the door. "Bullshit."
"Commander gave me the news. We're on the two o'clock shuttle." Feeney
thought resignedly of how his stomach reacted to air travel. "I hate
politics."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Eve was still gritting her teeth over her briefing with Whitney when she
ran headlong into DeBlass's security outside his office in the New
Senate Office Building, East Washington.
Their identification aside, both she and Feeney were scanned, and
according to the revised Federal Property Act of 2022, were obliged to
hand over their weapons.
"Like we're going to zap the guy while he's sitting at his desk," Feeney
muttered as they were escorted over red, white, and blue carpet.
"I wouldn't mind giving several of these guys a quick buzz." Flanked by
suits and shined shoes, Eve slouched in front of the glossy door of the
senator's office, waiting for the internal camera to clear them.
"If you ask me, East Washington's been paranoid since the terrorist
hit." Feeney sneered into the camera. "Couple dozen legislators get
whacked, and they never forget it."
The door opened, and Rockman, pristine in needle-thin pin stripes,
nodded. "Long memories are an advantage in politics, Captain Feeney.
Lieutenant Dallas," he added with another nod. "We appreciate your
promptness."
"I had no idea the senator and my chief were so close," Eve said as she
stepped inside. "Or that both of them would be so anxious to waste the
taxpayers' money."
"Perhaps they both consider justice priceless." Rockman gestured them
toward the gleaming desk of cherry wood -- certainly priceless -- where
DeBlass waited.
He had, as far as Eve could see, benefited from the change of
temperature in the country -- too lukewarm in her opinion -- and the
repeal of the Two Term Bill. Under current law, a politician could now
retain his seat for life. All he had to do was buffalo his constituents
into electing him.
DeBlass certainly looked at home. His paneled office was as hushed as a
cathedral and every bit as reverent with its altarlike desk, the visitor
chairs as subservient as pews.
"Sit," DeBlass barked, and folded his large-knuckled hands on the desk.
"My latest information is that you are no closer to finding the monster
who murdered my granddaughter than you were a week ago." His dark brows
beetled over his eyes. "I find this difficult to understand, considering
the resources of the New York Police Department."
"Senator." Eve let Commander Whitney's terse instructions play in her
head: Be tactful, respectful, and tell him nothing he doesn't already
know. "We're using those resources to investigate and gather evidence.
While the department is not now prepared to make an arrest, every
possible effort is being made to bring your granddaughter's murderer to
justice. Her case is my first priority, and you have my word it will
continue to be until it can be satisfactorily closed."
The senator listened to the little speech with all apparent interest.
Then he leaned forward. "I've been in the business of bullshit for more
than twice your life, lieutenant. So don't pull out your tap dance with
me. You have nothing."
Fuck tact, Eve decided instantly. "What we have, Senator DeBlass, is a
complicated and delicate investigation. Complicated, given the nature of
the crime; delicate, due to the victim's family tree. It's my
commander's opinion that I'm the best choice to conduct the
investigation. It's your right to disagree. But pulling me off my job to
come here to defend my work is a waste of time. My time." She rose. "I
have nothing new to tell you."
With the vision of both their butts hanging in a sling, Feeney rose as
well, all respect. "I'm sure you understand, senator, that the delicacy
of an investigation of this nature often means progress is slow. It's
difficult to ask you to be objective when we're talking of your
granddaughter, but Lieutenant Dallas and I have no choice but to be
objective."
With an impatient gesture, DeBlass waved them to sit again. "Obviously
my emotions are involved. Sharon was an important part of my life.
Whatever she became, and however I was disappointed in her choices, she
was blood." He drew a deep breath, let it loose. "I cannot and will not
be placated with bits and pieces of information."
"There's nothing else I can tell you," Eve repeated.
"You can tell me about the prostitute who was murdered two nights ago."
His eyes flicked up to Rockman.
"Lola Starr," he supplied.
"I imagine your sources of information on Lola Starr are as thorough as
ours." Eve chose to speak directly to Rockman. "Yes, we believe that
there is a connection between the two murders."
"My granddaughter might have been misguided," DeBlass broke in, "but she
did not socialize with people like Lola Starr."
So, prostitutes had class systems, Eve thought wearily. What else was
new? "We haven't determined whether they knew each other. But there's
little doubt that they both knew the same man. And that man killed them.
Each murder followed a specific pattern. We'll use that pattern to find
him. Before, we hope, he kills again."
"You believe he will," Rockman put in.
"I'm sure he will."
"The murder weapon," DeBlass demanded. "Was it the same type?"
"It's part of the pattern," Eve told him. She'd commit no more than
that. "There are basic and undeniable similarities between the two
homicides. There's no doubt the same man is responsible."
Calmer now, Eve stood again. "Senator, I never knew your granddaughter
and have no personal tie to her, but I'm personally offended by murder.
I'm going after him. That's all I can tell you."
He studied her for a moment, saw more than he'd expected to see. "Very
well, lieutenant. Thank you for coming."
Dismissed, Eve walked with Feeney to the door. In the mirror she saw
DeBlass signal to Rockman, Rockman acknowledged. She waited until she
was outside before she spoke.
"The son of a bitch is going to tail us."
"Huh?"
"DeBlass's guard dog. He's going to shadow us."
"What the hell for?"
"To see what we do, where we go. Why do you tail anyone? We're going to
lose him at the transport center," she told Feeney as she flagged down a
cab. "Keep your eyes out and see if he follows you to New York."
"Follows me? Where are you going?"
"I'm going to follow my nose."
-=O=-***-=O=-
It wasn't a difficult maneuver. The west wing boarding terminal at
National Transport was always bedlam. It was even worse at rush hour
when all northbound passengers were jammed into the security line and
herded along by computerized voices. Shuttles and runabouts were going
to be jammed.
Eve simply lost herself in the crowd, crammed herself into a cross
terminal transport to the south wing, and caught an underground to
Virginia.
After settling in her tube, ignoring the four o'clocks who were heading
to the suburban havens, she took out her pocket directory. She requested
Elizabeth Barrister's address, then asked for directions.
So far her nose was just fine. She was on the right tube and would have
to make only one change in Richmond. If her luck held, she could finish
the trip and be back in her apartment in time for dinner.
With her chin on her fist, she toyed with the controls of her video
screen. She would have bypassed the news -- something she made a habit
of doing -- but when an all-too-familiar face flashed on-screen, she
stopped scanning.
Roarke, she thought, narrowing her eyes. The guy sure kept popping up.
Lips pursed, she tuned in the audio, plugged in her ear receiver.
"... in this international, multibillion dollar project, Roarke
Industries, Tokayamo, and Europa will join hands," the announcer stated.
"It's taken three years, but it appears that the much debated, much
anticipated Olympus Resort will begin construction."
Olympus Resort, Eve mused, flipping through her mental files. Some
high-class, high-dollar vacation paradise, she recalled. A proposed
space station built for pleasure and entertainment.
She snorted. Wasn't it just like him to spend his time and money on
fripperies?
If he didn't lose his tailored silk shirt, she imagined he'd make
another fortune.
"Roarke -- one question, sir."
She watched Roarke pause on his way down a long flight of marble steps
and lift a brow -- exactly as she remembered he did -- at the reporter's
interruption.
"Could you tell me why you've spent so much time and effort, and a
considerable amount of your own capitol, on this project -- one
detractors say will never fly?"
"Fly is precisely what it will do," Roarke replied. "In a manner of
speaking. As to why, the Olympus Resort will be a haven for pleasure. I
can't think of anything more worthwhile on which to spend time, effort,
and capital."
You wouldn't, Eve decided, and glanced up just in time to realize she
was about to miss her stop. She dashed to the doors of the tube, cursed
the computer voice for scolding her for running, and made the change to
Fort Royal.
When she came above ground again, it was snowing. Soft, lazy flakes
drifted over her hair and shoulders. Pedestrians were stomping it to
mush on the sidewalks, but when she found a cab and gave her
destination, she found the swirl of white more picturesque.
There was still countryside to be had, if you possessed the money or the
prestige. Elizabeth Barrister and Richard DeBlass possessed both, and
their home was a striking two stories of rosy brick set on a sloping
hill and flanked by trees.
Snow was pristine on the expansive lawn, ermine draped on the bare
branches of what Eve thought might be cherry trees. The security gate
was an artful symphony of curling iron. However decorative it might have
been, Eve was certain it was as practical as a vault.
She leaned out the cab window, flashed her badge at the scanner.
"Lieutenant Dallas, NYPSD."
"You are not listed in the appointment directory, Lieutenant Dallas."
"I'm the officer in charge of the DeBlass case. I have some questions
for Ms. Barrister or Richard DeBlass."
There was a pause, during which time Eve began to shiver in the cold.
"Please step out of the cab, Lieutenant Dallas, and up to the scanner
for further identification."
"Tough joint," the cabbie muttered, but Eve merely shrugged and
complied.
"Identification verified. Dismiss your transport, Lieutenant Dallas. You
will be met at the gate."
"Heard the daughter got whacked up in New York," the cabbie said as Eve
paid the fare. "Guess they're not taking any chances. Want I should pull
back a ways and wait for you?"
"No, thanks. But I'll ask for your number when I'm ready to go."
With a half salute, the cabbie backed up, swung away. Eve's nose was
beginning to numb when she saw the little electric cart slide through
the gate. The curved iron opened.
"Please go inside, step into the cart," the computer invited. "You will
be taken to the house. Ms. Barrister will see you."
"Terrific." Eve climbed into the cart and let it take her noiselessly to
the front steps of the brick house. Even as she started up them, the
door opened.
Either the servants were required to wear boring black suits, or the
house was still in mourning. Eve was shown politely into a room off the
entrance hall.
Where Roarke's home had simply whispered money, this one said old money.
The carpets were thick, the walls papered in silk. The wide windows
offered a stunning view of rolling hills and falling snow. And solitude,
Eve thought. The architect must have understood that those who lived
here preferred to consider themselves alone.
"Lieutenant Dallas." Elizabeth rose. There was nervousness in the
deliberate movement, in the rigid stance and, Eve saw, in the shadowed
eyes that held grief.
"Thank you for seeing me, Ms. Barrister."
"My husband's in a meeting. I can interrupt him if necessary."
"I don't think it will be."
"You've come about Sharon."
"Yes."
"Please sit down." Elizabeth gestured toward a chair upholstered in
ivory. "Can I offer you anything?"
"No, thanks. I'll try not to keep you very long. I don't know how much
of my report you've seen -- "
"All of it," Elizabeth interrupted. "I believe. It seems quite thorough.
As an attorney, I have every confidence that when you find the person
who killed my daughter, you'll have built a strong case."
"That's the plan." Running on nerves, Eve decided, watching the way
Elizabeth's long, graceful fingers clenched, unclenched. "This is a
difficult time for you."
"She was my only child," Elizabeth said simply. "My husband and I were
-- are -- proponents of the population adjustment theory. Two parents,"
she said with a thin smile. "One offspring. Do you have any further
information to give me?"
"Not at this time. Your daughter's profession, Ms. Barrister. Did this
cause friction in the family?"
In another of her slow, deliberate gestures, Elizabeth smoothed down the
ankle-skimming skirt of her suit. "It was not a profession I dreamed of
my daughter embracing. Naturally, it was her choice."
"Your father-in-law would have been opposed. Certainly politically
opposed."
"The senator's views on sexual legislation are well known. As a leader
of the Conservative Party, he is, of course, working to change many of
the current laws regarding what is popularly called the Morality Issue."
"Do you share his views?"
"No, I don't, though I fail to see how that applies."
Eve cocked her head. Oh, there was friction there, all right. Eve
wondered if the streamlined attorney agreed with her outspoken
father-in-law on anything. "Your daughter was killed -- possibly by a
client, possibly by a personal friend. If you and your daughter were at
odds over her lifestyle, it would be unlikely she would have confided in
you about professional or personal acquaintances."
"I see." Elizabeth folded her hands and forced herself to think like a
lawyer. "You're assuming that, as her mother, as a woman who might have
shared some of the same viewpoints, Sharon would talk to me, perhaps
share with me some of the more intimate details of her life." Despite
her efforts, Elizabeth's eyes clouded. "I'm sorry, lieutenant, that's
not the case. Sharon rarely shared anything with me. Certainly not about
her business. She was... aloof, from both her father and me. Really,
from her entire family."
"You wouldn't know if she had a particular lover -- someone she was more
personally involved with? One who might have been jealous?"
"No. I can tell you I don't believe she did. Sharon had..." Elizabeth
took a steadying breath. "A disdain for men. An attraction to them, yes,
but an underlying disdain. She knew she could attract them. From a very
early age, she knew. And she found them foolish."
"Professional companions are rigidly screened. A dislike -- or disdain,
as you put it -- is a usual reason for denial of licensing."
"She was also clever. There was nothing in her life she wanted she
didn't find a way to have. Except happiness. She was not a happy woman,"
Elizabeth went on, and swallowed the lump that always seemed to hover in
her throat. "I spoiled her, it's true. I have no one to blame but myself
for it. I wanted more children." She pressed a hand to her mouth until
she thought her lips had stopped trembling. "I was philosophically
opposed to having more, and my husband was very clear in his position.
But that didn't stop the emotion of wanting children to love. I loved
Sharon, too much. The senator will tell you I smothered her, babied her,
indulged her. And he would be right."
"I would say that mothering was your privilege, not his."
This brought a ghost of a smile to Elizabeth's eyes. "So were the
mistakes, and I made them. Richard, too, though he loved her no less
than I. When Sharon moved to New York, we fought with her over it.
Richard pleaded with her. I threatened her. And I pushed her away,
lieutenant. She told me I didn't understand her -- never had, never
would -- and that I saw only what I wanted to see, unless it was in
court; but what went on in my own home was invisible."
"What did she mean?"
"That I was a better lawyer than a mother, I suppose. After she left, I
was hurt, angry. I pulled back, quite certain she would come to me. She
didn't, of course."
She stopped speaking for a moment, hoarding her regrets. "Richard went
to see her once or twice, but that didn't work, and only upset him. We
let it alone, let her alone. Until recently, when I felt we had to make
a new attempt."
"Why recently?"
"The years pass," Elizabeth murmured. "I'd hoped she would be growing
tired of the lifestyle, perhaps have begun to regret the rift with
family. I went to see her myself about a year ago. But she only became
angry, defensive, then insulting when I tried to persuade her to come
home. Richard, though he'd resigned himself, offered to go up and talk
to her. But she refused to see him. Even Catherine tried," she murmured
and rubbed absently at a pain between her eyes. "She went to see Sharon
only a few weeks ago."
"Congresswoman DeBlass went to New York to see Sharon?"
"Not specifically. Catherine was there for a fund-raiser and made a
point to see and try to speak with Sharon." Elizabeth pressed her lips
together. "I asked her to. You see, when I tried to open communications
again, Sharon wasn't interested. I'd lost her," Elizabeth said quietly,
"and moved too late to get her back, I didn't know how to get her back.
I'd hoped that Catherine could help, being family, but not Sharon's
mother."
She looked over at Eve again. "You're thinking that I should have gone
again myself. It was my place to go."
"Ms. Barrister -- "
But Elizabeth shook her head. "You're right, of course. But she refused
to confide in me. I thought I should respect her privacy, as I always
had. I was never one of those mothers who peeked into her daughter's
diary."
"Diary?" Eve's antenna vibrated. "Did she keep one?"
"She always kept a diary, even as a child. She changed the password in
it regularly."
"And as an adult?"
"Yes. She'd refer to it now and again -- joke about the secrets she had
and the people she knew who would be appalled at what she'd written
about them."
There'd been no personal diary in the inventory, Eve remembered. Such
things could be as small as a woman's thumb. If the sweepers missed it
the first time...
"Do you have any of them?"
"No." Abruptly alert, Elizabeth looked up. "She kept them in a deposit
box, I think. She kept them all."
"Did she use a bank here in Virginia?"
"Not that I'm aware of. I'll check and see what I can find out for you.
I can go through the things she left here."
"I'd appreciate that. If you think of anything -- anything at all -- a
name, a comment, no matter how casual, please contact me."
"I will. She never spoke of friends, lieutenant. I worried about that,
even as I used it to hope that the lack of them would draw her back
home. Out of the life she'd chosen. I even used one of my own, my own
friends, thinking he would be more persuasive than I."
"Who was that?"
"Roarke." Elizabeth teared up again, fought them back. "Only days before
she was murdered, I called him. We've known each other for years. I
asked him if he would arrange for her to be invited to a certain party I
knew he'd be attending. If he'd seek her out. He was reluctant. Roarke
isn't one to meddle in family business. But I used our friendship. If he
would just find a way to befriend her, to show her that an attractive
woman doesn't have to use her looks to feel worthwhile. He did that for
me, and for my husband."
"You asked him to develop a relationship with her?" Eve said carefully.
"I asked him to be her friend," Elizabeth corrected. "To be there for
her. I asked him because there's no one I trust more. She'd cut herself
off from all of us, and I needed someone I could trust. He would never
hurt her, you see. He would never hurt anyone I loved."
"Because he loves you?"
"Cares." Richard DeBlass spoke from the doorway. "Roarke cares very much
for Beth and for me, and a few select others. But loves? I'm not sure
he'd let himself risk quite that unstable an emotion."
"Richard." Elizabeth's control wobbled as she got to her feet. "I wasn't
expecting you quite yet."
"We finished early." He came to her, closed his hands over hers. "You
should have called me, Beth."
"I didn't -- " She broke off, looked at him helplessly. "I'd hoped to
handle it alone."
"You don't have to handle anything alone." He kept his hand closed over
his wife's as he turned to Eve. "You'd be Lieutenant Dallas?"
"Yes, Mr. DeBlass. I had a few questions and hoped it would be easier if
I asked them in person."
"My wife and I are willing to cooperate in any way we can." He remained
standing, a position Eve judged as one of power and of distance.
There was none of Elizabeth's nerves or fragility in the man who stood
beside her. He was taking charge, Eve decided, protecting his wife and
guarding his own emotions with equal care.
"You were asking about Roarke," he continued. "May I ask why?"
"I told the lieutenant that I'd asked Roarke to see Sharon. To try
to..."
"Oh, Beth." In a gesture that was both weary and resigned, he shook his
head. "What could he do? Why would you bring him into it?"
She stepped away from him, her face so filled with despair, Eve's heart
broke. "I know you told me to let it alone, that we had to let her go.
But I had to try again. She might have connected with him, Richard. He
has a way." She began to speak quickly now, her words tumbling out,
tripping over each other. "He might have helped her if I'd asked him
sooner. With enough time, there's very little he can't do. But he didn't
have enough time. Neither did my child."
"All right," Richard murmured, and laid a hand on her arm. "All right."
She controlled herself again, drew back, drew in. "What can I do now,
lieutenant, but pray for justice?"
"I'll get you justice, Ms. Barrister."
She closed her eyes and clung to that. "I think you will. I wasn't sure
of that, even after Roarke called me about you."
"He called you -- to discuss the case?"
"He called to see how we were -- and to tell me he thought you'd be
coming to see me personally before long." She nearly smiled. "He's
rarely wrong. He told me I'd find you competent, organized, and
involved. You are. I'm grateful I've had the opportunity to see that for
myself and to know that you're in charge of my daughter's murder
investigation."
"Ms. Barrister," Eve hesitated only a moment before deciding to take the
risk. "What if I told you Roarke is a suspect?"
Elizabeth's eyes went wide, then calmed again almost immediately. "I'd
say you were taking an extraordinarily big wrong step."
"Because Roarke is incapable of murder?"
"No, I wouldn't say that." It was a relief to think of it, if only for a
moment, in objective terms. "Incapable of a senseless act, yes. He might
kill cold-bloodedly, but never the defenseless. He might kill, I
wouldn't be surprised if he had. But would he do to anyone what was done
to Sharon -- before, during, after? No. Not Roarke."
"No," Richard echoed, and his hand searched for his wife's again. "Not
Roarke."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Not Roarke, Eve thought again when she was back in her cab and headed
for the underground. Why the hell hadn't he told her he'd met Sharon
DeBlass as a favor to her mother? What else hadn't he told her?
Blackmail. Somehow she didn't see him as a victim of blackmail. He
wouldn't give a damn what was said or broadcast about him. But the diary
changed things and made blackmail a new and intriguing motive.
Just what had Sharon recorded about whom, and where were the goddamn
diaries?
*** CHAPTER NINE ***
"No problem reversing the tail," Feeney said as he shoveled in what
passed for breakfast at the eatery at Cop Central. "I see him cue in on
me. He's looking around for you, but there's plenty of bodies. So I get
on the frigging plane."
Feeney washed down irradiated eggs with black bean coffee without a
wince. "He gets on, too, but he sits up in First Class. When we get off,
he's waiting, and that's when he knows you're not there." He jabbed at
Eve with his fork. "He was pissed, makes a quick call. So I get behind
him, trail him to the Regent Hotel. They don't like to tell you anything
at the Regent. Flash your badge and they get all offended."
"And you explained, tactfully, about civic duty."
"Right." Feeney pushed his empty plate into the recycler slot, crushed
his empty cup with his hand, and sent it to follow. "He made a couple of
calls -- one to East Washington, one to Virginia. Then he makes a local
-- to the chief."
"Shit."
"Yeah. Chief Simpson's pushing buttons for DeBlass, no question. Makes
you wonder what buttons."
Before Eve could comment, her communicator beeped. She pulled it out and
answered the call from her commander.
"Dallas, be in Testing. Twenty minutes."
"Sir, I'm meeting a snitch on the Colby matter at oh nine hundred."
"Reschedule." His voice was flat. "Twenty minutes."
Slowly, Dallas replaced her communicator. "I guess we know one of the
buttons."
"Seems like DeBlass is taking a personal interest in you." Feeney
studied her face. There wasn't a cop on the force who didn't despise
Testing. "You going to handle it okay?"
"Yeah, sure. This is going to tie me up most of the day, Feeney. Do me a
favor. Do a run on the banks in Manhattan. I need to know if Sharon
DeBlass kept a safe deposit box. If you don't find anything there,
spread out to the other boroughs."
"You got it."
-=O=-***-=O=-
The Testing section was riddled with long corridors, some glassed, some
done in pale green walls that were supposed to be calming. Doctors and
technicians wore white. The color of innocence and, of course, power.
When she entered the first set of reinforced glass doors, the computer
politely ordered her to surrender her weapon. Eve took it out of her
holster, set it on the tray, and watched it slide away.
It made her feel naked even before she was directed into Testing Room
1-C and told to strip.
She laid her clothes on the bench provided and tried not to think about
the techs watching her on their monitors or the machines with the
nastily silent glide and their impersonal blinking lights.
The physical exam was easy. All she had to do was stand on the center
mark in the tubelike room and watch the lights blip and flash as her
internal organs and bones were checked for flaws.
Then she was permitted to don a blue jumpsuit and sit while a machine
angled over to examine her eyes and ears. Another, snicking out from one
of the wall slots, did a standard reflex test. For the personal touch, a
technician entered to take a blood sample.
Please exit door marked Testing 2-C. Phase one is complete, Dallas,
Lieutenant Eve.
In the adjoining room, Eve was instructed to lie on a padded table for
the brain scan. Wouldn't want any cops out there with a brain tumor
urging them to blast civilians, she thought wearily.
Eve watched the techs through the glass wall as the helmet was lowered
onto her head.
Then the games began.
The bench adjusted to a sitting position and she was treated to virtual
reality. The VR put her in a vehicle during a high-speed chase. Sounds
exploded in her ears: the scream of sirens, the shouts of conflicting
orders from the communicator on the dash. She could see that it was a
standard police unit, fully charged. The control of the vehicle was
hers, and she had to swerve and maneuver to avoid flattening a variety
of pedestrians the VR hurled in her path.
In one part of her brain she was aware her vitals were being monitored:
blood pressure, pulse, even the amount of sweat that crawled on her
skin, the saliva that pooled and dried in her mouth. It was hot, almost
unbearably hot. She narrowly missed a food transport that lumbered into
her path.
She recognized her location. The old ports on the east side. She could
smell them: water, bad fish, and old sweat. Transients wearing their
uniform of blue coveralls were looking for a handout or a day's labor.
She flew by a group of them jostling for position in front of a
placement center.
Subject armed. Rifle torch, hand explosive. Wanted for robbery homicide.
Great, Eve thought as she careened after him. Fucking great. She punched
the accelerator, whipped the wheel, and kissed off the fender of the
target vehicle in a shower of sparks. A spurt of flame whooshed by her
ear as he fired at her. The proprietor of a port side roach coach dived
for cover, along with several of his customers. Rice noodles flew along
with curses.
She rammed the target again, ordering her backup to maneuver into a
pincer position.
This time her quarry's vehicle shuddered, tipped. As he fought for
control, she used hers to batter his to a stop. She shouted the standard
identification and warning as she bolted from the vehicle. He came out
blasting, and she brought him down.
The shock from her weapon jolted his nervous system. She watched him
jitter, wet himself, then collapse.
She'd hardly taken a breath to readjust when the bastard techs tossed
her into a new scene. The screams, the little girl's screams; the raging
roar of the man who was her father.
They had reconstructed it almost too perfectly, using her own report,
visuals of the site, and the mirror of her memory they'd lifted in the
scan.
Eve didn't bother to curse them, but held back her hate, her grief, and
sent herself racing up the stairs and back into her nightmare.
No more screams from the little girl. She beat on the door, calling out
her name and rank. Warning the man on the other side of the door, trying
to calm him.
"Cunts. You're all cunts. Come on in, cunt bitch. I'll kill you."
The door folded like cardboard under her ramming shoulder. She went in,
weapon drawn.
"She was just like her mother -- just like her fucking mother. Thought
they'd get away from me. Thought they could. I fixed it. I fixed them.
I'm going to fix you, cunt cop."
The little girl was staring at her with big, dead eyes. Doll's eyes. Her
tiny, helpless body mutilated, blood spreading like a pool. And dripping
from the knife.
She told him to freeze: "You son of a bitch, drop the weapon. Drop the
fucking knife!" But he kept coming. Stunned him. But he kept coming.
The room smelled of blood, of urine, of burned food. The lights were too
bright, unshaded and blinding so that everything, everything stood out
in jarring relief. A doll with a missing arm on the ripped sofa, a
crooked window shield that let in a hard red glow from the neon across
the street, the overturned table of cheap molded plastic, the cracked
screen of a broken 'link.
The little girl with dead eyes. The spreading pool of blood. And the
sharp, sticky gleam of the blade.
"I'm going to ram this right up your cunt. Just like I did to her."
Stunned again. His eyes were wild, jagged on homemade Zeus, that
wonderful chemical that made gods out of men, with all the power and
insanity that went with delusions of immortality.
The knife, with the scarlet drenched blade hacked down, whistled.
And she dropped him.
The jolt zipped through his nervous system. His brain died first, so
that his body convulsed and shuddered as his eyes turned to glass.
Strapping down on the need to scream, she kicked the knife away from his
still twitching hand and looked at the child.
The big doll's eyes stared at her, and told her -- again -- that she'd
been too late.
Forcing her body to relax, she let nothing into her mind but her report.
The VR section was complete. Her vitals were checked again before she
was taken to the final testing phase. The one-on-one with the
psychiatrist.
Eve didn't have anything against Dr. Mira. The woman was dedicated to
her calling. In private practice, she could have earned triple the
salary she pulled in under the Police and Security Department.
She had a quiet voice with the faintest hint of upper class New England.
Her pale blue eyes were kind -- and sharp. At sixty, she was comfortable
with middle age, but far from matronly.
Her hair was a warm honey brown and scooped up in the back in a neat yet
complicated twist. She wore a tidy, rose toned suit with a sedate gold
circle on the lapel.
No, Eve had nothing against her personally. She just hated shrinks.
"Lieutenant Dallas." Mira rose from a soft blue scoop chair when Eve
entered.
There was no desk, no computer in sight. One of the tricks, Eve knew, to
make the subjects relax and forget they were under intense observation.
"Doctor." Eve sat in the chair Mira indicated.
"I was just about to have some tea. You'll join me?"
"Sure."
Mira moved gracefully to the server, ordered two teas, then brought the
cups to the sitting area. "It's unfortunate that your testing was
postponed, lieutenant." With a smile, she sat, sipped. "The process is
more conclusive and certainly more beneficial when run within
twenty-four hours of an incident."
"It couldn't be helped."
"So I'm told. Your preliminary results are satisfactory."
"Fine."
"You still refuse autohypnosis?"
"It's optional." Hating the defensive sound of her voice.
"Yes, it is." Mira crossed her legs. "You've been through a difficult
experience, lieutenant. There are signs of physical and emotional
fatigue."
"I'm on another case, a demanding one. It's taking a lot of my time."
"Yes, I have that information. Are you taking the standard sleep
inducers?"
Eve tested the tea. It was, as she'd suspected, floral in scent and
flavor. "No. We've been through that before. Night pills are optional,
and I opt no."
"Because they limit your control."
Eve met her eyes. "That's right. I don't like being put to sleep, and I
don't like being here. I don't like brain rape."
"You consider Testing a kind of rape?"
There wasn't a cop with a brain who didn't. "It's not a choice, is it?"
Mira kept her sigh to herself. "The termination of a subject, no matter
the circumstances, is a traumatic experience for a police officer. If
the trauma affects the emotions, the reactions, the attitude, the
officer's performance will suffer. If the use of full force was caused
by a physical defect, that defect must be located and repaired."
"I know the company line, doctor. I'm cooperating fully. But I don't
have to like it."
"No, you don't." Mira neatly balanced the cup on her knee. "Lieutenant,
this is your second termination. Though that is not an unusual amount
for an officer with your length of duty, there are many who never need
to make that decision. I'd like to know how you feel about the choice
you made, and the results."
I wish I'd been quicker, Eve thought. I wish that child was playing with
her toys right now instead of being cremated.
"As my only choice was to let him carve me into pieces, or stop him, I
feel just fine about the decision. My warning was issued and ignored.
Stunning was ineffective. The evidence that he would, indeed, kill was
lying on the floor between us in a puddle of blood. Therefore, I have no
problem with the results."
"You were disturbed by the death of the child?"
"I believe anyone would be disturbed by the death of a child. Certainly
that kind of vicious murder of the defenseless."
"And do you see the parallel between the child and yourself?" Mira asked
quietly. She could see Eve draw in and close off. "Lieutenant, we both
know I'm fully aware of your background. You were abused, physically,
sexually, and emotionally. You were abandoned when you were eight."
"That has nothing to do with -- "
"I think it may have a great deal to do with your mental and emotional
state," Mira interrupted. "For two years between the ages of eight and
ten, you lived in a communal home while your parents were searched for.
You have no memory of the first eight years of your life, your name,
your circumstances, your birthplace."
However mild they were, Mira's eyes were sharp and searching. "You were
given the name Eve Dallas and eventually placed in foster care. You had
no control over any of this. You were a battered child, dependent on the
system, which in many ways failed you."
It took every ounce of will for Eve to keep her eyes and her voice
level. "As I, part of the system, failed to protect the child. You want
to know how I feel about that, Dr. Mira?"
Wretched. Sick. Sorry.
"I feel that I did everything I could do. I went through your VR and did
it again. Because there was no changing it. If I could have saved the
child, I would have saved her. If I could have arrested the subject, I
would have."
"But these matters were not in your control."
Sneaky bitch, Eve thought. "It was in my control to terminate. After
employing all standard options, I exercised my control. You've reviewed
the report. It was a clean, justifiable termination."
Mira said nothing for a moment. Her skills, she knew, had never been
able to more than scrape at Eve's outer wall of defense. "Very well,
lieutenant. You're cleared to resume duty without restriction." Mira
held up a hand before Eve could rise. "Off the record."
"Is anything?"
Mira only smiled. "It's true that very often the mind protects itself.
Yours refuses to acknowledge the first eight years of your life. But
those years are a part of you. I can get them back for you when you're
ready. And Eve," she added in that quiet voice, "I can help you deal
with them."
"I've made myself what I am, and I can live with it. Maybe I don't want
to risk living with the rest." She got up and walked to the door. When
she turned back, Mira was sitting just as she had been, legs crossed,
one hand holding the pretty little cup. The scent of brewed flowers
lingered in the air.
"A hypothetical case," Eve began and waited for Mira's nod.
"A woman, with considerable social and financial advantages, chooses to
become a whore." At Mira's lifted brow, Eve swore impatiently. "We don't
have to pretty up the terminology here, doctor. She chose to make her
living from sex. Flaunted it in front of her well-positioned family,
including her arch-conservative grandfather. Why?"
"It's difficult to come up with one specific motive from such general
and sketchy information. The most obvious would be the subject could
find her self-worth only in sexual skill. She either enjoyed or detested
the act."
Intrigued, Eve stepped away from the door. "If she detested it, why
would she become a pro?"
"To punish."
"Herself?"
"Certainly, and those close to her."
To punish, Eve mused. The diary. Blackmail.
"A man kills," she continued. "Viciously, brutally. The killing is tied
to sex, and is executed in a unique and distinctive fashion. He records
it, has bypassed a sophisticated security system. A recording of the
murder is delivered to the investigating officer. A message is left at
the scene, a boastful message. What is he?"
"You don't give me much," Mira complained, but Eve could see her
attention was caught. "Inventive," she began. "A planner, and a voyeur.
Confident, perhaps smug. You said distinctive, so he wishes to leave his
mark, and he wants to show off his skill, his brain. Using your
observation and deductive talents, lieutenant, did he enjoy the act of
murder?"
"Yes. I think he reveled in it."
Mira nodded. "Then he will certainly enjoy it again."
"He already has. Two murders, barely a week apart. He won't wait long
before the next, will he?"
"It's doubtful." Mira sipped her tea as if they were discussing the
latest spring fashions. "Are the two murders connected in any way other
than the perpetrator and the method?"
"Sex," Eve said shortly.
"Ah." Mira tilted her head. "With all our technology, with the amazing
advances that have been made in genetics, we are still unable to control
human virtues and flaws. Perhaps we are too human to permit the
tampering. Passions are necessary to the human spirit. We learned that
early this century when genetic engineering nearly slipped out of
control. It's unfortunate that some passions twist. Sex and violence.
For some it's still a natural marriage."
She stood then to take the cups and place them beside the server. "I'd
be interested in knowing more about this man, lieutenant. If and when
you decide you want a profile, I hope you'll come to me."
"It's Code Five."
Mira glanced back. "I see."
"If we don't tie this up before he hits again, I may be able to swing
it."
"I'll make myself available."
"Thanks."
"Eve, even strong, self-made women have weak spots. Don't be afraid of
them."
Eve held Mira's gaze for another moment. "I've got work to do."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Testing left her shaky. Eve compensated by being surly and antagonistic
with her snitch and nearly losing a lead on a case involving bootlegged
chemicals. Her mood was far from cheerful when she checked back in to
Cop Central. There was no message from Feeney.
Others in her department knew just where she'd spent the day and did
their best to stay out of her way. As a result, she worked in solitude
and annoyance for an hour.
Her last effort was to put through a call to Roarke. She was neither
surprised nor particularly disappointed when he wasn't available. She
left a message on his E-mail requesting an appointment, then logged out
for the day.
She intended to drown her mood in cheap liquor and mediocre music at
Mavis's latest gig at the Blue Squirrel.
It was a joint, which put it one slippery step up from a dive. The light
was dim, the clientele edgy, and the service pitiful. It was exactly
what Eve was looking for.
The music struck her in one clashing wave when she walked in. Mavis was
managing to lift her appealing screech of a voice over the band, which
consisted of one multitattooed kid on a melody master.
Eve snarled off the offer from a guy in a hooded jacket to buy her a
drink in one of the private smoking booths. She jockeyed her way to a
table, pressed in an order for a screamer, and settled back to watch
Mavis perform.
She wasn't half bad, Eve decided. Not half good either, but the
customers weren't choosy. Mavis was wearing paint tonight, her busty
little body a canvas for splatters and streaks of orange and violet,
with strategically brushed splotches of emerald. Bracelets and chains
jangled as she jittered around the small, raised stage. One step below,
a mass of humanity gyrated in sympathy.
Eve watched a small, sealed package pass from hand to hand on the edge
of the dance floor. Drugs, of course. They'd tried a war on them,
legalizing them, ignoring them, and regulating them. Nothing seemed to
work.
She couldn't raise the interest to make a bust and lifted a hand in a
wave to Mavis instead.
The vocal part of the song ended -- such as it was. Mavis leaped
offstage, wiggled through the crowd, and plopped a painted hip on the
edge of Eve's table.
"Hey, stranger."
"Looking good, Mavis. Who's the artist?"
"Oh, this guy I know." She shifted, tapped an inch-long fingernail on
the left cheek of her butt. "Caruso. See, he signed me. Got the job free
for passing his name around." Her eyes rounded when the waitress set the
long, slim glass filled with frothy blue liquid in front of Eve. "A
screamer? Wouldn't you rather I find a hammer and just knock you
unconscious?"
"It's been a shitty day," Eve muttered and took the first shocking sip.
"Jesus. These never get any better."
Worried, Mavis leaned closer. "I can cut out for a little while."
"No, I'm okay." Eve risked her life with another sip. "I just wanted to
check out your gig, let off some steam. Mavis, you're not using, are
you?"
"Hey, come on." More concerned than insulted, Mavis shook Eve's
shoulder. "I'm clean, you know that. Some shit gets passed around in
here, but it's all minor league. Some happy pills, some calmers, a few
mood patches." She pokered up. "If you're looking to make a bust, you
could at least do it on my night off."
"Sorry." Annoyed with herself, Eve rubbed her hands over her face. "I'm
not fit for human consumption at the moment. Go back and sing. I like
hearing you."
"Sure. But if you want company when you split, just give me a sign. I
can fix it."
"Thanks." Eve sat back, closed her eyes. It was a surprise when the
music slowed, even mellowed. If you didn't look around, it wasn't so
bad.
For twenty credits she could have hooked on mood enhancer goggles,
treated herself to lights and shapes that fit the music. At the moment,
she preferred the dark behind her eyes.
"This doesn't seem quite your den of iniquity, lieutenant."
Eve opened her eyes and stared up at Roarke. "Every time I turn around."
He sat across from her. The table was small enough that their knees
bumped. His way of adjusting was to slide his thighs against hers. "You
called me, remember, and you'd left this address when you logged out."
"I wanted an appointment, not a drinking buddy."
He glanced at the drink on the table, leaned over to take a sniff.
"You're not going to get one with that poison."
"This joint doesn't run to fine wine and aged scotch."
He laid a hand over hers for the simple purpose of watching her scowl
and jerk away. "Why don't we go somewhere that does?"
"I'm in a pisser of a mood. Roarke. Give me an appointment, at your
convenience, then take off."
"An appointment for what?" The singer caught his attention. He cocked a
brow, watching her roll her eyes and gesture. "Unless she's having some
sort of seizure, I believe the vocalist is signaling you."
Resigned, Eve glanced over, shook her head. "She's a friend of mine."
She shook her head more emphatically when Mavis grinned and turned both
thumbs up. "She thinks I got lucky."
"You did." Roarke picked the drink up and set it on an adjoining table
where greedy hands fought over it. "I just saved your life."
"Goddamn it -- "
"If you want to get drunk, Eve, at least do it with something that will
leave you most of your stomach lining." He scanned the menu, winced.
"Which means nothing that can be purchased here." He took her hand as he
rose. "Come on."
"I'm fine right here."
All patience, he bent down until his face was close to hers. "What you
are is hoping to get drunk enough so that you can take a few punches at
someone without worrying about the consequences. With me, you don't have
to get drunk, you don't have to worry. You can take all the punches you
want."
"Why?"
"Because you have something sad in your eyes. And it gets to me." While
she was dealing with the surprise of that statement, he hauled her to
her feet and toward the door.
"I'm going home," she decided.
"No, you're not."
"Listen, pal -- "
That was as far as she got before her back was shoved against the wall
and his mouth crushed hard on hers. She didn't fight. The wind had been
knocked out of her by the suddenness, and the rage under it, and the
shock of need that slammed into her like a fist.
It was quick, seconds only, before her mouth was free. "Stop it," she
demanded, and hated that her voice was only a shaky whisper.
"Whatever you think," he began, struggling for his own composure, "there
are times when you need someone. Right now, it's me." Impatience
shimmering around him, he pulled her outside. "Where's your car?"
She gestured down the block and let him propel her down the sidewalk. "I
don't know what your problem is."
"It seems to be you. Do you know how you looked?" he demanded as he
yanked open the car door. "Sitting in that place with your eyes closed,
shadows under them?" Picturing it again only fired his anger. He shoved
her into the passenger seat and rounded the car to take the driver's
position himself. "What's your fucking code?"
Fascinated with the whiplash temper, she shifted to key it in herself.
With the lock released, he pressed the starter and pulled away from the
curb.
"I was trying to relax," Eve said carefully.
"You don't know how," he shot back. "You've packed it in, but you
haven't gotten rid of it. You're walking a real straight line, Eve, but
it's a damn thin one."
"That's what I'm trained to do."
"You don't know what you're up against this time."
Her fingers curled into a fist at her side. "And you do."
He was silent for a moment, banking his own emotions. "We'll talk about
it later."
"I like now better. I went to see Elizabeth Barrister yesterday."
"I know." Calmer, he adjusted to the jerky rhythm of her car. "You're
cold. Turn up the heater."
"It's busted. Why didn't you tell me that she'd asked you to meet
Sharon, to talk to her?"
"Because Beth asked me in confidence."
"What's your relationship with Elizabeth Barrister?"
"We're friends." Roarke slanted her a look. "I have a few. She and
Richard are among them."
"And the senator?"
"I hate his fucking, pompous, hypocritical guts," Roarke said calmly.
"If he gets his party's nomination for president, I'll put everything
I've got into his opponent's campaign. If it's the devil himself."
"You should learn to speak your mind, Roarke," she said with a ghost of
a smile. "Did you know that Sharon kept a diary?"
"It's a natural assumption. She was a businesswoman."
"I'm not talking about a log, business records. A diary, a personal
diary. Secrets, Roarke. Blackmail."
He said nothing as he turned the idea over. "Well, well. You found your
motive."
"That remains to be seen. You have a lot of secrets, Roarke."
He let out a half laugh as he stopped at the gates of his estate. "Do
you really think I'd be a victim of blackmail, Eve? That some lost,
pitiful woman like Sharon could unearth information you can't and use it
against me?"
"No." That was simple. She put a hand on his arm. "I'm not going inside
with you." That was not.
"If I were bringing you here for sex, we'd have sex. We both know it.
You wanted to see me. You want to shoot the kind of weapon that was used
to kill Sharon and the other, don't you?"
She let out a short breath. "Yes."
"Now's your chance."
The gates opened. He drove through.
*** CHAPTER TEN ***
The same stone-faced butler stood guard at the door. He took Eve's coat
with the same faint disapproval.
"Send coffee down to the target room, please," Roarke ordered as he led
Eve up the stairs.
He was holding her hand again, but Eve decided it was less a sentimental
gesture than one to make sure she didn't balk. She could have told him
she was much too intrigued to go anywhere, but found she enjoyed that
ripple of annoyance under his smooth manner.
When they'd reached the third floor, he went through his collection
briskly, choosing weapons without fuss or hesitation. He handled the
antiques with the competence of experience and, she thought, habitual
use.
Not a man who simply bought to own, but one who made use of his
possessions. She wondered if he knew that counted against him. Or if he
cared.
Once his choices were secured in a leather case, he moved to a wall.
Both the security console and the door itself were so cleverly hidden in
a painting of a forest, she would never have found it. The trompe l'oeil
slid open to an elevator.
"This car only opens to a select number of rooms," he explained as Eve
stepped into the elevator with him. "I rarely take guests down to the
target area."
"Why?"
"My collection, and the use of it, are reserved for those who can
appreciate it."
"How much do you buy through the black market?"
"Always a cop." He flashed that grin at her, and she was sure, tucked
his tongue in his cheek. "I buy only through legal sources, naturally."
His eyes skimmed down to her shoulder bag. "As long as you've got your
recorder on."
She couldn't help but smile back. Of course she had her recorder on. And
of course he knew it. It was a measure of her interest that she opened
the bag, took out her recorder, and manually disengaged.
"And your backup?" he said smoothly.
"You're too smart for your own good." Willing to take the chance, she
slipped a hand into her pocket. The backup unit was nearly paper thin.
She used a thumbnail to deactivate it. "What about yours?" She glanced
around the elevator as the doors opened. "You'd have video and audio
security in every corner of this place."
"Of course." He took her hand again and drew her out of the car.
The room was high ceilinged, surprisingly spartan given Roarke's love of
comfort. The lights switched on the moment they stepped in, illuminating
plain, sand colored walls, a bank of simple high-backed chairs, and
tables where a tray holding a silver coffeepot and china cups had
already been set.
Ignoring them, Eve walked over to a long, glossy black console. "What
does it do?"
"A number of things." Roarke set the case he carried down on a flat
area. He pressed his palm to an identiscreen. There was a soft green
glow beneath it as his print was read and accepted, then lights and
dials glowed on.
"I keep a supply of ammunition here." He pressed a series of buttons. A
cabinet in the base of the console slid open. "You'll want these." From
a second cabinet, he took earplugs and safety glasses.
"This is, what, like a hobby?" Eve asked as she adjusted the glasses.
The small, clear lenses cupped her eyes, the attached earplugs fit
snugly.
"Yes. Like a hobby."
His voice came with a faint echo through her ear protectors, linking
them, closing out the rest. He chose the. 38, loaded it.
"This was standard police issue in the mid-twentieth century. Toward the
second millennium, nine millimeters were preferred."
"The RS-fifties were the official weapon of choice during the Urban
Revolt and into the third decade of the twenty-first century."
He lifted a brow, pleased. "You've been doing your homework."
"Damn right." She glanced at the weapon in his hand. "Into the mind of a
killer."
"Then you'd be aware that the hand laser you have strapped to your side
didn't gain popular acceptance until about twenty-five years ago."
She watched with a slight frown as he slapped the cylinder shut. "The NS
laser, with modifications, has been standard police issue since 2023. I
didn't notice any lasers in your collection."
His eyes met hers, and there was a laugh in them. "Cop toys only.
They're illegal, lieutenant, even for collectors." He pressed a button.
Against the far wall a hologram flashed, so lifelike that Eve blinked
and braced before she caught herself.
"Excellent image," she murmured, studying the big, bull-shouldered man
holding a weapon she couldn't quite identify.
"He's a replica of a typical twentieth-century thug. That's an
AK-forty-seven he's holding."
"Right." She narrowed her eyes at it. It was more dramatic than in the
photos and videos she'd studied. "Very popular with urban gangs and drug
dealers of the era."
"An assault weapon," Roarke murmured. "Fashioned to kill. Once I
activate, if he hits target, you'd feel a slight jolt. Low level
electrical shock, rather than the much more dramatic insult of a bullet.
Want to try it?"
"You go first."
"Fine." Roarke activated. The hologram lunged forward, swinging up his
weapon. The sound effects kicked in instantly.
The thunder of noise had Eve jerking back a step. Snarled obscenities,
street sounds, the terrifyingly rapid explosion of gunfire.
She watched, slack jawed, as the image spurted what looked entirely too
much like blood. The wide chest seemed to erupt with it as the man flew
back. The weapon spiraled out of his hand. Then both vanished.
"Jesus."
A little surprised that he'd been showing off, like a kid at an arcade,
Roarke lowered his weapon. "It hardly makes the point of what something
like this can do to flesh and bone if the image isn't realistic."
"Guess not." She had to swallow. "Did he hit you?"
"Not that time. Of course, one on one, and when you can fully anticipate
your opponent, doesn't make it very difficult to win your round."
Roarke pushed more buttons, and the dead gunman was back, whole and
ready to rock. Roarke took his stance with the ease and automation, Eve
thought, of a veteran cop. Or, to borrow his word, a thug.
Abruptly, the image lunged, and as Roarke fired, other holograms
appeared in rapid succession. A man with some sort of wicked looking
handgun, a snarling woman aiming a long barreled weapon -- a. 44 Magnum,
Eve decided -- a small, terrified child carrying a ball.
They flashed and fired, cursed, screamed, bled. When it was over, the
child was sitting on the ground weeping, all alone.
"A random choice like that's more difficult," Roarke told her. "Caught
my shoulder."
"What?" Eve blinked, focused on him again. "Your shoulder."
He grinned at her. "Don't worry, darling. It's just a flesh wound."
Her heart was thudding in her ears, no matter how ridiculous she told
herself was her reaction. "Hell of a toy, Roarke. Real fun and games
time. Do you play often?"
"Now and again. Ready to try it?"
If she could handle a session with VR, Eve decided, she could handle
this. "Yeah, run another random pattern."
"That's what I admire about you, lieutenant." Roarke selected ammo,
loaded fresh. "You jump right in. Let's try a dry run first."
He brought up a simple target, circles and a bull's-eye. He stepped
behind her, putting the. 38 in her hands, his over them. He pressed his
cheek to hers. "You have to sight it, as it doesn't sense heat and
movement as your weapon does." He adjusted her arms until he was
satisfied. "When you're ready to fire, you want to squeeze the trigger,
not pump it. It's going to jerk a bit. It's not as smooth or as silent
as your laser."
"I've got that," she muttered. It was foolish to be susceptible to his
hands over hers, the press of his body, the smell of him. "You're
crowding me."
He turned his head, just enough to have his lips brushing up to her
earlobe. It was innocently unpierced, rather sweet, like a child's.
"I know. You need to brace yourself more than you're used to. Your
reaction will be to flinch. Don't."
"I don't flinch." To prove it, she squeezed the trigger. Her arms
jerked, annoying her. She shot again, and a third time, missing the
heart of the target by less than an inch. "Christ, you feel it, don't
you?" She rolled her shoulders, fascinated by the way they sang in
response to the weapon in her hands.
"It makes it more personal. You've got a good eye." He was impressed,
but his tone was mild. "Of course, it's one thing to shoot at a circle,
another to shoot at a body. Even a reproduction."
A challenge? she noted. Well, she was up for it. "How many more shots in
this?"
"We'll reload it full." He programmed in a series. Curiosity and, he had
to admit, ego had him choosing a tough one. "Ready?"
She flicked a glance at him, adjusted her stance. "Yeah."
The first image was an elderly woman clutching a shopping bag with both
hands. Eve nearly took the bystander's head off before her finger froze.
A movement flickered to the left, and she shot a mugger before he could
bring an iron pipe down on the old woman. A slight sting in her left hip
had her shifting again, and taking out a bald man with a weapon similar
to her own.
They came fast and hard after that.
Roarke watched her, mesmerized. No, she didn't flinch, he mused. Her
eyes stayed flat and cool. Cop's eyes. He knew her adrenaline was up,
her pulse hammering. Her movements were quick but as smooth and studied
as a dance. Her jaw was set, her hands steady.
And he wanted her, he realized as his gut churned. Quite desperately he
wanted her.
"Caught me twice," she said almost to herself. She opened the chamber
herself, reloaded as she'd seen Roarke do. "Once in the hip, once in the
abdomen. That makes me dead or in dire straits. Run another."
He obliged her, then tucked his hands in his pockets and watched her
work.
When she was done, she asked to try the Swiss model. She found she
preferred the weight and the response of it. Definitely an advantage
over a revolver, she reflected. Quicker, more responsive, better fire
power, and a reload took seconds.
Neither weapon fit as comfortably in her hand as her laser, yet she
found both primitively and horribly efficient.
And the damage they caused, the torn flesh, the flying blood, turned
death into a gruesome affair.
"Any hits?" Roarke asked.
Though the images were gone, she stared at the wall, and the afterimages
that played in her mind. "No. I'm clean. What they do to a body," she
said softly, and put the weapon down. "To have used these -- to have
faced having to use them day after day, and know going in they could be
used against you. Who could face that," she wondered, "without going a
little insane?"
"You could." He removed his eye and ear protectors. "Conscience and
dedication to duty don't have to equal any kind of weakness. You got
through Testing. It cost you, but you got through it."
Carefully, she set her protectors beside his. "How do you know?"
"How do I know you were in Testing today? I have contacts. How do I know
it cost you?" He cupped her chin. "I can see it," he said softly. "Your
heart wars with your head. I don't think you realize that's what makes
you so good at your job. Or so fascinating to me."
"I'm not trying to fascinate you. I'm trying to find a man who used
those weapons I just fired; not for defense, but for pleasure." She
looked straight into his eyes. "It isn't you."
"No, it isn't me."
"But you know something."
He brushed the pad of his thumb over, into the dip in her chin before
dropping his hand. "I'm not at all sure that I do." He crossed over to
the table, poured coffee. "Twentieth-century weapons, twentieth-century
crimes, with twentieth-century motives?" He flicked a glance at her.
"That would be my take."
"It's a simple enough deduction."
"But tell me, lieutenant, can you play deductive games in history, or
are you too firmly entrenched in the now?"
She'd wondered the same herself, and she was learning. "I'm flexible."
"No, but you're smart. Whoever killed Sharon had a knowledge, even an
affection, perhaps an obsession with the past." His brow lifted
mockingly. "I do have a knowledge of certain pieces of the past, and
undoubtedly an affection for them. Obsession?" He lifted a careless
shoulder. "You'd have to judge for yourself."
"I'm working on it."
"I'm sure you are. Let's take a page out of old-fashioned deductive
reasoning, no computers, no technical analysis. Study the victim first.
You believe Sharon was a blackmailer. And it fits. She was an angry
woman, a defiant one who needed power. And wanted to be loved."
"You figured all that out after seeing her twice?"
"From that." He offered the coffee to her. "And from talking to people
who knew her. Friends and associates found her a stunning, energetic
woman, yet a secretive one. A woman who dismissed her family, yet
thought of them often. One who loved to live, yet one who brooded
regularly. I imagine we've covered much of the same ground."
Irritation jumped in. "I wasn't aware you were covering any ground,
Roarke, in a police investigation."
"Beth and Richard are my friends. I take my friendships seriously.
They're grieving, Eve. And I don't like knowing Beth is blaming
herself."
She remembered the haunted eyes and nerves. She sighed. "All right, I
can accept that. Who have you talked to?"
"Friends, as I said, acquaintances, business associates." He set his
coffee aside as Eve sipped hers and paced. "Odd, isn't it, how many
different opinions and perceptions you find on one woman. Ask this one,
and you'll hear Sharon was loyal, generous. Ask another and she was
vindictive, calculating. Still another saw her as a party addict who
could never find enough excitement, while the next tells you she enjoyed
quiet evenings on her own. Quite a role player, our Sharon."
"She wore different faces for different people. It's common enough."
"Which face, or which role, killed her?" Roarke took out a cigarette,
lighted it. "Blackmail." Thoughtfully he blew out a fragrant stream of
smoke. "She would have been good at it. She liked to dig into people and
could dispense considerable charm while doing it."
"And she dispensed it on you."
"Lavishly." That careless smile flashed again. "I wasn't prepared to
exchange information for sex. Even if she hadn't been my friend's
daughter and a professional, she wouldn't have appealed to me in that
way. I prefer a different type." His eyes rested on Eve's again,
broodingly. "Or thought I did. I haven't yet figured out why the
intense, driven, and prickly type appeals to me so unexpectedly."
She poured more coffee, looked at him over the rim. "That isn't
flattering."
"It wasn't meant to be. Though for someone who must have a very
poor-sighted hairdresser and doesn't choose the standard enhancements,
you are surprisingly easy to look at."
"I don't have a hairdresser, or time for enhancements." Or, she decided,
the inclination to discuss them. "To continue the deduction. If Sharon
DeBlass was murdered by one of her blackmail victims, where does Lola
Starr come in?"
"A problem, isn't it?" Roarke took a contemplative drag. "They don't
appear to have anything in common other than their choice of profession.
It's doubtful they knew each other or shared the same taste in clients.
Yet there was one who, at least briefly, knew them both."
"One who chose them both."
Roarke lifted a brow, nodded. "You put it better."
"What did you mean when you said I didn't know what I was getting into?"
His hesitation was so brief, so smoothly covered, it was barely
noticeable. "I'm not sure if you understand the power DeBlass has or can
use. The scandal of his granddaughter's murder could add to it. He wants
the presidency, and he wants to dictate the mood and moral choices of
the country and beyond."
"You're saying he could use Sharon's death politically? How?"
Roarke stubbed his cigarette out. "He could paint his granddaughter as a
victim of society, with sex for profit as the murder weapon. How can a
world that allows legalized prostitution, full conception control,
sexual adjustment, and so forth not take responsibility for the
results?"
Eve could appreciate the debate, but shook her head. "DeBlass also wants
to eliminate the gun ban. She was shot by a weapon not really available
under current law."
"Which makes it more insidious. Would she have been able to defend
herself if she, too, had been armed?" When Eve started to disagree, he
shook his head. "It hardly matters what the answer is, only the question
itself. Have we forgotten our founders and the basic tenets of their
blueprint for the country? Our right to bear arms. A woman murdered in
her own home, her own bed, a victim of sexual freedom and
defenselessness. More, yes, much more, of moral decline."
He strolled over to disengage the console. "Oh, you'll argue that murder
by handgun was the rule rather than the exception when anyone with the
desire and the finances could purchase one, but he'll drown that out.
The Conservative Party is gaining ground, and he's the spearhead."
He watched her assimilate as she poured yet more coffee. "Has it
occurred to you that he might not want the murderer caught?"
Off guard, she looked up. "Why wouldn't he? Over and above the personal,
wouldn't that give him even more ammunition? 'Here's the low-life,
immoral scum that murdered my poor, misguided granddaughter.'"
"That's a risk, isn't it? Perhaps the murderer is a fine, upstanding
pillar of his community who was equally misguided. But a scapegoat is
certainly required."
He waited a moment, watching her think it through. "Who do you think
made certain you went to Testing in the middle of this case? Who's
watching every step you take, monitoring every stage of your
investigation? Who'd digging into your background, your personal life as
well as your professional one?"
Shaken, she set her cup down. "I suspect DeBlass put the pressure on
about Testing. He doesn't trust me, or he hasn't decided I'm competent
to head the investigation. And he had Feeney and me followed from East
Washington." She let out a long breath. "How do you know he's digging on
me? Because you are?"
He didn't mind the anger in her eyes, or the accusation. He preferred it
to the worry another might have shown. "No, because I'm watching him
while he's watching you. I decided I'd find it more satisfying to learn
about you from the source, over time, than by reading reports."
He stepped closer, skimmed his fingers over her choppy hair. "I respect
the privacy of the people I care about. And I care about you, Eve. I
don't know why, precisely, but you pull something from me."
When she started to step back, he tightened his fingers. "I'm tired of
every time I have a moment with you, you put murder between us."
"There is murder between us."
"No. If anything, that's what brought us here. Is that the problem? You
can't shed Lieutenant Dallas long enough to feel?"
"That's who I am."
"Then that's who I want." His eyes had darkened with impatient desire.
The frustration he felt was only with himself, for being so impossibly
driven he might, at any moment, beg. "Lieutenant Dallas wouldn't be
afraid of me, even if Eve might."
The coffee had wired her. That's what had her system so jittery with
nerves. "I'm not afraid of you, Roarke."
"Aren't you?" He moved closer, curling his hands on the lapels of her
shirt. "What do you think will happen if you step over the line?"
"Too much," she murmured. "Not enough. Sex isn't high on my priority
list. It's distracting."
The temper in his eyes lighted to a laugh. "Damn right it is. When it's
done well. Isn't it time you let me show you?"
She gripped his arms, not sure if she intended to move in or away. "It's
a mistake."
"So we'll have to make it count," he muttered before his mouth captured
hers.
She moved in.
Her arms went around him, fingers diving into his hair. Her body slammed
into his, vibrating as the kiss grew rough, then nearly brutal. His
mouth was hot, almost vicious. The shock of it sent flares of reaction
straight to her center.
Already, his fast, impatient hands were tugging her shirt from her
jeans, finding her skin. In response, she dragged at his, desperate to
get through silk and to flesh.
He had a vision of himself dragging her to the floor, pounding himself
into her until her screams echoed like gunshots, and his release erupted
like blood. It would be quick, and fierce. And over.
With the breath shuddering in his lungs, he jerked back. Her face was
flushed, her mouth already swollen. He'd torn her shirt at the shoulder.
A room filled with violence, the smell of gunsmoke still stinking the
air, and weapons still within reach.
"Not here." He half carried, half dragged her to the elevator. By the
time the doors opened, he'd ripped aside the torn sleeve. He shoved her
against the back wall as the doors closed them in, and fumbled with her
holster. "Take this damn thing off. Take it off."
She hit the release and let the holster dangle from one hand as she
fought open his buttons with the other. "Why do you wear so many
clothes?"
"I won't next time." He ripped the tattered shirt aside. Beneath she
wore a thin, nearly transparent undershirt that revealed small, firm
breasts and hardened nipples. He closed his hands over them, watched her
eyes glaze. "Where do you like to be touched?"
"You're doing fine." She had to brace a hand on the side wall to keep
from buckling.
When the doors opened again, they were fused together. They circled out
with his teeth nipping and scraping along her throat. She let her bag
and her holster drop.
She got a glimpse of the room: wide windows, mirrors, muted colors. She
could smell flowers and felt the give of carpet under her feet. As she
struggled to release his slacks, she caught sight of the bed.
"Holy God."
It was huge, a lake of midnight blue cupped between high carved wood. It
stood on a platform beneath a domed sky window. Across from it was a
fireplace of pale green stone where fragrant wood sizzled.
"You sleep here?"
"I don't intend to sleep tonight."
He interrupted her gawking by pulling her up the two stairs to the
platform and tumbling her onto the bed.
"I have to check in by oh seven hundred."
"Shut up, lieutenant."
"Okay."
With a half laugh, she rolled on top of him and fastened her mouth to
his. Wild, reckless energy was bursting inside her. She couldn't move
quickly enough, her hands weren't fast enough to satisfy the craving.
She fought off her boots, let him peel the jeans over her hips. A wave
of pleasure rippled through her when she heard him groan. It had been a
long time since she'd felt the tension and heat of a man's body -- a
very long time since she'd wanted to.
The need for release was driving and fierce. The moment they were naked,
she would have straddled him and satisfied it. But he flipped their
positions, muffled her edgy protests with a long, rough kiss.
"What's your hurry?" he murmured, sliding a hand down to take her breast
and watching her face while his thumb quietly tortured her nipple. "I
haven't even looked at you."
"I want you."
"I know." He levered back, running a hand from her shoulder to her thigh
while his gaze followed the movement. The blood was pounding in his
loins. "Long, slim..." His hand squeezed lightly on her breast. "Small.
Very nearly delicate. Who would have guessed?"
"I want you inside me."
"You only want one aspect inside you," he murmured.
"Goddamn it," she began, then groaned when he dipped his head and took
her breast into his mouth.
She writhed against him, against herself as he suckled, so gently at
first it was torture, then harder, faster until she had to bite back a
scream. His hands continued to skim over her, kindling exotic little
fires of need.
It wasn't what she was used to. Sex, when she chose to have it, was
quick, simple, and satisfied a basic need. But this was tangling
emotions, a war on the system, a battering of the senses.
She struggled to get a hand between them, to reach him where he lay hard
and heavy against her. Pure panic set in when he braceleted her wrists
and levered her hands over her head.
"Don't."
He'd nearly released her in reflex before he saw her eyes. Panic yes,
even fear, but desire, too. "You can't always be in control, Eve." As he
spoke he ran his free hand over her thigh. She trembled, and her eyes
unfocused when his fingers brushed the back of her knee.
"Don't," she said again, fighting for air.
"Don't what? Find a weakness, exploit it?" Experimentally, he caressed
that sensitive skin, tracing his fingers up toward the heat, then back
again. Her breath was coming in pants now as she fought to roll away
from him.
"Too late, it seems," he murmured. "You want the kick without the
intimacy?" He began a trail of slow, open-mouthed kisses at the base of
her throat, working his way down while her body shivered like a plucked
wire beneath his. "You don't need a partner for that. And you have one
tonight. I intend to give as much pleasure as I get."
"I can't." She strained against him, bucked, but each frantic movement
brought only a new and devastating sensation.
"Let go." He was mad to have her. But her struggle to hold back both
challenged and infuriated.
"I can't."
"I'm going to make you let go, and I'm going to watch it happen." He
slid back up her, feeling every tremble and quake, until his face was
close to hers again. He pressed his palm firmly on the mound between her
thighs.
Her breath hissed out. "You bastard. I can't."
"Liar," he said quietly, then slid a finger down, over her, into her.
His groan melded with hers as he found her tight, hot, wet. Clinging to
control, he focused on her face, the change from panic to shock, from
shock to glazed helplessness.
She felt herself slipping, battled back, but the pull was too strong.
Someone screamed as she fell, then her body imploded. One moment the
tension was vicious, then the spear of pleasure arrowed into her, so
sharp, so hot. Dazed, disoriented, she went limp.
He went mad.
He dragged her up so that she was kneeling, her head heavy on his
shoulder. "Again," he demanded, dragging her head back by the hair and
plundering her mouth. "Again, goddamn it."
"Yes." It was building so quickly. The need like teeth grinding inside
her. Free, her hands raced over him, and her body arched fluidly back so
that his lips could taste where and how they liked.
Her next climax ripped through him like claws. With something like a
snarl, he shoved her onto her back, levered her hips high, and drove
himself inside her. She closed around him, a hot, greedy fist.
Her nails scraped at his back, her hips pistoned as he plunged. When her
hands slid weakly from his sweat-slicked shoulders, he emptied himself
into her.
*** CHAPTER ELEVEN ***
She didn't speak for a long time. There really wasn't anything to say.
She had taken an inappropriate step with her eyes wide open. If there
were consequences, she would pay them.
Now, she needed to gather whatever dignity she could scrape together and
get out.
"I have to go." With her face averted, she sat up and wondered how she
was going to find her clothes.
"I don't think so." Roarke's voice was lazy, confident, and infuriating.
Even as she started to get off the bed, he snagged her arm, overbalanced
her, and had her on her back again.
"Look, fun's fun."
"It certainly is. I don't know as I'd qualify what just happened here as
fun. I say it was too intense for that. I haven't finished with you,
lieutenant." When her eyes narrowed, he grinned. "Good, that's what I
wanted to -- "
He lost his breath and with it the words when her elbow shot into his
stomach. In the blink of an eye, she'd reversed their positions. That
well-aimed elbow was now pressing dangerously on his windpipe.
"Listen, pal, I come and go as I please, so check your ego."
Like a white flag, he lifted his palms out for peace. Her elbow lifted a
half inch before he shifted and sprang.
She was tough, strong, and smart. That was only one more reason why,
after a sweaty struggle, she was infuriated to find herself under him
again.
"Assaulting an officer will earn you one to five, Roarke. That's in a
cage, not cushy home detention."
"You're not wearing your badge. Or anything else, for that matter." He
gave her a friendly nip on the chin. "Be sure to put that in your
report."
So much for dignity, she decided. "I don't want to fight with you." It
pleased her that her voice was calm, even reasonable. "I just have to
go."
He shifted, watched as her eyes widened, then fluttered half closed when
he slipped inside her again. "No, don't shut your eyes." His voice was
whisper rough.
So she watched him, incapable of resisting the fresh onslaught of
pleasure. He kept the rhythm slow now, with long, deep strokes that
stirred the soul.
Her breath quickened, thickened. All she could see was his face, all she
could feel was that lovely, fluid slide of his body in hers, the
tireless friction of it that had an orgasm shivering through her like
gold.
His fingers linked with hers, and his lips curved on hers. She felt his
body tighten an instant before he buried his face in her hair. They lay
quiet, bodies meshed but still. He turned his head, pressed a kiss to
her temple.
"Stay," he murmured. "Please."
"Yes." She closed her eyes now. "All right, yes."
-=O=-***-=O=-
They didn't sleep. It wasn't fatigue so much as bafflement that
assaulted Eve when she stepped into Roarke's shower in the early hours
of the morning.
She didn't spend nights with men. Always she'd been careful to keep sex
simple, straightforward and, yes, impersonal. Yet here she was, the
morning after, letting herself be pummeled by the hot pulse of his
shower sprays. For hours, she'd let herself be pummeled by him. He'd
assaulted then invaded parts of her she'd thought impregnable.
She was trying to regret it. It seemed important that she realize and
recognize her mistake, and move on. But it was difficult to regret
anything that made her body feel so alive and kept the dreams at bay.
"You look good wet, lieutenant."
Eve turned her head as Roarke stepped through the criss crossing sprays.
"I'm going to need to borrow a shirt."
"We'll find you one." He pressed a knob on the tiled walls, cupped his
hand under a fount to catch a puddle of clear, creamy liquid.
"What are you doing?"
"Washing your hair," he murmured and proceeded to stroke and massage the
shampoo into her short, sopping cap of hair. "I'm going to enjoy
smelling my soap on you." His lips curved. "You're a fascinating woman,
Eve. Here we are, wet, naked, both of us half dead from a very memorable
night, and still you watch me with very cool, very suspicious eyes."
"You're a suspicious character, Roarke."
"I think that's a compliment." He bent his head to bite her lip, as the
steam rose and the spray began to pulse like a heartbeat. "Tell me what
you meant, the first time I made love to you, when you said, 'I can't.
'"
He angled her head back, and Eve closed her eyes in defense as water
chased the shampoo away. "I don't remember everything I said."
"You remember." From another fount, he drew pale green soap that smelled
of wild forests. Watching her, he slicked it over her shoulders, down
her back, then around and up to her breasts. "Hadn't you had an orgasm
before?"
"Of course I have." True, she'd always equated them with the subtle pop
of a cork from a bottle of stress, not the violent explosion that
destroyed a lifetime of restraint. "You're flattering yourself, Roarke."
"Am I?" Didn't she know that those cool eyes, that wall of resistance
she was scrambling to rebuild was an irresistible challenge? Obviously
not, he mused. He tugged lightly at her soap-slicked nipples, smiling
when she sucked in a breath. "I'm about to flatter myself again."
"I haven't got time for this," she said quickly, and found her back
pressed against the tile wall. "It was a mistake in the first place. I
have to go."
"It won't take long." He felt a hard slap of lust when he cupped her
hips, lifted her. "It wasn't a mistake then, or now. And I have to have
you."
His breath was coming faster. It stunned him how much he could want her
still, baffled him that she could be blind to how helpless he was under
the clawing need for her. It infuriated him that she could, simply by
existing, be his weakness.
"Hold onto me," he demanded, his voice harsh, edgy. "Goddamn it, hold
onto me."
She already was. He pierced her, pinned her to the wall with an erection
that filled her to bursting. Her frantic, helpless mewing echoed off the
walls. She wanted to hate him for that, for making her a victim of her
own rampant passions. But she held onto him, and let herself spin
dizzily out of control.
He climaxed violently, slapped a hand on the wall, his arm rigid to
maintain balance as her legs slid slowly off his hips. Suddenly he was
angry, furious that she could strip away his finesse until he was no
more than a beast rutting.
"I'll get you a shirt," he said briskly, then stepped out, flicking a
towel from a rack, and leaving her alone in the billowing steam.
-=O=-***-=O=-
By the time she was dressed, frowning over the feel of raw silk against
her skin, there was a tray of coffee waiting in the sitting area of the
bedroom.
The morning news chattered quietly on the view screen, the curiosity
corner at the lower left running fields of figures. The stock exchange.
The monitor on a console was open to a newspaper. Not the Times or one
of the New York tabs, Eve noted. It looked like Japanese.
"Do you have time for breakfast?" Roarke sat, sipping his coffee. He
wasn't able to give his full attention to the morning data. He'd enjoyed
watching her dress: the way her hands had hesitated over his shirt
before she'd shrugged into it, how her fingers had run quickly up the
buttons, the quick wriggle of hip as she'd tugged on jeans.
"No, thanks." She wasn't sure of her moves now. He'd fucked her blind in
the shower, then had withdrawn to play well-mannered host. She strapped
into her holster before crossing to accept the coffee he'd already
poured her.
"You know, lieutenant, you wear your weapon the way other women wear
pearls."
"It's not a fashion accessory."
"You misunderstand. To some, jewelry is as vital as limbs." He tilted
his head, studying her. "The shirt's a bit large, but it suits you."
Eve thought anything she could wear on her back that cost close to a
week's pay couldn't suit her. "I'll get it back to you."
"I have several others." He rose, unnerving her again by tracing a
fingertip over her jaw. "I was rough before. I'm sorry."
The apology, so quiet and unexpected, embarrassed her. "Forget it." She
shifted away, drained her cup, set it aside.
"I won't forget it; neither will you." He took her hand, lifted it to
his lips. Nothing could have pleased him more than the quick suspicion
on her face. "You won't forget me, Eve. You'll think of me, perhaps not
fondly, but you'll think of me."
"I'm in the middle of a murder investigation. You're part of it. Sure,
I'll think of you."
"Darling," he began, and watched with amusement as his use of the
endearment knitted her brow. "You'll be thinking of what I can do to
you. Unfortunately, I won't be able to do more than imagine it myself
for a few days."
She tugged her hand free and reached, casually she hoped, for her bag.
"Going somewhere?"
"The preliminary work on the resort requires my attention, and my
presence on FreeStar One for a number of meetings with the directorship.
I'll be tied up, a few hundred thousand miles away, for a day or two."
An emotion moved through her she wasn't ready to admit was
disappointment. "Yeah, I heard you wrapped the deal on that major
indulgence for the bored rich."
He only smiled. "When the resort's complete, I'll take you there. You
may form another opinion. In the meantime, I have to ask you for your
discretion. The meetings are confidential. There's still a loose end or
two to tie up, and it wouldn't do for my competitors to know we're
getting under way so quickly. Only a few key people will know I'm not
here in New York."
She finger combed her hair. "Why did you tell me?"
"Apparently, I've decided you're a key." As disconcerted by that as she,
Roarke led the way to the door. "If you need to contact me, tell
Summerset. He'll put you through."
"The butler?"
Roarke smiled as they descended the stairs. "He'll see to it," was all
he said. "I should be gone about five days, a week at the most. I want
to see you again." He stopped, took her face in his hands. "I need to
see you again."
Her pulse jumped, as if it had nothing to do with the rest of her.
"Roarke, what's going on here?"
"Lieutenant." He leaned forward, touched his lips to hers. "Indications
are we're having a romance." Then he laughed, kissed her again, hard and
quick. "I believe I could have held a gun to your head and you wouldn't
have looked as terrified. Well, you'll have several days to think it
through, won't you?"
She had a feeling several years wouldn't be enough.
There, at the base of the stairs, was Summerset, stone-faced,
stiff-necked, holding her jacket. She took it and glanced back at Roarke
as she shrugged it on.
"Have a good trip."
"Thanks." Roarke laid a hand on her shoulder before she could walk out
the door. "Eve, be careful." Annoyed with himself, he dropped his hands.
"I'll be in touch."
"Sure." She hurried out, and when she glanced back, the door was closed.
When she opened her car door, she noticed the electronic memo on the
driver's seat. Scooping it up, she got behind the wheel. As she headed
toward the gate, she flicked on the memo. Roarke's voice drawled out.
"I don't like the idea of you shivering unless I cause it. Stay warm."
Frowning, she tucked the memo in her pocket before experimentally
touching the temperature gauge. The blast of heat had her yelping in
shock.
She grinned all the way to Cop Central.
-=O=-***-=O=-
Eve closed herself in her office. She had two hours before her official
shift began, and she wanted to use every minute of it on the
DeBlass-Starr homicides. When her shift kicked in, her duties would
spread to a number of cases in varying degrees of progress. This time
was her own.
As a matter of routine, she cued IRCCA to transmit any and all current
data and ordered it in hard copy to review later. The transmission was
depressingly brief and added nothing solid.
Back, she thought, to deductive games. On her desk she'd spread out
photos of both victims. She knew them intimately now, these women.
Perhaps now, after the night she'd spent with Roarke, she understood
something of what had driven them.
Sex was a powerful tool to use or have used against you. Both of these
women had wanted to wield it, to control it. In the end, it had killed
them.
A bullet in the brain had been the official cause of death, but Eve saw
sex as the trigger.
It was the only connection between them, and the only link to their
murderer.
Thoughtfully, she picked up the. 38. It was familiar in her hand now.
She knew exactly how it felt when it fired, the way the punch of it sung
up the arm. The sound it made when the mechanism and basic physics sent
the bullet flying.
Still holding the gun, she cued up the disc she'd requisitioned and
watched Sharon DeBlass's murder again.
What did you feel, you bastard? she wondered. What did you feel when you
squeezed the trigger and sent that slug of lead into her, when the blood
spewed out, when her eyes rolled up dead?
What did you feel?
Eyes narrowed, she reran the disc. She was almost immune to the
nastiness of it now. There was, she noted, the slightest waver in the
video, as if he'd jostled the camera.
Did your arm jerk? she wondered. Did it shock you, the way her body flew
back, how far the blood splattered?
Is that why she could hear the soft sob of breath, the slow exhale
before the image changed?
What did you feel? she asked again. Revulsion, pleasure, or just cold
satisfaction?
She leaned closer to the monitor. Sharon was carefully arranged now, the
scene set as the camera panned her objectively and, yes, Eve thought,
coldly.
Then why the jostle? Why the sob?
And the note. She picked up the sealed envelope and read it again. How
did you know you'd be satisfied to stop at six? Have you already picked
them out? Selected them?
Dissatisfied, she ejected the disc, replaced it and the. 38. Loading the
Starr disc, taking the second weapon, Eve ran through the process again.
No jostle this time, she noted. No quick, indrawn breath. Everything's
smooth, precise, exact. You knew this time, she thought, how it would
feel, how she'd look, how the blood would smell.
But you didn't know her. Or she didn't know you. You were just John
Smith in her book, marked as a new client.
How did you choose her? And how are you going to pick the next one?
Just before nine, when Feeney knocked on her door, she was studying a
map of Manhattan. He stepped behind her, leaned over her shoulder, and
breathed candy mints.
"Thinking of relocating?"
"I'm trying geography. Widen view five percent," she ordered the
computer. The image adjusted. "First murder, second murder," she said,
nodding toward the tiny red pulses on Broadway and in the West Village.
"My place." There was a green pulse just off Ninth Avenue.
"Your place?"
"He knows where I live. He's been there twice. These are three places we
can put him. I was hoping I'd be able to confine the area, but he
spreads himself out. And the security." She indulged in one little sigh,
as she eased back in her chair. "Three different systems. Stair's was
all but nonexistent. Electronic doorman, inoperable -- and it had been,
according to other residents, for a couple of weeks. DeBlass had top
grade, key code for entry, hand plate, full building security -- audio
and video. Had to be breached on-site. Our time lag only hits one
elevator, and the victim's hallway. Mine's not as fancy. I could breach
the entry, any decent B and E man could. But I've got a System Five
thousand police lock on the door. You have to be a real pro to pop it
without the master code."
Drumming her fingers on the desk, she scowled at the map. "He's a
security expert, knows his weapons -- old weapons, Feeney. He'd cued in
enough to department procedure to tag me for the primary investigator
within hours of the first hit. He doesn't leave fingerprints or bodily
fluids. Not even a fucking pubic hair. What does that tell you?"
Feeney sucked air through his teeth, rocked back on his heels. "Cop.
Military. Maybe paramilitary or government security. Could be a security
hobbyist; there are plenty of them. Possible professional criminal, but
unlikely."
"Why unlikely?"
"If the guy was making a living off crime, why murder? There's no profit
in either of these hits."
"So, he's taking a vacation," Eve said, but it didn't play for her.
"Maybe. I've run known sex offenders, crossed with IRCCA. Nobody pops
who fits the MO. You look at this report yet?" he asked, indicating the
IRCCA transmission.
"No. Why?"
"I already tagged it this morning. You might be surprised that there
were about a hundred gun assaults last year, country wide. About that
many accidental, too." He jerked a shoulder. "Bootlegged, homemade,
black market, collectors."
"But nobody fits our profile."
"Nope." He chewed contemplatively. "Perverts either, though it's a real
education to scan the data. Got a favorite. This guy in Detroit, hit on
four before they tagged him. Liked to pick up a lonely heart, go back to
her place. He'd tranq her, then he'd strip her down, spray her with
glow-in-the-dark red paint, top to toe."
"Weird."
"Lethal. Skin's gotta breathe, so she'd suffocate, and while she was
smothering to death, he'd play with her. Wouldn't bang her, no sperm or
penetration. He'd just run his eager little hands over her."
"Christ, that's sick."
"Yeah, well, anyway. He gets a little too eager, a little too impatient
with one, starts rubbing her before she's dry, you know. Some of the
paint rubs off, and she starts to come around. So he panics, runs. Now
our girl's naked, covered with paint, wobbly from the tranq, but she's
pissed, runs right outside on the street and starts screaming. The unit
comes by, catches on quick 'cause she's glowing like a laser show, and
starts a standard search. Our boy's only a couple of blocks away. So
they catch him..."
"Don't say it."
"Red-handed," Feeney said with a wicked grin. "Kiss my ass, that's a
good one. Caught him red-handed." When Dallas just rolled her eyes,
Feeney decided the guys in his division would appreciate the story more.
"Anyway, we maybe got a pervert. I'll bump up the pervs and the pros.
Maybe we'll get lucky. I like the idea of that better than a cop."
"So do I." Lips pursed, she swiveled to look at him. "Feeney, you've got
a small collection, know something about antique firearms."
He held out his arms, wrists tight together. "I confess. Book me."
She nearly smiled. "You know any other cops who collect?"
"Sure, a few. It's an expensive hobby, so most of the ones I know
collect reproductions. Speaking of expensive," he added, fingering her
sleeve. "Nice shirt. You get a raise?"
"It's borrowed," she muttered, and was surprised that she had to control
a flush. "Run them for me, Feeney. The ones that have genuine antiques."
"Ah, Dallas." His smile faded away at the thought of focusing in on his
own people. "I hate that shit."
"So do I. Run them anyway. Keep it to the city for now."
"Right." He blew out a breath, wondered if she realized his name would
be on the list. "Hell of a way to start the day. Now I've got a present
for you, kid. There was a memo on my desk when I got in. The chief's on
his way in to the commander's office. He wants both of us."
"Fuck that."
Feeney just looked at his watch. "I make it in five minutes. Maybe you
want to put on a sweater or something, so Simpson doesn't get a good
look at that shirt and decide we're overpaid."
"Fuck that, too."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Chief Edward Simpson was an imposing figure. Well over six feet,
fighting trim, he preferred dark suits and vivid ties. His waving brown
hair was tipped with gray.
It was well known throughout the department that those distinguished
highlights were added by his personal cosmetician. His eyes were a
steely blue -- a color his polls indicated inspired voter confidence --
that rarely showed humor, his mouth a thin comma of command. Looking at
him, you thought of power and authority.
It was disillusioning to know how carelessly he used both to do laps in
the heady pool of politics.
He sat down, steepling his long, creamy hands that winked with a trio of
gold rings. His voice, when he spoke, had an actor's resonance.
"Commander, captain, lieutenant, we have a delicate situation."
And an actor's timing. He paused, let those hard blue eyes scan each
face in turn.
"You're all aware of how the media enjoys sensationalism," he continued.
"Our city has, in the five years of my jurisdiction, lowered its crime
rate by five percent. A full percentage a year. However, with recent
events, it isn't the progress that will be touted by the press. Already
there are headlines of these two killings. Stories that question the
investigation and demand answers."
Whitney, detesting Simpson in every pore, answered mildly. "The stories
lack details, chief. The Code Five on the DeBlass case makes it
impossible to cooperate with the press or feed it."
"By not feeding it," Simpson snapped back. "We allow them to speculate.
I'll be making a statement this afternoon." He held up a hand even as
Whitney started to protest. "It's necessary to give the public something
to assess, and by assessing feel confident that the department has the
matter under control. Even if that isn't the case."
His eyes zeroed in on Eve. "As the primary, lieutenant, you'll attend
the press conference as well. My office is preparing a statement for you
to give."
"With all respect, Chief Simpson, I can't divulge to the public any
details of the case that could undermine the investigation."
Simpson plucked a piece of lint from his sleeve. "Lieutenant, I have
thirty years of experience. I believe I know how to handle a press
conference. Secondly," he continued, dismissing her by turning back to
Commander Whitney, "it's imperative that the link the press has made
between the DeBlass and Starr homicides be broken. The department can't
be responsible for embarrassing Senator DeBlass personally, or damaging
his position, by joining these cases at the hip."
"The murderer did that for us," Eve said between her teeth.
Simpson spared her a glance. "Officially, there is no connection. When
asked, deny."
"When asked," Eve corrected. "Lie."
"Save your personal ethics. This is reality. A scandal that starts here
and reverberates to East Washington will come back on us like a monsoon.
Sharon DeBlass has been dead over a week, and you have nothing."
"We have the weapon," she disagreed. "We have possible motive as
blackmail, and a list of suspects."
His color came up as he rose out of the chair. "I'm head of this
department, lieutenant, and the mess you make is left to me to clean.
It's time you stop digging at dirt and close the 'case."
"Sir." Feeney stepped forward. "Lieutenant Dallas and I -- "
"Can both be on Traffic Detail in a fucking heartbeat," Simpson
finished.
Fists clenched, Whitney lunged to his feet. "Don't threaten my officers,
Simpson. You play your games, smile for the cameras, and rub asses with
East Washington, but don't you come in on my turf and threaten my
people. They're on and they stay on. You want to change that, you try
going through me."
Simpson's color deepened further. In fascination, Eve watched a vein
throb at his temple. "Your people press the wrong buttons on this, it'll
be your ass. I've got Senator DeBlass under control for the moment, but
he's not happy having the primary running off to pressure his
daughter-in-law, to invade the privacy of her grief and ask her
embarrassing, irrelevant questions. Senator DeBlass and his family are
victims, not suspects, and are to be accorded respect and dignity during
this investigation."
"I accorded Elizabeth Barrister and Richard DeBlass respect and
dignity." Very deliberately Eve shut down her temper. "The interview was
conducted with their consent and cooperation. I was not aware that I was
required to receive permission from you or the senator to proceed as I
see warranted on this case."
"And I will not have the press speculating that this department harasses
grieving parents, or why the primary resisted required testing after a
termination."
"Lieutenant Dallas's testing was postponed at my order," Whitney said
with snarling fury. "And with your approval."
"I'm well aware of that." Simpson angled his head. "I'm talking about
speculation in the press. We will, all of us, be under a microscope
until this man is stopped. Lieutenant Dallas's record and her actions
will be up for public dissection."
"My record'll stand it."
"And your actions," Simpson said with a faint smile. "How will you
answer the fact that you're jeopardizing the case and your position by
indulging in a personal relationship with a suspect? And what do you
think my official position will be if and when it comes out that you
spent the night with that suspect?"
Control kept her in place, made her eyes flat, had her voice even. "I'm
sure you'd hang me to save yourself, Chief Simpson."
"Without hesitation," he agreed. "Be at City Hall. Noon, sharp."
When the door clinked shut behind him, Commander Whitney sat again.
"Dickless son of a bitch." Then his eyes, still sharp as razors, cut
into Eve. "What the fuck are you doing?"
Eve accepted -- was forced to accept -- that her privacy was no longer
an issue. "I spent the night with Roarke. It was a personal decision, on
my personal time. In my professional opinion, as primary investigator,
he has been eliminated as a suspect. It doesn't negate the fact that my
behavior was inadvisable."
"Inadvisable," Whitney exploded. "Try asinine. Try career suicide.
Goddamn it, Dallas, can't you hold your glands in check? I don't expect
this from you."
She didn't expect it from herself. "It doesn't affect the investigation,
or my ability to continue it. If you think differently, you're wrong. If
you pull me off, you'll have to take my badge, too."
Whitney stared at her another moment, swore again. "You make damn sure
Roarke is eliminated from the short list, Dallas. Damn sure he's
eliminated or booked within thirty-six hours. And you ask yourself a
question."
"I've already asked it," she interrupted, with a giddy relief only she
knew she experienced when he didn't call for her badge -- yet. "How did
Simpson know where I spent last night? I'm being monitored. Second
question is why. Is it on Simpson's authority, is it DeBlass? Or, did
someone leak the information to Simpson in order to damage my
credibility and therefore, the investigation."
"I expect you to find out." He jerked a thumb toward the door. "Watch
yourself at that press conference, Dallas."
They'd taken no more than three strides down the corridor when Feeney
erupted. "What the hell are you thinking of? Jesus Christ, Dallas."
"I didn't plan it, okay?" She jabbed for an elevator, jammed her hands
in her pockets. "Back off."
"He's on the short list. He's one of the last people we know of who saw
Sharon DeBlass alive. He's got more money than God, and can buy
anything, including immunity."
"He doesn't fit type." She stormed into the elevator, barked out her
floor. "I know what I'm doing."
"You don't know shit. All the years I've known you, I've never seen you
so much as stub your toe on a guy. Now you've fallen fucking over on
one."
"It was just sex. Not all of us have a nice comfortable life with a nice
comfortable wife. I wanted someone to touch me, and he wanted to be the
one. It's none of your goddamn business who I sleep with."
He caught her arm before she could storm out of the elevator. "The hell
with that. I care about you."
She fought back the rage at being questioned, at being probed, at having
her most private moments invaded. She turned back, lowering her voice so
that those who walked the corridor wouldn't overhear.
"Am I a good cop, Feeney?"
"You're the best I ever worked with. That's why -- "
She held up a hand. "What makes a good cop?"
He sighed. "Brains, guts, patience, nerve, instinct."
"My brains, my guts, my instincts tell me it's not Roarke. Every time I
try to turn it around and point it at him, I hit a wall. It's not him.
I've got the patience, Feeney, and the nerve to keep at it until we find
out who."
His eyes stayed on hers. "And if you're wrong this time, Dallas?"
"If I'm wrong, they won't have to ask for my badge." She had to take a
steadying breath. "Feeney, if I'm wrong about this, about him, I'm
finished. All the way finished. Because if I'm not a good cop, I'm
nothing."
"Jesus, Dallas, don't -- "
She shook her head. "Run the cop list for me, will you? I've got some
calls to make."
*** CHAPTER TWELVE ***
Press conferences left a bad taste in Eve's mouth. She stood on the
steps of City Hall, on a stage set by Simpson with his patriotic tie and
his gold I Love New York lapel pin. In his Big Brother of the City mode,
his voice rose and fell while he read his statement.
A statement, Eve thought in disgust, that was riddled with lies, half
truths, and plenty of self aggrandizements. According to Simpson he
would have no rest until the murderer of young Lola Starr was brought to
justice.
When questioned as to whether there was any connection between the Starr
homicide and the mysterious death of Senator DeBlass's granddaughter, he
flatly denied it.
It wasn't his first mistake and, Eve thought glumly, it would hardly be
his last.
The words were barely out of his mouth when he was peppered with shouts
from Channel 75's on-air ace, Nadine Furst.
"Chief Simpson, I have information that indicates the Starr homicide is
linked with the DeBlass case -- not only because both women were engaged
in the same profession."
"Now, Nadine." Simpson flashed his patient, avuncular smile. "We all
know that information is often passed to you and your associates, and
it's often inaccurate. That's why I set up the Data Verification Center
in the first year of my term as chief of police. You have only to check
with the DVC for accuracy."
Eve managed to hold back a snort, but Nadine, with her sharp cat's eyes
and lightning brain didn't bother. "My source claims that Sharon
DeBlass's death was not an accident -- as the DVC claims -- but murder.
That both DeBlass and Starr were killed by the same method and the same
man."
This caused an uproar in the huddle of news teams, a scatter shot of
demands and questions that had Simpson sweating under his monogrammed
shirt.
"The department stands behind its position that there is no connection
between these unfortunate incidents," Simpson shouted out, but Eve saw
little lights of panic flickering in his eyes. "And my office stands
behind the investigators."
Those jittery eyes shot to Eve, and she knew, in that instant, what it
was to be picked up bodily and thrown to the wolves.
"Lieutenant Dallas, a veteran officer with more than ten years of
experience on the force, is in charge of the Starr homicide. She'll be
happy to answer your questions."
Trapped, Eve stepped forward while Simpson bent down so that his weasley
aide could whisper rapid-fire advice in his ear.
Questions rained down on her, and she waited, filtering them until she
found one she could deal with.
"How was Lola Starr murdered?"
"In order to protect the credibility of the investigation, I'm not at
liberty to divulge the method." She suffered through the shouts, cursing
Simpson. "I will state that Lola Starr, an eighteen-year-old licensed
companion, was murdered, with violence and premeditation. Evidence
indicates that she was murdered by a client."
That fed them for awhile, Eve noted. Several reporters checked their
links with base.
"Was it a sexual crime?" someone shouted out, and Eve lifted a brow.
"I've just stated that the victim was a prostitute and that she was
killed by a client. Put it together."
"Was Sharon DeBlass also killed by a client?" Nadine demanded.
Eve met those cagey feline eyes levelly. "The department has not issued
any official statement that Sharon DeBlass was murdered."
"My source names you as primary in both cases. Will you confirm?"
Boggy ground. Eve stepped onto it. "Yes. I'm the primary on several
ongoing investigations."
"Why would a ten-year vet be assigned to an accidental death?"
Eve smiled. "Want me to define bureaucracy?"
That drew some chuckles, but it didn't pull Nadine off the scent.
"Is the DeBlass case still ongoing?"
Any answer would stir a hornet's nest. Eve opted for the truth. "Yes.
And it will remain ongoing until I, as primary, am satisfied with its
disposition. However," she continued, rolling over the shouts. "No more
emphasis will be given to Sharon DeBlass's death than any other.
Including Lola Starr. Any case that comes across my desk is treated
equally, regardless of family or social background. Lola Starr was a
young woman from a simple family. She had no social status, no
influential background, no important friends. Now, after a few short
months in New York, she's dead. Murdered. She deserves the best I can
give her, and that's what she's going to get."
Eve scanned the crowd, zeroed in on Nadine. "You want a story, Ms.
Furst. I want a killer. I figure my wants are more important than yours,
so that's all I have to say."
She turned on her heel, shot Simpson one fulminating look, then strode
away. She could hear him fighting off questions as she headed for her
car.
"Dallas." Nadine, in low-heeled shoes built for style and movement,
raced after her.
"I said I'm finished. Talk to Simpson."
"Hey, if I want to wade through bullshit, I can call the DVC. That was a
pretty impassioned statement. Didn't sound like Simpson's speech
writer."
"I like to talk for myself." Eve reached her car and started to open the
door when Nadine touched her shoulder.
"You like to play it straight. So do I. Look, Dallas, we've got
different methods, but similar goals." Satisfied that she had Eve's
attention, she smiled. When her lips curved, her face turned into a tidy
triangle, dominated by those upslanted green eyes. "I'm not going to
pull out the old public's right to know."
"You'd be wasting your time."
"What I am going to say is we've got two women dead in a week. My
information, and my gut tells me they were both murdered. I don't figure
you're going to confirm that."
"You figure right."
"What I want's a deal. You let me know if I'm on the right track, and I
hold off going out with anything that undermines your investigation.
When you've got something solid and you're ready to move on it, you call
me. I get an exclusive on the arrest -- live."
Almost amused, Dallas leaned against her car. "What are you going to
give me for that, Nadine? A handshake and a smile?"
"For that I'm going to give you everything my source has passed to me.
Everything."
Now she was interested. "Including the source?"
"I couldn't do that if I had to. Point is, I don't. What I do have,
Dallas, is a disc, delivered to me at the studio. On the disc are copies
of police reports, including autopsies on both victims, and a couple of
nasty little videos of two dead women."
"Fuck that. If you had half of what you're telling me, you'd have been
on air in a heartbeat."
"I thought about it," Nadine admitted. "But this is bigger than ratings.
Hell of a lot bigger. I want a story, Dallas, one that's going to cop me
the Pulitzer, the International News Award, and a few other major
prizes."
Her eyes changed, darkened. She wasn't smiling anymore. "But I saw what
someone did to those woman. Maybe the story comes first with me, but
it's not all. I pushed Simpson today, and I pushed you. I liked the way
you pushed back. You can deal with me, or I can go out on my own. Your
choice."
Eve waited. A fleet of taxis cruised by, and a maxibus with its humming
electric motor. "We deal." Before Furst's eyes could light in triumph,
Eve turned on her. "You cross me on this, Nadine, you cross me by so
much as an inch, and I'll bury you."
"Fair enough."
"The Blue Squirrel, twenty minutes."
-=O=-***-=O=-
The afternoon crowd at the club was too bored to do much more than
huddle over their drinks. Eve found a corner table, ordered a Pepsi
Classic and the veggie pasta. Nadine slid in across from her. She chose
the chicken plate with no-oil fries. An indication, Eve thought glumly,
of the wide difference between a cop's salary and a reporter's.
"What have you got?" Eve demanded.
"A picture's worth several hundred thousand words." Nadine took a
personal palm computer out of her bag -- her red leather bag, Eve noted
with envy. She had a weakness for leather and bold colors that she could
rarely indulge.
Nadine popped in the disc, handed Eve the PPC. There was little use in
swearing, Eve decided as she watched her own reports flick on-screen.
Brooding, she let the disc run over Code Five data, through official
medical reports, the ME's findings. She stopped it when the videos
began. There was no need to check out death over a meal.
"Is it accurate?" Nadine asked when Eve passed back the computer.
"It's accurate."
"So the guy's some sort of gun freak, a security expert who patronizes
companions."
"The evidence indicates that profile."
"How far have you narrowed it down?"
"Obviously, not far enough."
Nadine waited while their food was served. "There's got to be a lot of
political pressure on you -- the DeBlass end."
"I don't play politics."
"Your chief does." Nadine took a bite of her chicken. Eve smirked as she
winced. "Christ, this is terrible." Philosophically, she shifted to the
fries. "It's no secret DeBlass is front runner for the Conservative
Party's nomination this summer. Or that the asshole Simpson is shooting
for governor. Given the show this afternoon, it looks like cover-up."
"At this point, publicly, there is no connection between the cases. But
I meant what I said about equality, Nadine. I don't care who Sharon
DeBlass's granddaddy is. I'm going to find the guy who did her."
"And when you do, is he going to be charged with both murders, or only
with Stair's?"
"That's up to the prosecuting attorney. Personally, I don't give a shit,
as long as I hang him."
"That's the difference between you and me, Dallas." Nadine waved a fry,
then bit in. "I want it all. When you get him, and I break the story,
the PA's not going to have a choice. The fallout's going to keep DeBlass
busy for months."
"Now who's playing politics?"
Nadine lifted a shoulder. "Hey, I just report the story, I don't make
it. And this one's got it all. Sex, violence, money. Having a name like
Roarke's involved is going to shoot the ratings through the roof."
Very slowly, Eve swallowed pasta. "There's no evidence linking Roarke to
the crimes."
"He knew DeBlass -- he's a friend of the family. Christ, he owns the
building where Sharon was killed. He's got one of the top weapon
collections in the world, and rumor is he's an expert shot."
Eve picked up her drink. "Neither murder weapon can be traced to him. He
has no connection with Lola Starr."
"Maybe not. But even as a periphery character, Roarke sells news. And
it's no state secret that he and the senator have bumped heads in the
past. The man's got ice in his veins," she added with a shrug. "I don't
imagine he'd have any problem with a couple of cold-blooded killings.
But..." She paused to lift her own drink. "He's also a fanatic about
privacy. It's hard to picture him bragging about the murders by sending
discs to reporters. Somebody does that, they want publicity as much as
they want to get away with the crime."
"An interesting theory." Eve had had enough. A headache was beginning to
brew behind her eyes, and the pasta wasn't going to sit well. She rose,
then leaned over the table close to Nadine. "I'll give you another one,
formulated by a cop. Do you want to know who your source is, Nadine?"
Her eyes glittered. "Damn right."
"Your source is the killer." Eve paused, watching the light go out of
Nadine's eyes. "I'd watch my step if I were you, friend."
Eve strode off, heading around behind the stage. She hoped Mavis was in
the narrow cubicle that served as a dressing room. Just then, she needed
a pal.
Eve found her, huddled under a blanket and sneezing into a tattered
tissue.
"Got a fucking cold." Mavis glared out of puffy eyes and blew like a
bullhorn. "I had to be crazy, wearing nothing but goddamn paint for
twelve hours in goddamn lousy February."
Warily, Eve kept her distance. "Are you taking anything?"
"I'm taking everything." She gestured to a tabletop littered with
over-the-counter drugs and touch-up cosmetics. "It's a fucking
pharmaceutical conspiracy, Eve. We've wiped out just about every known
plague, disease, and infection. Oh, we come up with a new one every now
and again, to give the researchers something to do. But none of these
bright-eyed medical types, none of the medi-computers can figure out how
to cure the common fucking cold. You know why?"
Even couldn't stop the smile. She waited patiently until Mavis finished
another bout of explosive sneezing. "Why?"
"Because the pharmaceutical companies need to sell drugs. You know what
a damn sinus tab costs? You can get anticancer injections cheaper. I
swear it."
"You can go to the doctor, get a prescription to eradicate the
symptoms."
"I got that, too. Damn stuff's only good for eight hours, and I've got a
performance tonight. I have to wait until seven o'clock to take it."
"You should be home in bed."
"They're exterminating the building. Some wise guy said he saw a
cockroach." She sneezed again, then peered owlishly at Eve from under
unpainted lashes. "What are you doing here?"
"I had some business. Look, get some rest. I'll see you later."
"No, stick around. I'm boring myself." She reached for a bottle of some
nasty looking pink liquid and glugged it down. "Hey, nice shirt. You get
a bonus or something?"
"Or something."
"So, sit down. I was going to call you, but I've been too busy hacking
up my lungs. That was Roarke who came in our fine establishment last
night, wasn't it?"
"Yeah, it was Roarke."
"I almost passed out when he walked up to your table. What's the story?
You helping him with some security or something?"
"I slept with him," Eve blurted out, and Mavis responded with a fit of
helpless choking.
"You -- Roarke." Eyes watering, she reached for more tissue. "Jesus,
Eve. Jesus Christ, you never sleep with anybody. And you're telling me
you slept with Roarke?"
"That's not precisely accurate. We didn't sleep."
Mavis let out a moan. "You didn't sleep. How long?"
Eve jerked a shoulder. "I don't know. I stayed the night. Eight, nine
hours, I guess."
"Hours." Mavis shuddered delicately. "And you just kept going. ".
"Pretty much."
"Is he good? Stupid question," she said quickly. "You wouldn't have
stayed otherwise. Wow, Eve, what got into you? Besides his incredibly
energetic cock?"
"I don't know. It was stupid." She dragged her hands through her hair.
"It's never been like that for me before. I didn't think it could --
that I could. It's just never been important, then all of a sudden --
shit."
"Honey." Mavis snaked a hand from under her blanket and took Eve's
tensed fingers. "You've been blocking off normal needs all your life
because of things you barely remember. Somebody just found a way to get
through. You should be happy."
"It puts him in the pilot's seat, doesn't it?"
"Oh, that's bullshit," Mavis interrupted before Eve could go on. "Sex
doesn't have to be a power trip. It sure as hell doesn't have to be a
punishment. It's supposed to be fun. And now and again, if you're lucky,
it gets to be special."
"Maybe." She closed her eyes. "Oh God, Mavis, my career's on the line."
"What are you talking about?"
"Roarke's involved in a case I'm working on."
"Oh shit." She had to break off and blow again. "You're not going to
have to bust him for something, are you?"
"No." Then more emphatically. "No. But if I don't tie it all up fast,
with a nice, tidy bow, I'll be out. I'll be finished. Somebody's using
me, Mavis." Her eyes sharpened again. "They're clearing the path in one
direction, tossing roadblocks in the other. I don't know why. If I don't
find out, it's going to cost me everything I have."
"Then you're going to have to find out, aren't you?" Mavis squeezed
Eve's fingers.
-=O=-***-=O=-
She would find out, Eve promised herself. It was after ten P. M. when
she let herself into the lobby of her building. If she didn't want to
think just then, it wasn't a crime. She'd had to swallow a reprimand
from the chief's office for veering from the official statement during
the press conference.
The commander's unofficial support didn't quite ease the sting.
Once she was inside her apartment she checked her E-mail. She knew it
was foolish, this nagging hope that she'd find a message from Roarke.
There wasn't one. But what she found had her flesh crawling with ice.
The video message was unnamed, sent from a public access. The little
girl. Her dead father. The blood.
Eve recognized the angles of the official department record, the one
taken to document the site of murder and justified termination.
The audio came over it. A playback of her auto-record of the child's
screams. Her beating on the door. The warning, and all the horror that
followed.
"You bastard," she whispered. "You're not going to get to me with this.
You're not going to use that baby to get to me."
But her fingers shook as she ejected the disc. And she jolted when her
intercom rang.
"Who is it?"
"Hennessy from apartment two-D." The pale, earnest face of her
downstairs neighbor flicked on screen. "I'm sorry, Lieutenant Dallas. I
didn't know what to do exactly. We've got trouble down here in the
Finestein apartment."
Eve sighed and let the image of the elderly couple flip into her mind.
Quiet, friendly, television addicts. "What's the problem?"
"Mr. Finestein's dead, lieutenant. Keeled over in the kitchen while his
wife was out playing mah-jongg with friends. I thought maybe you could
come down."
"Yeah." She sighed again. "I'll be there. Don't touch anything, Mr.
Hennessy, and try to keep people out of the way." Out of habit she
called dispatch, reported an unattended death and her presence on the
scene.
-=O=-***-=O=-
She found the apartment quiet, with Mrs. Finestein sitting on the living
room sofa with her tiny white hands folded in her lap. Her hair was
white as well, a snowfall around a face that was beginning to line
despite antiaging creams and treatments.
The old woman smiled gently at Eve.
"I'm so sorry to trouble you, dear."
"It's okay. Are you all right?"
"Yes, I'm fine." Her soft blue eyes stayed on Eve's. "It was our weekly
game, the girls and mine. When I got home, I found him in the kitchen.
He'd been eating a custard pie. Joe was overly fond of sweets."
She looked over at Hennessy, who stood, shifting uncomfortably from foot
to foot. "I didn't know quite what to do, and went knocking on Mr.
Hennessy's door."
"That's fine. If you'd stay with her for a minute please," she said to
Mr. Hennessy.
The apartment was set up similarly to her own. It was meticulously neat,
despite the abundance of knickknacks and memorabilia.
At the kitchen table with its centerpiece of china flowers, Joe
Finestein had lost his life, and considerable dignity.
His head was slumped, half in, half out of a fluffy custard pie. Eve
checked for a pulse, found none. His skin had cooled considerably. At a
guess, she put his death at one-fifteen, give or take a couple of hours.
"Joseph Finestein," she recited dutifully. "Male, approximately one
hundred and fifteen years of age. No signs of forced entry, no signs of
violence. There are no marks on the body."
She leaned closer, looked into Joe's surprised and staring eyes, sniffed
the pie. After finishing her prelim notes, she went back to relieve
Hennessy and interview the deceased's widow.
It was midnight before she was able to crawl into bed. Exhaustion
snatched at her like a cross and greedy child. Oblivion was what she
wanted, what she prayed for.
No dreams, she ordered her subconscious. Take the night off.
Even as she closed her eyes, her bedside 'link blipped.
"Fry in hell, whoever you are," she muttered, then dutifully wrapped the
sheet around her naked shoulders and switched it on.
"Lieutenant." Roarke's image smiled at her. "Did I wake you?"
"You would have in another five minutes." She shifted as the audio
hissed with a bit of space interference. "I guess you got where you were
going all right."
"I did. There was only a slight delay in transport. I thought I might
catch you before you turned in."
"Any particular reason?"
"Because I like looking at you." His smile faded as he stared at her.
"What's wrong, Eve?"
Where do you want me to start? she thought, but shrugged. "Long day --
ending with one of your other tenants here croaking in his late night
snack. He went facedown in a custard pie."
"There are worse ways to go, I suppose." He turned his head, murmured to
someone nearby. Eve saw a woman move briskly behind Roarke and out of
view. "I've just dismissed my assistant," he explained. "I wanted to be
alone when I asked if you're wearing anything under that sheet."
She glanced down, lifted a brow. "Doesn't look like it."
"Why don't you take it off?"
"No way I'm going to satisfy your prurient urges by interspace
transmission, Roarke. Use your imagination."
"I am. I'm imagining what I'm going to do to you the next time I get my
hands on you. I advise you to rest up, lieutenant."
She wanted to smile and couldn't. "Roarke, we're going to have to talk
when you get back."
"We can do that as well. I've always found conversations with you
stimulating, Eve. Get some sleep."
"Yeah, I will. See you, Roarke."
"Think of me, Eve."
He ended the transmission, then sat alone, brooding at the blank
monitor. There'd been something in her eyes, he thought. He knew the
moods of them now, could see beyond the training into the emotion.
The something had been worry.
Turning his chair, he looked out at his view of star splattered space.
She was too far away for him to do any more than wonder about her.
And to ask himself, again, why she mattered so much.
*** CHAPTER THIRTEEN ***
Eve studied the report of the bank search for Sharon DeBlass's deposit
box with frustration. No record, no record, no record.
Nothing in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut. Nothing in East Washington
or Virginia.
She had rented one somewhere, Eve thought. She'd had diaries, and had
kept them tucked away someplace where she could get to them safely and
quickly.
In those diaries, Eve was convinced, was a motive for murder.
Unwilling to tag Fenney for another, broader search, she began one
herself, starting with Pennsylvania, working west and north toward the
borders of Canada and Quebec. In slightly less than twice the time it
would have taken Feeney, she came up blank again.
Then, working south, she struck out with Maryland, and down to Florida.
Her machine began to chug noisily at the work. Eve issued a warning
snarl and a sharp bump to the console. She swore she'd risk the morass
of requisition for a new unit if this one just held out for one more
case.
More from stubbornness than hope, she did a scan of the Midwest, heading
toward the Rockies.
You were too smart, Sharon, Eve thought, as the negative results
flickered by. Too smart for your own good. You wouldn't have gone out of
the country, or off planet where you'd have to go through a customs scan
every trip. Why go far away, someplace where you'd need transport or
travel docs? You might want immediate access.
If your mother knew you kept diaries, maybe other people knew it, too.
You bragged about it because you liked to make people uncomfortable. And
you knew they were safely tucked away.
But close, damn it, Eve thought, closing her eyes to bring the woman she
was coming to know so well into full focus. Close enough so that you
could feel the power, use it, toy with people.
But not so simple that just anyone could track it down, gain access,
spoil the game. You used an alias. Rented your safe box under another
name -- just in case. And if you were smart enough to use an alias,
you'd have used one that was basic, that was familiar. One you wouldn't
have to hassle over.
It was so simple, Eve realized as she keyed in Sharon Barrister. So
simple both she and Feeney had overlooked it.
She hit pay dirt at the Brinkstone International Bank and Finance,
Newark, New Jersey.
Sharon Barrister not only had a safe-deposit box, she had a brokerage
account in the amount of $326,000.85.
Grinning at the screen, she hit her tie-in with the PA. "I need a
warrant," she announced.
-=O=-***-=O=-
Three hours later, she was back in Commander Whitney's office, trying
not to gnash her teeth. "She's got another one somewhere," Eve insisted.
"And the diaries are in it."
"Nobody's stopping you from looking for it, Dallas."
"Fine, that's fine." She whirled around the office as she spoke. Energy
was pumping now, and she wanted action. "What are we going to do about
this?"
She jerked a hand at the file on his desk.
"You've got the disc I took from the safe-deposit box and the print out
I ran. It's right there, commander. A blackmail list: names and amounts.
And Simpson's name is there, in tidy alphabetical order."
"I can read, Dallas." He resisted the urge to rub at the tension
gathering at the base of his skull. "The chief isn't the only person
named Simpson in the city, much less the country."
"It's him." She was fuming and there was no place to put the steam. "We
both know it. There are a number of other interesting names there, too.
A governor, a Catholic bishop, a respected leader of the International
Organization of Women, two high-ranking cops, an ex-Vice President -- "
"I'm aware of the names," Whitney interrupted. "Are you aware of your
position, Dallas, and the consequences?" He held up a hand to silence
her. "A few neat columns of names and numbers don't mean squat. This
data gets out of this office, and it's over. You're finished and so's
the investigation. Is that what you want?"
"No, sir."
"You get the diaries, Dallas, find the connection between Sharon DeBlass
and Lola Starr, and we'll see where we go from there."
"Simpson's dirty." She leaned over the desk. "He knew Sharon DeBlass; he
was being blackmailed. And he's doing everything he can to undermine the
investigation."
"Then we'll have to work around him, won't we?" Whitney put the file in
his lock box. "No one knows what we have in here, Dallas. Not even
Feeney. Is that clear?
"Yes, sir." Knowing she had to be satisfied with that, she started for
the door. "Commander, I'd like to point out that there's a name absent
from that list. Roarke's not on it."
Whitney met her eyes, nodded. "As I said, Dallas. I can read."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Her message light was blinking when she got back to her office. A check
of her E-mail turned up two calls from the medical examiner.
Impatiently, Eve put the hot lead aside and returned the call.
"Finished running the tests on your neighbor, Dallas. You hit the
bull's-eye."
"Oh, hell." She ran her hands over her face. "Send through the results.
I'll take it from here."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Hetta Finestein opened her door with a puff of lavender sachet and the
yeasty smell of homemade bread.
"Lieutenant Dallas."
She smiled her quiet smile and stepped back in invitation. Inside, the
viewing screen was tuned to a chatty talk show where interested members
of the home audience could plug in and shoot their holographic images to
the studio for fuller interaction. The topic seemed to be higher state
salaries for professional mothers. Just now the screen was crowded with
women and children of varying sizes and vocal opinions.
"How nice of you to come by. I've had so many visitors today. It's a
comfort. Would you like some cookies?"
"Sure," Eve agreed, and felt like slime. "Thanks." She sat on the couch,
let her eyes scan the tidy little apartment. "You and Mr. Finestein used
to run a bakery?"
"Oh, yes." Hetta's voice carried from the kitchen, along with her
bustling movements. "Until just a few years ago. We did very well.
People love real cooking, you know. And if I do say so myself, I have
quite a hand with pies and cakes."
"You do a lot of baking here, at home."
Hetta came in with a tray of golden cookies. "One of my pleasures. Too
many people never know the joy of a home-baked cookie. So many children
never experience real sugar. It's hideously expensive, of course, but
worth it."
Eve sampled a cookie and had to agree. "I guess you must have baked the
pie your husband was eating when he died."
"You won't find store-bought or simulations in my house," Hetta said
proudly. "Of course, Joe would gobble everything up almost as soon as I
took it out of the oven. There's not an AutoChef on the market as
reliable as a good baker's instincts and creativity."
"You did bake the pie, Mrs. Finestein."
The woman blinked, lowered her lashes. "Yes, I did."
"Mrs. Finestein, you know what killed your husband?"
"Yes, I do." She smiled softly. "Gluttony. I told him not to eat it. I
specifically told him not to eat it. I said it was for Mrs. Hennessy
across the hall."
"Mrs. Hennessy." That jolted Eve back several mental paces. "You -- "
"Of course, I knew he'd eat it, anyway. He was very selfish that way."
Eve cleared her throat. "Could we, ah, turn the program off?"
"Hmm? Oh, I'm sorry." The flustered hostess tapped her cheeks with her
hands. "That's so rude. I'm so used to letting it play all day I don't
even notice it. Um, program -- no, screen off."
"And the audio," Eve said patiently.
"Of course." Shaking her head as the sound continued to run, Hetta
looked sheepish. "I've just never gotten the hang of the thing since we
switched from remote to voice. Sound off, please. There, that's better,
isn't it."
The woman could bake a poisoned pie, but couldn't control her own
television, Eve thought. It took all kinds. "Mrs. Finestein, I don't
want you to say any more until I've read you your rights. Until you're
sure you understand them. You're under no obligation to make any
statement," Eve began, while Hetta continued to smile gently.
Hetta waited until the recitation was over. "I didn't expect to get away
with it. Not really."
"Get away with what, Mrs. Finestein?"
"Poisoning Joe. Although..." She pursed her lips like a child. "My
grandson's a lawyer -- a very clever boy. I think he'd say that since I
did tell Joe, very specifically told him not to eat that pie, it was
more Joe's doing than mine. In any case," she said and waited patiently.
"Mrs. Finestein, are you telling me that you added synthetic cyanide
compound to a custard pie with the intention of killing your husband?"
"No, dear. I'm telling you I added cyanide compound, with a nice dose of
extra sugar to a pie, and told my husband not to touch it. 'Joe,' I
said, 'Don't you so much as sniff this custard pie. I baked it special,
and it's not for you. You hear me, Joe?'"
Hetta smiled again. "He said he heard me all right, and then just before
I left for my evening with the girls, I told him again, just to be sure.
'I mean it, Joe. You let that pie be.' I expected he would eat it,
though, but that was up to him, wasn't it? Let me tell you about Joe,"
she continued conversationally, and picked up the cookie tray to urge
another on Eve. When Eve hesitated, she laughed gaily. "Oh, dear, these
are quite safe, I promise you. I just gave a dozen to the nice little
boy upstairs."
To prove her point she chose one herself and bit in.
"Now, where was I? Oh, yes, about Joe. He's my second husband, you know.
We've been married fifty years come April. He was a good partner, and
quite a fine baker himself. Some men should never retire. The last few
years he's been very hard to live with. Cross and complaining all the
time, forever finding fault. And never would get flour on his fingers.
Not that he'd pass by an almond tart without gobbling it down."
Because it sounded almost reasonable, Eve waited a moment. "Mrs.
Feinstein, you poisoned him because he ate too much?"
Hetta's rosy cheeks rounded. "It does seem that way. But it goes deeper.
You're so young, dear, and you don't have family, do you?"
"No."
"Families are a source of comfort, and a source of irritation. No one
outside can ever understand what goes on in the privacy of a home. Joe
wasn't an easy man to live with, and I'm afraid, though I'm sorry to
speak ill of the dead, that he had developed bad habits. He'd find a
real glee in upsetting me, in ruining my small pleasures. Why just last
month he deliberately ate half the Tower of Pleasure Cake I'd baked for
the International Betty Crocker cook-off. Then he told me it was dry."
Her voice huffed out in obvious insult. "Can you imagine?"
"No," Eve said weakly. "I can't."
"Well, he did it just to make me mad. It was the way he wielded power,
you see. So I baked the pie, told him not to touch it, and went out to
play mah-jongg with the girls. I wasn't at all surprised when I got back
and found he hadn't listened. He was a glutton, you see." She gestured
with the cookie before delicately finishing the last bite. "That's one
of the seven deadly sins, gluttony. It just seemed right that he would
die by sin. Are you sure you won't have another cookie?"
-=O=-***-=O=-
The world was certainly a mad place, Eve decided, when old women
poisoned custard pies. And, she thought, with Hetta's quiet,
old-fashioned, grandmotherly demeanor, the woman would probably get off.
If they sent her up, she'd get kitchen duty and happily bake pastries
for the other inmates.
Eve filed her report, caught a quick dinner in the eatery, then went
back to work on the still simmering lead.
She'd no more than cleared half the New York banks when the call came
through. "Yeah, Dallas."
Her answer was the image that flowed onto her screen. A dead woman,
arranged all too familiarly on blood-soaked sheets.
THREE OF SIX
She stared at the message imposed over the body and snarled at her
computer.
"Trace address. Now, goddamn it."
After the computer obliged, she tagged Dispatch.
"Dallas, Lieutenant Eve, ID 5347BQ. Priority A. Any available units to
156 West Eighty-ninth, apartment twenty-one nineteen. Do not enter
premises. Repeat, do not enter premises. Detain any and all persons
exiting building. Nobody goes in that apartment, uniform or civilian. My
ETA, ten minutes."
"Copy, Dallas, Lieutenant, Eve." The droid on duty spoke coolly and
without rush. "Units five-oh and three-six available to respond. Will
await your arrival. Priority A. Dispatch, out."
She grabbed her bag and her field kit and was gone.
-=O=-***-=O=-
Eve entered the apartment alone, weapon out and ready. The living room
was tidy, even homey with its thick cushions and fringed area rugs.
There was a book on the sofa and a slight dip in the cushion, indicating
someone had spent some time curled up and reading. Frowning over the
image, she moved to a door beyond.
The small room was set up as an office, the workstation tidy as a pin,
with little hints of personality in the basket of perfumed silk flowers,
the bowl of colorful gumdrops, the shiny white mug decorated with a
glossy red heart.
The workstation faced the window, the window faced the sheer side of
another building, but no one had bothered with a privacy screen. Lining
one wall was a clear shelf holding several more books, a large drop box
for discs, another for E-memos, a small treasure trove of pricey
graphite pencils and recycled legal pads. Cuddled between was a lopsided
baked clay blob that might have been a horse, and had certainly been
made by a child.
Eve turned out of the room and opened the opposing door.
She knew what to expect. Her system didn't revolt. The blood was still
very fresh. With only a small sigh, she holstered her weapon, knowing
she was alone with the dead.
Through the thin protective spray on her hands, she felt the body. It
hadn't had time to cool.
She'd been positioned on the bed, and the weapon had been placed neatly
between her legs.
Eve pegged it as a Ruger P-90, a sleek combat weapon popular as home
defense during the Urban Revolt. Light, compact, and fully automatic.
No silencer this time. But she'd be willing to bet the bedroom was
soundproofed -- and that the killer had known it.
She moved over to the fussily female circular dresser, opened a small
burlap bag that was currently a fashion rage. Inside she found the dead
woman's companion's license.
Pretty woman, she mused. Nice smile, direct eyes, really stunning
coffee-and-cream complexion.
"Georgie Castle," Eve recited for the record. "Female. Age fifty-three.
Licensed companion. Death probably occurred between seven and
seven-forty-five P. M., cause of death gunshot wounds. ME to confirm.
Three visible points of violence: forehead, mid-chest, genitalia. Most
likely induced with antique combat style handgun left at scene. No signs
of struggle, no appearance of forced entry or robbery."
A whisper of a sound behind her had Eve whipping out her weapon.
Crouched, eyes hard and cold, she stared at a fat gray cat who slid into
the room.
"Jesus, where'd you come from?" She let out a long, cleansing breath as
she replaced her weapon. "There's a cat," she added for the record, and
when it blinked at her, flashing one gold and one green eye, she bent
down to scoop it up.
The purring sounded like a small, well oiled engine.
Shifting him, she took out her communicator and called for a homicide
team.
-=O=-***-=O=-
A short time later, Eve was in the kitchen, watching the cat sniff with
delicate disdain at a bowl of food she'd unearthed when she heard the
raised voices outside the apartment door.
When she went to investigate, she found the uniform she'd posted trying
to restrain a frantic and very determined woman.
"What's the problem here, officer?"
"Lieutenant." With obvious relief, the uniform deferred to her superior.
"The civilian demands entry. I was -- "
"Of course I demand entry." The woman's dark red hair, cut in a perfect
wedge, moved and settled around her face with each jerky movement. "This
is my mother's home. I want to know what you're doing here."
"And your mother is?" Eve prompted.
"Mrs. Castle. Mrs. Georgie Castle. Was there a break-in?" Anger turned
to worry as she tried to squeeze past Eve. "Is she all right? Mom?"
"Come with me." Eve took a firm hold of her arm and steered her inside
and into the kitchen. "What's your name?"
"Samantha Bennett."
The cat left his bowl and walked over to curl around and through
Samantha's legs. In a gesture Eve recognized as habitual and automatic,
Samantha bent to give the cat one quick scratch between the ears.
"Where's my mother?" Now that the worry was heading toward fear,
Samantha's voice cracked.
There was no part of the job Eve dreaded more than this, no aspect of
police work that scraped at her heart with such dull blades.
"I'm sorry, Ms. Bennett. "I'm very sorry. Your mother's dead."
Samantha said nothing. Her eyes, the same warm honey tone as her
mother's, unfocused. Before she could fold, Eve eased her into a chair.
"There's a mistake," she managed. "There has to be a mistake. We're
going to the movies. The nine o'clock show. We always go to the movies
on Tuesdays." She stared up at Eve with desperately hopeful eyes. "She
can't be dead. She's barely fifty, and she's healthy. She's strong."
"There's no mistake. I'm sorry."
"There was an accident?" Those eyes filled now, flowed over. "She had an
accident?"
"It wasn't an accident." There was no way but one to get it down. "Your
mother was murdered."
"No, that's impossible." The tears kept flowing. Her voice hitched over
them as she continued to shake her head in denial. "Everyone liked her.
Everyone. No one would hurt her. I want to see her. I want to see her
now."
"I can't let you do that."
"She's my mother." Tears plopped on her lap even as her voice rose. "I
have the right. I want to see my mother."
Eve clamped both hands on Samantha's shoulders, forcing her back into
the chair she'd sprung from. "You're not going to see her. It wouldn't
help her. It wouldn't help you. What you're going to do is answer my
questions, and that's going to help me find who did this to her. Now, do
you want me to get you something? Call anyone for you?"
"No. No." Samantha fumbled in her purse for a tissue. "My husband, my
children. I'll have to tell them. My father. How can I tell them?"
"Where is your father, Samantha?"
"He lives -- he lives in Westchester. They divorced about two years ago.
He kept the house because she wanted to move into the city. She wanted
to write books. She wanted to be a writer."
Eve turned to the filtered water unit on the counter, glugged out a
glass, pressed it on Samantha. "Do you know how your mother made her
living?"
"Yes." Samantha pressed her lips together, crushed the damp tissue in
her chilled fingers. "No one could talk her out of it. She used to laugh
and say it was time she did something shocking, and what wonderful
research it was for her books. My mother -- " Samantha broke off to
drink. "She got married very young. A few years ago, she said she needed
to move on, see what else there was. We couldn't talk her out of that,
either. You could never talk her out of anything."
She began to weep again, covering her face and sobbing silently. Eve
took the barely touched glass, waited, let the first wave of grief and
shock roll. "Was it a difficult divorce? Was your father angry?"
"Baffled. Confused. Sad. He wanted her back, and always said this was
just one of her phases. He -- " The question behind the question
abruptly struck her. She lowered her hands. "He would never hurt her.
Never, never, never. He loved her. Everyone did. You couldn't help it."
"Okay." Eve would deal with that later. "You and your mother were
close?"
"Yes, very close."
"Did she ever talk to you about her clients?"
"Sometimes. It embarrassed me, but she'd find a way to make it all so
outrageously funny. She could do that. Called herself Granny Sex, and
you had to laugh."
"Did she ever mention anyone who made her uneasy?"
"No. She could handle people. It was part of her charm. She was only
going to do this until she was published."
"Did she ever mention the names Sharon DeBlass or Lola Starr?"
"No." Samantha started to drag her hair back, then her hand froze in
midair. "Starr, Lola Starr. I heard, on the news, I heard about her. She
was murdered. Oh God. Oh God." She lowered her head and her hair fell in
wings to shield her face.
"I'm going to have an officer take you home, Samantha."
"I can't leave. I can't leave her."
"Yes, you can. I'm going to take care of her." Eve laid her hands over
Samantha's. "I promise you, I'll take care of her for you. Come on now."
Gently, she helped Samantha to her feet. She wrapped an arm around the
distraught woman's waist as she led her to the door. She wanted her out
before the team had finished in the bedroom. "Is your husband home?"
"Yes. He's home with the children. We have two children. Two years, and
six months. Tony's home with the children."
"Good. What's your address?"
The shock was settling in. Eve hoped the numbness she could read on
Samantha's face would help as the woman recited an upscale address in
Westchester.
"Officer Banks."
"Yes, lieutenant."
"Take Mrs. Bennett home. I'll call for another officer for the door.
Stay with the family as long as you're needed."
"Yes, sir." With compassion, Banks guided Samantha toward the elevators.
"This way, Mrs. Bennett," she murmured.
Samantha leaned drunkenly on Banks. "You'll take care of her?"
Eve met Samantha's ravaged eyes. "I promise."
-=O=-***-=O=-
An hour later, Eve walked into the station house with a cat under her
arm.
"Hey there, lieutenant, caught yourself a cat burglar." The desk
sergeant snorted at his own humor.
"You're a laugh riot, Riley. Commander still here?"
"He's waiting for you. You're to go up as soon as you show." He leaned
forward to scratch the purring cat. "Hooked yourself another homicide?"
"Yeah."
A kissing sound had her glancing over at a leering hunk in a spandex
jumpsuit. The jumpsuit, and the blood trickling at the side of his mouth
were approximately the same color. His accessories were a set of thin,
black restraints that secured one arm to a nearby bench. He rubbed his
crotch with his free hand and winked at her.
"Hey, baby. Got something here for you."
"Tell Commander Whitney I'm on my way," she told Riley as the desk
sergeant rolled his eyes.
Unable to resist, she swung by the bench, leaned close enough to smell
sour vomit. "That was a charming invitation," she murmured, then arched
a brow when the man peeled open his fly patch and wagged his personality
at her. "Oh, look, kitty. A teeny-tiny little penis." She smiled, leaned
just a bit closer. "Better take care of it, asshole, or my pussy here
might mistake it for a teeny-tiny little mouse and bite it off."
It made her feel better to see what there was of his pride and joy
shrivel before he closed his flaps. The good humor lasted almost until
she stepped into the elevator and ordered Commander Whitney's floor.
He was waiting, with Feeney, and the report she'd transmitted directly
from the crime scene. In the nature of the repetition required in police
work, she went over the same ground verbally.
"So that's the cat," Feeney said.
"I didn't have the heart to dump him on the daughter in the state she
was in." Eve shrugged. "And I couldn't very well just leave him there."
With her free hand, she reached into her bag. "Her discs. Everything's
labeled. I scanned through her appointments. The last one of the day was
at six-thirty. John Smith. The weapon." She laid the bagged weapon on
Commander Whitney's desk. "Looks like Ruger P-ninety."
Feeney took a look, nodded. "You're learning, kid."
"I've been boning up."
"Early twenty-first, probably oh eight, oh nine." Feeney stated as he
turned the sealed weapon in his hands. "Prime condition. Serial number's
intact. Won't take long to run it," he added, but moved his shoulders.
"But he's too smart to use a registered."
"Run it," Whitney ordered, and gestured to the auxiliary unit across the
room. "I've got surveillance on your building, Dallas. If he tries to
slip you another disc, we'll spot him."
"If he stays true to form, it'll be within twenty-four hours. He's
holding to the pattern so far, though each of his victims has been a
distinctly different type: with DeBlass you've got the glitz, the
sophistication; with Starr you've got fresh, childlike; and with this
one, we've got comfort, still young but mature.
"We're still interviewing neighbors, and I'm going to hit the family
again, look into the divorce. It looks to me like she took this guy spur
of the moment. She had a standing date with her daughter for Tuesdays.
I'd like Feeney to run her 'link, see if he called her direct. We're not
going to be able to keep this from the media, commander. And they're
going to hit us hard."
"I'm already working on media control."
"It may be hotter than we think." Feeney looked up from the terminal.
His eyes lingered on Eve's, made her blood chill.
"The murder weapon's registered. Purchased through silent auction at
Sotheby's last fall. Roarke."
Eve didn't speak for a moment. Didn't care. "It breaks pattern," she
managed. "And it's stupid. Roarke's not a stupid man."
"Lieutenant -- "
"It's a plant, commander. An obvious one. A silent auction. Any
second-rate hacker can use someone's ID and bid. How was it paid for?"
she snapped at Feeney.
"I'll need to access Sotheby's records after they open tomorrow."
"My bet's cash, electronic transfer. The auction house gets the money,
why should they question it?" Her voice might have been calm, but her
mind was racing. "And the delivery. Odds are electronic pick-up station.
You don't need ID for an EPS; all you do is key in the delivery code."
"Dallas." Whitney spoke patiently. "Pick him up for questioning."
"I can't."
His eyes remained level, cool. "That's a direct order. If you have a
personal problem, save it for personal time."
"I can't pick him up," she repeated. "He's on the FreeStar space
station, a fair distance from the murder scene."
"If he put out that he'd be on FreeStar -- "
"He didn't," she interrupted. "And that's where the killer made a
mistake. Roarke's trip is confidential, with only a few key people
apprised. As far as it's generally known, he's right here in New York."
Commander Whitney inclined his head. "Then we'd better check his
whereabouts. Now."
Her stomach churned as she engaged Whitney's 'link. Within seconds she
was listening to Summerset's prune voice. "Summerset, Lieutenant Dallas.
I have to contact Roarke."
"Roarke is in meetings, lieutenant. He can't be disturbed."
"He told you to put me through, goddamn it. This is police business.
Give me his access number or I'm coming over there and hauling your bony
ass in for obstructing justice."
Summerset's face puckered up. "I am not authorized to give out that
data. I will, however, transfer you. Please stand by."
Eve's palms began to sweat as the screen went to holding blue. She
wondered whose idea it was to pipe in the sugary music. Certainly not
Roarke's. He had too much class.
Oh God, what was she going to do if he wasn't where he said he'd be?
The blue screen contracted into a pinpoint, then opened up. There was
Roarke, a trace of impatience in his eyes, a half smile on his mouth.
"Lieutenant. You've caught me at a bad time. Can I get back to you?"
"No." She could see from the comer of her eye that Feeney was already
tracing the transmission. "I need to verify your whereabouts."
"My whereabouts?" His brow cocked. He must have seen something in her
face, though Eve would have sworn she kept it as smooth and unreadable
as stone. "What's wrong, Eve? What's happened?"
"Your whereabouts, Roarke. Please verify."
He remained silent, studying her. Eve heard someone speak to him. He
flicked away the interruption with a dismissing gesture. "I'm in the
middle of a meeting in the presidential chamber of Station FreeStar, the
location of which is Quadrant Six, Slip Alpha. Scan," he ordered, and
the intergalactic 'link circled the room. A dozen men and women sat at a
wide, circular table.
The long, bowed port showed a scatter of stars and the perfect
blue-green globe of Earth.
"Location of transmission confirmed," Feeney said in an undertone. "He's
just where he says he is."
"Roarke, please switch to privacy mode."
Without a flicker of expression, he lifted a headset. "Yes, lieutenant?"
"A weapon registered to you was confiscated at a homicide. I have to ask
you to come in for questioning at the first possible opportunity. You're
free to bring your attorney. I'm advising you to bring your attorney,"
she added, hoping he understood the emphasis. "If you don't comply
within forty-eight hours, the Station Guard will escort you back
on-planet. Do you understand your rights and obligations in this
matter?"
"Certainly. I'll make arrangements. Good-bye, lieutenant."
The screen went blank.
*** CHAPTER FOURTEEN ***
More shaken than she cared to admit, Eve entered Dr. Mira's office the
following morning. At Mira's invitation, she took a seat, folded her
hands to keep them from any telltale restless movements.
"Have you had time to profile?"
"You requested urgent status." Indeed, Mira had been up most of the
night, reading reports, using her training and her psych diagnostics to
compose a profile. "I'd like more time to work on this, but I can give
you an overall view."
"Okay." Eve leaned forward. "What is he?"
"He is almost certainly correct. Traditionally, crimes of this nature
are not committed within the same sex. He's a man, above average
intelligence, with sociopathic and voyeuristic tendencies. He's bold,
but not a risk taker, though he probably sees himself as such."
In her graceful way, she linked her fingers together, crossed her legs.
"His crimes are well thought out. Whether or not he has sex with his
victims is incidental. His pleasure and satisfaction comes from the
selection, the preparation, and the execution."
"Why prostitutes?"
"Control. Sex is control. Death is control. And he needs to control
people, situations. The first murder was probably impulse."
"Why?"
"He was caught off guard by the violence, his own capability of
violence. He had a reaction, a jerk of a movement, the indrawn breath,
the shaky exhale. He recovered, systematically protected himself. He
doesn't want to be caught, but he wants -- needs to be admired, feared.
Hence the recordings.
"He uses collector's weapons," she continued in that same moderate
voice, "a status symbol of money. Again, power and control. He leaves
them behind so that they can show he's unique among men. He appreciates
the overt violence of guns and the impersonal aspect of them. The kill
from a comfortable distance, the aloofness of that. He's decided on the
number he'll kill to show that he's organized, precise. Ambitious."
"Could he have had the six women in mind from the beginning? Six
targets?"
"The only verified connection between the three victims is their
profession," Mira began, and saw that Eve had already reached the same
conclusion, but wanted it confirmed. "He had the profession in mind. It
would be my opinion the women are incidental. It's likely he holds a
high-level position, certainly a responsible one. If he has a sexual or
marriage partner, he or she is subservient. His opinion of women is low.
He debases and humiliates them after death to show his disgust and his
superiority. He doesn't perceive these as crimes but as moments of
personal power, personal statement.
"The prostitute, male or female, remains a profession of low esteem in
many minds. Women are not his equals; a prostitute is beneath his
contempt, even when he uses her for his own release. He enjoys his work,
lieutenant. He enjoys it very much."
"Is it work, doctor, or a mission?"
"He has no mission. Only ambitions. It isn't religion, not a moral
statement, not a societal stance."
"No, the statement's personal, the stance is control."
"I would agree," Mira said, pleased with the straightforward workings of
Eve's mind. "It is, to him, an interest, a new and somewhat fascinating
hobby that he has discovered himself adept at. He's dangerous,
lieutenant, not simply because he has no conscience, but because he's
good at what he does. And his success feeds him."
"He'll stop at six," Eve murmured. "With this method. But he'll find
another creative way to kill. He's too vain to go back on his word to
the authorities, but he's enjoying his hobby too much to give it up."
Mira angled her head. "One would think, lieutenant, that you've already
read my report. I believe you're coming to understand him very well."
Eve nodded. "Yeah, piece by piece." There was a question she had to ask,
one she had suffered over through a long, sleepless night. "To protect
himself, to make the game more difficult, would he hire someone, pay
someone to kill a victim he'd chosen while he was alibied?"
"No." Mira's eyes softened with compassion as she watched Eve's close in
relief. "In my opinion, he needs to be there. To watch, to record, most
of all to experience. He doesn't want vicarious satisfaction. Nor does
he believe you'll outsmart him. He enjoys watching you sweat,
lieutenant. He's an observer of people, and I believe he focused on you
the moment he learned you were primary. He studies you, and knows you
care. He sees that as a weakness to exploit, and does so by presenting
you with the murders -- not at your place of work, but where you live."
"He sent the last disc. It was in my morning mail drop, posted from a
midtown slot about an hour after the murder. We had my building under
surveillance. He'd have figured that and found a way to get around it."
"He's a born button pusher." Mira handed Eve a disc and a hard copy of
the initial profile. "He is an intelligent and a mature man. Mature
enough to restrain his impulses, a man of means and imagination. He
would rarely show his emotions, rarely have them to show. It's an
intellect with him -- and, as you said, vanity."
"I appreciate you getting this for me so quickly."
"Eve," Mira said before Eve could rise. "There's an addendum. The weapon
that was left at the last murder. The man who committed these crimes
would not make so foolish a mistake to leave a traceable weapon behind.
The diagnostic rejected it at a probability of ninety-three point four
percent."
"It was there," Eve said flatly. "I bagged it myself."
"As I'm sure he wanted you to. It's likely he enjoyed implicating
someone else to further bog the system, twist the investigation process.
And it's likely he chose this particular person to upset you, to
distract you, even to hurt you. I've included that in the profile.
Personally, I want to tell you that I'm concerned about his interest in
you."
"I'm going to see to it that he's a hell of a lot more concerned with my
interest in him. Thank you, doctor."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Eve went directly to Whitney's office to deliver the psychiatric
profile. With any luck at all, Feeney would have verified her suspicions
about the purchase and delivery of the murder weapon.
If she was right, and she had to believe she was, that and the weight of
Mira's profile would clear Roarke.
She already knew, by the way Roarke had looked at her -- through her --
during their last transmission, that her professional duties had
destroyed whatever personal bridge they'd been building.
She was only more sure of it when she was cleared into the office, and
found Roarke there.
He must have used a private transport, she decided. It would have been
impossible for him to have arrived so quickly through normal channels.
He only inclined his head, said nothing as she crossed to give Commander
Whitney the disc and file.
"Dr. Mira's profile."
"Thank you, lieutenant." His eyes shifted to Roarke's. "Lieutenant
Dallas will show you to an interview area. We appreciate your
cooperation."
Still, he said nothing, only rose and waited for Eve to go to the door.
"You're entitled to have your attorney present," she began as she called
for an elevator.
"I'm aware of that. Am I being charged with any crime, lieutenant?"
"No." Cursing him, she stepped inside, requested Area B. "This is just
standard procedure." His silence continued until she wanted to scream.
"Damn it, I don't have a choice here."
"Don't you?" he murmured and preceded her out of the car when the doors
opened.
"This is my job." The doors of the interview area whisked open, then
snapped closed behind them. The surveillance cameras any petty thief
would know were hidden in every wall engaged automatically. Eve took a
seat at a small table and waited for him to sit across from her.
"These proceedings are being recorded. Do you understand?"
"Yes."
"Lieutenant Dallas, ID 5347BQ, interviewer. Subject, Roarke. Initial
date and time. Subject has waived the presence of an attorney. Is that
correct?"
"Yes, the subject has waived the presence of an attorney."
"Are you acquainted with a licensed companion, Georgie Castle?"
"No."
"Have you been to 156 West Eighty-ninth Street?"
"No, I don't believe I have."
"Do you own a Ruger P-ninety, automatic combat weapon, circa 2005?"
"It's likely that I own a weapon of that make and era. I'd have to check
to be certain. But for argument's sake, we'll say I do."
"When did you purchase said weapon?"
"Again, I'd have to check." He never blinked, never took his eyes from
hers. "I have an extensive collection, and don't carry all the details
of it in my head or in my pocket log."
"Did you purchase said weapon at Sotheby's?"
"It's possible. I often add to my collection through auctions."
"Silent auctions?"
"Occasionally."
Her stomach, already knotted, began to roll. "Did you add to your
collection with the aforesaid weapon at a silent auction at Sotheby's on
October second of last year?"
Roarke slipped his log out of his pocket, skimmed back to the date. "No.
I don't have a record of that. It seems I was in Tokyo on that date,
engaged in meetings. You can verify that easily."
Damn you, damn you, she thought. You know that's no answer.
"Representatives are often used in auctions."
"They are." Watching her dispassionately, he tucked the log away again.
"If you check with Sotheby's, you'll be told that I don't use
representatives. When I decide to acquire something, it's because I've
seen it -- with my own eyes. Gauged its worth to me. If and when I
decide to bid, I do so personally. In a silent auction, I would either
attend, or participate by 'link."
"Isn't it traditional to use a sealed electronic bid, or a
representative authorized to go to a certain ceiling?"
"I don't worry about traditions overmuch. The fact is, I could change my
mind as to whether I want something. For one reason or another, it could
lose its appeal."
She understood the underlying meaning of his statement, tried to accept
that he was done with her. "The aforesaid weapon, registered in your
name and purchased through silent auction at Sotheby's in October of
last year was used to murder Georgie Castle at approximately
seven-thirty last evening."
"You and I both know I wasn't in New York at seven-thirty last evening."
His gaze skimmed over her face. "You traced the transmission, didn't
you?"
She didn't answer. Couldn't. "Your weapon was found at the scene."
"Have we established it was mine?"
"Who has access to your collection?"
"I do. Only I do."
"Your staff?"
"No. If you recall, lieutenant, my display cases are locked. Only I have
the code."
"Codes can be broken."
"Unlikely, but possible," he agreed. "However, unless my palm print is
used for entry, any case that is opened by any means triggers an alarm."
Goddamn it, give me an opening. Couldn't he see she was pleading with
him, trying to save him? "Alarm's can be bypassed."
"True. When any case is opened without my authorization, all entry to
the room is sealed off. There's no way to get out, and security is
notified simultaneously. I can assure you, lieutenant, it's quite
foolproof. I believe in protecting what's mine."
She glanced up as Feeney came in. He jerked his head, and she rose.
"Excuse me."
When the doors shut behind them, he dipped his hands into his pockets.
"You called it, Dallas. Electronic bid, cash deal, delivered to an EPS.
The head snoot at Sotheby's claims this was an unusual procedure for
Roarke. He always attends in person, or by direct 'link. Never used this
line before in the fifteen years or so he's dealt with them."
She allowed herself one satisfied breath. "That checks with Roarke's
statement. What else?"
"Ran an undercheck on the registration. The Ruger only appeared on the
books in Roarke's name a week ago. No way in hell we can pin it on him.
The commander says to spring him."
She couldn't afford to be relieved, not yet, and only nodded. "Thanks,
Feeney."
She slipped back inside. "You're free to go."
He stood as she stepped backward through the open door. "Just like
that?"
"We have no reason, at this time, to detain or inconvenience you any
further."
"Inconvenience?" He walked toward her until the doors snicked shut at
his back. "Is that what you call this? An inconvenience?"
He was, she told herself entitled to his anger, to his bitterness. She
was obliged to do her job. "Three women are dead. Every possibility has
to be explored."
"And I'm just one of your possibilities?" He reached out, the sudden
violent movement of his hands closing over her shirt, surprising her.
"Is that what it comes down to between us?"
"I'm a cop. I can't afford to overlook anything, to assume anything."
"To trust," he interrupted. "Anything. Or anyone. If it had leaned a
little the other way, would you have locked me up? Would you have put me
in a cage, Eve?"
"Back off." Eyes blazing, Feeney strode down the corridor. "Back fucking
off."
"Leave us alone, Feeney."
"Hell I will." Ignoring Eve, he shoved against Roarke. "Don't you come
down on her, big shot. She went to bat for you. And the way things
stand, it could have cost her the job. Simpson's already prepping her as
sacrificial lamb because she was dumb enough to sleep with you."
"Shut up, Feeney."
"Goddamn it, Dallas."
"I said shut up." Calm again, detached, she looked at Roarke. "The
department appreciates your cooperation," she said to Roarke and, prying
his hand from her shirt, turned and hurried off.
"What the hell did you mean by that?" Roarke demanded.
Feeney only snorted. "I got better things to do than waste my time on
you."
Roarke backed him into a wall. "You're going to be free to book me for
assaulting an officer in about two breaths, Feeney. Tell me what you
meant about Simpson?"
"You want to know, big shot?" Feeney looked around for a place of
comparative privacy, jerked a head toward the door of a men's room.
"Come into my office, and I'll tell you."
-=O=-***-=O=-
She had the cat for company. Eve was already regretting the fact that
she'd have to turn the useless, overweight feline over to Georgie's
family. She should have done so already, but found solace in even a
pitiful furball's worth of companionship.
Nonetheless, she was nothing but irritated by the beep of her intercom.
Human company was not welcomed. Particularly, as she checked her viewing
screen, Roarke.
She was raw enough to take the coward's way. Leaving the summons
unanswered, she walked back to the couch, curled up with the cat. If
she'd had a blanket handy, she'd have pulled it over her head.
The sound of her locks disengaging moments later had her springing to
her feet. "You son of a bitch," she said when Roarke walked in. "You
cross too many lines."
He simply tucked his master code back in his pocket. "Why didn't you
tell me?"
"I don't want to see you." She hated that her voice sounded desperate
rather than angry. "Take a hint."
"I don't like being used to hurt you."
"You do fine on your own."
"You expect me to have no reaction when you accuse me of murder? When
you believe it?"
"I never believed it." It came out in a hiss, a passionate whisper. "I
never believed it," she repeated. "But I put my personal feelings aside
and did my job. Now get out."
She headed for the door. When he grabbed her, she swung out, fast and
hard. He didn't even attempt to block the blow. Calmly he wiped the
blood from his mouth with the back of his hand while she stood rigid,
her breathing fast and audible.
"Go ahead," he invited. "Take another shot. You needn't worry. I don't
hit women -- or murder them."
"Just leave me alone." She turned away, gripped the back of the sofa
where the cat sat eyeing her coolly. The emotions were welling up,
threatening to fill her chest to bursting. "You're not going to make me
feel guilty for doing what I had to do."
"You sliced me in two, Eve." It infuriated him anew to admit it, to know
she could so easily devastate him. "Couldn't you have told me you
believe in me?"
"No." She squeezed her eyes tight. "God, don't you realize it would have
been worse if I had? If Whitney couldn't believe I'd be objective, if
Simpson even got a whiff that I showed you any degree of preferential
treatment, it would have been worse. I couldn't have moved on the psych
profile so fast. Couldn't have put Feeney on a priority basis to check
the trail of the weapon to eliminate probable cause."
"I hadn't thought of that," he said quietly. "I hadn't thought." When he
laid a hand on her shoulder, she shrugged it off, turned on him with
blazing eyes.
"Goddamn it, I told you to bring an attorney. I told you. If Feeney
hadn't hit the right buttons, they could have held you. You're only out
because he did, and the profile didn't fit."
He touched her again; she jerked back again. "It appears I didn't need
an attorney. All I needed was you."
"It doesn't matter." She battled control back into place. "It's done.
The fact that you have an unassailable alibi for the time of the murder,
and that the gun was an obvious plant shifts the focus away from you."
She felt sick, unbearably tired. "It may not eliminate you completely,
but Dr. Mira's profiles are gold. Nobody overturns her diagnostics.
She's eliminated you, and that carries a lot of weight with the
department and the PA."
"I wasn't worried about the department or the PA."
"You should have been."
"It seems you've worried enough for me. I'm very sorry."
"Forget it."
"I've seen shadows under your eyes too often since I've known you." He
traced a thumb along them. "I don't like being responsible for the ones
I see now."
"I'm responsible for myself."
"And I had nothing to do with putting your job in jeopardy?"
Damn Feeney, she thought viciously. "I make my own decisions. I pay my
own consequences."
Not this time, he thought. Not alone. "The night after we'd been
together, I called. I could see you were worried, but you brushed it
off. Feeney told me exactly why you were worried that night. Your angry
friend wanted to pay me back for making you unhappy. He did."
"Feeney had no right -- "
"Perhaps not. He wouldn't have had to if you'd confided in me." He took
both her arms to stop her quick movement. "Don't turn away from me," he
warned, his voice low. "You're good at shutting people out, Eve. But it
won't work with me."
"What did you expect, that I'd come crying to you? 'Roarke, you seduced
me, and now I'm in trouble. Help.' The hell with that, you didn't
seduce me. I went to bed with you because I wanted to. Wanted to enough
that I didn't think about ethics. I got slammed for it, and I'm handling
it. I don't need help."
"Don't want it, certainly."
"Don't need it." She wouldn't humiliate herself by struggling away now,
but stood passive. "The commander's satisfied that you're not involved
in the murders. You're clear, so other than what the department will
officially term an error in judgment on my part, so am I. If I'd been
wrong about you, it'd be different."
"If you'd been wrong about me, it would have cost you your badge."
"Yes. I'd have lost my badge. I'd have lost everything. I'd have
deserved to. But it didn't happen, so it's over. Move on."
"Do you really think I'm going to walk away?"
It weakened her, that soft, gentle lilt that came into his voice. "I
can't afford you, Roarke. I can't afford to get involved."
He stepped forward, laid his hands on the back of the couch, caged her
in. "I can't afford you, either. It doesn't seem to matter."
"Look -- "
"I'm sorry I hurt you," he murmured. "Very sorry that I didn't trust
you, then accused you of not trusting me."
"I didn't expect you to think any differently. To act any differently."
That stung more than the blow to the face. "No. I'm sorry for that, too.
You risked a great deal for me. Why?"
There were no easy answers. "I believed you."
He pressed his lips to her brow. "Thank you."
"It was a judgment call," she began, letting out a shaky breath when he touched his mouth to her cheek.
"I'm going to stay with you tonight." Then to her temple. "I'm going to see that you sleep."
"Sex as a sedative?"
He frowned, but brushed his lips lightly over hers. "If you like." He
lifted her off her feet, flustering her. "Let's see if we can find the
right dosage."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Later, with the lights still on low, he watched her. She slept facedown,
a limp sprawl of exhaustion. To please himself, he stroked a hand down
her back -- smooth skin, slim bones, lean muscle. She didn't stir.
Experimentally, he let his fingers comb through her hair. Thick as mink
pelt, shades of aged brandy and old gold, poorly cut. It made him smile
as he traced those fingers over her lips. Full, firm, fiercely
responsive.
However surprised he was that he'd been able to take her beyond what
she'd experienced before, he was overwhelmed by the knowledge that had,
unknowingly, taken him.
How much farther, he wondered, would they go?
He knew it had ripped him when he'd believed she'd thought him guilty.
The sense of betrayal, disillusionment was huge, weakening, and
something he hadn't felt in too many years to count.
She'd taken him back to a point of vulnerability he'd escaped from. She
could hurt him. They could hurt each other. That was something he would
have to consider carefully.
But at the moment, the pressing question was who wanted to hurt them
both. And why.
He was still gnawing at the problem when he took her hand, linked
fingers, and let himself slide into sleep with her.
*** CHAPTER FIFTEEN ***
He was gone when she woke. It was better that way. Mornings after
carried a casual intimacy that made her nervous. She was already more
involved with him than she had ever been with anyone. That click between
them had the potential, she knew, to reverberate through the rest of her
life.
She took a quick shower, bundled into a robe, then headed into the
kitchen. There was Roarke, in trousers and a shirt he'd yet to button,
scanning the morning paper on her monitor.
Looking, she realized with a quick tug-of-war of delight and dismay,
very much at home.
"What are you doing?"
"Hmmm?" He glanced up, reached behind him to open the AutoChef. "Making
you coffee."
"Making me coffee?"
"I heard you moving around." He took the cups out, carried them to where
she was still hovering in the doorway. "You don't do that often enough."
"Move around?"
"No." He chuckled and touched his lips to hers. "Smile at me. Just smile
at me."
Was she smiling? She hadn't realized. "I thought you'd left." She walked
around the small table, glanced at the monitor. The stock reports.
Naturally. "You must have gotten up early."
"I had some calls to make." He watched her, enjoying the way she raked
her fingers through her damp hair. A nervous habit he was certain she
was unaware of. He picked up the portalink he'd left on the table,
slipped it back into his pocket. "I had a conference call scheduled with
the station -- five A. M. our time."
"Oh." She sipped her coffee, wondering how she had ever lived without
the zip of the real thing in the morning. "I know those meetings were
important. I'm sorry."
"We'd managed to hammer down most of the details. I can handle the rest
from here."
"You're not going back?"
"No."
She turned to the AutoChef, fiddled with her rather limited menu. "I'm
out of most everything. Want a bagel or something?"
"Eve." Roarke set his coffee down, laid his hands on her shoulders. "Why
don't you want me to know you're pleased I'm staying?"
"Your alibi holds. It's none of my business if you -- " She broke off
when he turned her to face him. He was angry. She could see it in his
eyes and prepared for the argument to come. She hadn't prepared for the
kiss, the way his mouth closed firmly over hers, the way her heart
rolled over slow and dreamy in her chest.
So she let herself be held, let her head nestle in the curve of his
shoulder. "I don't know how to handle this," she murmured. "I don't have
any precedent here. I need rules, Roarke. Solid rules."
"I'm not a case you need to solve."
"I don't know what you are. But I know this is going too fast. It
shouldn't have even started. I shouldn't have been able to get started
with you."
He drew her back so that he could study her face. "Why?"
"It's complicated. I have to get dressed. I have to get to work."
"Give me something." His fingers tightened on her shoulders. "I don't
know what you are, either."
"I'm a cop," she blurted out. "That's all I am. I'm thirty years old and
I've only been close to two people in my entire life. And even with
them, it's easy to hold back."
"Hold back what?"
"Letting it matter too much. If it matters too much, it can grind you
down until you're nothing. I've been nothing. I can't be nothing ever
again."
"Who hurt you?"
"I don't know." But she did. She did. "I don't remember, and I don't
want to remember. I've been a victim, and once you have, you need to do
whatever it takes not to be one again. That's all I was before I got
into the academy. A victim, with other people pushing the buttons,
making the decisions, pushing me one way, pulling me another."
"Is that what you think I'm doing?"
"That's what's happening."
There were questions he needed to ask. Questions, he could see by her
face, that needed to wait. Perhaps it was time he took a risk. He dipped
a hand into his pocket, drew out what he carried there.
Baffled, Eve stared down at the simple gray button in his palm. "That's
off my suit."
"Yes. Not a particularly flattering suit -- you need stronger colors. I
found it in my limo. I meant to give it back to you."
"Oh." But when she reached out, he closed his fingers over the button.
"A very smooth lie." Amused, he laughed at himself. "I had no intention
of giving it back to you."
"You got a button fetish, Roarke?"
"I've been carrying this around like a schoolboy carries a lock of his
sweetheart's hair."
Her eyes came back to his, and something sweet moved through her.
Sweeter yet as she could see he was embarrassed. "That's weird."
"I thought so, myself." But he slipped the button back in his pocket.
"Do you know what else I think, Eve?"
"I don't have a clue."
"I think I'm in love with you."
She felt the color drain out of her cheeks, felt her muscles go lax,
even as her heart shot like a missile to her throat. "That's..."
"Yes, difficult to come up with the proper word, isn't it?" He slid his
hands down her back, up again, but brought her no closer. "I've been
giving it a lot of thought and haven't hit on one myself. But I should
circle back to my point."
She moistened her lips. "There's a point?"
"A very interesting and important point. I'm every bit as much in your
hands as you are in mine. Every bit as uncomfortable, though perhaps not
as resistant, to finding myself in that position. I'm not going to let
you walk away until we've figured out what to do about it."
"It, ah, complicates things."
"Outrageously," he agreed.
"Roarke, we don't even know each other. Outside of the bedroom."
"Yes, we do. Two lost souls. We've both turned away from something and
made ourselves something else. It's hardly a wonder that fate decided to
throw a curve into what had been, for both of us, a straight path. We
have to decide how far we want to follow the curve."
"I have to concentrate on the investigation. It has to be my priority."
"I understand. But you're entitled to a personal life."
"My personal life, this part of it, grew out of the investigation. And
the killer's making it more personal. Planting that gun so that
suspicion would swing toward you was a direct response to my involvement
with you. He's focused on me."
Roarke's hand jerked up to the lapels of her robe. "What do you mean?"
Rules, she reminded herself. There were rules. And she was about to
break them. "I'll tell you what I can while I'm getting dressed."
Eve went to the bedroom with the cat sliding and weaving in front of
her. "Do you remember that night you were here when I got home? The
package that you'd found on the floor?"
"Yes, it upset you."
With a half laugh she peeled out of her robe. "I've got a rep for having
the best poker face in the station."
"I made my first million gambling."
"Really?" She tugged a sweater over her head, reminded herself not to be
distracted. "It was a recording of Lola Stair's murder. He sent me
Sharon DeBlass's as well."
A cold lance of fear stabbed. "He was in your apartment."
She was busy discovering she had no clean underwear and didn't notice
the iced edge of his voice. "Maybe, maybe not. I think not. No signs of
forced entry. He could have shoved it under the door. That's what he did
the first time. He mailed Georgie's disc. We had the building under
surveillance."
Resigned, she pulled slacks over bare skin. "He either knew it or
smelled it. But he saw I got the discs, all three of them. He knew I was
primary almost before I did."
She searched for socks, got lucky, and found a pair that matched. "He
called me, transmitted the video of Georgie Castle's murder scene
minutes after he'd whacked her." She sat on the edge of the bed, pulled
on the socks. "He planted a weapon, made sure it was traceable. To you.
Not to knock how inconvenient a murder charge would have made your life,
Roarke, if I hadn't had the commander behind me on this, I'd have been
off the case, and out of the department in a blink. He knows what goes
on inside Cop Central. He knows what's going on in my life."
"Fortunately, he didn't know that I wasn't even on the planet."
"That was a break for both of us." She located her boots, tugged them
on. "But it's not going to stop him." She rose, picked up her holster.
"He's still going to try to get to me, and you're his best bet."
Roarke watched her automatically check her laser before strapping it on.
"Why you?"
"He doesn't have a high opinion of women. I'd have to say it burns his
ass to have a female heading the investigation. It lowers his status."
She shrugged, raked her fingers through her hair to whip it into place.
"At least that's the shrink's opinion."
Philosophically, she pried the cat free when he started to climb up her
leg, gave him a light toss to the bed where he turned his butt in her
direction and began to wash.
"And is it the shrink's opinion that he could try to eliminate you by
more direct means?"
"I don't fit the pattern."
Fighting back the slippery edge of fear, Roarke fisted his hands in his
pockets. "And if he breaks the pattern?"
"I can handle myself."
"It's worth risking your life for three women who are already dead?"
"Yes." She heard the fury pulsing in his voice and faced it. "It's worth
risking my life to find justice for three women who are already dead,
and to try to prevent three more from dying. He's only half through.
He's left a note under each body. He's wanted us to know, right from the
start that he had a plan. And he's daring us to stop him. One of six,
two of six, three of six. I'll do whatever it takes to keep him from
having the fourth."
"Full-out guts. That's what I first admired about you. Now it terrifies
me."
For the first time she moved to him, laid a hand on his cheek. Almost as
soon as she had, she dropped her hand and stepped back again,
embarrassed. "I've been a cop for ten years, Roarke, never had more than
some bumps and bruises. Don't worry about it."
"I think you're going to have to get used to having someone worry about
you, Eve."
That hadn't been the plan. She walked out of the bedroom to get her
jacket and bag. "I'm telling you this so that you'll understand what I'm
up against. Why I can't split my energies and start analyzing what's
between us."
"There'll always be cases."
"I hope to God there won't always be cases like this one. This isn't
murder for gain, or out of passion. It isn't desperate or frenzied. It's
cold and calculated. It's..."
"Evil?"
"Yes." It relieved her that he'd said it first. It didn't sound so
foolish. "Whatever we've done in genetic engineering, in vitro, with
social programs, we still can't control basic human failings: violence,
lust, envy."
"The seven deadly sins."
She thought of the old woman and her poisoned pie. "Yeah. I've got to
go."
"Will you come to me when you're off duty tonight?"
"I don't know when I'll log out. It could be -- "
"Will you come?"
"Yeah."
Then he smiled, and she knew he was waiting for her to make the move.
She was sure he knew just how hard it was for her to cross to him, to
bring her lips up, to press them, however casually, to his.
"See you."
"Eve. You should have gloves."
She decoded the door, tossed a quick smile over her shoulder. "I know --
but I just keep losing them."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Her up mood lasted until she walked into her office and found DeBlass
and his aide waiting for her.
Deliberately, DeBlass stared at his gold watch. "More banker's hours
than police hours, Lieutenant Dallas."
She knew damn well it was only minutes past eight, but shrugged out of
her jacket. "Yeah, it's a pretty lush life around here. Is there
something I can do for you, senator?"
"I'm aware there's been yet another murder. I'm obviously dissatisfied
with your progress. However, I'm here for damage control. I do not want
my granddaughter's name linked with the two other victims."
"You want Simpson for that, or his press secretary."
"Don't smirk at me, young woman." DeBlass leaned forward. "My
granddaughter is dead. Nothing can change that. But I will not have the
DeBlass name sullied, muddied by the death of two common whores."
"You seem to have a low opinion of women, senator." She was careful not
to smirk this time, but watched him, and considered.
"On the contrary; I revere them. Which is why those who sell themselves,
those who disregard morality and common decency, revolt me."
"Including your granddaughter?"
He lurched out of his chair, his face purpling, eyes bulging. Eve was
quite certain he would have struck her if Rockman hadn't stepped between
them.
"Senator, the lieutenant is only baiting you. Don't give her the
satisfaction."
"You will not besmirch my family." DeBlass was breathing fast, and Eve
wondered if he had any history of heart trouble. "My granddaughter paid
dearly for her sins, and I will not see the rest of my loved ones
dragged down into public ridicule. And I will not tolerate your vile
insinuations."
"Just trying to get my facts straight." It was fascinating watching him
battle for composure. He was having a rough time of it, she noted, hands
shaking, chest heaving. "I'm trying to find the man who killed Sharon,
senator. I assume that's also high on your agenda."
"Finding him won't get her back." He sat again, obviously exhausted by
the outburst. "What's important now is to protect what's left. To do
that, Sharon must be segregated from the other women."
She didn't like his opinion, but neither did she care for his color. It
was still alarmingly high. "Can I get you some water, Senator DeBlass?"
He nodded, waved at her. Eve slipped into the corridor and dispensed a
cup of bottled water. When she came back, his breathing was more
regular, his hands a bit steadier.
"The senator has been overtaxing himself," Rockman put in. "His Morals
Bill goes before the House tomorrow. The pressure of this family tragedy
is a great weight."
"I appreciate that. I'm doing everything I can to close the case." She
tilted her head. "Political pressure is also a great weight on an
investigation. I don't care to be monitored on my personal time."
Rockman gave her a mild smile. "I'm sorry. Could you qualify that?"
"I was monitored, and my personal relationship with a civilian reported
to Chief Simpson. It's no secret that Simpson and the senator are
tight."
"The senator and Chief Simpson have a personal and a political
allegiance," Rockman agreed. "However, it would hardly be ethical, or in
the senator's best interest, to monitor a member of the police force. I
assure you, lieutenant, Senator DeBlass has been much too involved with
his own grief and his responsibilities to the country to worry about
your... personal relationships. It has come to our attention, however,
through Chief Simpson, that you've had a number of liaisons with
Roarke."
"An amoral opportunist." The senator set his cup aside with a snap. "A
man who would stop at nothing to add to his own power."
"A man," Eve added, "who has been cleared of any connection with this
investigation."
"Money buys immunity," DeBlass said in disgust.
"Not in this office. I'm sure you'll request the report from the
commander. In the meantime, whether or not it assuages your grief, I
intend to find the man who killed your granddaughter."
"I suppose I should commend your dedication." DeBlass rose. "See that
your dedication doesn't jeopardize my family's reputation."
"What changed your mind, senator?" Eve wondered. "The first time we
spoke, you threatened to have my job if I didn't bring Sharon's murderer
to justice, and quickly."
"She's buried," was all he said, and strode out.
"Lieutenant." Rockman kept his voice low. "I will repeat that the
pressure on Senator DeBlass is enormous, enough to crush a lesser man."
He let out a slow breath. "The fact is, it's destroyed his wife. She's
had a breakdown."
"I'm sorry."
"The doctors don't know if she'll recover. This additional tragedy has
his son crazed with grief; his daughter has closed herself off from her
family and gone into retreat. The senator's only hope of restoring his
family is to let Sharon's death, the horror of it, pass."
"Then it might be wise for the senator to take a step back and leave due
process to the department."
"Lieutenant -- Eve," he said with that rare and quick flash of charm. "I
wish I could convince him of that. But I believe that would be as
fruitless an endeavor as convincing you to let Sharon rest in peace."
"You'd be right."
"Well then." He laid a hand on her arm briefly. "We must all do what we
can to set things right. It was good to see you again."
Eve closed the door behind him and considered. DeBlass certainly had the
kind of hair-trigger temper that could lead to violence. She was almost
sorry he didn't also have the control, the calculation, to have
meticulously planned three murders.
In any case, she'd have a hard time connecting a rabidly right-wing
senator to a couple of New York prostitutes.
Maybe he was protecting his family, she mused. Or maybe he was
protecting Simpson, a political ally.
That was crap, Eve decided. He might work on Simpson's behalf if the
chief was involved in the Starr and Castle homicides. But a man didn't
protect the killer of his grandchild.
Too bad she wasn't looking for two men, Eve mused. Regardless, she was
going to do some pecking away at Simpson's underpinnings.
Objectively, she warned herself. And it wouldn't do to forget that there
was a strong possibility that DeBlass didn't know one of his favorite
political cronies had been blackmailed by his only granddaughter.
She'd have to find out.
But for now, she had another hunch to follow. She located Charles
Monroe's number and put through a call.
His voice was smeared with sleep, his eyes heavy. "You spend all your
time in bed, Charles?"
"All I can, Lieutenant Sugar." He rubbed a hand over his face and
grinned at her. "That's how I think of you."
"Well, don't. Couple of questions."
"Ah, can't you come on over and ask in person? I'm warm and naked and
all alone."
"Pal, don't you know there's a law against soliciting a police officer?"
"I'm talking freebie here. I told you -- we'd keep it strictly
personal."
"We're keeping it strictly impersonal. You had an associate. Georgie
Castle. Did you know her?"
The seductive smile faded from his face. "Yeah, actually, I did. Not
well, but I met her at a party about a year ago. She was new in the
business. Fun, attractive. Game, you know. We hit it off."
"In what way?"
"In a friendly way. We had a drink now and again. Once when Sharon had
an overbooking, I had her send a couple of clients Georgie's way."
"They knew each other." Eva pounced on it. "Sharon and Georgie?"
"I don't think so. As far as I remember, Sharon contacted Georgie, asked
her if she was interested in a couple of fresh tricks. Georgie gave it
the green light, and that was that. Oh, yeah, Sharon said something
about Georgie sending her a dozen roses. Real ones, like a thank-you
gift. Sharon got a real kick out of the old-fashioned etiquette."
"Just an old-fashioned girl," Eve said under her breath.
"When I heard Georgie was dead, it hit hard. I gotta tell you. With
Sharon it was a jolt, but not that much of a surprise. She lived on the
edge. But Georgie, she was centered, you know?"
"I may need to follow up on this, Charles. Stay available."
"For you -- "
"Knock it off," she ordered, before he could get cute. "What do you know
about Sharon's diaries?"
"She never let me read one," he said easily. "I used to tease her about
them. Seems to me she said she'd kept them since she was a kid. You got
one? Hey, am I in it?"
"Where'd she keep them?"
"In her apartment, I guess. Where else?"
That was the question, Eve mused. "If you think of anything else about
Georgie or about the diaries, contact me."
"Day or night, Lieutenant Sugar. Count on me."
"Right." But she was laughing when she broke transmission.
-=O=-***-=O=-
The sun was just setting when she arrived at Roarke's. She didn't
consider herself off duty. The favor she was going to ask had been
simmering in her mind all day. She'd decided on it, rejected it, and
generally vacillated until she'd disgusted herself.
In the end, she'd left the station for the first time in months right on
the dot of the end of her shift. With what limited progress she'd made,
she'd hardly needed to be there at all.
Feeney had hit nothing but a dead end in his search for a second lock
box. He had, with obvious reluctance, given her the list of cops she'd
requested. Eve intended to run a make on each of them -- on her own time
and in her own way.
With some regret, she realized she was going to use Roarke.
Summerset opened the door with his usual disdain. "You're earlier than
expected, lieutenant."
"If he isn't in, I can wait."
"He's in the library."
"Which is where, exactly?"
Summerset permitted himself the tiniest huff. If Roarke hadn't ordered
him to show the woman in immediately he would have shuffled her off to
some small, poorly lit room. "This way, please."
"What exactly is it about me that rubs you wrong, Summerset?"
With his back poker straight, he led her up a flight and down the wide
corridor. "I have no idea what you mean, lieutenant. The library," he
announced in reverent terms, and opened the door for her.
She'd never in her life seen so many books. She never would have
believed so many existed outside of museums. The walls were lined with
them so that the two-level room positively reeked with books.
On the lower level, on what was surely a leather sofa, Roarke lounged, a
book in his hand, the cat on his lap.
"Eve. You're early." He set the book aside, picked up the cat as he
rose.
"Jesus, Roarke, where did you get all these?"
"The books?" He let his gaze roam the room. Firelight danced and shifted
over colorful spines. "Another of my interests. Don't you like to read?"
"Sure, now and again. But discs are so much more convenient."
"And so much less aesthetic." He stroked the cat's neck and sent him
into ecstasy. "You're welcome to borrow any you like."
"I don't think so."
"How about a drink?"
"I could handle that."
His 'link beeped. "This is the call I've been waiting for. Why don't you
get us both a glass of wine I've had breathing over on the table?"
"Sure." She took the cat from him and walked over to oblige. Because she
wanted to eavesdrop, she forced herself to stay the length of the room
away from where he sat murmuring.
It gave her a chance to browse the books, to puzzle over the titles.
Some she had heard of. Even with a state education, she'd been required
to read Steinbeck and Chaucer, Shakespeare and Dickens. The curriculum
had taken her through King and Grisham, Morrison and Grafton.
But there were dozens, perhaps hundreds of names here she'd never heard
of. She wondered if anyone could handle so many books, much less read
them.
"I'm sorry," he said when the call was complete. "That couldn't wait."
"No problem."
He took the wine she'd poured him. "The cat's becoming quite attached to
you."
"I don't think he has any particular loyalties." But Eve had to admit,
she enjoyed the way he curled under her stroking hand. "I don't know
what I'm going to do about him. I called Georgie's daughter and she said
she just couldn't face taking him. Pressing the matter only made her
cry."
"You could keep him."
"I don't know. You have to take care of pets."
"Cats are remarkably self-sufficient." He sat on the sofa and waited for
her to join him. "Want to tell me about your day?"
"Not very productive. Yours?"
"Very productive."
"A lot of books," Eve said lamely, knowing she was stalling.
"I have an affection for them. I could barely read my name when I was
six. Then I came across a battered copy of Yeats. An Irish writer of
some note," he said when Eve looked blank. "I badly wanted to figure it
out, so I taught myself."
"Didn't you go to school?"
"Not if I could help it. You've got trouble in your eyes, Eve," he
murmured.
She blew out a breath. What was the use of stalling when he could see
right through her? "I've got a problem. I want to do a run on Simpson.
Obviously, I can't go through channels or use either my home or office
units. The minute I tried to dig on the chief of police, I'd be
flagged."
"And you're wondering if I have a secured, unregistered system. Of
course I do."
"Of course," she muttered. "A nonregistered system is in violation of
Code four fifty-three-B, section thirty-five."
"I can't tell you how aroused it makes me when you quote codes,
lieutenant."
"It's not funny. And what I'm going to ask you to do is illegal. It's a
serious offense to electronically breach the privacy of a state
official."
"You could arrest both of us afterward."
"This is serious, Roarke. I go by the book, and now I'm asking you to
help me break the law."
He rose, drew her to her feet. "Darling Eve, you have no idea how many
I've already broken." He fetched the wine bottle, letting it dangle from
two fingers of the hand he slipped around her waist. "I ran an
underground dice game when I was ten," he began, leading her from the
room. "A legacy from my dear old father who'd earned himself a knife
through the gullet in a Dublin alley."
"I'm sorry."
"We weren't close. He was a bastard and no one loved him, least of all
me. Summerset, we'll have dinner at seven-thirty," Roarke added as he
turned toward the stairs. "But he taught me, by means of a fist to the
face, to read the dice, the cards, the odds. He was a thief, not a good
one, as his end proved. I was better. I stole, I cheated, I spent some
time learning the smuggling trade. So you see, you're hardly corrupting
me with such a nominal request."
She didn't look at him as he decoded a locked door on the second floor.
"Do you..."
"Do I steal, cheat, and smuggle now?" He turned and touched a hand to
her face. "Oh, you'd hate that, wouldn't you? I almost wish I could say
yes, then give it all up for you. I learned a long time ago that there
are gambles more exciting for their legitimacy. And winning is so much
more satisfying when you've dealt from the top of the deck."
He pressed a kiss to her brow, then stepped into the room. "But, we have
to keep our hand in."
*** CHAPTER SIXTEEN ***
Compared to the rest of the house she'd seen, this room was spartan,
designed rigidly for work. No fancy statues, dripping chandeliers. The
wide, U-shaped console, the base for communication, research, and
information retrieving devices, was unrelieved black, studded with
controls, sliced with slots and screens.
Eve had heard that IRCCA had the swankiest base system in the country.
She suspected Roarke's matched it.
Eve was no compu-jock, but she knew at a glance that the equipment here
was vastly superior to any the New York Police and Security Department
used -- or could afford -- even in the lofty Electronic Detection
Division.
The long wall facing the console was taken up by six large monitor
screens. A second, auxiliary station held a sleek little tele-link, a
second laser fax, a hologram send-receive unit, and several other pieces
of hardware she didn't recognize.
The trio of comp stations boasted personal monitors with attached
'links.
The floor was glazed tile, the diamond patterns in muted colors that
bled together like liquid. The single window looked over the city and
pulsed with the last lights of the setting sun.
It seemed even here, Roarke demanded ambiance.
"Quite a setup," Eve commented.
"Not quite as comfortable as my office, but it has the basics." He moved
behind the main console, placed his palm on the identiscreen. "Roarke.
Open operations."
After a discreet hum, the lights on the console glowed on. "New palm and
voice print clearance," he continued and gestured to Eve. "Cleared for
yellow status."
At his nod, Eve pressed her hand to the screen, felt the faint warmth of
the reading. "Dallas."
"There you are." Roarke took his seat. "The system will accept your
voice and hand commands."
"What's yellow status?"
He smiled. "Enough to give you everything you need to know -- not quite
enough to override my commands."
"Hmmm." She scanned the controls, the patiently blinking lights, the
myriad screens and gauges. She wished for Feeney and his computer-minded
brain. "Search on Edward T. Simpson, Chief of Police and Security, New
York City. All financial data."
"Going right to the heart," Roarke murmured.
"I don't have time to waste. This can't be traced?"
"Not only can't it be traced, but there'll be no record of the search."
"Simpson, Edward T.," the computer announced in a warm, female tone.
"Financial records. Searching."
At Eve's lifted brow, Roarke grinned. "I prefer to work with melodious
voices."
"I was going to ask," she returned, "how you can access data without
alerting the Compuguard."
"No system's foolproof, or completely breach resistant -- even the
ubiquitous Compuguard. The system is an excellent deterrent to your
average hacker or electronic thief. But with the right equipment, it can
be compromised. I have the right equipment. Here comes the data. On
viewing screen one," he ordered.
Eve glanced up and saw Simpson's credit report flash onto the large
monitor. It was the standard business: vehicle loans, mortgages, credit
card balances. All the automatic E-transactions.
"That's a hefty AmEx bill," she mused. "And I don't think it's common
knowledge he owns a place on Long Island."
"Hardly murderous motives. He maintains a Class A rating, which means he
pays what he owes. Ah, here's a bank account. Screen two."
Eve studied the numbers, dissatisfied. "Nothing out of line, pretty
average deposits and withdrawals -- mostly automatic bill paying
transfers that jibe with the credit report. What's Jeremy's?"
"Men's clothier," Roarke told her with the smallest sneer of disdain.
"Somewhat second rate."
She wrinkled her nose. "Hell of a lot to spend on clothes."
"Darling, I'm going to have to corrupt you. It's only too much if
they're inferior clothes."
She sniffed, stuck her thumbs in the front pockets of her baggy brown
trousers.
"Here's his brokerage account. Screen three. Spineless," Roarke added
after a quick scan.
"What do you mean?"
"His investments, such as they are. All no risk. Government issue, a few
mutual funds, a smattering of blue chip. Everything on-planet."
"What's wrong with that?"
"Nothing if you're content to let your money gather dust." He slanted
her a look. "Do you invest, lieutenant?"
"Yeah, right." She was still trying to make sense of the abbreviations
and percentage points. "I watch the stock reports twice a day."
"Not a standard credit account." He nearly shuddered.
"So what?"
"Give me what you have, I'll double it within six months."
She only frowned, struggling to read the brokerage report. "I'm not here
to get rich."
"Darling," he corrected in that flowing Irish lilt. "We all are."
"How about contributions, political, charities, that kind of thing?"
"Access tax saving outlay," Roarke ordered. "Viewing screen two."
She waited, impatiently tapping a hand on her thigh. Data scrolled on.
"He puts his money where his heart is," she muttered, scanning his
payments to the Conservative Party, DeBlass's campaign fund.
"Not particularly generous otherwise. Hmm." Roarke's brow lifted.
"Interesting, a very hefty gift to Moral Values."
"That's an extremist group, isn't it?"
"I'd call it that, the faithful prefer to think of it as an organization
dedicated to saving all of us sinners from ourselves. DeBlass is a
strong proponent."
But she was flipping through her own mental files. "They're suspected of
sabotaging the main data banks at several large contraception control
clinics."
Roarke clucked his tongue. "All those women deciding for themselves if
and when they want to conceive, how many children they want. What's the
world coming to? Obviously, someone has to bring them back to their
senses."
"Right." Dissatisfied, Eve stuck her hands in her pockets. "It's a
dangerous connection for someone like Simpson. He likes to play middle
of the road. He ran on a Moderate ticket."
"Cloaking his Conservative ties and leanings. In the last few years he's
been cautiously removing the layers. He wants to be governor, perhaps
believes DeBlass can put him there. Politics is a bartering game."
"Politics. Sharon DeBlass's blackmail disc was heavy on politicians.
Sex, murder, politics," Eve murmured. "The more things change..."
"Yes, the more they remain the same. Couples still indulge in courting
rituals, humans still kill humans, and politicians still kiss babies and
lie."
Something wasn't quite right, and she wished for Feeney again.
Twentieth-century murders, she thought, twentieth-century motives. There
was one other thing that hadn't changed over the last millennium. Taxes.
"Can we get his IRS data? The past three years?"
"That's a little trickier." His mouth had already quirked up at the
challenge.
"It's also a federal offense. Listen, Roarke -- "
"Just hold on a minute." He pressed a button and a manual keyboard
slipped out of the console. With some surprise, Eve watched his fingers
fly over the keys. "Where'd you learn to do that?" Even with required
department training, she was barely competent on manual.
"Here and there," he said absently, "in my misspent youth. I have to get
around the security. It's going to take some time. Why don't you pour us
some more wine?"
"Roarke, I shouldn't have asked." An attack of conscience had her
walking to him. "I can't let this come back on you -- "
"Ssh." His brows drew together in concentration as he maneuvered his way
through the security labyrinth.
"But -- "
He head snapped up, impatience vivid in his eyes. "We've already opened
the door, Eve. Now we go through, or we turn away from it."
Eve thought of three women, dead because she hadn't been able to stop
it. Hadn't known enough to stop it. With a nod, she turned away again.
The clatter of the keyboard resumed.
She poured the wine, then moved to stand in front of the screens. Tidy
as they came, she mused. Top credit rating, prompt payment of debts,
conservative and, she assumed, relatively small investments. Surely that
was more money than average spent on clothes, wine shops, and jewelry.
But it wasn't a crime to have expensive taste. Not when you paid for it.
Even the second home wasn't a criminal offense.
Some of the contributions were dicey for a registered Moderate, but
still, not criminal.
She heard Roarke curse softly and looked back. But he was hunkered over
the keyboard. She might not have been there. Odd, she wouldn't have
guessed he had the technical skills to access manually. According to
Feeney, it was almost a lost art except in tech-clerks and hackers.
Yet here he was, the rich, the privileged, the elegant, clattering over
a problem usually delegated to a low-paid, overworked office drone.
For a moment, she let herself forget about the business at hand and
smiled at him.
"You know, Roarke, you're kind of cute."
She realized it was the first time she'd really surprised him. His head
came up, and his eyes were startled -- for perhaps two heartbeats. Then
that sly smile came into them. The one that made her own pulse jitter.
"You're going to have to do better than that, lieutenant. I've got you
in."
"No shit?" Excitement flooded through her as she whirled back to the
screens. "Put it up."
"Screens four, five, six."
"There's his bottom line." She frowned over gross income. "It's about
right, wouldn't you say -- salarywise."
"A bit of interest and dividends from investments." Roarke scrolled
pages. "A few honorariums for personal appearances and speeches. He
lives close, but just within his means, according to all of the data
shown."
"Hell." She tossed back wine. "What other data is there?"
"For a sharp woman, that's an incredibly naive question. Underground
accounts," he explained. "Two sets of books is a tried and true and very
traditional method of hiding illicit income."
"If you had illicit income, why would you be stupid enough to document
it?"
"A question for the ages. But people do. Oh yes, they do. Yes," he said,
answering her unspoken question as to his own bookkeeping methods. "Of
course I do."
She shot him a hard look. "I don't want to know about it."
He only moved his shoulders. "The point being, because I do, I know how
it's done. Everything's above board here, wouldn't you say?" With a few
commands he had the IRS reports merged on one screen. "Now let's go down
a level. Computer, Simpson, Edward T., foreign accounts."
"No known data."
"There's always more data," Roarke murmured, undeterred. He went back to
the keyboard, and something began to hum.
"What's that noise?"
"It's just telling me I'm hitting a wall." Like a laborer, he flicked
open the buttons at his cuffs, rolled up his sleeves. The gesture made
Eve smile. "And if there's a wall, there's something behind it."
He continued to work, one handed, and sipped his wine. When he repeated
his command, the response had shifted.
"Data protected."
"Ah, now we've got it."
"How can you -- "
"Ssh," he ordered again and had Eve subsiding into impatient silence.
"Computer, run numerical and alphabetical combinations for passkey."
Pleased with the progress, he pushed back. "This will take a little
time. Why don't you come here?"
"Can you show me how you -- " She broke off, shocked, when Roarke pulled
her into his lap. "Hey, this is important."
"So's this." He took her mouth, sliding his hand up her hip to just
under the curve of her breast. "It could take an hour, maybe more, to
find the key." Those quick, clever hands were already moving under her
sweater. "You don't like to waste time, as I recall."
"No, I don't." It was the first time in her life she'd ever sat on
anyone's lap, and the sensation wasn't at all unpleasant. She was
sinking, but the next mechanical hum had her pulling back. Speechless,
she stared at the bed gliding out of a panel in the side wall. "The man
who has everything," she managed.
"I will have." He hooked an arm under her legs, lifted her. "Very
shortly."
"Roarke." She had to admit, maybe just this once, she enjoyed being
swept up and carried off.
"Yes."
"I always thought too much emphasis, in society, advertisement,
entertainment, was put on sex."
"Did you?"
"I did." Grinning, she shifted her body, quick and agile, and
overbalanced him. "I've changed my mind," she said as they tumbled onto
the bed.
She'd already learned that lovemaking could be intense, overwhelming,
even dangerously exciting. She hadn't known it could be fun. It was a
revelation to find that she could laugh and wrestle over the bed like a
child.
Quick, nipping kisses, ticklish groping, breathless giggles. She
couldn't remember ever giggling before in her life as she pinned Roarke
to the mattress.
"Gotcha."
"You do indeed." Delighted with her, he let her hold him down, rain
kisses over his face. "Now that you have me, what are you going to do
about it?"
"Use you, of course." She bit down, none too gently, on his bottom lip.
"Enjoy you." With her brows arched, she unfastened his shirt, spread it
open. "You do have a terrific body." To please herself, she ran her
hands over his chest. "I used to think that sort of thing was overrated,
too. After all, anyone with enough money can have one."
"I didn't buy mine," Roarke said, surprised into defending his physique.
"No, you've got a gym in this place, don't you?" Bending, she let her
lips cruise over his shoulder. "You'll have to show it to me sometime. I
think I'd like watching you sweat."
He rolled her over, reversing positions. He felt her freeze, then relax
under his restraining hands. Progress, he thought. The beginnings of
trust. "I'm ready to work out with you, lieutenant, anytime." He tugged
the sweater over her head. "Anytime at all."
He released her hands. It moved him to have her reach up, draw him down
to her to embrace.
So strong, he thought, as the tone of the lovemaking changed from
playful to tender. So soft. So troubled. He took her slowly, and very
gently over the first rise, watched her crest, listened to the low,
humming moan as her system absorbed each velvet shock.
He needed her. It still had the power to shake him to know just how much
he needed her. He knelt, lifting her. Her legs wrapped silkily around
him, her body bowed fluidly back. He could take his mouth over her,
tasting warm flesh while he moved inside her, deep, steady, slow.
Each time she shuddered, a fresh stream of pleasure rippled through him.
Her throat was a slim white feast he couldn't resist. He laved it,
nipped, nuzzled while the pulse just under that sensitized flesh
throbbed like a heart.
And she gasped his name, cupping his head in her hands, pressing him
against her as her body rocked, rocked, rocked.
-=O=-***-=O=-
She discovered lovemaking made her loose, and warm. The slow arousal,
the long, slow finish energized her. She didn't feel awkward climbing
back into her clothes with the scent of him clinging to her. She felt
smug.
"I feel good around you." It surprised her to say it aloud, to give him
-- or anyone -- even so slight an advantage.
He understood that such an admission, for her, was tantamount to a
shouted declaration of devotion from other women.
"I'm glad." He traced a fingertip down her cheek, dipped it into the
faint dent in her chin. "I like the idea of staying around you."
She turned away at that, crossed over to watch the number sequences fly
by on the console screen. "Why did you tell me about being a kid in
Dublin, about your father, the things you did?"
"You won't stay with someone you don't know." He studied her back as he
tucked his shirt into his trousers. "You'd told me a little, so I told
you a little. And I think, eventually, you'll tell me who hurt you when
you were a child."
"I told you I don't remember." She hated even the whisper of panic in
her voice. "I don't need to."
"Don't tighten up." He murmured to her as he walked over to massage her
shoulders. "I won't press you. I know exactly what it is to remake
yourself, Eve. To distance yourself from what was."
What good would it do to tell her that no matter how far, how fast you
ran, the past always stayed two paces behind you?
Instead, he wrapped his arms around her waist, satisfied when she closed
her hands over his. He knew she was studying the screens across the
room. Knew the instant she saw it.
"Son of a bitch, look at the numbers: income, outgo. They're too damn
close. They're practically exact."
"They are exact," Roarke corrected, and released the woman, knowing the
cop would want to stand clear. "To the penny."
"But that's impossible." She struggled to do the math in her head.
"Nobody spends exactly what they make -- not on record. Everyone carries
at least a little cash -- for the occasional vendor on the sidewalk, the
Pepsi machine, the kid who brings the pizza. -Sure, it's mostly plastic
or electronic, but you've got to have some cash floating around."
She paused, turned around. "You'd already seen it. Why the hell didn't
you say something?"
"I thought it would be more interesting to wait until we found his
cache." He glanced down as the-blinking yellow light for searching
switched to green. "And it appears we have. Ah, a traditional man, our
Simpson. As I suspected, he relies on the well respected and discreet
Swiss. Display data on screen five."
"Jesus fucking Christ." Eve gaped at the bank listings.
"That's in Swiss francs," Roarke explained. "Translate to USD, screen
six. About triple his tax portfolio here, wouldn't you say, lieutenant?"
Her blood was up. "I knew he was taking. Goddamn it, I knew it. And look
at the withdrawals, Roarke, in the last year. Twenty-five thousand a
quarter, every quarter. A hundred thousand." She turned back to Roarke,
and her smile was thin. "That matches the figure on Sharon's list.
Simpson -- one hundred K. She was bleeding him."
"You may be able to prove it."
"I damn well will prove it." She began to pace. "She had something on
him. Maybe it was sex, maybe it was graft. Probably a combination of a
lot of ugly little sins. So he paid her to keep her quiet."
Eve thrust her hands into her pockets, pulled them out again. "Maybe she
upped the ante. Maybe he was just sick and tired of shelling out a
hundred a year for insurance. So he offs her. Somebody keeps trying to
scuttle the investigation. Somebody with the power and the information
to complicate things. It points right at him."
"What about the two other victims?"
She was working on it. Goddamn it, she was working on it. "He used one
prostitute. He could have used others. Sharon and the third victim knew
each other -- or of each other. One of them might have known Lola,
mentioned her, even suggested her as a change of pace. Hell, she could
have been a random choice. He got caught up in the thrill of the first
murder. It scared him, but it was also a high for him."
She stopped prowling the room long enough to flick a glance at Roarke.
He'd taken out a cigarette, lighted it, watching her.
"DeBlass is one of his backers," she continued. "And Simpson's come out
strongly in favor of DeBlass's upcoming Morals Bill. They're just
prostitutes, he's thinking. Just legal whores, and one of them was
threatening him. How much more of a danger to him would she have been
once he put in his bid for governor?"
She stopped pacing again, turned back. "And that's just shit."
"I thought it sounded quite reasonable."
"Not when you look at the man." Slowly, she rubbed her fingers between
her brows. "He doesn't have the brains for it. Yeah, I think he could
kill, Christ knows he's into control, but to pull off a series of
murders this slick? He's a desk man -- an administrator, an image, not a
cop. He can't even remember a penal code without an aide prompting him.
Graft's easy, it's just business. And to kill out of panic or passion or
fury, yes. But to plan, to execute the plan step by step? No. He isn't
even smart enough to juggle his public records well."
"So he had help."
"Possible. Maybe if I could put pressure on him, I'd find out."
"I can help you there." Roarke took a final, thoughtful drag before
crushing out his cigarette. "What do you think the media would do if it
received an anonymous transmission of Simpson's underground accounts?"
She dropped the hand she'd lifted to rake through her hair. "They'd hang
him. If he knows anything, even with a fleet of lawyers around him, we
might be able to shake something loose."
"Just so. Your call, lieutenant."
She thought of rules, of due process, of the system she'd made herself
an intregal part of. And she thought of three dead women -- three more
she might be able to protect.
"There's a reporter. Nadine Furst. Give it to her."
-=O=-***-=O=-
She wouldn't stay with him. Eve knew a call would come, and it was best
if she were home and alone when it did. She didn't think she would
sleep, but she drifted into dreams.
She dreamed first of murder. Sharon, Lola, Georgie, each of them smiling
toward the camera. That instant of fear a lightning bolt in the eyes
before they flew back on sex-warmed sheets.
Daddy. Lola had called him Daddy. And Eve stumbled painfully into an
older, more terrifying dream.
She was a good girl. She tried to be good, not to cause trouble. If you
caused trouble, the cops came and got you, and put you in a deep, dark
hole where bugs skittered and spiders crept toward you on silent,
slithery legs.
She didn't have friends. If you had friends you had to make up stories
about where the bruises came from. How you were clumsy when you weren't
clumsy. How you'd fallen when you hadn't fallen. Besides, they never
lived in one place very long. If you did, the fucking social workers
came nosing around, asking questions. It was the fucking social workers
who called the cops that put you away in that dark, bug crawling hole.
Her Daddy had warned her.
So she was a good girl, without any friends, who moved from place to
place when she was taken.
But it didn't seem to make any difference.
She could hear him coming. She always heard him. Even if she was sound
asleep, the creeping shuffle of his bare feet on the floor woke her as
quickly as a thunder clap.
Oh, please, oh, please, oh please. She would pray, but she wouldn't cry.
If she cried she was beaten, and he did the secret things anyway. The
painful and secret thing that she knew, even at five, was somehow bad.
He told her she was good. The whole time he did the secret thing he
would tell her she was good. But she knew she was bad, and she would be
punished.
Sometimes he tied her up. When she heard her door open, she whimpered
softly, praying he wouldn't tie her this time. She wouldn't fight, she
wouldn't, if he just didn't tie her up. If he just didn't hold his hand
over her mouth, she wouldn't scream or call out.
"Where's my little girl? Where's my good little girl?"
Tears gathered in the corners of her eyes as his hands slipped under the
sheets, poking, probing, pinching. She could smell his breath on her
face, sweet, like candy.
His fingers rammed inside her, his other hand coming down hard over her
mouth as she drew in breath to scream. She couldn't help it.
"Be quiet." His breath was coming in short gasps, in a sickening arousal
she didn't understand. His fingers dug into her cheeks where bruises
would form by morning. "Be a good girl. There's a good girl."
She couldn't hear his grunts for the screaming inside her head. She
screamed it over and over and over.
No, Daddy. No, Daddy.
"No!" The scream ripped out of Eve's throat as she reared up in bed.
Gooseflesh prickled on her clammy skin, and she shivered and shivered as
she tugged the blankets up.
Didn't remember. Wouldn't remember, she comforted herself and drew up
her knees, pressed her forehead against them. Just a dream, and it was
already fading. She could will it away -- had done so before -- until
there was nothing left but the faint nausea.
Still shaky, she got up, wrapped herself in her robe to combat the
chill. In the bath she ran water over her face until she was breathing
evenly again. Steadier, she got herself a tube of Pepsi, huddled back
into bed, and switched on one of the twenty-four-hour news stations.
And settled down to wait.
It was the lead story at six A. M., the headline read by a cat-eyed
Nadine. Eve was already dressed when the call came through summoning her
to Cop Central.
*** CHAPTER SEVENTEEN ***
Whatever personal satisfaction Eve felt on finding herself part of the
team who questioned Simpson, she hid it well. In deference to his
position, they used the office of Security Administration rather than an
interrogation area.
The clear wrap of windows and the glossy acrylic table didn't negate the
fact that Simpson was in deep trouble. The beading of sweat above his
top lip indicated he knew just how deep.
"The media is trying to injure the department," Simpson began, using the
statement meticulously prepared by his senior aide. "With the very
visible failure of the investigation into the brutal deaths of three
women, the media is attempting to incite a witch-hunt. As chief of
police, I'm an obvious target."
"Chief Simpson." Not by the flicker of an eyelash did Commander Whitney
expose his inner glee. His voice was grave, his eyes somber. His heart
was celebrating. "Regardless of the motive, it will be necessary for you
to explain the discrepancy in your books."
Simpson sat frozen while one of his attorneys leaned over and murmured
in his ear.
"I have not admitted to any discrepancy. If one exists, I'm unaware of
it."
"Unaware, Chief Simpson, of more than two million dollars?"
"I've already contacted my accounting firm. Obviously, if there is a
mistake of some nature, it was made by them."
"Will you confirm or deny that the account numbered four seventy-eight
nine one one two seven, four ninety-nine is yours?"
After another brief consultation, Simpson nodded. "I will confirm that."
To lie would only tighten the noose.
Whitney glanced at Eve. They'd agreed the account was an IRS matter. All
they'd wanted was for Simpson to confirm.
"Will you explain, Chief Simpson, the withdrawal of one hundred thousand
dollars, in twenty-five thousand dollar increments, every three months
during the past year?"
Simpson tugged at the knot of his tie. "I see no reason to explain how I
spend my money, Lieutenant Dallas."
"Then perhaps you can explain how it is those same amounts were listed
by Sharon DeBlass and accredited to you."
"I don't know what you're talking about."
"We have evidence that you paid to Sharon DeBlass one hundred thousand
dollars, in twenty-five thousand dollar increments in one year's
period." Eve waited a beat. "That's quite a large amount between casual
acquaintances."
"I have nothing to say on the matter."
"Was she blackmailing you?"
"I have nothing to say."
"The evidence says it for you," Eve stated. "She was blackmailing you;
you were paying her off. I'm sure you're aware there are only two ways
to stop extortion, Chief Simpson. One, you cut off the supply. Two...
you eliminate the blackmailer."
"This is absurd. I didn't kill Sharon. I was paying her like clockwork.
I -- "
"Chief Simpson." The elder of the team of lawyers put a hand on
Simpson's arm, squeezed. He turned his mild gaze to Eve. "My client has
no statement to make regarding Sharon DeBlass. Obviously, we will
cooperate in any way with the Internal Revenue Service's investigation
into my client's records. At this time, however, no charges have been
made. We're here only as a courtesy, and to show our goodwill."
"Were you acquainted with a woman known as Lola Starr?" Eve shot out.
"My client has no comment."
"Did you know licensed companion, Georgie Castle?"
"Same response," the lawyer said patiently.
"You've done everything you could to roadblock this murder investigation
from the beginning. Why?"
"Is that a statement of fact, Lieutenant Dallas?" the lawyer asked. "Or
an opinion?"
"I'll give you facts. You knew Sharon DeBlass, intimately. She was
hosing you for a hundred grand a year. She's dead, and someone is
leaking confidential information on the investigation. Two more women
are dead. All the victims made their living through legal prostitution
-- something you oppose."
"My opposition of prostitution is a political, moral, and a personal
stance," Simpson said tightly. "I will support wholeheartedly any
legislation that outlaws it. But I would hardly eliminate the problem by
picking off prostitutes one at a time."
"You own a collection of antique weapons," Eve persisted.
"I do," Simpson agreed, ignoring his attorney. "A small, limited
collection. AH registered, secured, and inventoried. I'll be more than
happy to turn them over to Commander Whitney for testing."
"I appreciate that," Whitney said, shocking Simpson by agreeing. "Thank
you for your cooperation."
Simpson rose, his face a battleground of emotion. "When this matter is
cleared up, I won't forget this meeting." His eyes rested briefly on
Eve. "I won't forget who attacked the office of Chief of Police and
Security."
Commander Whitney waited until Simpson sailed out, followed by his team
of attorneys. "When this is settled, he won't get within a hundred yards
of the office of Chief of Police and Security."
"I needed more time to work on him. Why'd you let him walk?"
"His isn't the only name on the DeBlass list," Whitney reminded her.
"And there's no tie, as yet, between him and the other two victims.
Whittle the list down, get me a tie, and I'll give you all the time you
need." He paused, shuffling through the hard copies of the documents
that had been transmitted to his office. "Dallas, you seemed very
prepared for this interview. Almost as if you'd been expecting it. I
don't suppose I need remind you that tampering with private documents is
against the law."
"No, sir."
"I didn't think I did. Dismissed."
As she headed for the door, she thought she heard him murmur "Good job"
but she might have been mistaken.
She was taking the elevator to her own section when her communicator
blipped. "Dallas."
"Call for you. Charles Monroe."
"I'll get back to him."
She snagged a cup of sludge masquerading as coffee, and what might have
been a doughnut as she passed through the bullpen area of the records
section. It took nearly twenty minutes for her to requisition copies of
the discs for the three homicides.
Closeting herself in her office, she studied them again. She reviewed
her notes, made fresh ones.
The victim was on the bed each time. The bed rumpled each time. They
were naked each time. Their hair was mussed.
Eyes narrowed, she ordered the image of Lola Starr to freeze, pull into
close-up.
"Skin reddened left buttocks," she murmured. "Missed that before.
Spanking? Domination thrill? Doesn't appear to be bruising or welting.
Have Feeney enhance and determine. Switch to DeBlass tape."
Again, Eve ran it. Sharon laughed at the camera, taunted it, touching
herself, shifting. "Freeze image. Quadrant -- shit -- try sixteen,
increase. No marks," she said. "Continue. Come on, Sharon, show me the
right side, just in case. Little more. Freeze. Quadrant twelve,
increase. No marks on you. Maybe you did the spanking, huh? Run Castle
disc. Come on Georgie, let's see."
She watched the woman smile, flirt, lift a hand to smooth down her
tousled hair. Eve already knew the dialogue perfectly: "That was
wonderful. You're terrific."
She was kneeling, sitting back on her haunches, her eyes pleasant and
companionable. Silently, Eve began to urge her to move, just a little,
shift over. Then Georgia yawned delicately, turned to fluff the pillows.
"Freeze. Oh yeah, paddled you, didn't he? Some guys get off on playing
bad girl and Daddy."
She had a flash, like a stab of a knife through the brain. Memories
sliced through her, the solid slap of a hand on her bottom, stinging,
the heavy breathing. "You have to be punished, little girl. Then Daddy's
going to kiss it better. He's going to kiss it all better."
"Jesus." She rubbed shaking hands over her face. "Stop. Put it away. Put
it away."
She reached for cold coffee and found only dregs. The past was past, she
reminded herself, and had nothing to do with her. Nothing to do with the
job at hand.
"Victim Two and Three show marks of abuse on buttocks. No marks on
Victim One." She let out a long breath, took in a slow one. Steadier.
"Break in pattern. Apparent emotional reaction during first murder,
absent in subsequent two."
Her 'link buzzed, she ignored it.
"Possible theory: Perpetrator gained confidence, enjoyment in subsequent
murders. Note: No security on Victim Two. Time lapse on security
cameras, Victim Three, thirty-three minutes less than Victim One.
Possible theory: More adept, more confident, less inclined to play with
victim. Wants the kick faster."
Possible, possible, she thought, and her computer agreed after a jittery
wheeze, with a ninety-six-three probability factor. But something else
was clicking as she ran the three discs so closely together,
interchanging sections.
"Split screen," she ordered, "Victims One and Two, from beginning."
Sharon's cat smile, Lola's pout. Both women looked toward the camera,
toward the man behind it. Spoke to him.
"Freeze images," Eve said so softly only the sharp ears of the computer
could have heard her. "Oh God, what have we here?"
It was a small thing, a slight thing, and with the eyes focused on the
brutality of the murders, easily missed. But she saw it now, through
Sharon's eyes. Through Lola's.
Lola's gaze was angled higher.
The height of the beds could account for it, Eve told herself as she
added Georgie's image to the screen. Each woman had their head tilted.
After all, they were sitting, he very likely standing. But the angle of
the eyes, the point at which they stared... Only Sharon's was different.
Still watching the screen, Eve called Dr. Mira.
"I don't care what she's doing," Eve spat out at the drone working
reception. "It's urgent."
She snarled as she was put on hold and her ears assaulted with mindless,
sugary music.
"Question," she said the moment Mira was on the line.
"Yes, lieutenant."
"Is it possible we have two killers?"
"A copycat? Unlikely, lieutenant, given as much of the method and style
of the murders has been kept under wraps."
"Shit leaks. I've got breaks in pattern. Small ones, but definite
breaks." Impatient, she outlined them. "Theory, doctor. The first murder
committed by someone who knew Sharon well, who killed on impulse, then
had enough control to clean up behind himself well. The second two are
reflections of the first crime, fined down, thought through, committed
by someone cold, calculating, with no connection to his victims. And
goddamn it, he's taller."
"It's a theory, lieutenant. I'm sorry, but it's just as likely, even
more so, that all three murders were committed by one man who grows more
calculating with each success. In my professional opinion, no one who
wasn't privy to the first crime, to the stages of it, could have so
perfectly mirrored the events in the second two."
Her computer had ditched her theory as well, with a forty-eight-five.
"Okay, thanks." Deflated, Eve disconnected. Stupid to be disappointed,
she told herself. How much worse could it be if she were after two men
instead of one?
Her 'link buzzed again. Teeth bared in annoyance, she flipped on.
"Dallas, What?"
"Hey, Lieutenant Sugar, a guy might think you didn't care."
"I don't have time to play, Charles."
"Hey, don't cut me off. I got something for you."
"Or for lame innuendoes -- "
"No, really. Boy, flirt with a woman once or twice and she never takes
you seriously." His perfect face registered hurt. "You asked me to call
if I remembered anything, right?"
"Right." Patience, she warned herself. "So, did you?"
"It was the diaries that got me thinking. You know how I said she was
always recording everything. Since you're looking for them, I figure
they weren't over at her place."
"You should be a detective."
"I like my line of work. Anyhow, I started wondering where she might put
them for safekeeping. And I remembered the safe-deposit box."
"We've already checked it. Thanks, anyway."
"Oh. Well, how'd you get into it without me? She's dead."
Eve paused on the point of cutting him off. "Without you?"
"Yeah. A couple, three years ago, she asked me to sign for one for her.
Said she didn't want her name on the record."
Eve's heart began to thump. "Then what good would it do her?"
Charles's smile was sheepish and charming. "Well, technically, I signed
her on as my sister. I've got one in Kansas City. So we listed Sharon as
Annie Monroe. She paid the rent, and I just forgot about it, I can't
even say for sure if she kept it, but I thought you might want to know."
"Where's the bank?"
"First Manhattan, on Madison."
"Listen to me, Charles. You're home, right?"
"That's right."
"You stay there. Right there. I'll be over in fifteen minutes. We're
going to go banking, you and me."
"If that's the best I can do. Hey, did I give you a hot lead, Lieutenant
Sugar?"
"Just stay put."
She was up and shrugging into her jacket when her 'link buzzed again.
"Dallas."
"Dispatch, Dallas. We have a transmission on hold for you. Video
blocked. Refuses to identify."
"Tracing?"
"Tracing now."
"Then put it through." She swung up her bag as the audio clicked. "This
is Dallas."
"Are you alone?" It was a female voice, tremulous.
"Yes. Do you want me to help you?"
"It wasn't my fault. You have to know it wasn't my fault."
"No one's blaming you." Training had Eve picking up on both fear and
grief. "Just tell me what happened."
"He raped me. I couldn't stop him. He raped me. He raped her, too. Then
he killed her. He could kill me."
"Tell me where you are." She studied her screen, waiting for the trace
to come through. "I want to help, but I have to know where you are."
Breath hitching, a whimper. "He said it was supposed to be a secret. I
couldn't tell. He killed her so she couldn't tell. Now there's me. No
one will believe me."
"I believe you. I'll help you. Tell me -- " She swore as the
transmission broke. "Where?" she demanded after switching to dispatch.
"Front Royal, Virginia. Number seven oh three, five five five,
thirty-nine oh eight. Address -- "
"I don't need it. Get me Captain Ryan Feeney in EDD. Fast."
Two minutes wasn't fast enough. Eve nearly drilled a hole in her temple
rubbing it while she waited. "Feeney, I've got something, and it's big."
"What?"
"I can't go into it yet, but I need you to go pick up Charles Monroe."
"Christ, Eve, have we got him?"
"Not yet. Monroe's going to take you to Sharon's other safe box. You
take good care of him, Feeney. We're going to need him. And you take
damn good care of whatever you find in the box."
"What are you going to be doing?"
"I've got to catch a plane." She broke transmission, then called Roarke.
It took another three minutes of very precious time before he came
on-line.
"I was about to call you, Eve. It looks like I have to fly to Dublin.
Care to join me?"
"Roarke, I need your plane. Now. I have to get to Virginia fast. If I go
through channels or take public transport -- "
"The plane will be ready for you. Terminal C, Gate 22."
She closed her eyes. "Thanks. I owe you."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Her gratitude lasted until she arrived at the gate and found Roarke
waiting for her.
"I don't have time to talk." Her voice was a snap, her long legs eating
up the distance from gate to lift.
"We'll talk on the plane."
"You're not going with me. This is official -- "
"This is my plane, lieutenant," he interrupted smoothly as the lift
closed them in together, gliding silently up.
"Can't you do anything without strings?"
"Yes. This isn't one of them." The hatch opened. The flight attendant
waited efficiently.
"Welcome aboard, sir, lieutenant. Can I offer you refreshments?"
"No, thank you. Have the pilot take off as soon as we're cleared."
Roarke took his seat while Eve stood fuming. "We can't take off until
you're seated and secured."
"I thought you were going to Ireland." She could argue with him just as
easily sitting down.
"It's not a priority. This is. Eve, before you state your case, I'll
outline mine. You're going to Virginia in quite a rush. That points to
the DeBlass case and some new information. Beth and Richard are friends,
close friends. I don't have many close friends, nor do you. Reverse
situations. What would you do?"
She drummed her fingers on the arm of her chair as the plane began to
taxi. "This can't be personal."
"Not for you. For me, it's very personal. Beth contacted me even as I
was arranging for the plane to be readied. She asked me to come."
"Why?"
"She wouldn't say. She didn't have to -- she only had to ask."
Loyalty was a trait Eve had a difficult time arguing against. "I can't
stop you from going, but I'm warning you, this is department business."
"And the department is in upheaval this morning," he said evenly,
"because of certain information leaked to the media -- by an unnamed
source."
She hissed out a breath. Nothing like backing yourself into a corner.
"I'm grateful for your help."
"Enough to tell me the outcome?"
"I imagine the cap will be off by the end of the day." She moved her
shoulders restlessly, staring out the window, willing the miles away.
"Simpson's going to try to ditch the whole business on his accounting
firm. I can't see him pulling it off. The IRS'll get him for tax fraud.
I imagine the internal investigation will uncover where he got the
money. Considering Simpson's imagination, I'd bet on the standard
kickbacks, bribes, and graft."
"And the blackmail?"
"Oh, he was paying her. He admitted as much before his lawyer shut him
up. And he'll cop to it, once he realizes paying blackmail's a lot less
dicey than accessory to murder."
She took out her communicator, requested Feeney's access.
"Yo, Dallas."
"Did you get them?"
Feeney held a small box up so that she could see it in the tiny viewing
screen. "All labeled and dated. About twenty years' worth."
"Start with the last entry, work back. I should hit destination in about
twenty minutes. I'll contact you as soon as I can for a status report."
"Hey, Lieutenant Sugar." Charles edged his way on-screen and beamed at
her. "How'd I do?"
"You did good. Thanks. Now, until I say different, forget about the safe
box, the diaries, everything."
"What diaries?" he said with a wink. He blew her a kiss before Feeney
elbowed him aside.
"I'm heading back to Cop Central now. Stay in touch."
"Out." Eve switched off, slipped the communicator back in her pocket.
Roarke waited a beat. "Lieutenant Sugar?"
"Shut up, Roarke." She closed her eyes to ignore him, but couldn't quite
wipe the smirk off her face.
-=O=-***-=O=-
When they landed, she was forced to admit that Roarke's name worked even
faster than a badge. In minutes they were in a powerful rental car and
eating up the miles to Front Royal. She might have objected about being
delegated to the passenger seat, but she couldn't fault his driving.
"Ever done the Indy?"
"No." He spared her a brief glance as they bulleted up Route 95 at just
under a hundred. "But I've driven in a few Grand Prix."
"Figures." She tapped her fingers against the chicken stick when he shot
the car into a vertical rise, skimmed daringly -- and illegally -- over
the top of a small jam of cars. "You say Richard is a good friend. How
would you describe him?"
"Intelligent, dedicated, quiet. He rarely speaks unless he has something
to say. Overshadowed by his father, often at odds with him."
"How would you describe his relationship with his father?"
He brought the vehicle down again, wheels barely skidding on the road
surface. "From the little he might have said, and the things Beth let
drop, I'd have to say combative, frustrated."
"And his relationship with his daughter?"
"The choices she made were in direct opposition to his lifestyle, his,
well, morals, if you wish. He's a staunch believer in freedom of choice
and expression. Still, I can't imagine any father wanting his daughter
to become a woman who sells herself for a living."
"Wasn't he involved in designing his father's security for the last
senatorial campaign?"
He took the vehicle up again, maneuvered it off the road, muttering
something about a shortcut. In the time he took to skim through a glade
of trees, over a few residential buildings, and down again onto a quiet
suburban street, he was silent.
She stopped counting the traffic violations.
"Family loyalty transcends politics. A man with DeBlass's views is
either well loved or well hated. Richard may disagree with his father,
but he'd hardly want him assassinated. And as he specializes in security
law, it follows he'd assist his father in the matter."
A son protects his father, Eve thought. "And how far would DeBlass go to
protect his son?"
"From what? Richard is a moderate's moderate. He maintains a low
profile, supports his causes quietly. He -- " The import of the question
struck. "You're off target," Roarke said between his teeth. "Way off
target."
"We'll see."
-=O=-***-=O=-
The house on the hill looked peaceful. Under the cold blue sky, it sat
serenely, warmly, with a few brave crocuses beginning to peep out of the
winter stung grass.
Appearances, Eve thought, were deceiving more often than not. She knew
this wasn't a home of easy wealth, quiet happiness, and tidy lives. She
was certain now that she knew what had gone on behind those rosy walls
and gleaming glass.
Elizabeth opened the door herself. If anything, she was paler and more
drawn than when Eve had last seen her. Her eyes were puffy from weeping,
and the mannishly tailored suit she wore bagged at the hips from recent
weight loss.
"Oh, Roarke." As Elizabeth went into his arms, Eve could all but hear
the fragile bones knocking together. "I'm sorry I dragged you out here.
I shouldn't have bothered you."
"Don't be silly." He tilted her face up with a gentleness that tugged at
the heart Eve was struggling to hold distant. "Beth, you're not taking
care of yourself."
"I can't seem to function, to think, or to do. Everything's crumbling
away at my feet, and I -- " She broke off, remembering abruptly that
they weren't alone. "Lieutenant Dallas."
Eve caught the quick accusation in Elizabeth's eyes when she looked at
Roarke. "He didn't bring me, Ms. Barrister. I brought him. I received a
call this morning from this location. Did you make it?"
"No." Elizabeth stepped back. Her hands reached for each other, twisted.
"No, I didn't. It must have been Catherine. She arrived here last night,
suddenly. Hysterical, overwrought. Her mother has been hospitalized, and
the prognosis is poor. I can only think the stress of the last few weeks
has been too much for her. That's why I called you, Roarke. Richard's at
his wit's end. I don't seem to be any help. We needed someone."
"Why don't we go in and sit down?"
"They're in the parlor." In a jittery move, Elizabeth turned to look
down the hall. "She won't take a sedative, she won't explain. She
refused to let us do more than call her husband and son and tell them
she was here, and not to come. She's frantic at the idea they might be
in some sort of danger. I suppose what happened to Sharon has made her
worry more about her own child. She's obsessed with saving him from God
knows what."
"If she called me," Eve put in. "Then maybe she'll talk to me."
"Yes. Yes, all right."
She led the way down the hall, and into the tidy, sunwashed parlor.
Catherine DeBlass sat on a sofa, leaning into her brother's arms. Eve
couldn't be sure if he was comforting, or restraining.
Richard raised stricken eyes to Roarke's. "It's good of you to come.
We're a mess, Roarke." His voice shook, nearly broke. "We're a mess."
"Elizabeth." Roarke crouched in front of Catherine. "Why don't you ring
for coffee?"
"Oh, of course. I'm sorry."
"Catherine." His voice was gentle, as was the hand he laid on her arm.
But the touch had Catherine jerking up, her eyes going wide.
"Don't. What -- what are you doing here?"
"I came to see Beth and Richard. I'm sorry you're not well."
"Well?" She gave what might have been a laugh as she curled into
herself. "None of us will ever be well again. How can we? We're all
tainted. We're all to blame."
"For what?"
She shook her head, pushed herself into the far corner of the sofa. "I
can't talk to you."
"Congresswoman DeBlass, I'm Lieutenant Dallas. You called me a little
while ago."
"No, no I didn't." Panicked, Catherine wrapped her arms tightly around
her chest. "I didn't call. I didn't say anything."
As Richard leaned over to touch her, Eve shot him a warning glance.
Deliberately, she put herself between them, sat and took Catherine's
frigid hand. "You wanted me to help. And I will help you."
"You can't. No one can. I was wrong to call. We have to keep it in the
family. I have a husband, I have a little boy." Tears began to swim in
her eyes, "I have to protect them. I have to go away, far away, so I can
protect them."
"We'll protect them," Eve said quietly. "We'll protect you. It was too
late to protect Sharon. You can't blame yourself."
"I didn't try to stop it," Catherine said in a whisper. "Maybe I was
even glad, because it wasn't me anymore. It wasn't me."
"Ms. DeBlass, I can help you. I can protect you and your family. Tell me
who raped you."
Richard let out a hiss of shock. "My God, what are you saying? What -- "
Eve turned on him, eyes fierce. "Be quiet. There's no more secrets
here."
"Secrets," Catherine said between trembling lips. "It has to be a
secret."
"No, it doesn't. This kind of secret hurts. It crawls inside you and
eats at you. It makes you scared, and it makes you guilty. The ones who
want it to be secret use that -- the guilt, the fear, the shame. The
only way you can fight back is to tell. Tell me who raped you."
Catherine's breath shuddered out. She looked at her brother, terror
bright in her eyes. Eve turned her face back, held it.
"Look at me. Just me. And tell me who raped you. Who raped Sharon?"
"My father." The words burst from her in a howl of pain. "My father. My
father. My father." She buried her face in her hands and sobbed.
"Oh God." Across the room, Elizabeth stumbled back into the server
droid. China shattered. Coffee seeped dark into the lovely rug. "Oh my
God. My baby."
Richard shot off the couch, reaching her as she swayed. He caught her
hard against him. "I'll kill him for this. I'll kill him." Then he
pressed his face into her hair. "Beth. Oh, Beth."
"Do what you can for them," Eve murmured to Roarke as she gathered
Catherine to her.
"You thought it was Richard," Roarke said in an undertone.
"Yes." Her eyes were dull and flat when she lifted them to his. "I
thought it was Sharon's father. Maybe I didn't want to think that
something so foul could flourish in two generations."
Roarke leaned forward. His face was hard as rock. "One way or the other,
DeBlass is a dead man."
"Help your friends," Eve said evenly. "I have work to do here."
*** CHAPTER EIGHTEEN ***
She let Catherine cry it out, though she knew, too well, that the tears
wouldn't wash the wound clean. She knew, too, that she wouldn't have
been able to handle the situation alone. It was Roarke who calmed
Elizabeth and Richard, who ordered in the domestic droid to gather up
the broken crockery, who held their hands, and when he gauged the time
was right, it was he who gently suggested bringing Catherine some tea.
Elizabeth fetched it herself, carefully closing the parlor doors behind
her before she carried the cup to her sister-in-law. "Here, darling,
drink a little."
"I'm sorry." Catherine put both shaky hands around the cup to warm them.
"I'm sorry. I thought it had stopped. I made myself believe it had
stopped. I couldn't live otherwise."
"It's all right." Her face blank, Elizabeth went back to her husband.
"Ms. DeBlass, I need you to tell me everything. Congress-woman DeBlass?"
Eve waited until Catherine focused on her again. "Do you understand this
is being recorded?"
"He'll stop you."
"No, he won't. That's why you called me, because you know I'll stop
him."
"He's afraid of you," Catherine whispered. "He's afraid of you. I could
tell. He's afraid of women. That's why he hurts them. I think he may
have given something to my mother. Broke her mind. She knew."
"Your mother knew your father was abusing you?"
"She knew. She pretended she didn't, but I could see it in her eyes. She
didn't want to know -- she just wanted everything quiet and perfect, so
she could give her parties and be the senator's wife." She lifted a
hand, shielding her eyes. "When he would come into my room at night, I
could see it on her face the next morning. But when I tried to talk to
her, to tell her to make him stop, she pretended she didn't know what I
meant. She told me to stop imagining things. To be good, to respect the
family."
She lowered her hand again, cupped her tea with both hands, but didn't
drink. "When I was little, seven or eight, he would come in at night and
touch me. He said it was all right, because he was Daddy, and I was
going to pretend to be Mommy. It was a game, he said, a secret game. He
told me I had to do things -- to touch him. To -- "
"It's all right," Eve soothed as Catherine began to tremble violently.
"You don't have to say. Tell me what you can."
"You had to obey him. You had to. He was a force in our house. Richard?"
"Yes." Richard caught his wife's hand in his and squeezed, squeezed. "I
know."
"I couldn't tell you because I was ashamed, and I was afraid, and Mom
just looked away, so I thought I had to do it." She swallowed hard. "On
my twelfth birthday, we had a party. Lots of friends, and a big cake,
and the ponies. You remember the ponies, Richard?"
"I remember." Tears tracked silently down his cheeks. "I remember."
"And that night, the night of my birthday, he came. He said I was old
enough now. He said he had a present for me, a special present because I
was growing up. And he raped me." She buried her face in her hands and
rocked. "He said it was a present. Oh God. And I begged him to stop,
because it hurt. And because I was old enough to know it was wrong, it
was evil. I was evil. But he didn't stop. And he kept coming back. All
those years until I could get away. I went to college, far away, where
he couldn't touch me. And I told myself it never happened. It never,
never happened.
"I tried to be strong, to make a life. I got married because I thought I
would be safe. Justin was so kind, so gentle. He never hurt me. And I
never told him. I thought if he knew, he'd despise me. So I kept telling
myself it never happened."
She lowered her hands and looked at Eve. "I believed it, sometimes. Most
of the time. I could lose myself in my work, in my family. But then I
could see, I knew he was doing the same thing to Sharon. I wanted to
help, but I didn't know how. So I pushed it away, just like my mother
did. He killed her. Now he'll kill me."
"Why do you think he killed Sharon?"
"She wasn't weak like me. She turned it on him, used it against him. I
heard them arguing. Christmas Day. When we all went to his house to
pretend we were a family. I saw them go into his office, and I followed
them. I opened the door, and I watched and I listened through the crack.
He was so furious with her because she was making a public mockery of
everything he stood for. And she said, 'You made me what I am, you
bastard.' It warmed me to hear that. It made me want to cheer. She
stood up to him. She threatened to expose him unless he paid her. She
had it all documented, she said, every dirty detail. So he'd have to
play the game her way. They fought, hurling words at each other. And
then..."
Catherine glanced over at Elizabeth, at her brother, then looked away.
"She took off her blouse." Elizabeth's moan had Catherine trembling
again. "She told him he could have her, just like any client. But he'd
pay more. A lot more. He was looking at her. I knew the way he was
looking at her, his eyes glazed over, his mouth slack. He grabbed her
breasts. She looked at me. Right at me. She'd known I was there, and she
looked at me with such disgust. Maybe even with hate, because she knew
I'd do nothing. I closed the door, closed it and ran. I was sick. Oh,
Elizabeth."
"It's not your fault. She must have tried to tell me. I never saw, I
never heard. I never thought. I was her mother, and I didn't protect
her."
"I tried to talk to her." Catherine gripped her hands together. "When I
went to New York for the fund-raiser. She said I'd chosen my way, and
she'd chosen hers. And hers was better. I played politics, kept my head
buried, and she played with power and kept her eyes opened.
"When I heard she was dead, I knew. At the funeral I watched him, and he
watched me watching him. He came up to me, put his arms around me, held
me close as if in comfort. And he whispered to me to pay attention. To
remember, and to see what happened when families don't keep secrets. And
he said what a fine boy Franklin was. What big plans he had for him. He
said how proud I should be. And how careful." She closed her eyes. "What
could I do? He's my child."
"No one's going to hurt your son." Eve closed a hand over Catherine's
rigid ones. "I promise you."
"I'll never know if I could have saved her. Your child, Richard."
"You can know you're doing everything possible now." Hardly aware she'd
taken Catherine's hand, Eve tightened her grip in reassurance. "It's
going to be difficult for you, Ms. DeBlass, to go over all of this
again, as you'll have to. To face the publicity. To testify, should it
come to trial."
"He'll never let it go to trial," Catherine said wearily.
"I'm not going to give him a choice." Maybe not on murder, she thought.
Not yet. But she had him cold on sexual abuse. "Ms. Barrister, I think
your sister-in-law should rest now. Could you help her upstairs?"
"Yes, of course." Elizabeth rose, walked over to help Catherine to her
feet. "Let's go lie down for a bit, darling."
"I'm sorry." Catherine leaned heavily against Elizabeth as she was led
from the room. "God forgive me, I'm so sorry."
"There's a psychiatric counselor attached to the department, Mr.
DeBlass. I think your sister should see her."
"Yes." He said it absently, staring at the closed door. "She'll need
someone. Something."
You all will, Eve thought. "Are you up to a few questions?"
"I don't know. He's a tyrant, difficult. But this makes him a monster.
How am I to accept that my own father is a monster?"
"He has an alibi for the night of your daughter's death," Eve pointed
out. "I can't charge him without more."
"An alibi?"
"The record shows that Rockman was with your father, working with him in
his East Washington office until nearly two on the night of your
daughter's death."
"Rockman would say whatever my father told him to say."
"Including covering up murder?"
"It's simply a matter of the easiest way out. Why should anyone believe
my father is connected?" He shuddered once, as if blasted with a sudden
chill. "Rockman's statement merely detaches his employer from any
suspicion."
"How would your father travel back and forth to New York from East
Washington if he wanted no record of the trip?"
"I don't know. If his shuttle went out, there would be a log."
"Logs can be altered," Roarke said.
"Yes." Richard looked up as if remembering all at once that his friend
was there. "You'd know more about that than I."
"A reference to my smuggling days," Roarke explained to Eve. "Long
behind me. It can be done, but it would require some payoffs. The pilot,
perhaps the mechanic, certainly the air engineer."
"So I know where to put the pressure on." And if Eve could prove his
shuttle had taken the trip on that night, she'd have probable cause.
Enough to break him. "How much do you know about your father's weapon
collection?"
"More than I care to." Richard rose on unsteady legs. He went to a
cabinet, splashed liquor into a glass. He drank it fast, like medicine.
"He enjoys his guns, often shows them off. When I was younger, he tried
to interest me in them. Roarke can tell you, it didn't work."
"Richard believes guns are a dangerous symbol of power abuse. And I can
tell you that yes, DeBlass occasionally used the black market."
"Why didn't you mention that before?"
"You didn't ask."
She let it drop, for now. "Does your father have a knowledge of security
-- the technical aspects?"
"Certainly. He takes pride in knowing how to protect himself. It's one
of the few things we can discuss without disagreeing."
"Would you consider him an expert?"
"No," Richard said slowly. "A talented amateur."
"His relationship with Chief Simpson? How would you describe it?"
"Self-serving. He considered Simpson a fool. My father enjoys utilizing
fools." Abruptly, he sank into a chair. "I'm sorry. I can't do this. I
need some time. I need my wife."
"All right. Mr. DeBlass, I'm going to order surveillance on your father.
You won't be able to reach him without being monitored. Please don't
try."
"You think I'll try to kill him?" Richard gave a mirthless laugh and
stared down at his own hands. "I want to. For what he did to my
daughter, to my sister, to my life. I wouldn't have the courage."
-=O=-***-=O=-
When they were outside again, Eve headed straight for the car without
looking at Roarke. "You suspected this?" she asked.
"That DeBlass was involved? Yes, I did."
"But you didn't tell me."
"No." Roarke stopped her before she could wrench open the door. "It was
a feeling, Eve. I had no idea about Catherine. Absolutely none. I
suspected that Sharon and DeBlass were having an affair."
"That's too clean a word for it."
"I suspected it," he continued, "because of the way she spoke of him
during our single dinner together. But again, it was a feeling, not a
fact. That feeling would have done nothing to enhance your case. And,"
he added, turning her to face him, "once I got to know you, I kept that
feeling to myself, because I didn't want to hurt you." She jerked her
head away. He brought it patiently back with his fingertips. "You had no
one to help you?"
"It isn't about me." But she let out a shuddering breath. "I can't think
about it, Roarke. I can't. I'll mess up if I do, and if I mess up, he
could get away with it. With rape and murder, with abusing the children
he should have been protecting. I won't let him."
"Didn't you say to Catherine that the only way to fight back was to
tell?"
"I have work to do."
He fought back frustration. "I assume you'll want to go to the
Washington Airport where DeBlass keeps his shuttle."
"Yes." She climbed in the car when Roarke walked around to get in the
driver's side. "You can drop me at the nearest transport station."
"I'm sticking, Eve."
"All right, fine. I need to check in."
As he drove down the winding lane, she put in a call to Feeney. "I've
got something hot here," she said before he could speak. "I'm on my way
to East Washington."
"You've got something hot?" Feeney's voice was almost a song. "Didn't
have to look farther than her final entry, Dallas, logged the morning of
her murder. God knows why she took it to the bank. Blind luck. She had a
date at midnight. You'll never guess who."
"Her grandfather."
Feeney goggled, sputtered. "Fuck it, Dallas, how'd you get it?"
Eve closed her eyes briefly. "Tell me it's documented, Feeney. Tell me
she names him."
"Calls him the senator -- calls him her old fart of a grand-daddy. And
she writes pretty cheerfully about the five thousand she charges him for
each boink. Quote: 'It's almost worth letting him slobber all over me --
and there's a lot of energy left in dear old Granddad. The bastard. Five
thousand every couple of weeks isn't such a bad deal. I sure as hell
give him his money's worth. Not like when I was a kid and he used me.
Table's turned. I won't turn into a dried up prune like poor Aunt
Catherine. I'm thriving on it now. And one day, when it bores me enough,
I'm sending my diaries to the media. Multiple copies. It drives the
bastard crazy when I threaten to do that. Maybe I'll twist the knife a
little tonight. Give the senator a good scare. Christ, it's wonderful to
have the power to make him squirm after all he's done to me.'"
Feeney shook his head. "It was a long-time deal, Dallas. I've run
through several entries. She earned a nice income from blackmail, and
names names and deeds. But this puts the senator at her place on the
night of her death. And that puts his balls in the old nutcracker."
"Can you get me a warrant?"
"Commander's orders are to patch it through the minute you called in. He
says to pick him up. Murder One, three counts."
She let out a slow breath. "Where do I find him?"
"He's at the Senate building, hawking his Morals Bill."
"Fucking perfect. I'm on my way." She switched off, turned to Roarke.
"How much faster can this thing go?"
"We'll find out."
-=O=-***-=O=-
If Whitney's orders hadn't come through with the warrant, instructing
her to be discreet, Eve would have marched onto the Senate floor and
cuffed him in front of his associates. Still, there was considerable
satisfaction in the way it went down.
She waited while he completed his impassioned speech on the moral
decline of the country, the insidious corruption that stemmed from
promiscuity, conception control, genetic engineering. He expounded on
the lack of morality in the young, the dearth of organized religion in
the home, the school, the workplace. Our one nation under God had become
godless. Our constitutional right to bear arms sundered by the liberal
left. He touted figures on violent crime, on urban decay, on bootlegged
drugs, all a result, the senator claimed, of our increasing moral
decline, our softness on criminals, our indulgence in sexual freedom
without responsibility.
It made Eve sick to listen.
"In the year 2016," she said softly, "at the end of the Urban Revolt,
before the gun ban, there were over ten thousand deaths and injuries
from guns in the borough of Manhattan alone."
She continued to watch DeBlass sell his snake oil while Roarke laid a
hand at the base of her spine.
"Before we legalized prostitution, there was a rape or attempted rape
every three seconds. Of course, we still have rape, because it has much
less to do with sex than with power, but the figures have dropped.
Licensed prostitutes don't have pimps, so they aren't beaten, battered,
killed. And they can't use drugs. There was a time when women went to
butchers to deal with an unwanted pregnancy. When they had to risk their
lives or ruin them. Babies were born blind, deaf, deformed before
genetic engineering and the research it made possible to repair in
vitro. It's not a perfect world, but you listen to him and you realize
it could be a lot worse."
"Do you know what the media is going to do to him when this hits?"
"Crucify him," Eve murmured. "I hope to God it doesn't make him a
martyr."
"The voice of the moral right suspected of incest, trucking with
prostitutes, committing murder. I don't think so. He's finished." Roarke
nodded. "In more ways than one."
Eve heard the thunderous applause from the gallery. From the sound of
it, DeBlass's team had been careful to pepper the spectators with their
own.
Discretion be damned, she thought as the gavel was struck and an hour's
recess was called. She moved through the milling aides, assistants, and
pages until she came to DeBlass. He was being congratulated on his
eloquence, slapped on the back by his senatorial supporters.
She waited until he saw her, until his gaze skimmed over her, then
Roarke, until his mouth tightened. "Lieutenant. If you need to speak
with me, we can adjourn briefly to my office. Alone. I can spare ten
minutes."
"You're going to have plenty of time, senator. Senator DeBlass, you're
under arrest for the murders of Sharon DeBlass, Lola Starr, and Georgie
Castle." As he blustered in protest and the murmurs began, she lifted
her voice. "Additional charges include the incestuous rapes of Catherine
DeBlass, your daughter, and Sharon DeBlass, your granddaughter."
He was still standing, frozen in shock when she linked the restraints
over his wrist, turned him, and secured his hands behind his back. "You
are under no obligation to make a statement."
"This is an outrage." He exploded over the standard recitation of
revised Miranda. "I'm a senator of the United States. This is federal
property."
"And these two federal agents will escort you," she added. "You are
entitled to an attorney or representative." As she continued to recite
his rights, a flash from her eyes had the federal deputies and onlookers
backing off. "Do you understand these rights?"
"I'll have your badge, you bitch." He began to wheeze as she muscled him
through the crowd.
"I'll take that as a yes. Catch your breath, senator. We can't have you
popping off with a cardiac." She leaned closer to his ear. "And you
won't have my badge, you bastard. I'm going to have your ass." She
turned him over to the federal agents. "They're waiting for him in New
York," she said briefly.
She could hardly be heard now. DeBlass was screaming, demanding
immediate release. The Senate had erupted with voices and bodies.
Through it, she spotted Rockman. He came toward her, his face a cold
mask of fury.
"You're making a mistake, lieutenant."
"No, I'm not. But you made one in your statement. The way I see it,
that's going to make you accessory after the fact. I'm going to start
working on that when I get back to New York."
"Senator DeBlass is a great man. You're nothing but a pawn for the
Liberal Party and their plans to destroy him."
"Senator DeBlass is an incestuous child molester. A rapist and a
murderer. And what I am, pal, is the cop who's taking him down. You'd
better call a lawyer unless you want to sink with him."
Roarke had to force himself not to snatch her up as she swept through
the hallowed Senate halls. Members of the media were already leaping
toward her, but she cut through them as if they weren't there.
"I like your style, Lieutenant Dallas," he said when they'd fought their
way to the car. "I like it a lot. And by the way, I don't think I'm in
love with you anymore. I know I am."
She swallowed hard on the nausea rising in her throat. "Let's get out of
here. Let's get the hell out of here."
Sheer force of will kept her steady until she got to the plane. It kept
her voice flat and expressionless as she reported in to her superior.
Then she stumbled, and shoving away from Roarke's supporting arms,
rushed into the head to be wretchedly and violently ill.
On the other side of the door, Roarke stood helplessly. If he understood
her at all, it was to know that comforting would make it worse. He
murmured instructions to the flight attendant and took his seat. While
he waited, he stared out at the tarmac.
He looked up when the door opened. She was ice pale, her eyes too big,
too dark. Her usually smooth gait was coltish and stiff.
"Sorry. I guess it got to me."
When she sat, he offered a mug. "Drink this. It'll help."
"What is it?"
"It's tea, a whiff of whiskey."
"I'm on duty," she began, but his quick, vicious eruption cut her off.
"Drink, goddamn it, or I'll pour it into you." He flipped a switch and
ordered the pilot to take off.
Telling herself it was easier than arguing, she lifted the mug, but her
hands weren't steady. She barely managed to get a sip through her
chattering teeth before she set it aside.
She couldn't stop shaking. When Roarke reached for her, she drew herself
back. The sickness was still there, sliding slyly through her stomach,
making her head pound evilly.
"My father raped me." She heard herself say it. The shock of it, hearing
her own voice say the words, mirrored in her eyes. "Repeatedly. And he
beat me, repeatedly. If I fought or I didn't fight, it didn't matter. He
still raped me. He still beat me. And there was nothing I could do.
There's nothing you can do when the people who are supposed to take care
of you abuse you that way. Use you. Hurt you."
"Eve." He took her hand then, holding firm when she tried to yank free.
"I'm sorry. Terribly sorry."
"They said I was eight when they found me, in some alley in Dallas. I
was bleeding, and my arm was broken. He must have dumped me there. I
don't know. Maybe I ran away. I don't remember. But he never came for
me. No one ever came for me."
"Your mother?"
"I don't know. I don't remember her. Maybe she was dead. Maybe she was
like Catherine's mother and pretended not to know. I only get flashes,
nightmares of the worst of it. I don't even know my name. They weren't
able to identify me."
"You were safe then."
"You've never been shuffled through the system. There's no feeling of
safety. Only impotence. They strip you bare with good intentions." She
sighed, let her head fall back, her eyes close. "I didn't want to arrest
DeBlass, Roarke. I wanted to kill him. I wanted to kill him with my own
hands because of what happened to me. I let it get personal."
"You did your job."
"Yeah. I did my job. And I'll keep doing it." But it wasn't the job she
was thinking of now. It was life. Hers, and his. "Roarke, you've got to
know I've got some bad stuff inside. It's like a virus that sneaks
around the system, pops out when your resistance is low. I'm not a good
bet."
"I like long odds." He lifted her hand, kissed it. "Why don't we see it
through? Find out if we can both win."
"I've never told anybody before."
"Did it help?"
"I don't know. Maybe. Christ, I'm so tired."
"You could lean on me." He slipped an arm around her, nestled her head
in the curve of his shoulder.
"For a little while," she murmured. "Until we get to New York."
"For a little while then." He pressed his lips to her hair and hoped she
would sleep.
*** CHAPTER NINETEEN ***
DeBlass wouldn't talk. His lawyers put the muzzle on him early, and they
put in on tight. The interrogation process was slow, and it was tedious.
There were times Eve thought he would burst, when the temper that
reddened his face would tip the scales in her favor.
She'd stopped denying it was personal. She didn't want a tricky, media
blitzed trial. She wanted a confession.
"You were engaged in an incestuous affair with your granddaughter,
Sharon DeBlass."
"My client has not confirmed those allegations."
Eve ignored the lawyer, watched DeBlass's face. "I have here a
transcript of a portion of Sharon DeBlass's diary, dated on the night of
her murder."
She shoved the paper across the table. DeBlass's lawyer, a trim, tidy
man with a neat sandy beard and mild blue eyes picked it up, studied it.
Whatever his reaction was, he hid it behind cool indifference.
"This proves nothing, lieutenant, as I'm sure you know. The destructive
fantasies of a dead woman. A woman of dubious reputation who has long
been estranged from her family."
"There's a pattern here, Senator DeBlass." Eve stubbornly continued to
address the accused rather than his knight at arms. "You sexually abused
your daughter, Catherine."
"Preposterous," DeBlass blurted out before his attorney lifted a hand to
silence him.
"I have a statement, signed and verified before witnesses from
Congresswoman Catherine DeBlass." Eve offered it, and the lawyer nipped
it out of her fingers before the senator could move.
He scanned it, then folded his carefully manicured hands over it. "You
may not be aware, lieutenant, that there is an unfortunate history of
mental disorder here. Senator DeBlass's wife is even now under
observation for a breakdown."
"We are aware." She spared the lawyer a glance. "And we will be
investigating her condition, and the cause of it."
"Congresswoman DeBlass has also been treated for symptoms of depression,
paranoia, and stress," the lawyer continued in the same neutral tone.
"If she has, Senator DeBlass, we'll find that the roots of it are due to
your systematic and continued abuse of her as a child. You were in New
York on the night of Sharon DeBlass's murder," she said, switching gears
smoothly. "Not, as you previously claimed, in East Washington."
Before the lawyer could block her, she leaned forward, her eyes steady
on DeBlass's face. "Let me tell you how it went down. You took your
private shuttle, paying the pilot and the flight engineer to doctor the
log. You went to Sharon's apartment, had sex with her, recorded it for
your own purposes. You took a weapon with you, a thirty-eight caliber
Smith & Wesson antique. And because she taunted you, because she
threatened you, because you couldn't take the pressure of possible
exposure any longer, you shot her. You shot her three times, in the
head, in the heart and in the genitalia."
She kept the words coming fast, kept her face close to his. It pleased
her that she could smell his sweat. "The last shot was pretty clever.
Messed up any chance for us to verify sexual activity. You ripped her
open at the crotch. Maybe it was symbolic, maybe it was
self-preservation. Why'd you take the gun with you? Had you planned it?
Had you decided to end it once and for all?"
DeBlass's eyes darted left and right. His breathing grew hard and fast.
"My client does not acknowledge ownership of the weapon in question."
"Your client's scum."
The lawyer puffed up. "Lieutenant Dallas, you're speaking of a United
States Senator."
"That makes him elected scum. It shocked you, didn't it, senator? All
the blood, the noise, the way the gun jerked in your hand. Maybe you
hadn't really believed you could go through with it. Not when push came
to shove and you had to pull the trigger. But once you had, there was no
going back. You had to cover it up. She would have ruined you, she never
would have let you have peace. She wasn't like Catherine. Sharon
wouldn't fade into the background and suffer all the shame and the guilt
and the fear. She used it against you, so you had to kill her. Then you
had to cover your tracks."
"Lieutenant Dallas -- "
She never took her eyes from DeBlass, and ignoring the lawyer's warning,
kept beating at him. "That was exciting, wasn't it? You could get away
with it. You're a United States senator, the victim's grandfather. Who
would believe it of you? So you arranged her on the bed, indulged
yourself, your ego. You could do it again, and why not? The killing had
stirred something in you. What better way to hide than to make it seem
as if there was some maniac at large?"
She waited while DeBlass reached for a glass of water and drank
thirstily. "There was a maniac at large. You printed out the note,
slipped it under her. And you dressed, calmer now, but excited. You set
the 'link to call the cops at two fifty-five. You needed enough time to
go down and fix the security tapes. Then you got back on your shuttle,
flew back to East Washington, and waited to play the outraged
grandfather."
Through it all, DeBlass said nothing. But a muscle jerked in his cheek
and his eyes couldn't find a place to land.
"That's a fascinating story, lieutenant," the lawyer said. "But it
remains that -- a story. A supposition. A desperate attempt by the
police department to fight their way out of a difficult situation with
the media and the people of New York. And, of course, it's perfect
timing that such ridiculous and damaging accusation should be levied
against the senator just as his Morals Bill is coming up for debate."
"How did you pick the other two? How did you select Lola Starr and
Georgie Castle? Have you already picked the fourth, the fifth, the
sixth? Do you think you could have stopped there? Could you have stopped
when it made you feel so powerful, so invincible, so righteous?"
DeBlass wasn't red now. He was gray, and his breathing was harsh and
choppy. When he reached for a glass again, his hand jerked and sent it
rolling to the floor.
"This interview is over." The lawyer stood, helped DeBlass to his feet.
"My client's health is precarious. He requires medical attention
immediately."
"Your client's a murderer. He'll get plenty of medical attention in a
penal colony, for the rest of his life." She pressed a button. When the
doors of the interrogation room opened, a uniform stepped in. "Call the
MTs," she ordered. "The senator's feeling a little stressed. It's going
to get worse," she warned, turning back to DeBlass. "I haven't even
gotten started."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Two hours later, after filing reports and meeting with the prosecuting
attorney, Eve fought her way through traffic. She had read a good
portion of Sharon DeBlass's diaries. It was something she needed to set
aside for now, the pictures of a twisted man and how he had turned a
young girl into a woman almost as unbalanced as he.
Because she knew it could have been, all too easily, her story. Choices
were there to be taken, she thought, brooding. Sharon's had killed her.
She wanted to blow off some steam, go over the events step by step with
someone who would listen, appreciate, support. Someone who, for a little
while, would stand between her and the ghosts of what was. And what
could have been.
She headed for Roarke's.
When the call came through on her car 'link, she prayed it wasn't a
summons back to duty. "Dallas."
"Hey, kid." It was Feeney's tired face on-screen. "I just watched the
interrogation discs. Good job."
"Didn't get as far as I'd like, fencing with the damn lawyer. I'm going
to break him, Feeney. I swear it."
"Yeah, my money's on you. But, ah, I got to tell you something that's
not going to go down well. DeBlass had a little heart blip."
"Christ, he's not going to code out on us?"
"No. No, they medicated him. Some talk about getting him a new one next
week."
"Good." She blew out a stream of breath. "I want him to live a long time
-- behind bars."
"We've got a strong case. The prosecutor's ready to canonize you, but in
the meantime, he's sprung."
She hit the brakes. A volley of testy horn blasts behind her had her
whipping over to the edge of Tenth and blocking the turning lane. "What
the hell do you mean, he's sprung?"
Feeney winced, as much in empathy as reaction. "Released on his own
recognizance. U. S. senator, lifetime of patriotic duty, salt of the
earth, dinky heart -- and a judge in his pocket."
"Fuck that." She pulled her hair until the pain equaled her frustration.
"We got him on murder, three counts. Prosecutor said she was going for
no bail."
"She got shot down. DeBlass's lawyer made a speech that would have wrung
tears from a stone and had a corpse saluting the flag. DeBlass is back
in East Washington by now, under doctor's orders to rest. He got a
thirty-six-hour hold on further interrogation."
"Shit." She punched the wheel with the heel of her hand. "It's not going
to make any difference," she said grimly. "He can play the ill elder
statesman, he can do a tap dance at the fucking Lincoln Memorial, I've
got him."
"Commander's worried that the time lag will give DeBlass an opportunity
to pool his resources. He wants you back working with the prosecutor,
going over everything we've got by oh eight hundred tomorrow."
"I'll be there. Feeney, he's not going to slip out of this noose."
"Just make sure you've got the knot nice and tight, kid. See you at
eight."
"Yeah." Steaming, she swung back into traffic. She considered going
home, burying herself in the chain of evidence. But she was five minutes
from Roarke's. Eve opted to use him as a sounding board.
She could count on him to play devil's advocate if she needed it, to
point out flaws. And, she admitted, to calm her down so that she could
think without all these violent emotions getting in the way. She
couldn't afford those emotions, couldn't afford to let Catherine's face
pop into her head, as it had time and time again. The shame and the fear
and the guilt.
It was impossibly hard to separate it. She knew she wanted DeBlass to
pay every bit as much for Catherine as for the three dead women.
She was cleared through Roarke's gate, drove quickly up the sloped
driveway. Her pulse began to thud as she raced up the steps. Idiot, she
told herself. Like some hormonal plagued teenager. But she was smiling
when Summerset opened the door.
"I need to see Roarke," she said, brushing by him.
"I'm sorry, lieutenant. Roarke isn't at home."
"Oh." The sense of deflation made her feel ridiculous. "Where is he?"
Summerset's face pokered up. "I believe he's in a meeting. He was forced
to cancel an important trip to Europe, and was therefore compelled to
work late."
"Right." The cat pranced down the steps and immediately began twining
himself through Eve's legs. She picked him up, stroked his underbelly.
"When do you expect him?"
"Roarke's time is his business, lieutenant. I don't presume to expect
him."
"Look, pal, I haven't been twisting Roarke's arm to get him to spend his
valuable time with me. So why don't you pull the stick out of your ass
and tell me why you act like I'm some sort of embarrassing rodent
whenever I show up."
Shock turned Summerset's face paper white. "I am not comfortable with
crude manners, Lieutenant Dallas. Obviously, you are."
"They fit me like old slippers."
"Indeed." Summerset drew himself up. "Roarke is a man of taste, of
style, of influence. He has the ear of presidents and kings. He has
escorted women of unimpeachable breeding and pedigree."
"And I've got lousy breeding and no pedigree." She would have laughed if
the barb hadn't stuck so close to the heart. "It seems even a man like
Roarke can find the occasional mongrel appealing. Tell him I took the
cat," she added and walked out.
-=O=-***-=O=-
It helped to tell herself Summerset was an insufferable snob. And the
cat's silent interest as she vented on the drive home was curiously
smoothing. She didn't need some tight-assed butler's approval. As if in
agreement, the cat walked over onto her lap and began to knead her
thighs.
She winced a little as his claws nipped through her trousers, but didn't
move him aside. "I guess we've got to come up with a name for you. Never
had a pet before," she murmured. "I don't know what Georgie called you,
but we'll start fresh. Don't worry, we won't go for anything wimpy like
Fluffy."
She pulled into her garage, parked, saw the yellow light blipping on the
wall of her spot. A warning that her payment on the space was overdue.
If it went red, the barricade would engage and she'd be screwed.
She swore a little, more from habit than heat. She hadn't had time to
pay bills, damn it, and now realized she could face an evening of
catching up playing the credit juggle with her bank account.
Hauling the cat under her arm, she walked to the elevator. "Fred,
maybe." She tilted her head, stared into his unreadable two-toned eyes.
"No, you don't look like Fred. Jesus, you must weigh twenty pounds."
Shifting her bag, she stepped into the car. "We'll give the name some
thought, Tubbo."
The minute she set him down inside the apartment, he darted for the
kitchen. Taking her responsibilities as pet owner seriously, and
deciding it was one way to postpone crunching figures, Eve followed and
came up with a saucer of milk and some leftover Chinese that smelled
slightly off.
The cat apparently had no delicacies when it came to food, and attacked
the meal with gusto.
She watched him a moment, letting her mind drift. She'd wanted Roarke.
Needed him. That was something else she'd have to give some thought to.
She didn't know how seriously to take the fact that he claimed to be in
love with her. Love meant different things to different people. It had
never been a part of her life.
She poured herself a half glass of wine, then merely frowned into it.
She felt something for him, certainly. Something new, and uncomfortably
strong. Still, it was best to let things coast as they were. Decisions
made quickly were almost always regretted quickly.
Why the hell hadn't he been home?
She set the untouched wine aside, dragged a hand through her hair. That
was the biggest problem with getting used to someone, she thought. You
were lonely when they weren't there.
She had work to do, she reminded herself. A case to close, a little
Russian roulette with her credit status. Maybe she'd indulge in a long,
hot bath, letting some of the stress steam away before prepping for her
morning meeting with the prosecutor.
She left the cat gulping sweet and sour and went to the bedroom.
Instincts, sluggish after a long day and personal questions, kicked in a
moment too late.
Her hand was on her weapon before she fully registered the move. But it
dropped away slowly as she stared into the long barrel of the revolver.
Colt, she thought. Forty-five. The kind that tamed the American west,
six bullets at a time.
"This isn't going to help your boss's case, Rockman."
"I disagree." He stepped from behind the door, kept the gun pointed at
her heart. "Take your weapon out slowly, lieutenant, and drop it."
She kept her eyes on his. The laser was fast, but it wouldn't be faster
than a cocked. 45. At this range, the hole it would put in her would
make a nasty impression. She dropped her weapon.
"Kick it toward me. Ah!" He smiled pleasantly as her hand slid toward
her pocket. "And the communicator. I prefer keeping this between you and
me. Good," he said when her unit hit the floor.
"Some people might find your loyalty to the senator admirable, Rockman.
I find it stupid. Lying to give him an alibi is one thing. Threatening a
police officer is another."
"You're a remarkably bright woman, lieutenant. Still, you make
remarkably foolish mistakes. Loyalty isn't an issue here. I'd like you
to remove your jacket."
She kept her moves slow, her eyes on his. When the jacket was off one
shoulder, she engaged the recorder in its pocket. "If holding me at
gunpoint isn't due to loyalty to Senator DeBlass, Rockman, what is it?"
"It's a matter of self-preservation and great pleasure. I'd hoped for
the opportunity to kill you, lieutenant, but didn't see clearly how to
work it into the plan."
"What plan is that?"
"Why don't you sit down? The side of the bed. Take off your shoes and
we'll chat."
"My shoes?"
"Yes, please. This gives me my first, and I'm sure only opportunity to
discuss what I've managed to accomplish. Your shoes?"
She sat, choosing the side of the bed nearest her 'link. "You've been
working with DeBlass through it all, haven't you?"
"You want to ruin him. He could have been president, and eventually the
Chair of the World Federation of Nations. The tide's swinging, and he
could have swept it along and sat in the Oval Office. Beyond."
"With you at his side."
"Of course. And with me at his side, we would have taken the country,
then the world, in a new direction. The right direction. One of strong
morals, strong defense."
She took her time, letting one shoe drop before unstrapping the other.
"Defense -- like your old pals in SafeNet?"
His smile was hard, his eyes bright. "This country has been run by
diplomats for too long. Our generals discuss and negotiate rather than
command. With my help, DeBlass would have changed that. But you were
determined to bring him down, and me with him. There's no chance for the
presidency now."
"He's a murderer, a child abuser -- "
"A statesman," Rockman interrupted. "You'll never bring him to trial."
"He'll be brought to trial, and he'll be convicted. Killing me won't
stop it."
"No, but it will destroy your case against him -- posthumously on both
parts. You see, when I left him less than two hours ago, Senator DeBlass
was in his office in East Washington. I stood by him as he chose a four
fifty-seven Magnum, a very powerful gun. And I watched as he put the
barrel into his mouth, and died like a patriot."
"Christ." It jolted her, the image of it. "Suicide."
"The warrior falling on his sword." Admiration shone in Rockman's voice.
"I told him it was the only way, and he agreed. He would never have been
able to tolerate the humiliation. When his body is found, when yours is
found, the senator's reputation will be intact once again. It will be
proven that he was dead hours before you. He couldn't have killed you,
and as the method will be exactly as the other murders, and as there
will be two more, as promised, the evidence against him will cease to
matter. He'll be mourned. I'll lead the charge of fury and insult -- and
step into his bloody shoes."
"This isn't about politics. Goddamn you." She rose then, braced for the
blow. She was grateful he didn't use the gun, but the back of his hand
to knock her back. She turned with it, fell heavily onto the night
table. The glass she'd left there shattered to the floor.
"Get up."
She moaned a little. Indeed, the flash of pain had her cheek singing and
her vision blurred. She pushed herself up, turned, careful to keep her
body in front of the 'link she'd switched on manually.
"What good is it going to do to kill me, Rockman?"
"It will do me a great deal of good. You were the spearhead of the
investigation. You're sexually involved with a man who was an early
suspect. Your reputation, and your motives will come under close
scrutiny after your death. It's always a mistake to give a woman
authority."
She wiped the blood from her mouth. "Don't like women, Rockman?"
"They have their uses, but under it all, they're whores. Perhaps you
didn't sell your body to Roarke, but he bought you. Your murder won't
really break the pattern I've established."
"You've established?"
"Did you really believe DeBlass was capable of planning out and
executing such a meticulous series of murders?" He waited until he saw
that she understood. "Yes, he killed Sharon. An impulse. I wasn't even
aware he was considering it. He panicked afterward."
"You were there. You were with him the night he killed Sharon."
"I was waiting for him in the car. I always accompanied him on his
trysts with her. Driving him so that only I, who he trusted, would be
involved."
"His own granddaughter." Eve didn't dare turn to be certain she was
transmitting. "Didn't it disgust you?"
"She disgusted me, lieutenant. She used his weakness. Every man's
entitled to one, but she used it, exploited it, then threatened him.
After she was dead, I realized it was for the best. She would have
waited until he was president, then twisted the knife."
"So you helped him cover it up."
"Of course." Rockman lifted his shoulders. "I'm glad we have this
opportunity. It was frustrating for me not to be able to take credit.
I'm delighted to share it with you."
Ego, she remembered. Not just intelligence, but ego and vanity. "You had
to think fast," she commented. "And you did. Fast and brilliantly."
"Yes." His smile spread. "He called me on the car 'link, told me to come
up quickly. He was half mad with fear. If I hadn't calmed him, she might
have succeeded in ruining him."
"You can blame her?"
"She was a whore. A dead whore." He shrugged it off, but held the gun
steady. "I gave the senator a sedative, and I cleaned up the mess. As I
explained to him, it was necessary to make Sharon only part of the
whole. To use her failings, her pathetic choice of profession. It was a
simple matter to doctor the security discs. The senator's penchant for
recording his sexual activities gave me the idea to use that as part of
the pattern."
"Yes," she said through numbed lips. "That was clever."
"I wiped the place down, wiped the gun. Since he'd been sensible enough
not to use one that was registered, I left it behind. Again,
establishing pattern."
"So you used it," Eve said quietly. "Used him, used Sharon."
"Only fools waste opportunities. He was more himself once we were away,"
Rockman mused. "I was able to outline the rest of my plan. Using Simpson
to apply pressure, leak information. It was unfortunate that the senator
didn't remember until later to tell me about Sharon's diaries. I had to
risk going back. But, as we know now, she was clever enough to hide them
well."
"You killed Lola Starr and Georgie Castle. You killed them to cover up
the first murder."
"Yes. But unlike the senator, I enjoyed it. From beginning to end. It
was a simple matter to select them, choose names, locations."
It was a little difficult at the moment to enjoy the fact that she'd
been right, and her computer wrong. Two killers after all. "You didn't
know them? You didn't even know them?"
"Did you think I should?" He laughed at that. "Who they were hardly
mattered. Only what. Whores offend me. Women who spread their legs to
weaken a man offend me. You offend me, lieutenant."
"Why the discs?" Where the hell was Feeney? Why wasn't a roving unit
breaking down her door right now? "Why did you send me the discs?"
"I liked watching you scramble around like a mouse after cheese -- a
woman who believed she could think like a man. I pointed you at Roarke,
but you let him talk you onto your back. All too typical. You
disappointed me. You were emotional, lieutenant: over the deaths, over
that little girl you didn't save. But you got lucky. Which is why you're
about to become very unlucky."
He sidestepped over to the dresser where he had a camera waiting. He
switched it on. "Take off your clothes."
"You can kill me," she said as her stomach began to churn. "But you're
not going to rape me."
"You'll do exactly what I want you to do. They always do." He lowered
the gun until it pointed at her midsection. "With the others, it was a
shot to the head first. Instant death, probably painless. Do you have
any idea what sort of pain you'll experience with a forty-five slug in
your gut? You'll be begging me to kill you."
His eyes lit brilliantly. "Strip."
Eve's hands fell to her sides. She'd face the pain, but not the
nightmare. Neither of them saw the cat slink into the room.
"Your choice, lieutenant," Rockman said, then jerked when the cat
brushed between his legs.
Eve sprang forward, head low, and used the force of her body to drive
him against the wall.
*** CHAPTER TWENTY ***
Feeney stopped on his way back from the eatery, a half a soy burger in
his hand. He loitered by the coffee dispenser, gossiping with a couple
of cops on robbery detail. They swapped stories, and Feeney decided he
could use one more cup of coffee before calling it a night.
He nearly bypassed his office altogether, with visions of an evening in
front of the TV screen and a nice cold beer swimming in his head. His
wife might even be up for a little cuddle if he was lucky.
But he was a creature of habit. He breezed in to make certain his
precious computer was secured for the night. And heard Eve's voice.
"Hey, Dallas, what brings you -- " He stopped, scanning his empty
office. "Working too hard," he muttered, then heard her again.
"You were with him. You were with him the night he killed Sharon."
"Oh my Jesus."
He could see little on the screen: Eve's back, the side of the bed.
Rockman was blocked from view, but the audio was clear. Feeney was
already praying when he called Dispatch.
-=O=-***-=O=-
Eve heard the cat's annoyed screech when her foot stomped his tail,
heard too, the clatter as the gun hit the floor. Rockman had her in
height, he had her in weight. And he'd recovered from her full body slam
too quickly. He proved graphically that he was military trained.
She fought viciously, unable to restrain herself to the cool, efficient
moves of hand to hand. She used nails and teeth.
The shortened blow to the ribs stole her breath. She knew she was going
down, and she made sure she took him with her. They hit the floor hard,
and though she rolled, he came down on top of her.
Lights starred behind her eyes when her head rapped hard against the
floor.
His hand was around her throat, bruising her windpipe. She went for the
eyes, missed, and raked furrows down his cheek that had him howling like
an animal. If he'd used his other hand for a blow to the face, he might
have stunned her, but he was too focused on reaching the gun. Her
stiff-handed chop to his elbow had his hand shaking from her throat.
Painfully gasping in air, she scrambled with him for the gun.
His hand closed over it first.
-=O=-***-=O=-
Roarke tucked a package under his arm as he walked into the lobby of
Eve's building. He enjoyed the fact that she'd come to him. It was a
habit he didn't intend to see her break. He thought now that she'd
closed her case, he could talk her into taking a couple of days off. He
had an island in the West Indies he thought she'd enjoy.
He pressed her intercom, and was smiling over the image of swimming
naked with her in clear blue water, making love under a hot, white sun
when all hell broke loose behind him.
"Get the hell out of the way." Feeney came in like a steamroller, a
dozen uniforms in his wake. "Police business."
"Eve!" Roarke's blood drained even as he muscled his way onto the
elevator.
Feeney ignored him and barked into his communicator. "Secure all exits.
Get those fucking sharpshooters in position."
Roarke fisted his hand uselessly at his sides. "DeBlass?"
"Rockman," Feeney corrected, counting every beat of his own heart. "He's
got her. Stay out of the way, Roarke."
"The fuck I will."
Feeney flicked his eyes over, measured. No way he was going to spare a
couple of cops to restrain a civilian, and he had a hunch this civilian
would go to the wall, as he would, for Eve.
"Then do what I tell you."
They heard the gunshot as the elevator doors opened.
Roarke was two steps ahead of Feeney when he rammed Eve's apartment
door. He swore, reared back. They hit it together.
-=O=-***-=O=-
The pain was like being stabbed with ice. Then it was gone, numbed with
fury. Eve clamped her hand over the wrist of his gun hand, dug her short
nails into his flesh. Rockman's face was close to hers, his body pinning
her in an obscene parody of love. His wrist was slippery with his own
blood where she clawed at it.
She swore as she lost her grip, as he began to smile.
"You fight like a woman." He shook his hair back from his eyes, and the
blood from his torn cheek welled red. "I'm going to rape you. The last
thing you'll know before I kill you is that you're no better than a
whore."
She sagged, and aroused with victory, he ripped at her blouse.
His smile shattered when she pumped her fist into his mouth. Blood
splattered over her like warm rain. She hit him again, heard the crunch
of cartilage as his nose fountained more blood. Quick as a snake, she
scissored up.
And again, she jabbed at him, an elbow to the jaw, torn knuckles to the
face, screaming and cursing as if her words would pummel him as well as
her fists.
She didn't hear the battering of the door, the crash of it falling in.
With rage behind her, she shoved Rockman to his back, straddled him, and
continued to plunge her fists into his face.
"Eve. Sweet God."
It took Roarke and Feeney together to haul her off. She fought,
snarling, until Roarke pressed her face into his shoulder.
"Stop. It's done. It's over."
"He was going to kill me. He killed Lola and Georgie. He was going to
kill me, but he was going to rape me first." She pulled back, wiped at
the blood and sweat on her face. "That's where he made a mistake."
"Sit down." His hands were trembling and slicked with blood when he
eased her onto the bed. "You're hurt."
"Not yet. It'll start in a minute." She gathered in a breath, let it
out. She was a cop, damn it, she reminded herself. She was a cop, and
she'd act like one. "You got the transmission," she said to Feeney.
"Yeah." He took out a handkerchief to wipe his clammy face.
"Then what the hell took you so long?" She managed a ghost of a smile.
"You look a little upset, Feeney."
"Shit. All in a day's work." He flipped on his communicator. "Situation
under control. We need an ambulance."
"I'm not going to any health center."
"Not for you, champ. For him." He glanced down at Rockman, who managed a
weak groan.
"Once you clean him up, book him for the murders of Lola Starr and
Georgie Castle."
"You sure about that?"
Her legs were a bit wobbly, but she rose and picked up her jacket. "Got
it all." She held out the recorder. "DeBlass did Sharon, but our boy
here is accessory after the fact. And I want him charged with the
attempted rape and murder of a police officer. Toss in B and E for the
hell of it."
"You got it." Feeney tucked the recorder into his pocket. "Christ,
Dallas, you're a mess."
"I guess I am. Get him out of here, will you, Feeney?"
"Sure thing."
"Let me help you." Roarke bent down, lifted Rockman by the lapels. He
jerked the man up, steadied him. "Look at me, Rockman. Vision clear?"
Rockman blinked blood out of his eyes. "I can see you."
"Good." Roarke's arm shot up, quick as a bullet, and his fist connected
with Rockman's already battered face.
"Oops," Feeney said mildly, when Rockman crumbled to the floor again.
"Guess he's not too steady on his feet." He bent over himself, slipped
on the cuffs. "Maybe a couple of you boys ought to carry him out. Hold
the ambulance for me. I'll ride with him."
He took out an evidence bag, slipped the gun into it. "Nice piece --
ivory handle. Bet it packs a wallop."
"Tell me about it." Her hand went automatically to her arm.
Feeney stopped admiring the gun and gaped at her. "Shit, Dallas, you
shot?"
"I don't know." She said it almost dreamily, surprised when Roarke
ripped off the sleeve of her already tattered shirt. "Hey."
"Grazed her." His voice was hollow. He ripped the sleeve again, used it
to stanch the wound. "She needs to be looked at."
"I figure I can leave that to you," Feeney remarked. "You might want to
stay somewhere else tonight, Dallas. Let a team come in and clean this
up for you."
"Yeah." She smiled as the cat leaped onto the bed. "Maybe."
He whistled through his teeth. "Busy day."
"It comes and goes," she murmured, stroking the cat. Galahad, she
thought, her white knight.
"See you around, kid."
"Yeah. Thanks, Feeney."
Determined to get through, Roarke crouched in front of her. He waited
until Feeney's whistling faded away. "Eve, you're in shock."
"Sort of. I'm starting to hurt though."
"You need a doctor."
She moved her shoulders. "I could use a pain pill, and I need to clean
up."
She looked down at herself, took inventory calmly. Her blouse was torn,
spotted with blood. Her hands were a mess, ripped and swollen knuckles
-- she couldn't quite make a fist. A hundred bruises were making
themselves known and the wound on her arm where the bullet had nicked it
was turning to fire.
"I don't think it's as bad as it looks," she decided, "but I'd better
check."
When she started to rise, he picked her up. "I kind of like when you
carry me. Makes me all wobbly inside. Then I feel stupid about it after.
There's stuff in the bathroom."
Since he wanted to see the damage for himself, he carried her in, set
her on the toilet. He found strong, police issue pain pills in a nearly
empty medicine cabinet. He offered one, and water, before dampening a
cloth.
She pushed at her hair with her good arm. "I forgot to tell Feeney.
DeBlass is dead. Suicide. What they used to call eating your gun. Hell
of a phrase."
"Don't worry about it now." Roarke worked on the bullet wound first. It
was a nasty gash, but the bleeding had already slowed. Any competent MT
could close it in a matter of minutes. It didn't make his hands any
steadier.
"There were two killers." She frowned at the far wall. "That was the
problem. I clicked onto it, but then I let it go. Data indicated low
probability percentage. Stupid."
Roarke rinsed out the cloth and started on her face. He was deliriously
relieved that most of the blood on it wasn't hers. Her mouth was cut,
her left eye already beginning to swell. There was raw color along her
cheekbone.
He managed to take a full, almost easy breath. "You're going to have a
hell of a bruise."
"I've had them before." The medication was seeping in, turning pain into
a mist. She only smiled when he stripped her to the waist and began
checking for other injuries. "You've got great hands. I love when you
touch me. Nobody ever touched me like that. Did I tell you?"
"No." And he doubted she'd remember she was telling him now. He'd make
sure to remind her.
"And you're so pretty. So pretty," she repeated, lifting a bleeding hand
to his face. "I keep wondering what you're doing here."
He took her hand, wrapped a cloth gently around it. "I've asked myself
the same question."
She grinned foolishly, let herself float. Need to file my report, she
thought hazily. Soon. "You don't really think we're going to make
anything out of this, do you? Roarke and the cop?"
"I guess we'll have to find out." There were plenty of bruises, but the
bluing along her ribs worried him most.
"Okay. Maybe I could lie down now? Can we go to your place, 'cause
Feeney's going to send a team in to record the scene and all that. If I
could just take a little nap before I go in to make my report."
"You're going to the closest health center."
"No, uh-uh. Can't stand them. Hospitals, health centers, doctors." She
gave him a glassy-eyed smile and lifted her arms. "Let me sleep in your
bed, Roarke. Okay? The great big one, up on the platform, under the
sky."
For lack of anything closer to hand, he took off his jacket and slipped
it around her. When he picked her up again, her head lolled on his
shoulder.
"Don't forget Galahad. The cat saved my life. Who'd have thought?"
"Then he gets caviar for the whole of his nine lives." Roarke snapped
his fingers and the cat fell happily into step.
"Door's broken." Eve chuckled as Roarke stepped around it and into the
hall. "Landlord's going to be pissed. But I know how to get around him."
She pressed a kiss to Roarke's throat. "I'm glad it's over," she said,
sighing. "I'm glad you're here. Be nice if you stuck around."
"Count on it." Shifting her, he bent down and retrieved the package he'd
dropped in the hallway in his race to her door. There was a fresh pound
of coffee inside. He figured he'd need it as a bribe when she woke up
and found herself in a hospital bed.
"Don't wanna dream tonight," she murmured as she drifted off.
He stepped into the elevator, the cat at his feet. "No." He brushed his
lips over Eve's hair. "No dreams tonight."
Eve Dallas 01 - Naked In Death
[Version 1.0 - 12/31/01 - Scanned, OCR'ed and spell-checked; Version 1.1
- 01/12/02 - read through and additional typos corrected]
NAKED IN DEATH
by J. D. Robb
Copyright (c) 1995
-=O=-***-=O=-
What's past is prologue.
-- WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
Violence is as American as cherry pie.
-- RAP (HUBERT GEROLD) BROWN
*** CHAPTER ONE ***
She woke in the dark. Through the slats on the window shades, the first
murky hint of dawn slipped, slanting shadowy bars over the bed. It was
like waking in a cell.
For a moment she simply lay there, shuddering, imprisoned, while the
dream faded. After ten years on the force, Eve still had dreams.
Six hours before, she'd killed a man, had watched death creep into his
eyes. It wasn't the first time she'd exercised maximum force, or
dreamed. She'd learned to accept the action and the consequences.
But it was the child that haunted her. The child she hadn't been in time
to save. The child whose screams had echoed in the dreams with her own.
All the blood, Eve thought, scrubbing sweat from her face with her
hands. Such a small little girl to have had so much blood in her. And
she knew it was vital that she push it aside.
Standard departmental procedure meant that she would spend the morning
in Testing. Any officer whose discharge of weapon resulted in
termination of life was required to undergo emotional and psychiatric
clearance before resuming duty. Eve considered the tests a mild pain in
the ass.
She would beat them, as she'd beaten them before.
When she rose, the overheads went automatically to low setting, lighting
her way into the bath. She winced once at her reflection. Her eyes were
swollen from lack of sleep, her skin nearly as pale as the corpses she'd
delegated to the ME.
Rather than dwell on it, she stepped into the shower, yawning.
"Give me one oh one degrees, full force," she said and shifted so that
the shower spray hit her straight in the face.
She let it steam, lathered listlessly while she played through the
events of the night before. She wasn't due in Testing until nine, and
would use the next three hours to settle and let the dream fade away
completely.
Small doubts and little regrets were often detected and could mean a
second and more intense round with the machines and the owl-eyed
technicians who ran them.
Eve didn't intend to be off the streets longer than twenty-four hours.
After pulling on a robe, she walked into the kitchen and programmed her
AutoChef for coffee, black; toast, light. Through her window she could
hear the heavy hum of air traffic carrying early commuters to offices,
late ones home. She'd chosen the apartment years before because it was
in a heavy ground and air pattern, and she liked the noise and crowds.
On another yawn, she glanced out the window, followed the rattling
journey of an aging airbus hauling laborers not fortunate enough to work
in the city or by home-links.
She brought the New York Times up on her monitor and scanned the
headlines while the faux caffeine bolstered her system. The AutoChef had
burned her toast again, but she ate it anyway, with a vague thought of
springing for a replacement unit.
She was frowning over an article on a mass recall of droid cocker
spaniels when her tele-link blipped. Eve shifted to communications and
watched her commanding officer flash onto the screen.
"Commander."
"Lieutenant." He gave her a brisk nod, noted the still wet hair and
sleepy eyes. "Incident at Twenty-seven West Broadway, eighteenth floor.
You're primary."
Eve lifted a brow. "I'm on Testing. Subject terminated at twenty-two
thirty-five."
"We have override," he said, without inflection. "Pick up your shield
and weapon on the way to the incident. Code Five, lieutenant."
"Yes, sir." His face flashed off even as she pushed back from the
screen. Code Five meant she would report directly to her commander, and
there would be no unsealed interdepartmental reports and no cooperation
with the press.
In essence, it meant she was on her own.
-=O=-***-=O=-
Broadway was noisy and crowded, a party where rowdy guests never left.
Street, pedestrian, and sky traffic were miserable, choking the air with
bodies and vehicles. In her old days in uniform she remembered it as a
hot spot for wrecks and crushed tourists who were too busy gaping at the
show to get out of the way.
Even at this hour there was steam rising from the stationary and
portable food stands that offered everything from rice noodles to
soydogs for the teeming crowds. She had to swerve to avoid an eager
merchant on his smoking Glida-Grill, and took his flipped middle finger
as a matter of course.
Eve double-parked and, skirting a man who smelled worse than his bottle
of brew, stepped onto the sidewalk. She scanned the building first,
fifty floors of gleaming metal that knifed into the sky from a hilt of
concrete. She was propositioned twice before she reached the door.
Since this five-block area of Broadway was affectionately termed
Prostitute's Walk, she wasn't surprised. She flashed her badge for the
uniform guarding the entrance.
"Lieutenant Dallas."
"Yes, sir." He skimmed his official compu-seal over the door to keep out
the curious, then led the way to the bank of elevators. "Eighteenth
floor," he said when the doors swished shut behind them.
"Fill me in, officer." Eve switched on her recorder and waited.
"I wasn't first on the scene, lieutenant. Whatever happened upstairs is
being kept upstairs. There's a badge inside waiting for you. We have a
Homicide, and a Code Five in number Eighteen-oh-three."
"Who called it in?"
"I don't have that information."
He stayed where he was when the elevator opened. Eve stepped out and was
alone in a narrow hallway. Security cameras tilted down at her and her
feet were almost soundless on the worn nap of the carpet as she
approached 1803. Ignoring the handplate, she announced herself, holding
her badge up to eye level for the peep cam until the door opened.
"Dallas."
"Feeney." She smiled, pleased to see a familiar face. Ryan Feeney was an
old friend and former partner who'd traded the street for a desk and a
top level position in the Electronics Detection Division. "So, they're
sending computer pluckers these days."
"They wanted brass, and the best." His lips curved in his wide, rumpled
face, but his eyes remained sober. He was a small, stubby man with
small, stubby hands and rust-colored hair. "You look beat."
"Rough night."
"So I heard." He offered her one of the sugared nuts from the bag he
habitually carried, studying her, and measuring if she was up to what
was waiting in the bedroom beyond.
She was young for her rank, barely thirty, with wide brown eyes that had
never had a chance to be naive. Her doe-brown hair was cropped short,
for convenience rather than style, but suited her triangular face with
its razor-edge cheekbones and slight dent in the chin.
She was tall, rangy, with a tendency to look thin, but Feeney knew there
were solid muscles beneath the leather jacket. More, there was a brain,
and a heart.
"This one's going to be touchy, Dallas."
"I picked that up already. Who's the victim?"
"Sharon DeBlass, granddaughter of Senator DeBlass."
Neither meant anything to her. "Politics isn't my forte, Feeney."
"The gentleman from Virginia, extreme right, old money. The
granddaughter took a sharp left a few years back, moved to New York, and
became a licensed companion."
"She was a hooker." Dallas glanced around the apartment. It was
furnished in obsessive modern -- glass and thin chrome, signed holograms
on the walls, recessed bar in bold red. The wide mood screen behind the
bar bled with mixing and merging shapes and colors in cool pastels.
Neat as a virgin, Eve mused, and cold as a whore. "No surprise, given
her choice of real estate."
"Politics makes it delicate. Victim was twenty-four, Caucasian female.
She bought it in bed."
Eve only lifted a brow. "Seems poetic, since she'd been bought there.
How'd she die?"
"That's the next problem. I want you to see for yourself."
As they crossed the room, each took out a slim container, sprayed their
hands front and back to seal in oils and fingerprints. At the doorway,
Eve sprayed the bottom of her boots to slicken them so that she would
pick up no fibers, stray hairs, or skin.
Eve was already wary. Under normal circumstances there would have been
two other investigators on a homicide scene, with recorders for sound
and pictures. Forensics would have been waiting with their usual snarly
impatience to sweep the scene.
The fact that only Feeney had been assigned with her meant that there
were a lot of eggshells to be walked over.
"Security cameras in the lobby, elevator, and hallways," Eve commented.
"I've already tagged the discs." Feeney opened the bedroom door and let
her enter first.
It wasn't pretty. Death rarely was a peaceful, religious experience to
Eve's mind. It was the nasty end, indifferent to saint and sinner. But
this was shocking, like a stage deliberately set to offend.
The bed was huge, slicked with what appeared to be genuine satin sheets
the color of ripe peaches. Small, soft focused spotlights were trained
on its center where the naked woman was cupped in the gentle dip of the
floating mattress.
The mattress moved with obscenely graceful undulations to the rhythm of
programmed music slipping through the headboard.
She was beautiful still, a cameo face with a tumbling waterfall of
flaming red hair, emerald eyes that stared glassily at the mirrored
ceiling, long, milk white limbs that called to mind visions of Swan Lake
as the motion of the bed gently rocked them.
They weren't artistically arranged now, but spread lewdly so that the
dead woman formed a final X dead center of the bed.
There was a hole in her forehead, one in her chest, another horribly
gaping between the open thighs. Blood had splattered on the glossy
sheets, pooled, dripped, and stained.
There were splashes of it on the lacquered walls, like lethal paintings
scrawled by an evil child.
So much blood was a rare thing, and she had seen much too much of it the
night before to take the scene as calmly as she would have preferred.
She had to swallow once, hard, and force herself to block out the image
of a small child.
"You got the scene on record?"
"Yep."
"Then turn that damn thing off." She let out a breath after Feeney
located the controls that silenced the music. The bed flowed to
stillness. "The wounds," Eve murmured, stepping closer to examine them.
"Too neat for a knife. Too messy for a laser." A flash came to her --
old training films, old videos, old viciousness.
"Christ, Feeney, these look like bullet wounds."
Feeney reached into his pocket and drew out a sealed bag. "Whoever did
it left a souvenir." He passed the bag to Eve. "An antique like this has
to go for eight, ten thousand for a legal collection, twice that on the
black market."
Fascinated, Eve turned the sealed revolver over in her hand. "It's
heavy," she said half to herself. "Bulky."
"Thirty-eight caliber," he told her. "First one I've seen outside of a
museum. This one's a Smith & Wesson, Model Ten, blue steel." He looked
at it with some affection. "Real classic piece, used to be standard
police issue up until the latter part of the twentieth. They stopped
making them in about twenty-two, twenty-three, when the gun ban was
passed."
"You're the history buff." Which explained why he was with her. "Looks
new." She sniffed through the bag, caught the scent of oil and burning.
"Somebody took good care of this. Steel fired into flesh," she mused as
she passed the bag back to Feeney. "Ugly way to die, and the first I've
seen it in my ten years with the department."
"Second for me. About fifteen years ago, Lower East Side, party got out
of hand. Guy shot five people with a twenty-two before he realized it
wasn't a toy. Hell of a mess."
"Fun and games," Eve murmured. "We'll scan the collectors, see how many
we can locate who own one like this. Somebody might have reported a
robbery."
"Might have."
"It's more likely it came through the black market." Eve glanced back at
the body. "If she's been in the business for a few years, she'd have
discs, records of her clients, her trick books." She frowned. "With Code
Five, I'll have to do the door-to-door myself. Not a simple sex crime,"
she said with a sigh. "Whoever did it set it up. The antique weapon, the
wounds themselves, almost ruler straight down the body, the lights, the
pose. Who called it in, Feeney?"
"The killer." He waited until her eyes came back to him. "From right
here. Called the station. See how the bedside unit's aimed at her face?
That's what came in. Video, no audio."
"He's into showmanship." Eve let out a breath. "Clever bastard,
arrogant, cocky. He had sex with her first. I'd bet my badge on it. Then
he gets up and does it." She lifted her arm, aiming, lowering it as she
counted off, "One, two, three."
"That's cold," murmured Feeney.
"He's cold. He smooths down the sheets after. See how neat they are? He
arranges her, spreads her open so nobody can have any doubts as to how
she made her living. He does it carefully, practically measuring, so
that she's perfectly aligned. Center of the bed, arms and legs equally
apart. Doesn't turn off the bed 'cause it's part of the show. He leaves
the gun because he wants us to know right away he's no ordinary man.
He's got an ego. He doesn't want to waste time letting the body be
discovered eventually. He wants it now. That instant gratification."
"She was licensed for men and women," Feeney pointed out, but Eve shook
her head.
"It's not a woman. A woman wouldn't have left her looking both beautiful
and obscene. No, I don't think it's a woman. Let's see what we can find.
Have you gone into her computer yet?"
"No. It's your case, Dallas. I'm only authorized to assist."
"See if you can access her client files." Eve went to the dresser and
began to carefully search drawers.
Expensive taste, Eve reflected. There were several items of real silk,
the kind no simulation could match. The bottle of scent on the dresser
was exclusive, and smelled, after a quick sniff, like expensive sex.
The contents of the drawers were meticulously ordered, lingerie folded
precisely, sweaters arranged according to color and material. The closet
was the same.
Obviously the victim had a love affair with clothes and a taste for the
best and took scrupulous care of what she owned.
And she'd died naked.
"Kept good records," Feeney called out. "It's all here. Her client list,
appointments -- including her required monthly health exam and her
weekly trip to the beauty salon. She used the Trident Clinic for the
first and Paradise for the second."
"Both top of the line. I've got a friend who saved for a year so she
could have one day for the works at Paradise. Takes all kinds."
"My wife's sister went for it for her twenty-fifth anniversary. Cost
damn near as much as my kid's wedding. Hello, we've got her personal
address book."
"Good. Copy all of it, will you, Feeney?" At his low whistle, she looked
over her shoulder, glimpsed the small gold-edged palm computer in his
hand. "What?"
"We've got a lot of high-powered names in here. Politics, entertainment,
money, money, money. Interesting, our girl has Roarke's private number."
"Roarke who?"
"Just Roarke, as far as I know. Big money there. Kind of guy that
touches shit and turns it into gold bricks. You've got to start reading
more than the sports page, Dallas."
"Hey, I read the headlines. Did you hear about the cocker spaniel
recall?"
"Roarke's always big news," Feeney said patiently. "He's got one of the
finest art collections in the world. Arts and antiques," he continued,
noting when Eve clicked in and turned to him. "He's a licensed gun
collector. Rumor is he knows how to use them."
"I'll pay him a visit."
"You'll be lucky to get within a mile of him."
"I'm feeling lucky." Eve crossed over to the body to slip her hands
under the sheets.
"The man's got powerful friends, Dallas. You can't afford to so much as
whisper he's linked to this until you've got something solid."
"Feeney, you know it's a mistake to tell me that." But even as she
started to smile, her fingers brushed something between cold flesh and
bloody sheets. "There's something under her." Carefully, Eve lifted the
shoulder, eased her fingers over.
"Paper," she murmured. "Sealed." With her protected thumb, she wiped at
a smear of blood until she could read the protected sheet.
ONE OF SIX
"It looks hand printed," she said to Feeney and held it out. "Our boy's
more than clever, more than arrogant. And he isn't finished."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Eve spent the rest of the day doing what would normally have been
assigned to drones. She interviewed the victim's neighbors personally,
recording statements, impressions.
She managed to grab a quick sandwich from the same Glida-Grill she'd
nearly smashed before, driving across town. After the night and the
morning she'd put in, she could hardly blame the receptionist at
Paradise for looking at her as though she'd recently scraped herself off
the sidewalk.
Waterfalls played musically among the flora in the reception area of the
city's most exclusive salon. Tiny cups of real coffee and slim glasses
of fizzling water or champagne were served to those lounging on the
cushy chairs and settees. Headphones and discs of fashion magazines were
complementary.
The receptionist was magnificently breasted, a testament to the salon's
figure sculpting techniques. She wore a snug, short outfit in the
salon's trademark red, and an incredible coif of ebony hair coiled like
snakes.
Eve couldn't have been more delighted.
"I'm sorry," the woman said in a carefully modulated voice as empty of
expression as a computer. "We serve by appointment only."
"That's okay." Eve smiled and was almost sorry to puncture the disdain.
Almost. "This ought to get me one." She offered her badge. "Who works on
Sharon DeBlass?"
The receptionist's horrified eyes darted toward the waiting area. "Our
clients' needs are strictly confidential."
"I bet." Enjoying herself, Eve leaned companionably on the U-shaped
counter. "I can talk nice and quiet, like this, so we understand each
other -- Denise?" She flicked her gaze down to the discreet studded
badge on the woman's breast. "Or I can talk louder, so everyone
understands. If you like the first idea better, you can take me to a
nice quiet room where we won't disturb any of your clients, and you can
send in Sharon DeBlass's operator. Or whatever term you use."
"Consultant," Denise said faintly. "If you'll follow me."
"My pleasure."
And it was.
Outside of movies or videos, Eve had never seen anything so lush. The
carpet was a red cushion your feet could sink blissfully into. Crystal
drops hung from the ceiling and spun light. The air smelled of flowers
and pampered flesh.
She might not have been able to imagine herself there, spending hours
having herself creamed, oiled, pummeled, and sculpted, but if she were
going to waste such time on vanity, it would certainly have been
interesting to do so under such civilized conditions.
The receptionist showed her into a small room with a hologram of a
summer meadow dominating one wall. The quiet sound of birdsong and
breezes sweetened the air.
"If you'd just wait here."
"No problem." Eve waited for the door to close then, with an indulgent
sigh, she lowered herself into a deeply cushioned chair. The moment she
was seated, the monitor beside her blipped on, and a friendly, indulgent
face that could only be a droid's beamed smiles.
"Good afternoon. Welcome to Paradise. Your beauty needs and your comfort
are our only priorities. Would you like some refreshment while you wait
for your personal consultant?"
"Sure. Coffee, black, coffee."
"Of course. What sort would you prefer? Press C on your keyboard for the
list of choices."
Smothering a chuckle, Eve followed instructions. She spent the next two
minutes pondering over her options, then narrowed it down to French
Riviera or Caribbean Cream.
The door opened again before she could decide. Resigned, she rose and
faced an elaborately dressed scarecrow.
Over his fuchsia shirt and plum colored slacks, he wore an open,
trailing smock of Paradise red. His hair, flowing back from a painfully
thin face echoed the hue of his slacks. He offered Eve a hand, squeezed
gently, and stared at her out of soft doe eyes.
"I'm terribly sorry, officer. I'm baffled."
"I want information on Sharon DeBlass." Again, Eve took out her badge
and offered it for inspection.
"Yes, ah, Lieutenant Dallas. That was my understanding. You must know,
of course, our client data is strictly confidential. Paradise has a
reputation for discretion as well as excellence."
"And you must know, of course, that I can get a warrant, Mr. -- ?"
"Oh, Sebastian. Simply Sebastian." He waved a thin hand, sparkling with
rings. "I'm not questioning your authority, lieutenant. But if you could
assist me, your motives for the inquiry?"
"I'm inquiring into the motives for the murder of DeBlass." She waited a
beat, judged the shock that shot into his eyes and drained his face of
color. "Other than that, my data is strictly confidential."
"Murder. My dear God, our lovely Sharon is dead? There must be a
mistake." He all but slid into a chair, letting his head fall back and
his eyes close. When the monitor offered him refreshment, he waved a
hand again. Light shot from his jeweled fingers. "God, yes. I need a
brandy, darling. A snifter of Trevalli."
Eve sat beside him, took out her recorder. "Tell me about Sharon."
"A marvelous creature. Physically stunning, of course, but it went
deeper." His brandy came into the room on a silent automated cart.
Sebastian plucked the snifter and took one deep swallow. "She had
flawless taste, a generous heart, rapier wit."
He turned the doe eyes on Eve again. "I saw her only two days ago."
"Professionally?"
"She had a standing weekly appointment, half day. Every other week was a
full day." He whipped out a butter yellow scarf and dabbed at his eyes.
"Sharon took care of herself, believed strongly in the presentation of
self."
"It would be an asset in her line of work."
"Naturally. She only worked to amuse herself. Money wasn't a particular
need, with her family background. She enjoyed sex."
"With you?"
His artistic face winced, the rosy lips pursing in what could have been
a pout or pain. "I was her consultant, her confidant, and her friend,"
Sebastian said stiffly and draped the scarf with casual flare over his
left shoulder. "It would have been indiscreet and unprofessional for us
to become sexual partners."
"So you weren't attracted to her, sexually?"
"It was impossible for anyone not to be attracted to her sexually.
She..." He gestured grandly. "Exuded sex as others might exude an
expensive perfume. My God." He took another shaky sip of brandy. "It's
all past tense. I can't believe it. Dead. Murdered." His gaze shot back
to Eve. "You said murdered."
"That's right."
"That neighborhood she lived in," he said grimly. "No one could talk to
her about moving to a more acceptable location. She enjoyed living on
the edge and flaunting it all under her family's aristocratic noses."
"She and her family were at odds?"
"Oh definitely. She enjoyed shocking them. She was such a free spirit,
and they so... ordinary." He said it in a tone that indicated ordinary
was more mortal a sin than murder itself. "Her grandfather continues to
introduce bills that would make prostitution illegal. As if the past
century hasn't proven that such matters need to be regulated for health
and crime security. He also stands against procreation regulation,
gender adjustment, chemical balancing, and the gun ban."
Eve's ears pricked. "The senator opposes the gun ban?"
"It's one of his pets. Sharon told me he owns a number of nasty antiques
and spouts off regularly about that outdated right to bear arms
business. If he had his way, we'd all be back in the twentieth century,
murdering each other right and left."
"Murder still happens," Eve murmured. "Did she ever mention friends or
clients who might have been dissatisfied or overly aggressive?"
"Sharon had dozens of friends. She drew people to her, like..." He
searched for a suitable metaphor, used the corner of the scarf again.
"Like an exotic and fragrant flower. And her clients, as far as I know,
were all delighted with her. She screened them carefully. All of her
sexual partners had to meet certain standards. Appearance, intellect,
breeding, and proficiency. As I said, she enjoyed sex, in all of its
many forms. She was... adventurous."
That fit with the toys Eve had unearthed in the apartment. The velvet
handcuffs and whips, the scented oils and hallucinogens. The offerings
on the two sets of colinked virtual reality headphones had been a shock
even to Eve's jaded system.
"Was she involved with anyone on a personal level?"
"There were men occasionally, but she lost interest quickly. Recently
she'd spoken about Roarke. She'd met him at a party and was attracted.
In fact, she was seeing him for dinner the very night she came in for
her consultation. She'd wanted something exotic because they were dining
in Mexico."
"In Mexico. That would have been the night before last."
"Yes. She was just bubbling over about him. We did her hair in a gypsy
look, gave her a bit more gold to the skin -- full body work. Rascal Red
on the nails, and a charming little temp tattoo of a red-winged
butterfly on the left buttock. Twenty-four-hour facial cosmetics so that
she wouldn't smudge. She looked spectacular," he said, tearing up. "And
she kissed me and told me she just might be in love this time. 'Wish me
luck, Sebastian.' She said that as she left. It was the last thing she
ever said to me."
*** CHAPTER TWO ***
No sperm. Eve swore over the autopsy report. If she'd had sex with her
killer, the victim's choice of birth control had killed the little
soldiers on contact, eliminating all trace of them within thirty minutes
after ejaculation.
The extent of her injuries made the tests for sexual activity
inconclusive. He'd blown her apart either for symbolism or for his own
protection.
No sperm, no blood but for the victim's. No DNA.
The forensic sweep of the murder site turned up no fingerprints -- none:
not the victim's, not her weekly cleaning specialist, certainly not the
murderer's.
Every surface had been meticulously wiped, including the murder weapon.
Most telling of all, in Eve's judgment, were the security discs. Once
again, she slipped the elevator surveillance into her desk monitor.
The discs were initialed.
Gorham Complex. Elevator A. 2-12-2058. 06:00.
Eve zipped through, watching the hours fly by. The elevator doors opened
for the first time at noon. She slowed the speed, giving her unit a
quick smack with the heel of her hand when the image hobbled, then
studied the nervous little man who entered and asked for the fifth
floor.
A jumpy John, she decided, amused when he tugged at his collar and
slipped a breath mint between his lips. Probably had a wife and two kids
and a steady white-collar job that allowed him to slip away for an hour
once a week for his nooner.
He got off the elevator at five.
Activity was light for several hours, the occasional prostitute riding
down to the lobby, some returning with shopping bags and bored
expressions. A few clients came and went. The action picked up about
eight. Some residents went out, snazzily dressed for dinner, others came
in to keep their appointments.
At ten, an elegant-looking couple entered the car together. The woman
allowed the man to open her fur coat, under which she wore nothing but
stiletto heels and a tattoo of a rosebud with the stem starting at the
crotch and the flower artistically teasing the left nipple. He fondled
her, a technically illegal act in a secured area. When the elevator
stopped on eighteen, the woman drew her coat together, and they exited,
chatting about the play they'd just seen.
Eve made a note to interview the man the following day. It was he who
was the victim's neighbor and associate.
The glitch happened at precisely 12:05. The image shifted almost
seamlessly, with only the faintest blip, and returned to surveillance at
02:46.
Two hours and forty-one minutes lost.
The hallway disc of the eighteenth floor was the same. Nearly three
hours wiped. Eve picked up her cooling coffee as she thought it through.
The man understood security, she mused, was familiar enough with the
building to know where and how to doctor the discs. And he'd taken his
time, she thought. The autopsy put the victim's death at two A. M.
He'd spent nearly two hours with her before he'd killed her, and nearly
an hour more after she'd been dead. Yet he hadn't left a trace.
Clever boy.
If Sharon DeBlass had recorded an appointment, personal or professional,
for midnight, that, too, had been wiped.
So he'd known her intimately enough to be sure where she kept her files
and how to access them.
On a hunch, Eve leaned forward again. "Gorham Complex, Broadway, New
York. Owner."
Her eyes narrowed as the date flashed onto her screen.
Gorham Complex, owned by Roarke Industries, headquarters 500 Fifth
Avenue. Roarke, president and CEO. New York residence, 222 Central Park
West.
"Roarke," Eve murmured. "You just keep turning up, don't you. Roarke?"
she repeated. "All data, view and print."
Ignoring the incoming call on the 'link beside her, Eve sipped her
coffee and read.
Roarke -- no known given name -- born 10-06-2023, Dublin, Ireland. ID
number 33492-ABR-50. Parents unknown. Marital status, single. President
and CEO of Roarke Industries, established 2042. Main branches New York,
Chicago, New Los Angeles, Dublin, London, Bonn, Paris, Frankfurt, Tokyo,
Milan, Sydney. Off-planet branches. Station 45, Bridgestone Colony,
Vegas II, Free-Star One. Interests in real estate, import-export,
shipping, entertainment, manufacturing, pharmaceuticals, transportation.
Estimated gross worth, three billion, eight hundred million.
Busy boy, Eve thought, lifting a brow as a list of his companies clicked
on-screen.
"Education," she demanded.
Unknown.
"Criminal record?"
No data.
"Access Roarke, Dublin."
No additional data.
"Well, shit. Mr. Mystery. Description and visual." Roarke. Black hair,
blue eyes, 6 feet, 2 inches, 173 pounds.
Eve grunted as the computer listed the description. She had to agree
that in Roarke's case, a picture was worth a couple hundred words.
His image stared back at her from the screen. He was almost ridiculously
handsome: the narrow, aesthetic face; the slash of cheekbones; and
sculpted mouth. Yes, his hair was black, but the computer didn't say it
was thick and full and swept back from a strong forehead to fall inches
above broad shoulders. His eyes were blue, but the word was much too
simple for the intensity of color or the power in them.
Even on an image, Eve could see this was a man who hunted down what or
who he wanted, bagged it, used it, and didn't bother with frivolities
such as trophies.
And yes, she thought, this was a man who could kill if and when it
suited him. He would do so coolly, methodically, and without breaking a
sweat.
Gathering up the hard data, she decided she'd have a talk with Roarke.
Very soon.
-=O=-***-=O=-
By the time Eve left the station to head home, the sky was miserably
spitting snow. She checked her pockets without hope and found she had
indeed left her gloves in her apartment. Hatless, gloveless, with only
her leather jacket as protection against the biting wind, she drove
across town.
She'd meant to get her vehicle into repair. There just hadn't been time.
But there was plenty of time to regret it now as she fought traffic and
shivered, thanks to a faulty heating system.
She swore if she got home without turning into a block of ice, she'd
make the appointment with the mechanic.
But when she did arrive home, her primary thought was food. Even as she
unlocked her door, she was dreaming about a hot bowl of soup, maybe a
mound of chips, if she had any left, and coffee that didn't taste like
someone had spilled sewage into the water system.
She saw the package immediately, the slim square just inside the door.
Her weapon was out and in her hand before she drew the next breath.
Sweeping with weapon and eyes, she kicked the door shut behind her. She
left the package where it was and moved from room to room until she was
satisfied she was alone.
After bolstering her weapon, she peeled out of her jacket and tossed it
aside. Bending, she picked up the sealed disc by the edges. There was no
label, no message.
Eve took it into the kitchen, tapping it carefully out of its seal, and
slipped it into her computer.
And forgot all about food.
The video was top quality, as was the sound. She sat down slowly as the
scene played on her monitor.
Naked, Sharon DeBlass lounged on the lake-size bed, rustling satin
sheets. She lifted a hand, skimming it through that glorious tumbled
mane of russet hair as the bed's floating motion rocked her.
"Want me to do anything special, darling?" She chuckled, rose up on her
knees, cupped her own breasts. "Why don't you come back over here..."
Her tongue flicked out to wet her lips. "We'll do it all again." Her
gaze lowered, and a little cat smile curved her lips. "Looks like you're
more than ready." She laughed again, shook back her hair. "Oh, we want
to play a game." Still smiling, Sharon put her hands up. "Don't hurt
me." She whimpered, shivering even as her eyes glinted with excitement.
"I'll do anything you want. Anything. Come on over here and force me. I
want you to." Lowering her hands, she began to stroke herself. "Hold
that big bad gun on me while you rape me. I want you to. I want you to
-- "
The explosion had Eve jolting. Her stomach twisted as she saw the woman
fly backward like a broken doll, the blood spurting out of her forehead.
The second shot wasn't such a shock, but Eve had to force herself to
keep her eyes on the screen. After the final report there was silence,
but for the quiet music, the fractured breathing. The killer's
breathing.
The camera moved in, panned the body in grisly detail. Then, through the
magic of video, DeBlass was as Eve had first seen her, spread-eagled in
a perfect x over bloody sheets. The image ended with a graphic overlay.
ONE OF SIX
It was easier to watch it through the second time. Or so Eve told
herself. This time she noticed a slight bobble of the camera after the
first shot, a quick, quiet gasp. She ran it back again, listening to
each word, studying each movement, hoping for some clue. But he was too
clever for that. And they both knew it.
He'd wanted her to see just how good he was. Just how cold.
And he wanted her to know that he knew just where to find her. Whenever
he chose.
Furious that her hands weren't quite steady, she rose. Rather than the
coffee she'd intended, Eve took out a bottle of wine from the small cold
cell, poured half a glass.
She drank it down quickly, promised herself the other half shortly, then
punched in the code for her commander.
It was the commander's wife who answered, and from the glittering drops
at her ears and the perfect coiffure, Eve calculated that she'd
interrupted one of the woman's famous dinner parties.
"Lieutenant Dallas, Mrs. Whitney. I'm sorry to interrupt your evening,
but I need to speak to the commander."
"We're entertaining, lieutenant."
"Yes, ma'am. I apologize." Fucking politics, Eve thought as she forced a
smile. "It's urgent."
"Isn't it always?"
The machine hummed on hold, mercifully without hideous background music
or updated news reports, for a full three minutes before the commander
came on.
"Dallas."
"Commander, I need to send you something over a coded line."
"It better be urgent, Dallas. My wife's going to make me pay for this."
"Yes, sir." Cops, she thought as she prepared to send the image to his
monitor, should stay single.
She waited, folding her restless hands on the table. As the images
played again, she watched again, ignoring the clenching in her gut. When
it was over, Whitney came back on-screen. His eyes were grim.
"Where did you get this?"
"He sent it to me. A disc was here, in my apartment, when I got back
from the station." Her voice was flat and careful. "He knows who I am,
where I am, and what I'm doing."
Whitney was silent for a moment. "My office, oh seven hundred. Bring the
disc, lieutenant."
"Yes, sir."
When the transmission ended, she did the two things her instincts
dictated. She made herself a copy of the disc, and she poured another
glass of wine.
-=O=-***-=O=-
She woke at three, shuddering, clammy, fighting for the breath to
scream. Whimpers sounded in her throat as she croaked out an order for
lights. Dreams were always more frightening in the dark.
Trembling, she lay back. This one had been worse, much worse, than any
she'd experienced before.
She'd killed the man. What choice had she had? He'd been too buzzed on
chemicals to be stunned. Christ, she'd tried, but he'd just keep coming,
and coming, and coming, with that wild look in his eyes and the already
bloodied knife in his hand.
The little girl had already been dead. There was nothing Eve could have
done to stop it. Please God, don't let there have been anything that
could have been done.
The little body hacked to pieces, the frenzied man with the dripping
knife. Then the look in his eyes when she'd fired on full, and the life
had slipped out of them.
But that hadn't been all. Not this time. This time he'd kept coming. And
she'd been naked, kneeling in a pool of satin. The knife had become a
gun, held by the man whose face she'd studied hours before. The man
called Roarke.
He'd smiled, and she'd wanted him. Her body had tingled with terror and
sexual desperation even as he'd shot her. Head, heart, and loins.
And somewhere through it all, the little girl, the poor little girl, had
been screaming for help.
Too tired to fight it, Eve simply rolled over, pressed her face into her
pillow and wept.
-=O=-***-=O=-
"Lieutenant." At precisely seven A. M., Commander Whitney gestured Eve
toward a chair in his office. Despite the fact, or perhaps due to the
fact that he'd been riding a desk for twelve years, he had sharp eyes.
He could see that she'd slept badly and had worked to disguise the signs
of a disturbed night. In silence, he held out a hand.
She'd put the disc and its cover into an evidence bag. Whitney glanced
at it, then laid it in the center of his desk.
"According to protocol, I'm obliged to ask you if you want to be
relieved from this case." He waited a beat. "We'll pretend I did."
"Yes, sir."
"Is your residence secure, Dallas?"
"I thought so." She took hard copy out of her briefcase. "I reviewed the
security discs after I contacted you. There's a ten minute time lapse.
As you'll see in my report, he has the capability of undermining
security, a knowledge of videos, editing, and, of course, antique
weapons."
Whitney took her report, set it aside. "That doesn't narrow the field
overmuch."
"No, sir. I have several more people I need to interview. With this
perpetrator, electronic investigation isn't primary, though Captain
Feeney's help is invaluable. This guy covers his tracks. We have no
physical evidence other than the weapon he chose to leave at the scene.
Feeney hadn't been able to trace it through normal channels. We have to
assume it was black market. I've started on her trick books and her
personal appointments, but she wasn't the retiring kind. It's going to
take time."
"Time's part of the problem. One of six, lieutenant. What does that say
to you?"
"That he has five more in mind, and wants us to know it. He enjoys his
work and wants to be the focus of our attention." She took a careful
breath. "There's not enough for a full psychiatric profile. We can't say
how long he'll be satisfied by the thrill of this murder, when he'll
need his next fix. It could be today. It could be a year from now. We
can't bank on him being careless."
Whitney merely nodded. "Are you having problems with the rightful
termination?"
The knife slicked with blood. The small ruined body at her feet.
"Nothing I can't handle."
"Be sure of it, Dallas. I don't need an officer on a sensitive case like
this who's worried whether she should or shouldn't use her weapon."
"I'm sure of it."
She was the best he had, and he couldn't afford to doubt her. "Are you
up to playing politics?" His lips curved thinly. "Senator DeBlass is on
his way over. He flew into New York last night."
"Diplomacy isn't my strong suit."
"I'm aware of that. But you're going to work on it. He wants to talk to
the investigating officer, and he went over my head to arrange it.
Orders came down from the chief. You're to give the senator your full
cooperation."
"This is a Code Five investigation," Eve said stiffly. "I don't care if
orders came down from God Almighty, I'm not giving confidential data to
a civilian."
Whitney's smile widened. He had a good, ordinary face, probably the one
he was born with. But when he smiled and meant it, the flash of white
teeth against the cocoa colored skin turned the plain features into the
special.
"I didn't hear that. And you didn't hear me tell you to give him no more
than the obvious facts. What you do hear me tell you, Lieutenant Dallas,
is that the gentleman from Virginia is a pompous, arrogant asshole.
Unfortunately, the asshole has power. So watch your step."
"Yes, sir."
He glanced at his watch, then slipped the file and disc into his safe
drawer. "You've got time for a cup of coffee... and, lieutenant," he
added as she rose. "If you're having trouble sleeping, take your
authorized sedative. I want my officers sharp."
"I'm sharp enough."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Senator Gerald DeBlass was undoubtedly pompous. He was unquestionably
arrogant. After one full minute in his company, Eve agreed that he was
undeniably an asshole.
He was a compact, bull of a man, perhaps six feet, two hundred and
twenty. His crop of white hair was cut sharp and thin as a razor so that
his head seemed huge and bullet sleek. His eyes were nearly black, as
were the heavy brows over them. They were large, like his nose, his
mouth.
His hands were enormous, and when he clasped Eve's briefly on
introduction, she noted they were smooth and soft as a baby's.
He brought his adjutant with him. Derrick Rockman was a whiplike man in
his early forties. Though he was nearly six-five, Eve gave DeBlass
twenty pounds on him. Neat, tidy, his pin-striped suit and slate blue
tie showed not a crease. His face was solemn, attractively even
featured, his movements restrained and controlled as he assisted the
more flamboyant senator out of his cashmere overcoat.
"What the hell have you done to find the monster who killed my
granddaughter?" DeBlass demanded.
"Everything possible, senator." Commander Whitney remained standing.
Though he offered DeBlass a seat, the man prowled the room, as he was
given to prowl the New Senate Gallery in East Washington.
"You've had twenty-four hours and more," DeBlass shot back, his voice
deep and booming. "It's my understanding you've assigned only two
officers to the investigation."
"For security purposes, yes. Two of my best officers," the commander
added. "Lieutenant Dallas heads the investigation and reports solely to
me."
DeBlass turned those hard black eyes on Eve. "What progress have you
made?"
"We identified the weapon, ascertained the time of death. We're
gathering evidence and interviewing residents of Ms. DeBlass's building,
and tracking the names in her personal and business logs. I'm working to
reconstruct the last twenty-four hours of her life."
"It should be obvious, even to the slowest mind, that she was murdered
by one of her clients." He said the word in a hiss.
"There was no appointment listed for several hours prior to her death.
Her last client has an alibi for the critical hour."
"Break it," DeBlass demanded. "A man who would pay for sexual favors
would have no compunction about murder."
Though Eve failed to see the correlation, she remembered her job and
nodded. "I'm working on it, senator."
"I want copies of her appointment books."
"That's not possible, senator," Whitney said mildly. "All evidence of a
capital crime is confidential."
DeBlass merely snorted and gestured toward Rockman.
"Commander." Rockman reached in his left breast pocket and drew out a
sheet of paper affixed with a holographic seal. "This document from your
chief of police authorizes the senator access to any and all evidence
and investigative data on Ms. DeBlass's murder."
Whitney barely glanced at the document before setting it aside. He'd
always considered politics a coward's game, and hated that he was forced
to play it. "I'll speak to the chief personally. If the authorization
holds, we'll have copies to you by this afternoon." Dismissing Rockman,
he looked back at DeBlass. "The confidentiality of evidence is a major
tool in the investigative process. If you insist on this, you risk
undermining the case."
"The case, as you put it, commander, was my flesh and blood."
"And as such, I'd hope your first priority would be assisting us to
bring her killer to justice."
"I've served justice for more than fifty years. I want that information
by noon." He picked up his coat, tossed it over one beefy arm. "If I'm
not satisfied that you're doing everything in your power to find this
maniac, I'll see that you're removed from this office." He turned toward
Eve. "And that the next thing you investigate, lieutenant, will be
sticky fingered teenagers at a shop-corn."
After he stormed out, Rockman used his quiet, solemn eyes to apologize.
"You must forgive the senator. He's overwrought. However much strain
there was between him and his granddaughter, she was family. Nothing is
more vital to the senator than his family. Her death, this kind of
violent, senseless death, is devastating to him."
"Right," Eve muttered. "He looked all choked up."
Rockman smiled; he managed to look amused and sorrowful at once. "Proud
men often disguise their grief behind aggression. We have every
confidence in your abilities and your tenacity, lieutenant. Commander,"
he nodded. "We'll expect the data this afternoon. Thank you for your
time."
"He's a smooth one," Eve muttered when Rockman shut the door quietly
behind him. "You're not going to cave, commander."
"I'll give them what I have to." His voice was sharp and edged with
suppressed fury. "Now, go get me more."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Police work was too often drudgery. After five hours of staring at her
monitor as she ran makes on the names in DeBlass's books, Eve was more
exhausted than she would have been after a marathon race.
Even with Feeney taking a portion of the names with his skill and
superior equipment, there were too many for such a small investigative
unit to handle quickly.
Sharon had been a very popular girl.
Feeling discretion would gain her more than aggression, Eve contacted
the clients by 'link and explained herself. Those who balked at the idea
of an interview were cheerfully invited to come into Cop Central,
charged with obstruction of justice.
By midafternoon she had spoken personally with the first dozen on the
client list, and took a detour back to the Gorham.
DeBlass's neighbor, the elegant man from the elevator, was Charles
Monroe. Eve found him in, and entertaining a client.
Slickly handsome in a black silk robe, and smelling seductively of sex,
Charles smiled engagingly.
"I'm terribly sorry, lieutenant. My three o'clock appointment has
another fifteen minutes."
"I'll wait." Without invitation, Eve stepped inside. Unlike DeBlass's
apartment, this one ran to deep, cushy chairs in leather and thick
carpets.
"Ah..." Obviously amused, Charles glanced behind him, where a door was
discreetly closed at the end of a short hallway. "Privacy and
confidentiality are, you understand, vital to my profession. My client
is apt to be disconcerted if she discovers the police on my doorstep."
"No problem. Got a kitchen?"
He let out a weighty sigh. "Sure. Right through that doorway. Make
yourself at home. I won't be long."
"Take your time." Eve strolled off to the kitchen. In contrast to the
elaborate living area, this was spartan. It seemed Charles spent little
time eating in. Still, he had a full-size friggie unit rather than a
cold cell, and she found the treasure of a Pepsi chilling. Satisfied for
the moment, she sat down to enjoy it while Charles finished off his
three o'clock.
Soon enough, she heard the murmur of voices, a man's, a woman's, a light
laugh. Moments later, he came in, the same easy smile on his face.
"Sorry to keep you waiting."
"No problem. Are you expecting anyone else?"
"Not until later this evening." He took out a Pepsi for himself, broke
the freshness seal from the tube, and poured it into a tall glass. He
rolled the tube into a ball and popped it into the recycler. "Dinner,
the opera, and a romantic rendezvous."
"You like that stuff? Opera?" she asked when he flashed a grin.
"Hate it. Can you think of anything more tedious than some big-chested
woman screaming in German half the night?"
Eve thought it over. "Nope."
"But there you are. Tastes vary." His smile faded as he joined her at
the little nook under the kitchen window. "I heard about Sharon on the
news this morning. I've been expecting someone to come by. It's
horrible. I can't believe she's dead."
"You knew her well?"
"We've been neighbors more than three years -- and occasionally we
worked together. Now and again, one of our clients would request a trio,
and we'd share the business."
"And when it wasn't business, did you still share?"
"She was a beautiful woman, and she found me attractive." He moved his
silk-clad shoulders, his eyes shifting to the tinted glass of the window
as a tourist tram streamed by. "If one of us was in the mood for a
busman's holiday, the other usually obliged." He smiled again. "That was
rare. Like working in a candy store, after a while you lose your taste
for chocolate. She was a friend, lieutenant. And I was very fond of
her."
"Can you tell me where you were the night of her death between midnight
and three A. M. ?"
His brows shot up. If it hadn't just occurred to him that he could be
considered a suspect, he was an excellent actor. Then again, Eve
thought, people in his line of work had to be.
"I was with a client, here. She stayed overnight."
"Is that usual?"
"This client prefers that arrangement. Lieutenant, I'll give you her
name if absolutely necessary, but I'd prefer not to. At least until I've
explained the circumstances to her."
"It's murder, Mr. Monroe, so it's necessary. What time did you bring
your client here?"
"About ten. We had dinner at Miranda's, the sky cafe above Sixth."
"Ten." Eve nodded, and saw the moment he remembered.
"The security camera in the elevator." His smile was all charm again.
"It's an antiquated law. I suppose you could bust me, but it's hardly
worth your time."
"Any sexual act in a secured area is a misdemeanor, Mr. Monroe."
"Charles, please."
"It's a nitpick, Charles, but they could suspend your license for six
months. Give me her name, and we'll clear it up as quietly as possible."
"You're going to lose me one of my best clients," he muttered. "Darleen
Howe. I'll get you the address." He rose to get his electronic datebook,
then read off the information.
"Thanks. Did Sharon talk about her clients with you?"
"We were friends," he said wearily. "Yeah, we talked shop, though it's
not strictly ethical. She had some funny stories. I'm more conventional
in style. Sharon was... open to the unusual. Sometimes we'd get together
for a drink, and she'd talk. No names. She had her own little terms for
them. The emperor, the weasel, the milkmaid, that kind of thing."
"Was there anyone she mentioned who worried her, made her uneasy?
Someone who might have been violent?"
"She didn't mind violence, and no, nobody worried her. One thing about
Sharon, she always felt in control. That's the way she wanted it because
she said she'd been under someone else's control most of her life. She
had a lot of bitterness toward her family. She told me once she'd never
planned on making a career out of professional sex. She'd only gotten
into it to make her family crazy. But then, after she got into it, she
decided she liked it."
He moved his shoulders again, sipped from his glass. "So she stayed in
the life, and killed two birds with one fuck. Her phrase."
He lifted his eyes again. "Looks like one of the fucks killed her."
"Yeah." Eve rose, tucked her recorder away. "Don't take any out-of-town
trips, Charles. I'll be in touch."
"That's it?"
"For the moment."
He stood as well, smiled again. "You're easy to talk to for a cop...
Eve." Experimentally, he skimmed a fingertip down her arm. When her
brows lifted, he took the fingertip over her jawline. "In a hurry?"
"Why?"
"Well, I've got a couple of hours, and you're very attractive. Big
golden eyes," he murmured. "This little dip right in your chin. Why
don't we both go off the clock for awhile?"
She waited while he lowered his head, while his lips hovered just above
hers. "Is this a bribe, Charles? Because if it is, and you're half as
good as I think you are..."
"I'm better." He nibbled at her bottom lip, let his hand slide down to
toy with her breast. "I'm much better."
"In that case... I'd have to charge you with a felony." She smiled as he
jerked back. "And that would make both of us really sad." Amused, she
patted his cheek. "But, thanks for the thought."
He scratched his chin as he followed her to the door. "Eve?"
She paused, hand on the knob, and glanced back at him. "Yes?"
"Bribes aside, if you change your mind, I'd be interested in seeing more
of you."
"I'll let you know." She closed the door and headed for the elevator.
It wouldn't have been difficult, she mused, for Charles Monroe to slip
out of his apartment, leaving his client sleeping, and slip into
Sharon's. A little sex, a little murder...
Thoughtful, she stepped into the elevator.
Doctor the discs. As a resident of the building, it would have been
simple for him to gain access to security. Then he could have popped
back into bed with his client.
It was too bad that the scenario was plausible, Eve thought as she
reached the lobby. She liked him. But until she checked his alibi
thoroughly, Charles Monroe was now at the top of her short list.
*** CHAPTER THREE ***
Eve hated funerals. She detested the rite human beings insisted on
giving death. The flowers, the music, the endless words and weeping.
There might be a God. She hadn't completely ruled such things out. And
if there were, she thought, It must have enjoyed a good laugh over Its
creations' useless rituals and passages.
Still, she had made the trip to Virginia to attend Sharon DeBlass's
funeral. She wanted to see the dead's family and friends gathered
together, to observe, and analyze, and judge.
The senator stood grim-faced and dry-eyed, with Rockman, his shadow, one
pew behind. Beside DeBlass was his son and daughter-in-law.
Sharon's parents were young, attractive, successful attorneys who headed
their own law firm.
Richard DeBlass stood with his head bowed and his eyes hooded, a trimmer
and somehow less dynamic version of his father. Was it coincidence, Eve
wondered, or design that he stood at equal distance between his father
and wife?
Elizabeth Barrister was sleek and chic in her dark suit, her waving
mahogany hair glossy, her posture rigid. And, Eve, noted, her eyes
red-rimmed and swimming with constant tears.
What did a mother feel, Eve wondered, as she had wondered all of her
life, when she lost a child?
Senator DeBlass had a daughter as well, and she flanked his right side.
Congresswoman Catherine DeBlass had followed in her father's political
footsteps. Painfully thin, she stood militarily straight, her arms
looking like brittle twigs in her black dress. Beside her, her husband
Justin Summit stared at the glossy coffin draped with roses at the front
of the church. At his side, their son Franklin, still trapped in the
gangly stage of adolescence, shifted restlessly.
At the end of the pew, somehow separate from the rest of the family, was
DeBlass's wife, Anna.
She neither shifted nor wept. Not once did Eve see her so much as glance
at the flower-strewn box that held what was left of her only
granddaughter.
There were others, of course. Elizabeth's parents stood together, hands
linked, and cried openly. Cousins, acquaintances, and friends dabbed at
their eyes or simply looked around in fascination or horror. The
President had sent an envoy, and the church was packed with more
politicians than the Senate lunchroom.
Though there were more than a hundred faces, Eve had no trouble picking
Roarke out of the crowd. He was alone. There were others lined in the
pew with him, but Eve recognized the solitary quality that surrounded
him. There could have been ten thousand in the building, and he would
have remained aloof from them.
His striking face gave away nothing: no guilt, no grief, no interest. He
might have been watching a mildly inferior play. Eve could think of no
better description for a funeral.
More than one head turned in his direction for a quick study or, in the
case of a shapely brunette, a not so subtle flirtation. Roarke responded
to both the same way: he ignored them.
At first study, she would have judged him as cold, an icy fortress of a
man who guarded himself against any and all. But there must have been
heat. It took more than discipline and intelligence to rise so high so
young. It took ambition, and to Eve's mind, ambition was a flammable
fuel.
He looked straight ahead as the dirge swelled, then without warning, he
turned his head, looked five pews back across the aisle and directly
into Eve's eyes.
It was surprise that had her fighting not to jolt at that sudden and
unexpected punch of power. It was will that kept her from blinking or
shifting her gaze. For one humming minute they stared at each other.
Then there was movement, and mourners came between them as they left the
church.
When Eve stepped into the aisle to search him out again, he was gone.
-=O=-***-=O=-
She joined the long line of cars and limos on the journey to the
cemetery. Above, the hearse and the family vehicles flew solemnly. Only
the very rich could afford body internment. Only the obsessively
traditional still put their dead into the ground.
Frowning, her fingers tapping the wheel, she relayed her observations
into her recorder. When she got to Roarke, she hesitated and her frown
deepened.
"Why would he trouble himself to attend the funeral of such a casual
acquaintance?" She murmured into the recorder in her pocket. "According
to data, they had met only recently and had a single date. Behavior
seems inconsistent and questionable."
She shivered once, glad she was alone as she drove through the arching
gates of the cemetery. As far as Eve was concerned, there should be a
law against putting someone in a hole.
More words and weeping, more flowers. The sun was bright as a sword but
the air had the snapping bite of a petulant child. Near the gravesite,
she slipped her hands into her pockets. She'd forgotten her gloves
again. The long, dark coat she wore was borrowed. Beneath it, the single
gray suit she owned had a loose button that seemed to beg her to tug at
it. Inside her thin leather boots, her toes were tiny blocks of ice.
The discomfort helped distract her from the misery of headstones and the
smell of cold, fresh earth. She bided her time, waiting until the last
mournful word about everlasting life echoed away, then approached the
senator.
"My sympathies, Senator DeBlass, to you and your family."
His eyes were hard; sharp and black, like the hewed edge of a stone.
"Save your sympathies, lieutenant. I want justice."
"So do I. Mrs. DeBlass." Eve held out a hand to the senator's wife and
found her fingers clutching a bundle of brittle twigs.
"Thank you for coming."
Eve nodded. One close look had shown her Anna DeBlass was skimming under
the edge of emotion on a buffering layer of chemicals. Her eyes passed
over Eve's face and settled just above her shoulder as she withdrew her
hand.
"Thank you for coming," she said in exactly the same flat tone to the
next offer of condolence.
Before Eve could speak again, her arm was taken in a firm grip. Rockman
smiled solemnly down at her. "Lieutenant Dallas, the Senator and his
family appreciate the compassion and interest you've shown in attending
the service." In his quiet manner, he edged her away. "I'm sure you'll
understand that, under the circumstances, it would be difficult for
Sharon's parents to meet the officer in charge of their daughter's
investigation over her grave."
Eve allowed him to lead her five feet away before she jerked her arm
free. "You're in the right business, Rockman. That's a very delicate and
diplomatic way of telling me to get my ass out."
"Not at all." He continued to smile, smoothly polite. "There's simply a
time and place. You have our complete cooperation, lieutenant. If you
wish to interview the senator's family, I'd be more than happy to
arrange it."
"I'll arrange my own interviews, at my own time and place." Because his
placid smile irked her, she decided to see if she could wipe it off his
face. "What about you, Rockman? Got an alibi for the night in question?"
The smile did falter -- that was some satisfaction. He recovered
quickly, however. "I dislike the word alibi."
"Me, too," she returned with a smile of her own. "That's why I like
nothing better than to break them. You didn't answer the question,
Rockman."
"I was in East Washington on the night Sharon was murdered. The senator
and I worked quite late refining a bill he intends to present next
month."
"It's a quick trip from EW to New York," she commented.
"It is. However, I didn't make it on that particular night. We worked
until nearly midnight, then I retired to the senator's guest room. We
had breakfast together at seven the next morning. As Sharon, according
to your own reports, was killed at two, it gives me a very narrow window
of opportunity."
"Narrow windows still provide access." But she said it only to irritate
him as she turned away. She'd held back the information on the doctored
security discs from the file she'd given DeBlass. The murderer had been
in the Gorham by midnight. Rockman would hardly use the victim's
grandfather for an alibi unless it was solid. Rockman's working in East
Washington at midnight slammed even that narrow window closed.
She saw Roarke again, and watched with interest as Elizabeth Barrister
clung to him, as he bent his head and murmured to her. Not the usual
offer and acceptance of sympathy from strangers, Eve mused.
Her brow lifted as Roarke laid a hand on Elizabeth's right cheek, kissed
her left before stepping back to speak quietly to Richard DeBlass.
He crossed to the senator, but there was no contact between them, and
the conversation was brief. Alone, as Eve had suspected, Roarke began to
walk across the winter grass, between the cold monuments the living
raised for the dead.
"Roarke."
He stopped, and as he had at the service, turned and met her eyes. She
thought she caught a flash of something in them: anger, sorrow,
impatience. Then it was gone and they were simply cool, blue, and
unfathomable.
She didn't hurry as she walked to him. Something told her he was a man
too used to people -- women certainly -- rushing toward him. So she took
her time, her long, slow strides flapping her borrowed coat around her
chilly legs.
"I'd like to speak with you," she said when she faced him. She took out
her badge, watched him give it a brief glance before lifting his eyes
back to hers. "I'm investigating Sharon DeBlass's murder."
"Do you make a habit of attending the funerals of murder victims,
Lieutenant Dallas?"
His voice was smooth, with a whisper of the charm of Ireland over it,
like rich cream over warmed whiskey. "Do you make a habit of attending
the funerals of women you barely know, Roarke?"
"I'm a friend of the family," he said simply. "You're freezing,
lieutenant."
She plunged her icy fingers into the pockets of the coat. "How well do
you know the victim's family?"
"Well enough." He tilted his head. In a minute, he thought, her teeth
would chatter. The nasty little wind was blowing her poorly cut hair
around a very interesting face. Intelligent, stubborn, sexy. Three very
good reasons in his mind to take a second look at a woman. "Wouldn't it
be more convenient to talk someplace warmer?"
"I've been unable to reach you," she began.
"I've been traveling. You've reached me now. I assume you're returning
to New York. Today?"
"Yes. I have a few minutes before I have to leave for the shuttle.
So..."
"So we'll go back together. That should give you time enough to grill
me."
"Question you," she said between her teeth, annoyed that he turned and
walked away from her. She lengthened her stride to catch up. "A few
simple answers now, Roarke, and we can arrange a more formal interview
in New York."
"I hate to waste time," he said easily. "You strike me as someone who
feels the same. Did you rent a car?"
"Yes."
"I'll arrange to have it returned." He held out a hand, waiting for the
key card.
"That isn't necessary."
"It's simpler. I appreciate complications, lieutenant, and I appreciate
simplicity. You and I are going to the same destination at the same
approximate time. You want to talk to me, and I'm willing to oblige." He
stopped by a black limo where a uniformed driver waited, holding the
rear door open. "My transport's routed for New York. You can, of course,
follow me to the airport, take public transportation, then call my
office for an appointment. Or you can drive with me, enjoy the privacy
of my jet, and have my full attention during the trip."
She hesitated only a moment, then took the key card for the rental from
her pocket and dropped it into his hand. Smiling, he gestured her into
the limo where she settled as he instructed his driver to deal with the
rental car.
"Now then." Roarke slid in beside her, reached for a decanter. "Would
you like a brandy to fight off the chill?"
"No." She felt the warmth of the car sweep up from her feet and was
afraid she'd begin to shiver in reaction.
"Ah. On duty. Coffee perhaps."
"Great."
Gold winked at his wrist as he pressed his choice for two coffees on the
AutoChef built into the side panel. "Cream?"
"Black."
"A woman after my own heart." Moments later, he opened the protective
door and offered her a china cup in a delicate saucer. "We have more of
a selection on the plane," he said, then settled back with his coffee.
"I bet." The steam rising from her cup smelled like heaven. Eve took a
tentative sip -- and nearly moaned.
It was real. No simulation made from vegetable concentrate so usual
since the depletion of the rain forests in the late twentieth. This was
the real thing, ground from rich Columbian beans, singing with caffeine.
She sipped again, and could have wept.
"Problem?" He enjoyed her reaction immensely, the flutter of the lashes,
the faint flush, the darkening of the eyes -- a similar response, he
noted, to a woman purring under a man's hands.
"Do you know how long it's been since I had real coffee?"
He smiled. "No."
"Neither do I." Unashamed, she closed her eyes as she lifted the cup
again. "You'll have to excuse me, this is a private moment. We'll talk
on the plane."
"As you like."
He gave himself the pleasure of watching her as the car traveled
smoothly over the road.
Odd, he thought, he hadn't pegged her for a cop. His instincts were
usually keen about such matters. At the funeral, he'd been thinking only
what a terrible waste it was for someone as young, foolish, and full of
life as Sharon to be dead.
Then he'd sensed something, something that had coiled his muscles,
tightened his gut. He'd felt her gaze, as physical as a blow. When he'd
turned, when he'd seen her, another blow. A slow motion one-two punch he
hadn't been able to evade.
It was fascinating.
But the warning blip hadn't gone off. Not the warning blip that should
have relayed cop. He'd seen a tall, willowy brunette with short, tumbled
hair, eyes the color of honeycombs and a mouth made for sex.
If she hadn't sought him out, he'd intended to seek her.
Too damn bad she was a cop.
She didn't speak again until they were at the airport, stepping into the
cabin of his JetStar 6000.
She hated being impressed, again. Coffee was one thing, and a small
weakness was permitted, but she didn't care for her goggle-eyed reaction
to the lush cabin with its deep chairs, sofas, the antique carpet, and
crystal vases filled with flowers.
There was a viewing screen recessed in the forward wall and a uniformed
flight attendant who showed no surprise at seeing Roarke board with a
strange woman.
"Brandy, sir?"
"My companion prefers coffee, Diana, black." He lifted a
brow until Eve nodded. "I'll have brandy."
"I've heard about the JetStar." Eve shrugged out of her coat, and it was
whisked away along with Roarke's by the attendant. "It's a nice form of
transportation."
"Thanks. We spent two years designing it."
"Roarke Industries?" she said as she took a chair.
"That's right. I prefer using my own whenever possible. You'll need to
strap in for takeoff," he told her, then leaned forward to flip on an
intercom. "Ready."
"We've been cleared," they were told. "Thirty seconds."
Almost before Eve could blink, they were airborne, in so smooth a
transition she barely felt the g's. It beat the hell, she thought, out
of the commercial flights that slapped you back in your seat for the
first five minutes of air time.
They were served drinks and a little plate of fruit and cheese that had
Eve's mouth watering. It was time, she decided, to get to work.
"How long did you know Sharon DeBlass?"
"I met her recently, at the home of a mutual acquaintance."
"You said you were a friend of the family."
"Of her parents," Roarke said easily. "I've known Beth and Richard for
several years. First on a business level, then on a personal one. Sharon
was in school, then in Europe, and our paths didn't cross. I met her for
the first time a few days ago, took her to dinner. Then she was dead."
He took a flat gold case from his inside pocket. Eve's eyes narrowed as
she watched him light a cigarette. "Tobacco's illegal, Roarke."
"Not in free air space, international waters, or on private property."
He smiled at her through a haze of smoke. "Don't you think, lieutenant,
that the police have enough to do without trying to legislate our
morality and personal lifestyles?"
She hated to admit even to herself that the tobacco smelled enticing.
"Is that why you collect guns? As part of your personal lifestyle?"
"I find them fascinating. Your grandfather and mine considered owning
one a constitutional right. We've toyed quite a bit with constitutional
rights as we've civilized ourselves."
"And murder and injury by that particular type of weapon is now an
aberration rather than the norm."
"You like rules, lieutenant?"
The question was mild, as was the insult under it. Her shoulders
stiffened. "Without rules, chaos."
"With chaos, life."
Screw philosophy, she thought, annoyed. "Do you own a thirty-eight
caliber Smith & Wesson, Model Ten, circa 1990?"
He took another slow, considering drag. The tobacco burned expensively
between his long, elegant fingers. "I believe I own one of that model.
Is that what killed her?"
"Would you be willing to show it to me?"
"Of course, at your convenience."
Too easy, she thought. She suspected anything that came easily. "You had
dinner with the deceased the night before her death. In Mexico."
"That's right." Roarke crushed out his cigarette and settled back with
his brandy. "I have a small villa on the west coast. I thought she'd
enjoy it. She did."
"Did you have a physical relationship with Sharon DeBlass?"
His eyes glittered for a moment, but whether with amusement or with
anger, she couldn't be sure. "By that, I take you to mean did I have sex
with her. No, lieutenant, though it hardly seems relevant. We had
dinner."
"You took a beautiful woman, a professional companion, to your villa in
Mexico, and all you shared with her was dinner."
He took his time choosing a glossy green grape. "I appreciate beautiful
women for a variety of reasons, and enjoy spending time with them. I
don't employ professionals for two reasons. First, I don't find it
necessary to pay for sex." He sipped his brandy, watching her over the
rim. "And second, I don't choose to share." He paused, very briefly. "Do
you?"
Her stomach fluttered, was ignored. "We're not talking about me."
"I was. You're a beautiful woman, and we're quite alone, at least for
the next fifteen minutes. Yet all we've shared has been coffee and
brandy." He smiled at the temper smoldering in her eyes. "Heroic, isn't
it, what restraint I have?"
"I'd say your relationship with Sharon DeBlass had a different flavor."
"Oh, I certainly agree." He chose another grape, offered it.
Appetite was a weakness, Eve reminded herself even as she accepted the
grape and bit through its thin, tart skin. "Did you see her after your
dinner in Mexico?"
"No, I dropped her off about three A. M. and went home. Alone."
"Can you tell me your whereabouts for the forty-eight hours after you
went home -- alone?"
"I was in bed for the first five of them. I took a conference call over
breakfast. About eight-fifteen. You can check the records."
"I will."
This time he grinned, a quick flash of undiluted charm that had her
pulse skipping. "I have no doubt of it. You fascinate me, Lieutenant
Dallas."
"After the conference call?"
"It ended about nine. I worked out until ten, spent the next several
hours in my midtown office with various appointments." He took out a
small, slim card that she recognized as a daybook. "Shall I list them
for you?"
"I'd prefer you to arrange to have a hard copy sent to my office."
"I'll see to it. I was back home by seven. I had a dinner meeting with
several members of my Japanese manufacturing firm -- in my home. We
dined at eight. Shall I send you the menu?"
"Don't be snide, Roarke."
"Merely thorough, lieutenant. It was an early evening. By eleven I was
alone, with a book and a brandy, until about seven A. M., when I had my
first cup of coffee. Would you like another?"
She'd have killed for another cup of coffee, but she shook her head.
"Alone for eight hours, Roarke. Did you speak with anyone, see anyone
during that time?"
"No. No one. I had to be in Paris the next day and wanted a quiet
evening. Poor timing on my part. Then again, if I were going to murder
someone, it would have been ill advised not to protect myself with an
alibi."
"Or arrogant not to bother," she returned. "Do you just collect antique
weapons, Roarke, or do you use them?"
"I'm an excellent shot." He set his empty snifter aside. "I'll be happy
to demonstrate for you when you come to see my collection. Does tomorrow
suit you?"
"Fine."
"Seven o'clock? I assume you have the address." When he leaned over, she
stiffened and nearly hissed as his hand brushed her arm. He only smiled,
his face close, his eyes level. "You need to strap in," he said quietly.
"We'll be landing in a moment."
He fastened her harness himself, wondering if he made her nervous as a
man, or a murder suspect, or a combination of both. Just then, any
choice had its own interest -- and its own possibilities.
"Eve," he murmured. "Such a simple and feminine name. I wonder if it
suits you."
She said nothing while the flight attendant came in to remove the
dishes. "Have you ever been in Sharon DeBlass's apartment?"
A tough shell, he mused, but he was certain there would be something
soft and hot beneath. He wondered if -- no, when -- he'd have the
opportunity to uncover it.
"Not while she was a tenant," Roarke said as he sat back again. "And not
at all that I recall, though it's certainly possible." He smiled again
and fastened his own harness. "I own the Gorham Complex, as I'm sure you
already know."
Idly, he glanced out the window as earth hurtled toward them. "Do you
have transportation at the airport, lieutenant, or can I give you a
lift?"
*** CHAPTER FOUR ***
Eve was more than tired by the time she filed her report for Whitney and
returned home. She was pissed. She'd wanted, badly, to zing Roarke with
the fact that she knew he owned the Gorham. His telling her in the same
carelessly polite tone he used to offer her coffee had ended their first
interview with him one point up.
She didn't like the score.
It was time to even things up. Alone in her living room, and technically
off the clock, she sat down in front of her computer.
"Engage, Dallas, Code Five access. ID 53478Q. Open file DeBlass.
Voice print and ID recognized, Dallas. Proceed.
"Open subfile Roarke. Suspect Roarke -- known to victim. According to
Source C, Sebastian, victim desired suspect. Suspect met her
requirements for sexual partner. Possibility of emotional involvement
high.
"Opportunity to commit crime. Suspect owns victim's apartment building,
equaling easy access and probably knowledge of security of murder scene.
Suspect has no alibi for eight-hour period on the night of the murder,
which includes the time span erased from security discs. Suspect owns
large collection of antique weapons, including the type used on victim.
Suspect admits to being expert marksman.
"Factor in personality of suspect. Aloof, confident, self-indulgent,
highly intelligent. Interesting balance between aggressive and charming.
"Motive."
And there, she ran into trouble. Calculating, she rose, did a pass
through the room while the computer waited for more data. Why would a
man like Roarke kill? For gain, in passion? She didn't think so. Wealth
and status he would, and could gain by other means. Women -- for sex and
otherwise -- certainly he could win without breaking a sweat. She
suspected he was capable of violence, and that he would execute it
coldly.
Sharon DeBlass's murder had been charged with sex. There had been a
crudeness overlaying it. Eve couldn't quite reconcile that with the
elegant man she'd shared coffee with.
Perhaps that was the point.
"Suspect considers morality a personal rather than legislative area,"
she continued, pacing still. "Sex, weapon restriction, drug, tobacco,
and alcohol restrictions, and murder deal with morality that has been
outlawed or regulated. The murder of a licensed companion, the only
daughter of friends, the only granddaughter of one of the country's most
outspoken and conservative legislators, by a banned weapon. Was this an
illustration of the flaws the suspect considers are inherent in the
legal system?
"Motive," she concluded, settling again. "Self-indulgence." She took a
deep, satisfied breath. "Compute probability."
Her system whined, reminded her it was one more piece of hardware that
needed replacement, then settled into a jerky hum.
Probability Roarke perpetrator given current data and supposition,
eighty-two point six per cent.
Oh, it was possible, Eve thought, leaning back in her chair. There was a
time, in the not so distant past, when a child could be gunned down by
another child for the shoes on his feet.
What was that if not obscene self-indulgence?
He had the opportunity. He had the means. And if his own arrogance could
be taken into account, he had the motive.
So why, Eve thought as she watched her own words blink on the monitor,
as she studied her computer's impersonal analysis, couldn't she make it
play in her own head?
She just couldn't see it, she admitted. She just couldn't visualize
Roarke standing behind the camera, aiming the gun at the defenseless,
naked, smiling woman, and pumping steel into her perhaps only moments
after he'd pumped his seed into her.
Still, certain facts couldn't be overlooked. If she could gather enough
of them, she could issue a warrant for a psychiatric evaluation.
Wouldn't that be interesting? she thought with a half smile. Traveling
into Roarke's head would be a fascinating journey.
She'd take the next step at seven the following evening.
The buzz at her door brought a frown of annoyance to her eyes. "Save and
lock on voice print, Dallas. Code Five. Disengage."
The monitor blipped off as she rose to see who was interrupting her. A
glance at her security screen wiped the frown away.
"Hey, Mavis."
"You forgot, didn't you?" Mavis Freestone whirled in, a jangle of
bracelets, a puff of scent. Her hair was a glittery silver tonight, a
shade that would change with her next mood. She flipped it back where it
sparkled like stars down to her impossibly tiny waist.
"No, I didn't." Eve shut the door, reengaged the locks. "Forgot what?"
"Dinner, dancing, debauchery." With a heavy sigh, Mavis dropped her
slinkily attired ninety-eight pounds onto the sofa where she could eye
Eve's simple gray suit with disdain. "You can't be going out in that."
Feeling drab, as she often did within twenty feet of Mavis's outrageous
color, Eve looked down at her suit. "No, I guess not."
"So." Mavis gestured with one emerald-tipped finger. "You forgot."
She had, but she was remembering now. They had made plans to check out
the new club Mavis had discovered at the space docks in Jersey.
According to Mavis, the space jocks were perennially horny. Something to
do with extended weightlessness.
"Sorry. You look great."
It was true, inevitably. Eight years before, when Eve had busted Mavis
for petty theft, she'd looked great. A silk swirling street urchin with
quick fingers and a brilliant smile.
In the intervening years, they'd somehow become friends. For Eve, who
could count on one hand the number of friends she had who weren't cops,
the relationship was precious.
"You look tired," Mavis said, more in accusation than sympathy. "And
you're missing a button."
Eve's fingers went automatically to her jacket, felt the loose threads.
"Shit. I knew it." In disgust she shrugged out of the jacket, tossed it
aside. "Look, I'm sorry. I did forget. I had a lot on my mind today."
"Including the reason you needed my black coat?"
"Yeah, thanks. It came in handy."
Mavis sat a minute, tapping those emerald-tipped nails on the arm of the
couch. "Police business. Here I was hoping you had a date. You really
need to start seeing men who aren't criminals, Dallas."
"I saw that image consultant you fixed me up with. He wasn't a criminal.
He was just an idiot."
"You're too picky -- and that was six months ago."
Since he'd tried to get her in the sack by offering a free lip tattoo,
Eve thought it was not nearly long enough, but kept the opinion to
herself. "I'll go change."
"You don't want to go out and bump butts with the space boys." Mavis
sprang up again, the shoulder-length crystals at her ears sparkling.
"But go ahead and get out of that ugly skirt. I'll order Chinese."
Relief had Eve's shoulders sagging. For Mavis, she would have tolerated
an evening at a loud, crowded, obnoxious club, peeling randy pilots and
sex-starved sky station techs off her chest. The idea of eating Chinese
with her feet up was like heaven.
"You don't mind?"
Mavis waved the words away as she tapped in the restaurant she wanted on
the computer. "I spend every night in a club."
"That's work," Eve called out as she went into the bedroom.
"You're telling me." Tongue between her teeth, Mavis perused the menu
on-screen. "A few years ago I'd have said singing for my supper was the
world's biggest scam, the best grift I could run. Turns out I'm working
harder than I ever did bilking tourists. You want egg rolls?"
"Sure. You're not thinking of quitting, are you?"
Mavis was silent a moment as she made her choices. "No. I'm hooked on
applause." Feeling generous, she charged dinner to her World Card. "And
since we renegotiated my contract so I get ten percent of the gate, I'm
a regular businesswoman."
"There's nothing regular about you," Eve disagreed. She came back in,
comfortable in jeans and a NYPSD sweatshirt.
"True. Got any of that wine I brought over last time?"
"Most of the second bottle." Because it sounded like the best idea she'd
had all day, Eve detoured into the kitchen to pour it. "So, are you
still seeing the dentist?"
"Nope." Idly, Mavis wandered to the entertainment unit and programmed in
music. "It was getting too intense. I didn't mind him falling in love
with my teeth, but he decided to go for the whole package. He wanted to
get married."
"The bastard."
"You can't trust anybody," Mavis agreed. "How's the law and order
business?"
"It's a little intense right now." She glanced up from the wine she was
pouring when the buzzer sounded. "That can't be dinner already." Even as
she said it, she heard Mavis clipping cheerfully toward the door in her
five-inch spikes. "Check the security screen," she said quickly and was
halfway to the door herself when Mavis pulled it open.
She had one moment to curse, another to reach for the weapon she wasn't
wearing. Then Mavis's quick, flirtatious laugh had her adrenaline
draining again.
Eve recognized the uniform of the delivery company, saw nothing but
embarrassed pleasure in the young, fresh face of the boy who handed the
package to Mavis.
"I just love presents," Mavis said with a flutter of her silver-tipped
lashes as the boy backed away, blushing. "Don't you come with it?"
"Leave the kid alone." With a shake of her head, Eve took the package
from Mavis and closed the door again.
"They're so cute at that age." She blew a kiss at the security screen
before turning to Eve. "What are you so nervous about, Dallas?"
"The case I'm working on has me jumpy, I guess." She eyed the gold foil
and elaborate bow on the package she held with more suspicion than
pleasure. "I don't know who'd be sending me anything."
"There's a card," Mavis pointed out dryly. "You could always read it.
There might be a clue."
"Now look who's cute." Eve tugged the card out of its gold envelope.
Roarke
As she read over Eve's shoulder, Mavis let out a low whistle. "Not the
Roarke! The incredibly wealthy, fabulous to look at, sexily mysterious
Roarke who owns approximately twenty-eight percent of the world, and its
satellites?"
All Eve felt was irritation. "He's the only one I know."
"You know him." Mavis rolled her green shadowed eyes. "Dallas, I've
underestimated you unforgivably. Tell me everything. How, when, why? Did
you sleep with him? Tell me you slept with him, then give me every tiny
detail."
"We've had a secret, passionate affair for the last three years, during
which time I bore him a son who's being raised on the far side of the
moon by Buddhist monks." Brows knit, Eve shook the box. "Get a grip,
Mavis. It has to do with a case, and," she added before Mavis could open
her mouth, "it's confidential."
Mavis didn't bother to roll her eyes again. When Eve said confidential,
no amount of cajoling, pleading or whining could budge her an inch.
"Okay, but you can tell me if he looks as good in person as he does in
pictures."
"Better," Eve muttered.
"Jesus, really?" Mavis moaned and let herself fall onto the sofa. "I
think I just had an orgasm."
"You ought to know." Eve set the package down, scowled at it. "And how
did he know where I live? You can't pluck a cop's address out of the
directory file. How did he know?" she repeated quietly. "And what's he
up to?"
"For God's sake, Dallas, open it. He probably took a shine to you. Some
men find the cool, disinterested, and understated attractive. Makes them
think you're deep. I bet it's diamonds," Mavis said, pouncing on the box
as her patience snapped. "A necklace. A diamond necklace. Maybe rubies.
You'd look sensational in rubies."
She ripped ruthlessly through the pricey paper, tossed aside the lid of
the box, and plunged her hand through the gold-edged tissue. "What the
hell is this?"
But Eve had already scented it, already -- despite herself -- begun to
smile. "It's coffee," she murmured, unaware of the way her voice
softened as she reached for the simple brown bag Mavis held.
"Coffee." Illusions shattered, Mavis stared. "The man's got more money
than God, and he sends you a bag of coffee?"
"Real coffee."
"Oh, well then." In disgust, Mavis waved a hand. "I don't care what the
damn stuff costs a pound, Dallas. A woman wants glitter."
Eve brought the bag to her face and sniffed deep. "Not this woman. The
son of a bitch knew just how to get to me." She sighed. "In more ways
than one."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Eve treated herself to one precious cup the next morning. Even her
temperamental AutoChef hadn't been able to spoil the dark, rich flavor.
She drove to the station, with her faulty heater, under sleeting skies,
in a wild chill that came in just under five degrees, with a smile on
her face.
It was still there when she walked into her office and found Feeney
waiting for her.
"Well, well." He studied her. "What'd you have for breakfast, ace?"
"Nothing but coffee. Just coffee. Got anything for me?"
"Ran a full check on Richard DeBlass, Elizabeth Barrister, and the rest
of the clan." He handed her a disc marked Code Five in bold red. "No
real surprises. Nothing much out of the ordinary on Rockman, either. In
his twenties, he belonged to a paramilitary group known as SafeNet."
"SafeNet," Eve repeated, brow wrinkling.
"You'd have been about eight when it was disbanded, kid," Feeney told
her with a smirk. "Should have heard of it in your history lessons."
"Rings a distant bell. Was that one of the groups that got worked up
when we had that skirmish with China?"
"It was, and if they'd had their way, it would have been a lot more than
a skirmish. A disagreement over international space could have gotten
ugly. But the diplomats managed to fight that war before they could. Few
years later, they were disbanded, though there are rumors on and off
about a faction of SafeNet going underground."
"I've heard of them. Still hear about them. You think Rockman's involved
with a fanatic splinter group like that?"
It only took Feeney a moment to shake his head. "I think he watches his
step. Power reflects power, and DeBlass has plenty. If he ever gets into
the White House, Rockman would be right beside him."
"Please." Eve pressed a hand to her stomach. "You'll give me
nightmares."
"It's a long shot, but he's got some backing for the next election."
Feeney moved his shoulders.
"Rockman's alibied, anyway. By DeBlass. They were in East Washington. "'
She sat. "Anything else?"
"Charles Monroe. He's had an interesting life, nothing shady that shows.
I'm working on the victim's logs. You know, sometimes if you're careless
in altering files, you leave shadows floating. Seems to me somebody just
kills a woman could get careless."
"You find a shadow, Feeney, clear away the gray, and I'll buy you a case
of that lousy whiskey you like."
"Deal. I'm still working on Roarke," he added. "There's a guy who isn't
careless. Every time I think I've gotten over one wall of security, I
hit another. Whatever data there is on him is well guarded."
"Keep scaling those walls. I'll try digging under them."
When Feeney left, Eve shifted to her terminal. She hadn't wanted to
check in front of Mavis, and preferred, in this case, using her office
unit. The question was simple.
Eve entered the name and address of her apartment complex. Asked: Owner?
And so the answer was simple: Roarke.
-=O=-***-=O=-
Lola Starr's license for sex was only three months old. She'd applied
for it on her eighteenth birthday, the earliest possible date. She liked
to tell her friends she'd been an amateur until then.
It was the same day she'd left her home in Toledo, the same day she'd
changed her name from Alice Williams. Both home and name had been far
too boring for Lola.
She had a cute, pixie face. She'd nagged and begged and wept until her
parents had agreed to buy her a more pointed chin and a tip-tilted nose
for her sixteenth birthday.
Lola had wanted to look like a sexy elf and thought she'd succeeded. Her
hair was coal black, cut in short, sassy spikes. Her skin was milk white
and firm. She was saving for enough money to have her eyes changed from
brown to emerald green, which she thought would suit her image better.
But she'd been lucky enough to have been born with a lush little body
that needed no more than basic maintenance.
She'd wanted to be a licensed companion all of her life. Other girls
might have dreamed of careers in law or finance, studied their way into
medicine or industry. But Lola had always known she was born for sex.
And why not make a living from what you did best?
She wanted to be rich and desired and pampered. The desire part she
found easy. Men, particularly older men, were willing to pay well for
someone with Lola's attributes. But the expenses of her profession were
more stringent than she'd anticipated when she'd dreamed away in her
pretty room in Toledo.
The licensing fees, the mandatory health exams, the rent, and sin tax
all ate into profits. Once she'd finished paying for her training, she'd
only had enough left to afford a small, one-room apartment at the ragged
edges of Prostitute Walk.
Still, it was better than working the streets as many still did. And
Lola had plans for bigger and better things.
One day she'd live in a penthouse and take only the cream of clients.
She'd be wined and dined in the best restaurants, jetted to exotic
places to entertain royalty and wealth.
She was good enough, and she didn't intend to stay at the bottom of the
ladder for long.
The tips helped. A professional wasn't supposed to accept cash or credit
bonuses. Not technically. But everyone did. She was still girl enough to
prefer the pretty little gifts some of her clients offered. But she
banked the money religiously and dreamed of her penthouse.
Tonight, she was going to entertain a new client, one who had requested
she call him Daddy. She'd agreed, and had waited until the arrangements
were made before she allowed herself a smirk. The guy probably thought
he was the first one to want her to be his little girl. The fact was,
after only a few short months on the job, pedophilia was rapidly
becoming her specialty.
So, she'd sit on his lap, let him spank her, while telling her solemnly
that she needed to be punished. Really, it was like playing a game, and
most of the men were kind of sweet.
With that in mind, she chose a flirty skirted dress with a scalloped
white collar. Beneath she wore nothing but white stockings. She'd
removed her pubic hair, and was as bare and smooth as a ten year old.
After studying the reflection, she added a bit more color to her cheeks
and clear gloss on her pouty lips.
At the knock on the door she grinned, and her young and still guileless
face grinned back in the mirror.
She couldn't yet afford video security, and used the Judas hole to check
her visitor.
He was handsome, which pleased her. And, she assumed, old enough to be
her father, which would please him.
She opened the door, aimed a shy, coy smile. "Hi, Daddy."
He didn't want to waste time. It was the one asset he had little of at
the moment. He smiled at her. For a whore, she was a pretty little
thing. When the door was shut at his back, he reached under her skirt
and was pleased to find her naked. It would speed matters along if he
could become aroused quickly.
"Daddy!" Playing her part, Lola let out a shrieking giggle. "That's
naughty."
"I've heard you've been naughty." He removed his coat and set it neatly
aside while she pouted at him. Though he'd taken the precaution of clear
sealing his hands, he would touch nothing in the room but her.
"I've been good, Daddy. Very good. "
"You've been naughty, little girl." From his pocket he took a small
video camera, which he set up, aimed toward the narrow bed she'd piled
with pillows and stuffed animals.
"Are you going to take pictures?"
"That's right."
She'd have to tell him that would cost him extra, but decided to wait
until the deed was done. Clients didn't care to have their fantasies
broken with reality. She'd learned that in training.
"Go lie down on the bed."
"Yes, Daddy." She lay among the pillows and grinning animals.
"I've heard you've been touching yourself."
"No, Daddy."
"It isn't good to tell lies to your Daddy. I have to punish you, but
then I'll kiss it and make it better." When she smiled, he walked to the
bed. "Lift your skirt, little girl, and show me how you touched
yourself."
Lola didn't care for this part. She liked being touched, but the feel of
her own hands brought her little excitement. Still, she lifted her
skirt, stroked herself, keeping her movements shy and hesitant as she
expected he wanted.
It excited him, the glide of her small fingers. After all, that was what
a woman was made for. To use herself, to use the men who wanted her.
"How does it feel?"
"Soft," she murmured. "You touch, Daddy. Feel how soft."
He laid a hand over hers, felt himself harden satisfactorily as he
slipped a finger inside her. It would be quick, for both of them.
"Unbutton your dress," he ordered, and continued to manipulate her as
she opened it from its prim collar down. "Turn over."
When she did, he brought his hand down on her pert bottom in smart slaps
that reddened the creamy flesh while she whimpered in programmed
response.
It didn't matter if he hurt her or not. She'd sold herself to him.
"That's a good girl." He was fully erect now, beginning to throb. Still,
his movements were careful and precise as he undressed. Naked, he
straddled her, slipped his hands beneath her so that he could squeeze
her breasts. So young, he thought, and let himself shudder from the
pleasure of flesh that had yet to need refining.
"Daddy's going to show you how he rewards good girls."
He wanted her to take him into her mouth, but couldn't risk it. The
birth control her file listed she used would eradicate his sperm
vaginally, but not orally.
Instead, he vaulted up her hips, taking the time to stroke his hands
over that firm, young flesh as he drove himself into her.
He was rougher than either of them expected. After that first violent
thrust, he held himself back. He had no wish to hurt her to the point
where she would cry out. Though in a place such as this, he doubted
anyone would notice or care.
Still, she was rather charmingly unskilled and naive. He settled on a
slower, more gentle rhythm, which he discovered drew out his own
pleasure.
She moved well, meeting him, matching him. Unless he was very mistaken,
not all her groans and cries were simulated. He felt her tense, shudder,
and he smiled, pleased that he'd been able to bring a whore to a genuine
climax.
He closed his eyes and let himself come.
She sighed and cuddled into one of the pillows. It had been good, much,
much better than she'd expected. And she hoped she'd found another
regular.
"Was I a good girl, Daddy?"
"A very, very good girl. But we're not done. Roll over."
As she shifted, he rose and moved out of camera range. "Are we going to
watch the video, Daddy?"
He only shook his head.
Remembering her role, she pouted. "I like videos. We can watch, and then
you can show me how to be a good girl again." She smiled at him, hoping
for a bonus. "I could touch you this time. I'd like to touch you."
He smiled and took the SIG 210 with silencer out of his coat pocket. He
watched her blink in curiosity as he aimed the gun.
"What's that? Is it a toy for me to play with?"
He shot her in the head first, the weapon barely making more than a pop
as she jerked back. Coolly, he shot again, between those young, firm
breasts, and last, as the silencer eroded, into her smooth, bare pubis.
Switching the camera off, he arranged her carefully among blood-soaked
pillows and soiled, smiling animals while she stared up at him in
wide-eyed surprise.
"It was no life for a young girl," he told her gently, then went back to
the camera to record the last scene.
*** CHAPTER FIVE ***
All Eve wanted was a candy bar. She'd spent most of the day testifying
in court, and her lunch break had been eaten up by a call from a snitch
that had cost her fifty dollars and gained her a slim lead on a
smuggling case that had resulted in two homicides, which she'd been
beating her head against for two months.
All she wanted was a quick hit of sugar substitute before she headed
home to prep for her seven o'clock meeting with Roarke.
She could have zipped through any number of drive-through InstaStores,
but she preferred the little deli on the corner of West Seventy-eighth
-- despite, or perhaps because of the fact that it was owned and run by
Francois, a rude, snake-eyed refugee who'd fled to America after the
Social Reform Army had overthrown the French government some forty years
before.
He hated America and Americans, and the SRA had been dispatched within
six months of the coup, but Francois remained, bitching and complaining
behind the counter of the Seventy-eighth Street deli where he enjoyed
dispensing insults and political absurdities.
Eve called him Frank to annoy him, and dropped in at least once a week
to see what scheme he'd devised to try to short credit her.
Her mind on the candy bar, she stepped through the automatic door. It
had no more than begun to whisper shut behind her when instinct kicked
in.
The man standing at the counter had his back to her, his heavy, hooded
jacket masking all but his size, and that was impressive.
Six-five, she estimated, easily two-fifty. She didn't need to see
Francois's thin, terrified face to know there was trouble. She could
smell it, as ripe and sour as the vegetable hash that was today's
special.
In the seconds it took the door to clink shut, she'd considered and
rejected the idea of drawing her weapon.
"Over here, bitch. Now."
The man turned. Eve saw he had the pale gold complexion of a multiracial
heritage and the eyes of a very desperate man. Even as she filed the
description, she looked at the small round object he held in his hand.
The homemade explosive device was worry enough. The fact that it shook
as the hand that held it trembled with nerves was a great deal worse.
Homemade boomers were notoriously unstable. The idiot was likely to kill
all of them by sweating too freely.
She shot Francois a quick, warning look. If he called her lieutenant,
they were all going to be meat very quickly. Keeping her hands in plain
sight, she crossed to the counter.
"I don't want any trouble," she said, letting her voice tremble as
nervously as the thief's hand. "Please, I got kids at home."
"Shut up. Just shut up. Down on the floor. Down on the fucking floor."
Eve knelt, slipping a hand under her jacket where the weapon waited.
"All of it," the man ordered, gesturing with the deadly little ball. "I
want all of it. Cash, credit tokens. Make it fast."
"It's been a slow day," Francois whined. "You must understand business
is not what it was. You Americans -- "
"You want to eat this?" the man invited, shoving the explosive in
Francois's face.
"No, no." Panicked, Francois punched in the security code with his
shaking fingers. As the till opened, Eve saw the thief glance at the
money inside, then up at the camera that was busily recording the entire
transaction.
She saw it in his face. He knew his image was locked there, and that all
the money in New York wouldn't erase it. The explosive would, tossed
carelessly over his shoulder as he raced out to the street to be
swallowed in traffic.
She sucked in a breath, like a diver going under. She came up hard,
under his arm. The solid jolt had the device flying free. Screams,
curses, prayers. She caught it in her fingertips, a high fly, shagged
with two men out and the bases loaded. Even as she closed her hand
around it, the thief swung out.
It was the back of his hand rather than a fist, and Eve considered
herself lucky. She saw stars as she hit a stand of soy chips, but she
held on to the homemade boomer.
Wrong hand, goddamn it, wrong hand, she had time to think as the stand
collapsed under her. She tried to use her left to free her weapon, but
the two hundred and fifty pounds of fury and desperation fell on her.
"Hit the alarm, you asshole," she shouted as Francois stood like a
statue with his mouth opening and closing. "Hit the fucking alarm." Then
she grunted as the blow to her ribs stole her breath. This time he'd
used his fist.
He was weeping now, scratching and clawing up her arm in an attempt to
reach the explosive. "I need the money. I got to have it. I'll kill you.
I'll kill you all."
She managed to bring her knee up. The age old defense bought her a few
seconds, but lacked the power to debilitate.
She saw stars again as her head smacked sharply into the side of a
counter. Dozens of the candy bars she'd craved rained down on her.
"You son of a bitch. You son of a bitch." She heard herself saying it,
over and over as she landed three hard short arm blows to his face.
Blood spurting from his nose, he grabbed her arm.
And she knew it was going to break. Knew she would feel that sharp,
sweet pain, hear the thin crack as bone fractured.
But just as she drew in breath to scream, as her vision began to gray
with agony, his weight was off her.
The ball still cupped in her hand, she rolled over onto her haunches,
struggling to breathe and fighting the need to retch. From that position
she saw the shiny black shoes that always said beat cop.
"Book him." She coughed once, painfully. "Attempted robbery, armed,
carrying an explosive, assault." She'd have liked to have added
assaulting an officer and resisting arrest, but as she hadn't identified
herself, she'd be skirting the line.
"You all right, ma'am? Want the MTs?"
She didn't want the medi-techs. She wanted a fucking candy bar.
"Lieutenant," she corrected, pushing herself up and reaching for her ID.
She noted that the perp was in restraints and that one of the two cops
had been wise enough to use his stunner to take the fight out of him.
"We need a safe box -- quick." She watched both cops pale as they saw
what she held in her hand. "This little boomer's had quite a ride. Let's
get it neutralized."
"Sir." The first cop was out of the store in a flash. In the ninety
seconds it took him to return with the black box used for transporting
and deactivating explosives, no one spoke.
They hardly breathed.
"Book him," Eve repeated. The moment the explosive was contained, her
stomach muscles began to tremble. "I'll transmit my report. You guys
with the Hundred and twenty-third?"
"You bet, lieutenant."
"Good job." She reached down, favoring her injured arm and chose a
Galaxy bar that hadn't been flattened by the wrestling match. "I'm going
home."
"You didn't pay for that," Francois shouted after her.
"Fuck you, Frank," she shouted back and kept going.
-=O=-***-=O=-
The incident put her behind schedule. By the time she reached Roarke's
mansion, it was 7:10. She'd used over the counter medication to ease the
pain in her arm and shoulder. If it wasn't better in a couple of days,
she knew she'd have to go in for an exam. She hated doctors.
She parked the car and spent a moment studying Roarke's house. Fortress,
more like, she thought. Its four stories towered over the frosted trees
of Central Park. It was one of the old buildings, close to two hundred
years old, built of actual stone, if her eyes didn't deceive her.
There was lots of glass, and lights burning gold behind the windows.
There was also a security gate, behind which evergreen shrubs and
elegant trees were artistically arranged.
Even more impressive than the magnificence of architecture and
landscaping was the quiet. She heard no city noises here. No traffic
snarls, no pedestrian chaos. Even the sky overhead was subtly different
than the one she was accustomed to farther downtown. Here, you could
actually see stars rather than the glint and gleam of transports.
Nice life if you can get it, she mused, and started her car again. She
approached the gate, prepared to identify herself. She saw the tiny red
eye of a scanner blink, then hold steady. The gates opened soundlessly.
So, he'd programmed her in, she thought, unsure if she was amused or
uneasy. She went through the gate, up the short drive, and left her car
at the base of granite steps.
A butler opened the door for her. She'd never actually seen a butler
outside of old videos, but this one didn't disappoint the fantasy. He
was silver haired, implacably eyed and dressed in a dark suit and
ruthlessly knotted old-fashioned tie.
"Lieutenant Dallas."
There was an accent, a faint one that sounded British and Slavic at
once. "I have an appointment with Roarke."
"He's expecting you." He ushered her into a wide, towering hallway that
looked more like the entrance to a museum than a home.
There was a chandelier of star-shaped glass dripping light onto a glossy
wood floor that was graced by a boldly patterned rug in shades of red
and teal. A stairway curved away to the left with a carved griffin for
its newel post.
There were paintings on the walls -- the kind she had once seen on a
school field trip to the Met. French Impressionists from what century
she couldn't quite recall. The Revisited Period that had come into being
in the early twenty-first century complimented them with their pastoral
scenes and gloriously muted colors.
No holograms or living sculpture. Just paint and canvas.
"May I take your coat?"
She brought herself back and thought she caught a flicker of smug
condescension in those inscrutable eyes. Eve shrugged out of her jacket,
watched him take the leather somewhat gingerly between his manicured
fingers.
Hell, she'd gotten most of the blood off it.
"This way, Lieutenant Dallas. If you wouldn't mind waiting in the
parlor, Roarke is detained on a transpacific call."
"No problem."
The museum quality continued there. A fire was burning sedately. A fire
out of genuine logs in a hearth carved from lapis and malachite. Two
lamps burned with light like colored gems. The twin sofas had curved
backs and lush upholstery that echoed the jewel tones of the room in
sapphire. The furniture was wood, polished to an almost painful gloss.
Here and there objets d'art were arranged. Sculptures, bowls, faceted
glass.
Her boots clicked over wood, then muffled over carpet.
"Would you like a refreshment, lieutenant?"
She glanced back, saw with amusement that he continued to hold her
jacket between his fingers like a soiled rag. "Sure. What have you got,
Mr. -- ?"
"Summerset, lieutenant. Simply Summerset, and I'm sure we can provide
you with whatever suits your taste."
"She's fond of coffee," Roarke said from the doorway, "but I think she'd
like to try the Montcart forty-nine."
Summerset's eyes flickered again, with horror, Eve thought. "The
forty-nine, sir?"
"That's right. Thank you, Summerset."
"Yes, sir." Dangling the jacket, he exited, stiff-spined.
"Sorry I kept you waiting," Roarke began, then his eyes narrowed,
darkened.
"No problem," Eve said as he crossed to her. "I was just... Hey -- "
She jerked her chin as his hand cupped it, but his fingers held firm,
turning her left cheek to the light. "Your face is bruised." His voice
was cool on the statement, icily so. His eyes as they flicked over the
injury betrayed nothing.
But his fingers were warm, tensed, and jolted something in her gut. "A
scuffle over a candy bar," she said with a shrug.
His eyes met hers, held just an instant longer than comfortable. "Who
won?"
"I did. It's a mistake to come between me and food."
"I'll keep that in mind." He released her, dipped the hand that had
touched her into his pocket. Because he wanted to touch her again. It
worried him that he wanted, very much, to stroke away the bruise that
marred her cheek. "I think you'll approve of tonight's menu."
"Menu? I didn't come here to eat, Roarke. I came here to look over your
collection."
"You'll do both." He turned when Summerset brought in a tray that held
an uncorked bottle of wine the color of ripened wheat and two crystal
glasses.
"The forty-nine, sir."
"Thank you. I'll pour out." He spoke to Eve as he did so. "I thought
this vintage would suit you. What it lacks in subtlety..." He turned
back, offering her a glass. "It makes up for in sensuality." He tapped
his glass against hers so the crystal sang, then watched as she sipped.
God, what a face, he thought. All those angles and expressions, all that
emotion and control. Just now she was fighting off showing both surprise
and pleasure as the taste of the wine settled on her tongue. He was
looking forward to the moment when the taste of her settled on his.
"You approve?" he asked.
"It's good." It was the equivalent of sipping gold.
"I'm glad. The Montcart was my first venture into wineries. Shall we sit
and enjoy the fire?"
It was tempting. She could almost see herself sitting there, legs angled
toward the fragrant heat, sipping wine as the jeweled light danced.
"This isn't a social call, Roarke. It's a murder investigation."
"Then you can investigate me over dinner." He took her arm, lifting a
brow as she stiffened. "I'd think a woman who'd fight for a candy bar
would appreciate a two-inch fillet, medium rare."
"Steak?" She struggled not to drool. "Real steak, from a cow?"
A smile curved his lips. "Just flown in from Montana. The steak, not the
cow." When she continued to hesitate, he tilted his head. "Come now,
lieutenant, I doubt if a little red meat will clog your considerable
investigative skills."
"Someone tried to bribe me the other day," she muttered, thinking of
Charles Monroe and his black silk robe.
"With?"
"Nothing as interesting as steak." She aimed one long, level look. "If
the evidence points in your direction, Roarke, I'm still bringing you
down."
"I'd expect nothing less. Let's eat."
He led her into the dining room. More crystal, more gleaming wood, yet
another shimmering fire, this time cupped in rose-veined marble. A woman
in a black suit served them appetizers of shrimp swimming in creamy
sauce. The wine was brought in, their glasses topped off.
Eve, who rarely gave a thought to her appearance, wished she'd worn
something more suitable to the occasion than jeans and a sweater.
"So, how'd you get rich?" she asked him.
"Various ways." He liked to watch her eat, he discovered. There was a
single-mindedness to it.
"Name one."
"Desire," he said, and let the word hum between them.
"Not good enough." She picked up her wine again, meeting his eyes
straight on. "Most people want to be rich."
"They don't want it enough. To fight for it. Take risks for it."
"But you did."
"I did. Being poor is... uncomfortable. I like comfort." He offered her
a roll from a silver bowl as their salads were served -- crisp greens
tossed with delicate herbs. "We're not so different, Eve."
"Yeah, right."
"You wanted to be a cop enough to fight for it. To take risks for it.
You find the breaking of laws uncomfortable. I make money, you make
justice. Neither is a simple matter." He waited a moment. "Do you know
what Sharon DeBlass wanted?"
Her fork hesitated, then pierced a tender shoot of endive that had been
plucked only an hour before. "What do you think she wanted?"
"Power. Sex is often a way to gain it. She had enough money to be
comfortable, but she wanted more. Because money is also power. She
wanted power over her clients, over herself, and most of all, she wanted
power over her family."
Eve set her fork down. In the firelight, the dancing glow of candle and
crystal, he looked dangerous. Not because a woman would fear him, she
thought, but because she would desire him. Shadows played in his eyes,
making them unreadable.
"That's quite an analysis of a woman you claim you hardly knew."
"It doesn't take long to form an opinion, particularly if that person is
obvious. She didn't have your depth, Eve, your control, or your rather
enviable focus."
"We're not talking about me." No, she didn't want him to talk about her
-- or to look at her in quite that way. "Your opinion is that she was
hungry for power. Hungry enough to be killed before she could take too
big a bite?"
"An interesting theory. The question would be, too big a bite of what?
Or whom?"
The same silent servant cleared the salads, brought in oversize china
plates heavy with sizzling meat and thin, golden slices of grilled
potatoes.
Eve waited until they were alone again, then cut into her steak. "When a
man accumulates a great deal of money, possessions, and status, he then
has a great deal to lose."
"Now we're speaking of me -- another interesting theory." He sat there,
his eyes interested, yet still amused. "She threatened me with some sort
of blackmail and, rather than pay or dismiss her as ridiculous, I killed
her. Did I sleep with her first?"
"You tell me," Eve said evenly.
"It would fit the scenario, considering her choice of profession. There
may be a blackout on the press on this particular case, but it takes
little deductive power to conclude sex reared its head. I had her, then
I shot her... if one subscribes to the theory." He took a bite of steak,
chewed, swallowed. "There's a problem, however."
"Which is?"
"I have what you might consider an old-fashioned quirk. I dislike
brutalizing women, in any form."
"It's old-fashioned in that it would be more apt to say you dislike
brutalizing people, in any form."
He moved those elegant shoulders. "As I say, it's a quirk. I find it
distasteful to look at you and watch the candlelight shift over a bruise
on your face."
He surprised her by reaching out, running a finger down the mark, very
gently.
"I believe I would have found it even more distasteful to kill Sharon
DeBlass." He dropped his hand and went back to his meal. "Though I have,
occasionally, been known to do what is distasteful to me. When
necessary. How is your dinner?"
"It's fine." The room, the light, the food, was all more than fine. It
was like sitting in another world, in another time. "Who the hell are
you, Roarke?"
He smiled and topped off their glasses. "You're the cop. Figure it out."
She would, she promised herself. By God she would, before it was done.
"What other theories do you have about Sharon DeBlass?"
"None to speak of. She liked excitement and risk and didn't flinch from
causing those who loved her embarrassment. Yet she was..."
Intrigued, Eve leaned closer. "What? Go ahead, finish."
"Pitiable," he said, in a tone that made Eve believe he meant no more
and no less that just that. "There was something sad about her under all
that bright, bright gloss. Her body was the only thing about herself she
respected. So she used it to give pleasure and to cause pain."
"And did she offer it to you?"
"Naturally, and assumed I'd accept the invitation."
"Why didn't you?"
"I've already explained that. I can elaborate and add that I prefer a
different type of bedmate, and that I prefer to make my own moves."
There was more, but he chose to keep it to himself.
"Would you like more steak, lieutenant?"
She glanced down, saw that she'd all but eaten the pattern off the
plate. "No. Thanks."
"Dessert?"
She hated to turn it down, but she'd already indulged herself enough.
"No. I want to look at your collection."
"Then we'll save the coffee and dessert for later." He rose, offered a
hand.
Eve merely frowned at it and pushed back from the table. Amused, Roarke
gestured toward the doorway and led her back into the hall, up the
curving stairs.
"It's a lot of house for one guy."
"Do you think so? I'm more of the opinion that your apartment is small
for one woman." When she stopped dead at the top of the stairs, he
grinned. "Eve, you know I own the building. You'd have checked after I
sent my little token."
"You ought to have someone out to look at the plumbing," she told him.
"I can't keep the water hot in the shower for more than ten minutes."
"I'll make a note of it. Next flight up."
"I'm surprised you don't have elevators," she commented as they climbed
again.
"I do. Just because I prefer the stairs doesn't mean the staff shouldn't
have a choice."
"And staff," she continued. "I haven't seen one remote domestic in the
place."
"I have a few. But I prefer people to machines, most of the time. Here."
He used a palm scanner, coded in a key, then opened carved double doors.
The sensor switched on the lights as they crossed the threshold.
Whatever she'd been expecting, it hadn't been this.
It was a museum of weapons: guns, knives, swords, crossbows. Armor was
displayed, from medieval ages to the thin, impenetrable vests that were
current military issue. Chrome and steel and jeweled handles winked
behind glass, shimmered on the walls.
If the rest of the house seemed another world, perhaps a more civilized
one than what she knew, this veered jarringly in the other direction. A
celebration of violence.
"Why?" was all she could say.
"It interests me, what humans have used to damage humans through
history." He crossed over, touching a wickedly toothed ball that hung
from a chain. "Knights farther back than Arthur carried these into
jousts and battles. A thousand years..." He pressed a series of buttons
on a display cabinet and took out a sleek, palm-sized weapon, the
preferred killing tool of twenty-first century street gangs during the
Urban Revolt. "And we have something less cumbersome and equally lethal.
Progression without progress."
He put the weapon back, closed and secured the case. "But you're
interested in something newer than the first, and older than the second.
You said a thirty-eight, Smith & Wesson. Model Ten."
It was a terrible room, she thought. Terrible and fascinating. She
stared at him across it, realizing that the elegant violence suited him
perfectly.
"It must have taken years to collect all of this."
"Fifteen," he said as he walked across the uncarpeted floor to another
section. "Nearly sixteen now. I acquired my first handgun when I was
nineteen -- from the man who was aiming it at my head."
He frowned. He hadn't meant to tell her that.
"I guess he missed," Eve commented as she joined him.
"Fortunately, he was distracted by my foot in his crotch. It was a
nine-millimeter Baretta semiautomatic he'd smuggled out of Germany. He
thought to use it to relieve me of the cargo I was delivering to him and
save the transportation fee. In the end, I had the fee, the cargo, and
the Baretta. And so, Roarke Industries was born out of his poor
judgment. The one you're interested in," he added, pointing as the wall
display opened. "You'll want to take it, I imagine, to see if it's been
fired recently, check for prints, and so forth."
She nodded slowly while her mind worked. Only four people knew the
murder weapon had been left at the scene. Herself, Feeney, the
commander, and the killer. Roarke was either innocent or very, very
clever.
She wondered if he could be both.
"I appreciate your cooperation." She took an evidence seal out of her
shoulder bag and reached for the weapon that matched the one already in
police possession. It took her only a heartbeat to realize it wasn't the
one Roarke had pointed to.
Her eyes slid to his, held. Oh, he was watching her all right,
carefully. Though she let her hand hesitate now over her selection, she
thought they understood each other. "Which?"
"This." He tapped the display just under the. 38. Once she'd sealed it
and slipped it into her bag, he closed the glass. "It's not loaded, of
course, but I do have ammo, if you'd like to take a sample."
"Thanks. Your cooperation will be noted in my report."
"Will it?" He smiled, took a box out of a drawer, and offered it. "What
else will be noted, lieutenant?"
"Whatever is applicable." She added the box of ammo to her bag, took out
a notebook, and punched in her ID number, the date, and a description of
everything she'd taken. "Your receipt." She offered him the slip after
the notebook spit it out. "These will be returned to you as quickly as
possible unless they're called into evidence. You'll be notified one way
or the other."
He tucked the paper into his pocket, fingered what else he'd tucked
there. "The music room's in the next wing. We can have coffee and brandy
there."
"I doubt we'd share the same taste in music, Roarke."
"You might be surprised," he murmured, "at what we share." He touched
her cheek again, this time sliding his hand around until it cupped the
back of her neck. "At what we will share."
She went rigid and lifted a hand to shove his arm away. He simply closed
his fingers over her wrist. She could have had him flat on his back in a
heartbeat -- so she told herself. Still, she only stood there, the
breath backing up in her lungs and her pulse throbbing hard and thick.
He wasn't smiling now.
"You're not a coward, Eve." He said it softly when his lips were an inch
from hers. The kiss hovered there, a breath away until the hand she'd
levered against his arm changed its grip. And she moved into him.
She didn't think. If she had, even for an instant, she would have known
she was breaking all the rules. But she'd wanted to see, wanted to know.
Wanted to feel.
His mouth was soft, more persuasive than possessive. His lips nibbled
hers open so that he could slide his tongue over them, between them, to
cloud her senses with flavor.
Heat gathered like a fireball in her lungs even before he touched her,
those clever hands molding over the snug denim over her hips, slipping
seductively under her sweater to flesh.
With a kind of edgy delight, she felt herself go damp.
It was the mouth, just that generous and tempting mouth he'd thought
he'd wanted. But the moment he'd tasted it, he'd wanted all of her.
She was pressed against him; that tough, angular body beginning to
vibrate. Her small, firm breast weighed gloriously in his palm. He could
hear the hum of passion that sounded in her throat, all but taste it as
her mouth moved eagerly on his.
He wanted to forget the patience and control he'd taught himself to live
by, and just ravage.
Here. The violence of the need all but erupted inside him. Here and now.
He would have dragged her to the floor if she hadn't struggled back,
pale and panting.
"This isn't going to happen."
"The hell it isn't," he shot back.
The danger was shimmering around him now. She saw it as clearly as she
saw the tools of violence and death surrounding them.
There were men who negotiated when they wanted something. There were men
who just took.
"Some of us aren't allowed to indulge ourselves."
"Fuck the rules, Eve."
He stepped toward her. If she had stepped back, he would have pursued,
like any hunter after the prize. But she faced him squarely, and shook
her head.
"I can't compromise a murder investigation because I'm physically
attracted to a suspect."
"Goddamn it, I didn't kill her."
It was a shock to see his control snap. To hear the fury and frustration
in his voice, to witness it wash vividly across his face. And it was
terrifying to realize she believed him, and not be sure, not be
absolutely certain if she believed because she needed to.
"It's not as simple as taking your word for it. I have a job to do, a
responsibility to the victim, to the system. I have to stay objective,
and I -- "
Can't, she realized. Can't.
They stared at each other as the communicator in her bag began to beep.
Her hands weren't quite steady as she turned away, took the unit out.
She recognized the code for the station on the display and entered her
ID. After a deep breath, she answered the request for voice print
verification.
"Dallas, Lieutenant Eve. No audio please, display only."
Roarke could just see her profile as she read the transmission. It was
enough to measure the change in her eyes, the way they darkened, then
went flat and cool.
She put the communicator away, and when she turned back to him, there
was very little of the woman who'd vibrated in his arms in the woman who
faced him now.
"I have to go. We'll be in touch about your property."
"You do that very well," Roarke murmured. "Slide right into the cop's
skin. And it fits you perfectly."
"It better. Don't bother seeing me out. I can find my way."
"Eve."
She stopped at the doorway, looked back. There he was, a figure in black
surrounded by eons of violence. Inside the cop's skin, the woman's heart
stuttered.
"We'll see each other again."
She nodded. "Count on it."
He let her go, knowing Summerset would slip out of some shadow to give
her the leather jacket, bid her good night.
Alone, Roarke took the gray fabric button from his pocket, the one he'd
found on the floor of his limo. The one that had fallen from the jacket
of that drab gray suit she'd worn the first time he'd seen her.
Studying it, knowing he had no intention of giving it back to her, he
felt like a fool.
*** CHAPTER SIX ***
A rookie was guarding the door to Lola Start's apartment. Eve pegged him
as such because he barely looked old enough to order a beer, his uniform
looked as if it had just been lifted from the supply rack, and from the
faint green cast of his skin.
A few months of working this neighborhood, and a cop stopped needing to
puke at the sight of a corpse. Chemi-heads, the street LCs, and just
plain bad asses liked to wale on each other along these nasty blocks as
much for entertainment as for business profits. From the smell that had
greeted her outside, someone had died out there recently, or the recycle
trucks hadn't been through in the last week.
"Officer." She paused, flashed her badge. He'd gone on alert the moment
she'd stepped out of the pitiful excuse for an elevator. Instinct warned
her, rightly enough, that without the quick ID, she'd have been treated
to a stun from the weapon his shaky hand was gripping.
"Sir." His eyes were spooked and unwilling to settle on one spot.
"Give me the status."
"Sir," he said again, and took a long unsteady breath. "The landlord
flagged down my unit, said there was a dead woman in the apartment."
"And is there..." Her gaze flicked down to the name pinned over his
breast pocket. "Officer Prosky?"
"Yes, sir, she's..." He swallowed, hard, and Eve could see the horror
flit over his face again.
"And how did you determine the subject is terminated, Prosky? You take
her pulse?"
A flush, no healthier than the green hue, tinted his cheeks. "No, sir. I
followed procedure, preserved crime scene, notified headquarters. Visual
confirmation of termination, the scene is uncorrupted."
"The landlord went in?" All of this she could learn later, but she could
see that he was steadying as she forced him to go over the steps.
"No, sir, he says not. After a complaint by one of the victim's clients
who had an appointment for nine P. M., the landlord checked the
apartment. He unlocked the door and saw her. It's only one room,
Lieutenant Dallas, and she's -- You see her as soon as you open the
door. Following the discovery, the landlord, in a state of panic, went
down to the street and flagged down my patrol unit. I immediately
accompanied him back to the scene, made visual confirmation of
suspicious death, and reported in."
"Have you left your post, officer? However briefly?"
His eyes settled finally, met hers. "No, sir, lieutenant. I thought I'd
have to, for a minute. It's my first, and I had some trouble
maintaining."
"Looks like you maintained fine to me, Prosky." Out of the crime bag
she'd brought up with her, she took out the protective spray, used it.
"Make the calls to forensics and the ME. The room needs to be swept, and
she'll need to be bagged and tagged."
"Yes, sir. Should I remain on post?"
"Until the first team gets here. Then you can report in." She finished
coating her boots, glanced up at him. "You married, Prosky?" she asked
as she snapped her recorder to her shirt.
"No, sir. Sort of engaged though."
"After you report in, go find your lady. The ones who go for the liquor
don't last as long as the ones who have a nice warm body to lose it in.
Where do I find the landlord?" she asked and turned the knob on the
unsecured door.
"He's down in one-A."
"Then tell him to stay put. I'll take his statement when I'm done here."
She stepped inside, closed the door. Eve, no longer a rookie, didn't
feel her stomach revolt at the sight of the body, the torn flesh, or the
blood-splattered child's toys.
But her heart ached.
Then came the anger, a sharp red spear of it when she spotted the
antique weapon cradled in the arms of a teddy bear.
"She was just a kid."
-=O=-***-=O=-
It was seven A. M. Eve hadn't been home. She'd caught one hour's rough
and restless sleep at her office desk between computer searches and
reports. Without a Code Five attached to Lola Starr, Eve was free to
access the data banks of the International Resource Center on Criminal
Activity. So far, IRCCA had come up empty on matches.
Now, pale with fatigue, jittery with the false energy of false caffeine,
she faced Feeney.
"She was a pro, Dallas."
"Her fucking license was barely three months old. There were dolls on
her bed. There was Kool-Aid in her kitchen."
She couldn't get past it -- all those silly, girlish things she'd had to
paw through while the victim's pitiful body lay on the cheap, fussy
pillows and dolls. Enraged, Eve slapped one of the official photos onto
her desk.
"She looks like she should have been leading cheers at the high school.
Instead, she's running tricks and collecting pictures of fancy
apartments and fancier clothes. You figure she knew what she was getting
into?"
"I don't figure she thought she'd end up dead," Feeney said evenly. "You
want to debate the sex codes, Dallas?"
"No." Wearily, she looked down at her hard copy again. "No, but it bums
me, Feeney. A kid like this."
"You know better than that, Dallas."
"Yeah, I know better." She forced herself to snap back. "Autopsy should
be in this morning, but my prelim puts her dead for twenty-four hours
minimum at discovery. You've identified the weapon?"
"SIG two-ten -- a real Rolls-Royce of handguns, about 1980, Swiss
import. Silenced. Those old timey silencers were only good for a couple,
three shots. He'd have needed it because the victim's place wasn't
soundproofed like DeBlass's."
"And he didn't phone it in, which tells me he didn't want her found as
quickly. Had to get himself someplace else," she mused. Thoughtful, she
picked up a small square of paper, officially sealed.
TWO OF SIX
"One a week," she said softly. "Jesus Christ, Feeney, he isn't giving us
much time."
"I'm running her logs, trick book. She had a new client scheduled, 8:00
P. M., night before last. If your prelim checks, he's our guy." Feeney
smiled thinly. "John Smith."
"That's older than the murder weapon." She rubbed her hands hard over
her face. "IRCCA's bound to spit our boy out from that tag."
"They're still running data," Feeney muttered. He was protective, even
sentimental about the IRCCA.
"They're not going to find squat. We got us a time traveler, Feeney."
He snorted. "Yeah, a real Jules Verne."
"We've got a twentieth-century crime," she said through her hands. "The
weapons, the excessive violence, the hand-printed note left on scene. So
maybe our killer is some sort of historian, or buff anyway. Somebody who
wishes things were what they used to be."
"Lots of people think things would be better some other way. That's why
the world's lousy with theme parks."
Thinking, she dropped her hands. "IRCCA isn't going to help us get into
this guy's head. It still takes a human mind to play that game. What's
he doing, Feeney? Why's he doing it?"
"He's killing LCs."
"Hookers have always been easy targets, back to Jack the Ripper, right?
It's a vulnerable job, even now with all the screening, we still get
clients knocking LCs around, killing them."
"Doesn't happen much," Feeney mused. "Sometimes with the S and M trade
you get a party that gets too enthusiastic. Most LCs are safer than
teachers."
"They still run a risk, the oldest profession with the oldest crime. But
things have changed, some things. People don't kill with guns as a rule
anymore. Too expensive, too hard to come by. Sex isn't the strong
motivator it used to be, too cheap, too easy to come by. We have
different methods of investigation, and a whole new batch of motives.
When you brush all that away, the one fact is that people still
terminate people. Keep digging, Feeney. I've got people to talk to."
"What you need's some sleep, kid."
"Let him sleep," Eve muttered. "Let that bastard sleep." Steeling
herself, she turned to her tele-link. It was time to contact the
victim's parents.
-=O=-***-=O=-
By the time Eve walked into the sumptuous foyer of Roarke's midtown
office, she'd been up for more than thirty-two hours. She'd gotten
through the misery of having to tell two shocked, weeping parents that
their only daughter was dead. She'd stared at her monitor until the data
swam in front of her eyes.
Her follow-up interview with Lola's landlord had been its own adventure.
Since the man had had time to recover, he'd spent thirty minutes whining
about the unpleasant publicity and the possibility of a drop-off in
rentals.
So much, Eve thought, for human empathy.
Roarke Industries, New York, was very much what she'd expected. Slick,
shiny, sleek, the building itself spread one hundred fifty stories into
the Manhattan sky. It was an ebony lance, glossy as wet stone, ringed by
transport tubes and diamond-bright skyways.
No tacky Glida-Grills on this corner, she mused. No street hawkers with
their hot pocket PCs dodging security on their colorful air boards.
Out-of-doors vending was off limits on this bite of Fifth. The zoning
made things quieter, if a little less adventuresome.
Inside, the main lobby took up a full city block, boasting three tony
restaurants, a high priced boutique, a handful of specialty shops, and a
small theater that played art films.
The white floor tiles were a full yard square and gleamed like the moon.
Clear glass elevators zipped busily up and down, people glides zigzagged
left and right, while disembodied voices guided visitors to various
points of interest or, if there was business to be conducted, the proper
office.
For those who wanted to wander about on their own, there were more than
a dozen moving maps.
Eve marched to a monitor and was politely offered assistance.
"Roarke," she said, annoyed that his name hadn't been listed on the main
directory.
"I'm sorry." The computer's voice was that overly mannered tone that was
meant to be soothing, and instead grated on Eve's already raw nerves.
"I'm not at liberty to access that information."
"Roarke," Eve repeated, holding up her badge for the computer to scan.
She waited impatiently as the computer hummed, undoubtedly checking and
verifying her ID, notifying the man himself.
"Please proceed to the east wing, Lieutenant Dallas. You will be met."
"Right."
Eve turned down a corridor, passed a marble run that held a forest of
snowy white impatiens.
"Lieutenant." A woman in a killer red suit and hair as white as the
impatiens smiled coolly. "Come with me, please."
The woman slipped a thin security card into a slot, laid her palm
against a sheet of black glass for a handprint. The wall slid open,
revealing a private elevator.
Eve stepped inside with her, and was unsurprised when her escort
requested the top floor.
Eve had been certain Roarke would be satisfied with nothing but the top.
Her guide was silent on the ride up and exuded a discreet whiff of
sensible scent that matched her sensible shoes and neat, sleek coif. Eve
secretly admired women who put themselves together, top to toe, with
such seeming effortlessness.
Faced with such quiet magnificence, she tugged selfconsciously at her
worn leather jacket and wondered if it was time she actually spent money
on a haircut rather than hacking away at it herself.
Before she could decide on such earth-shattering matters, the doors
whooshed open into a silent, white carpeted foyer the size of a small
home. There were lush green plants -- real plants: ficus, palm, what
appeared to be a dogwood flowering off season. There was a sharp spicy
scent from a bank of dianthus, blooming in shades of rose and vivid
purple.
The garden surrounded a comfortable waiting area of mauve sofas and
glossy wood tables, lamps that were surely solid brass with jeweled
colored shades.
In the center of this was a circular workstation, equipped as
efficiently as a cockpit with monitors and keyboards, gauges and
tele-links. Two men and a woman worked at it busily, with a seamless
ballet of competence in motion.
She was led past them into a glass-sided breezeway. A peek down, and she
could see Manhattan. There was music piped in she didn't recognize as
Mozart. For Eve, music began sometime after her tenth birthday.
The woman in the killer suit paused again, flashed her cool, perfect
smile, then spoke into a hidden speaker. "Lieutenant Dallas, sir."
"Send her in, Caro. Thank you."
Again Caro pressed her palm to a slick black glass. "Go right in,
lieutenant," she invited as a panel slid open.
"Thanks." Out of curiosity, Eve watched her walk away, wondering how
anyone could stride so gracefully on three-inch heels. She walked into
Roarke's office.
It was, as she expected, as impressive as the rest of his New York
headquarters. Despite the soaring, three-sided view of New York, the
lofty ceiling with its pinprick lights, the vibrant tones of topaz and
emerald in the thickly cushioned furnishings, it was the man behind the
ebony slab desk that dominated.
What in hell was it about him? Eve thought again as Roarke rose and
slanted a smile at her.
"Lieutenant Dallas," he said in that faint and fascinating Irish lilt,
"a pleasure, as always."
"You might not think so when I'm finished."
He lifted a brow. "Why don't you come the rest of the way in and get
started? Then we'll see. Coffee?"
"Don't try to distract me, Roarke." She walked closer. Then, to satisfy
her curiosity, she took a brief turn around the room. It was as big as a
heliport, with all the amenities of a first-class hotel: automated
service bar, a padded relaxation chair complete with VR and mood
settings, an oversize wall screen, currently blank. To the left, there
was a full bath including whirl tub and drying tube. All the standard
office equipment, of the highest high-tech, was built in.
Roarke watched her with a bland expression. He admired the way she
moved, the way those cool, quick eyes took in everything.
"Would you like a tour, Eve?"
"No. How do you work with all this..." Using both hands, she gestured
widely at the treated glass walls. "Open."
"I don't like being closed in. Are you going to sit, or prowl?"
"I'm going to stand. I have some questions to ask you, Roarke. You're
entitled to have counsel present."
"Am I under arrest?"
"Not at the moment."
"Then we'll save the lawyers until I am. Ask."
Though she kept her eyes level on his, she knew where his hands were,
tucked casually in the pockets of his slacks. Hands revealed emotions.
"Night before last," she said, "between the hours of eight and ten P. M.
Can you verify your whereabouts?"
"I believe I was here until shortly after eight." With a steady hand he
touched his desk log. "I shut down my monitor at 8:17. I left the
building, drove home."
"Drove," she interrupted, "or were driven?"
"Drove. I keep a car here. I don't believe in keeping my employees
waiting on my whims."
"Damned democratic of you." And, she thought, damned inconvenient. She'd
wanted him to have an alibi. "And then?"
"I poured myself a brandy, had a shower, changed. I had a late supper
with a friend."
"How late, and what friend?"
"I believe I arrived at about ten. I like to be prompt. At Madeline
Montmart's townhouse."
Eve had a quick vision of a curvy blond with a sultry mouth and almond
eyes. "Madeline Montmart, the actress?"
"Yes. I believe we had squab, if that's helpful."
She ignored the sarcasm. "No one can verify your movements between
eight-seventeen and ten P. M. ?"
"One of the staff might have noticed, but then, I pay them well and
they're likely to say what I tell them to say." His voice took on an
edge. "There's been another murder."
"Lola Starr, licensed companion. Certain details will be released to the
media within the hour."
"And certain details will not."
"Do you own a silencer, Roarke?"
His expression didn't change. "Several. You look exhausted, Eve. Have
you been up all night?"
"Goes with the job. Do you own a Swiss handgun, SIG two-ten, circa
1980?"
"I acquired one about six weeks ago. Sit down."
"Were you acquainted with Lola Starr?" Reaching into her briefcase, she
pulled out a photo she'd found in Lola's apartment. The pretty, elfin
girl beamed out, full of sassy fun.
Roarke lowered his gaze to it as it landed on his desk. His eyes
flickered. This time his voice was tinged with something Eve thought
sounded like pity.
"She isn't old enough to be licensed."
"She turned eighteen four months ago. Applied on her birthday."
"She didn't have time to change her mind, did she?" His eyes lifted to
Eve's. And yes, it was pity. "I didn't know her. I don't use prostitutes
-- or children." He picked up the photo, skirted the desk, and offered
it back to Eve. "Sit down."
"Have you ever -- "
"Goddamn it, sit down." In sudden fury, he took her shoulders, pushed
her into a chair. Her case tipped, spilling out photos of Lola that had
nothing to do with sassy fun.
She might have reached them first -- her reflexes were as good as his.
Perhaps she wanted him to see them. Perhaps she needed him to.
Crouching, Roarke picked up a photo taken at the scene. He stared at it.
"Christ Jesus," he said softly. "You believe I'm capable of this?"
"My beliefs aren't the issue. Investigating -- " She broke off when his
eyes whipped to hers.
"You believe I'm capable of this?" he repeated in an undertone that cut
like a blade.
"No, but I have a job to do."
"Your job sucks."
She took the photos back, stored them. "From time to time."
"How do you sleep at night, after looking at something like this?"
She flinched. Though she recovered in a snap, he'd seen it. As intrigued
as he was by her instinctive and emotional reaction, he was sorry he'd
caused it.
"By knowing I'll take down the bastard who did it. Get out of my way."
He stayed where he was, laid a hand on her rigid arm. "A man in my
position has to read people quickly and accurately, Eve. I'm reading you
as someone close to the edge."
"I said, get out of my way."
He rose, but shifting his grip on her arm, pulled her to her feet. He
was still in her way. "He'll do it again," Roarke said quietly. "And
it's eating at you wondering when and where and who."
"Don't analyze me. We've got a whole department of shrinks on the
payroll for that."
"Why haven't you been to see one? You've been slipping through loopholes
to avoid Testing."
Her eyes narrowed.
He smiled, but there was no amusement in it.
"I have connections, lieutenant. You were due in Testing several days
ago, standard department procedure after a justifiable termination, one
you executed the night Sharon was killed."
"Keep out of my business," she said furiously. "And fuck your
connections."
"What are you afraid of? What are you afraid they'll find if they get a
look inside of that head of yours? That heart of yours?"
"I'm not afraid of anything." She jerked her arm free, but he merely
laid his hand on her cheek. A gesture so unexpected, so gentle, her
stomach quivered.
"Let me help you."
"I -- " Something nearly spilled out, as the photos had. But this time
her reflexes kept it tucked away. "I'm handling it." She turned away.
"You can pick up your property anytime after nine A. M. tomorrow."
"Eve."
She kept her eyes focused on the doorway, kept walking. "What?"
"I want to see you tonight."
"No."
He was tempted -- very tempted -- to lunge after her. Instead, he stayed
where he was. "I can help you with the case."
Cautious, she stopped, turned back. If he hadn't been experiencing an
uncomfortable twist of sexual frustration, he might have laughed aloud
at the combination of suspicion and derision in her eyes.
"How?"
"I know people Sharon knew." As he spoke, he saw the derision alter to
interest. But the suspicion remained. "It doesn't take a long mental
leap to realize you'll be looking for a connection between Sharon and
the girl whose photos you're carrying. I'll see if I can find one."
"Information from a suspect doesn't carry much weight in an
investigation. But," she added before he could speak, "you can let me
know."
He smiled after all. "Is it any wonder I want you naked, and in bed?
I'll let you know, lieutenant." And walked back behind his desk. "In the
meantime, get some sleep."
When the door closed behind her, the smile went out of his eyes. For a
long moment he sat in silence. Fingering the button he carried in his
pocket, he engaged his private, secure line.
He didn't want this call on his log.
*** CHAPTER SEVEN ***
Eve stepped up to the peep screen at Charles Monroe's door and started
to announce herself when it slid open. He was in black tie, a cashmere
cape swung negligently over his shoulders, offset by the cream of a silk
scarf. His smile was every bit as well turned out as his wardrobe.
"Lieutenant Dallas. How lovely to see you again." His eyes, full of
compliments she knew she didn't deserve, skimmed over her. "And how
unfortunate I'm just on my way out."
"I won't keep you long." She stepped forward, he stepped back. "A couple
of questions, Mr. Monroe, here, informally, or formally, at the station
with your representative or counsel."
His well shaped brows shot up. "I see. I thought we'd progressed beyond
that. Very well, lieutenant, ask away." He let the door slide shut
again. "We'll keep it informal."
"Your whereabouts night before last, between the hours of eight and
eleven?"
"Night before last?" He slipped a diary out of his pocket, keyed it in.
"Ah, yes. I picked up a client at seven-thirty for an eight o'clock
curtain at the Grande Theater. They're doing a reprise of Ibsen --
depressing stuff. We sat third row, center. It ended just before eleven,
and we had a late supper, catered. Here. I was engaged with her until
three A. M."
His smile flashed as he tucked the diary away again. "Does that clear
me?"
"If your client will corroborate."
The smile faded into a look of pain. "Lieutenant, you're killing me."
"Someone's killing people in your profession," she snapped back. "Name
and number, Mr. Monroe." She waited until he'd mournfully given the
data. "Are you acquainted with a Lola Starr?"
"Lola, Lola Starr... doesn't sound familiar." He took out the diary
again, scanning through his address section. "Apparently not. Why?"
"You'll hear about it on the news by morning," was all Eve told him as
she opened the door again. "So far, it's only been women, Mr. Monroe,
but if I were you, I'd be very careful about taking on new clients."
With a headache drumming at her, she strode to the elevator. Unable to
resist, she glanced toward the door of Sharon DeBlass's apartment, where
the red police security light blinked.
She needed to sleep, she told herself. She needed to go home and empty
her mind for an hour. But she was keying in her ID to disengage the
seal, and walking into the home of a dead woman.
It was silent. And it was empty. She'd expected nothing else. Somehow
she hoped there would be some flash of intuition, but there was only the
steady pounding in her temples. Ignoring it, she went into the bedroom.
The windows had been sealed as well with concealing spray to prevent the
media or the morbidly curious from doing fly-bys and checking out the
scene. She ordered lights, and the shadows bounced back to reveal the
bed.
The sheets had been stripped off and taken into forensics. Body fluids,
hair, and skin had already been analyzed and logged. There was a stain
on the floating mattress where blood had seeped through those satin
sheets.
The pillowed headboard was splattered with it. She wondered if anyone
would care enough to have it cleaned.
She glanced toward the table. Feeney had taken the small desktop PC so
that he could search through the hard drive as well as the discs. The
room had been searched and swept. There was nothing left to do.
Yet Eve went to the dresser, going methodically through the drawers
again. Who would claim all these clothes? she wondered. The silks and
lace, the cashmeres and satins of a woman who had preferred the textures
of the rich against her skin.
The mother, she imagined. Why hadn't she sent in a request for the
return of her daughter's things?
Something to think about.
She went through the closet, again going through skirts, dresses,
trousers, the trendy capes and caftans, jackets and blouses, checking
pockets, linings. She moved onto shoes, all kept neatly in acrylic
boxes.
The woman had only had two feet, she thought with some annoyance. No one
needed sixty pairs of shoes. With a little snort, she reached into toes,
deep inside the tunnel of boots, into the springy softness of inflatable
platforms.
Lola hadn't had so much, she thought now. Two pairs of ridiculously high
heels, a pair of girlish vinyl straps, and a simple pair of air pump
sneakers, all jumbled in her narrow closet.
But Sharon had been an organized as well as a vain soul. Her shoes were
carefully stacked in rows of --
Wrong. Skin prickling, Eve stepped back. It was wrong. The closet was as
big as a room, and every inch of space had been ruthlessly utilized.
Now, there was a full foot empty on the shelves. Because the shoes were
stacked six high in a row of eight.
It wasn't the way Eve had found them or the way she'd left them. They'd
been organized according to color and style. In stacks, she remembered
perfectly, of four, a row of twelve.
Such a little mistake, she thought with a small smile. But a man who
made one was bound to make another.
-=O=-***-=O=-
"Would you repeat that, lieutenant?"
"He restacked the shoe boxes wrong, commander." Negotiating traffic,
shivering as her car heater offered a tepid puff of air around her toes,
Eve checked in. A tourist blimp crept by at low altitude, the guide's
voice booming out tips on sky walk shopping as they crossed toward
Fifth. Some idiotic road crew with a special daylight license power
drilled a tunnel access on the corner of Sixth and Seventy-eighth. Eve
pitched her voice above the din.
"You can review the discs of the scene. I know how the closet was
arranged. It made an impression on me that any one person should have so
many clothes, and keep them so organized. He went back."
"Returned to the scene of the crime?" Whitney's voice was dry as dust.
"Cliches have a basis in fact." Hoping for relative quiet, she jogged
west down a cross street and ended up fuming behind a clicking microbus.
Didn't anyone stay home in New York? "Or they wouldn't be cliches," she
finished and switched to automatic drive so that she could warm her
hands in her pockets. "There were other things. She kept her costume
jewelry in a partitioned drawer. Rings in one section, bracelets in
another, and so on. Some of the chains were tangled when I looked
again."
"The sweepers -- "
"Sir, I went through the place again after the sweepers. I know he's
been there." Eve bit back on frustration and reminded herself that
Whitney was a cautious man. Administrators had to be. "He got through
the security, and he went in. He was looking for something -- something
he forgot. Something she had. Something we missed."
"You want the place swept again?"
"I do. And I want Feeney to go back over Sharon's files. Something's
there, somewhere. And it concerns him enough to risk going back for it."
"I'll signature the authorization. The chief isn't going to like it."
The commander was silent for a moment. Then, as if he'd just remembered
it was a fully secured line, he snorted. "Fuck the chief. Good eye,
Dallas."
"Thank you -- " But he'd cut her off before she could finish being
grateful.
Two of six, she thought, and in the privacy of her car, she shuddered
from more than the cold. There were four more people out there whose
lives were in her hands.
After pulling into her garage, she swore she'd call the damn mechanic
the next day. If history ran true, it meant he'd have her vehicle in for
a week, diddling with some idiotic chip in the heater control. The idea
of the paperwork in accessing a replacement vehicle through the
department was too daunting to consider.
Besides, she was used to the one she had, with all its little quirks.
Everyone knew the uniforms copped the best air-to-land vehicles.
Detectives had to make do with clinkers.
She'd have to rely on public transportation or just hook a car from the
police garage and pay the bureaucratic price later.
Still frowning over the hassle to come and reminding herself to contact
Feeney personally to have him go through a week's worth of security
discs on the Gorham, she rode the elevator to her floor. Eve had no more
than unkeyed her locks when her hand was on her weapon, drawing it.
The silence of her apartment was wrong. She knew instantly she wasn't
alone. The prickle along her skin had her doing a quick sweep, arms and
eyes, shifting fluidly left then right.
In the dim light of the room, the shadows hung and the silence remained.
Then she caught a movement that had her tensed muscles rippling, her
trigger finger poised.
"Excellent reflexes, lieutenant." Roarke rose from the chair where he'd
been lounging. Where he'd been watching her. "So excellent," he
continued in that same mild tone as he touched on a lamp, "that I have
every faith you won't use that on me."
She might have. She very well might have given him one good jolt. That
would have wiped that complacent smile off his face. But any discharge
of a weapon meant paperwork she wasn't prepared to face for simple
revenge.
"What the fuck are you doing here?"
"Waiting for you." His eyes remained on hers as he lifted his hands.
"I'm unarmed. You're welcome to check for yourself if you won't take my
word for it."
Very slowly, and with some reluctance, she holstered her weapon. "I
imagine you have a whole fleet of very expensive and very clever
lawyers, Roarke, who would have you out before I finished booking you on
a B and E. But why don't you tell me why I shouldn't put myself to the
trouble, and the city to the expense of throwing you in a cage for a
couple of hours?"
Roarke wondered if he'd become perverse that he could so enjoy the way
she slashed at him. "It wouldn't be productive. And you're tired, Eve.
Why don't you sit down?"
"I won't bother to ask you how you got in here." She could feel herself
vibrating with temper, and wondered just how much satisfaction she'd
gain from clamping his elegant wrists in restraints. "You own the
building, so that question answers itself."
"One of the things I admire about you is that you don't waste time on
the obvious."
"My question is why."
"I found myself thinking about you, on professional and personal levels,
after you'd left my office." He smiled, quick and charming. "Have you
eaten?"
"Why?" she repeated.
He stepped toward her so that the slant of light from the lamp played
behind him. "Professionally, I made a couple of calls that might be of
interest to you. Personally..." He lifted a hand to her face, fingers
just brushing her chin, his thumb skimming the slight dip. "I found
myself concerned by that fatigue in your eyes. For some reason I feel
compelled to feed you."
Though she knew it was the gesture of a cranky child, she jerked her
chin free. "What calls?"
He merely smiled again, moved to her tele-link. "May I?" he said even as
he keyed in the number he wanted. "This is Roarke. You can send the meal
up now." He disengaged, smiled at her again. "You don't object to pasta,
do you?"
"Not on principle. But I object to being handled."
"That's something else I like about you." Because she wouldn't, he sat
and, ignoring her frown, took out his cigarette case. "But I find it
easier to relax over a hot meal. You don't relax enough, Eve."
"You don't know me well enough to judge what I do or don't do. And I
didn't say you could smoke in here."
He lighted the cigarette, eyeing her through the faint, fragrant haze.
"You didn't arrest me for breaking and entering, you're not going to
arrest me for smoking. I brought a bottle of wine. I left it to breathe
on the counter in the kitchen. Would you like some?"
"What I'd like -- " She had a sudden flash, and the fury came so quickly
she could barely see through it. In one leap, she was at her computer,
demanding access.
That annoyed him -- enough to have his voice tighten. "If I'd come in to
poke through your files, I'd hardly have waited around for you."
"The hell you wouldn't. That kind of arrogance is just like you." But
her security was intact. She wasn't sure if she was relieved or
disappointed. Until she saw the small package beside her monitor.
"What's this?"
"I have no idea." He blew out another stream of smoke. "It was on the
floor inside the door. I picked it up."
Eve knew what it was -- the size, the shape, the weight. And she knew
when she viewed the disc she would see Lola Stair's murder.
Something about the way her eyes changed had him rising again, had his
voice gentling. "What is it, Eve?"
"Official business. Excuse me."
She walked directly to the bedroom, closed and secured the door.
It was Roarke's turn to frown. He went into the kitchen, located
glasses, and poured the burgundy. She lived simply, he thought. Very
little clutter, very little that spoke of background or family. No
mementos. He'd been tempted to wander into her bedroom while he'd had
the apartment to himself and see what he might have discovered about her
there, but he'd resisted.
It was not so much respect for her privacy as it was the challenge she
presented that provoked him to discover her from the woman alone rather
than her surroundings.
Still, he found the plain colors and lack of fuss illuminating. She
didn't live here, as far as he could see, so much as she existed here.
She lived, he deduced, in her work.
He sipped the wine, approved it. After dousing his cigarette, he carried
both glasses back into the living room. It was going to be more than
interesting to solve the puzzle of Eve Dallas.
When she came back in, nearly twenty minutes later, a white-coated
waiter was just finishing setting up dishes on a small table by the
window. However glorious the scents, they failed to stir her appetite.
Her head was pounding again, and she'd forgotten to take medication.
With a murmur, Roarke dismissed the waiter. He said nothing until the
door closed and he was alone with Eve again. "I'm sorry."
"For what?"
"For whatever's upset you." Except for that one flush of temper, she'd
been pale when she'd come into the apartment. But her cheeks were
colorless now, her eyes too dark. When he started toward her, she shook
her head once, fiercely.
"Go away, Roarke."
"Going away's easy. Too easy." Very deliberately, he put his arms around
her, felt her stiffen. "Give yourself a minute." His voice was smooth,
persuasive. "Would it matter, really matter to anyone but you, if you
took one minute to let go?"
She shook her head again, but this time there was weariness in the
gesture. He heard the sigh escape, and taking advantage, he drew her
closer. "You can't tell me?"
"No."
He nodded, but his eyes flashed with impatience. He knew better; it
shouldn't matter to him. She shouldn't. But too much about her mattered.
"Someone else then," he murmured.
"There's no one else." Then realizing how that might be construed, she
pulled back. "I didn't mean -- "
"I know you didn't." His smile was wry and not terribly amused. "But
there isn't going to be anyone else, for either of us, not for some
time."
Her step back wasn't a retreat, but a statement of distance. "You're
taking too much for granted, Roarke."
"Not at all. Nothing for granted. You're work, lieutenant. A great deal
of work. Your dinner's getting cold."
She was too tired to make a stand, too tired to argue. She sat down,
picked up her fork. "Have you been to Sharon DeBlass's apartment during
the last week?"
"No, why would I?"
She studied him carefully. "Why would anyone?"
He paused a moment, then realized the question wasn't academic. "To
relive the event," he suggested. "To be certain nothing was left behind
that would be incriminating."
"And as owner of the building, you could get in as easily as you got in
here."
His mouth tightened briefly. Annoyance, she judged, the annoyance of a
man who was weary of answering the same questions. It was a small thing,
but a very good sign of his innocence. "Yes. I don't believe I'd have a
problem. My master code would get me in."
No, she thought, his master code wouldn't have broken the police
security. That would require a different level, or an expert on
security.
"I assume that you believe someone not in your department has been in
that apartment since the murder."
"You can assume that," she agreed. "Who handles your security, Roarke?"
"I use Lorimar for both my business and my home." He lifted his glass.
"It's simpler that way, as I own the company."
"Of course you do. I suppose you know quite a bit about security
yourself."
"You could say I have a long-standing interest in security matters.
That's why I bought the company." He scooped up the herbed pasta, held
the fork to her lips, and was satisfied when she took the offered bite.
"Eve, I'm tempted to confess all, just to wipe that unhappy look off
your face and see you eat with the enthusiasm I'd enjoyed last time. But
whatever my crimes, and they are undoubtedly legion, they don't include
murder."
She looked down at her plate and began to eat. It frazzled her that he
could see she was unhappy. "What did you mean when you said I was work?"
"You think things through very carefully, and you weigh the odds, the
options. You're not a creature of impulse, and though I believe you
could be seduced, with the right timing, and the right touch, it
wouldn't be an ordinary occurrence."
She lifted her gaze again. "That's what you want to do, Roarke? Seduce
me?"
"I will seduce you," he returned. "Unfortunately, not tonight. Beyond
that, I want to find out what it is that makes you what you are. And I
want to help you get what you need. Right now, what you need is a
murderer. You blame yourself," he added. "That's foolish and annoying."
"I don't blame myself."
"Look in the mirror," Roarke said quietly.
"There was nothing I could do," Eve exploded. "Nothing I could do to
stop it. Any of it."
"Are you supposed to be able to stop it, any of it? All of it?"
"That's exactly what I'm supposed to do."
He tilted his head. "How?"
She pushed away from the table. "By being smart. By being in time. By
doing my job."
Something more here, he mused. Something deeper. He folded his hands on
the table. "Isn't that what you're doing now?"
The images flooded back into her brain. All the death. All the blood.
All the waste. "Now they're dead." And the taste of it was bitter in her
mouth. "There should have been something I could have done to stop it."
"To stop a murder before it happens, you'd have to be inside the head of
a killer," he said quietly. "Who could live with that?"
"I can live with that." She hurled it back at him. And it was pure
truth. She could live with anything but failure. "Serve and protect --
it's not just a phrase, it's a promise. If I can't keep my word, I'm
nothing. And I didn't protect them, any of them. I can only serve them
after they're dead. Goddamn it, she was hardly more than a baby. Just a
baby, and he cut her into pieces. I wasn't in time. I wasn't in time,
and I should have been."
Her breath caught on a sob, shocking her. Pressing a hand to her mouth,
she lowered herself onto the sofa. "God," was all she could say. "God.
God."
He came to her. Instinct had him taking her arms firmly rather than
gathering her close. "If you can't or won't talk to me, you have to talk
to someone. You know that."
"I can handle it. I -- " But the rest of the words slid down her throat
when he shook her.
"What's it costing you?" he demanded. "And how much would it matter to
anyone if you let it go? For one minute just let it go."
"I don't know." And maybe that was the fear, she realized. She wasn't
sure if she could pick up her badge, or her weapon, or her life, if she
let herself think too deeply, or feel too much. "I see her," Eve said on
a deep breath. "I see her whenever I close my eyes or stop concentrating
on what needs to be done."
"Tell me."
She rose, retrieved her wine and his, and then returned to the sofa. The
long drink eased her dry throat and settled the worst of the nerves. It
was fatigue, she warned herself, that weakened her enough that she
couldn't hold it in.
"The call came through when I was a half block away. I'd just closed
another case, finished the data load. Dispatch called for the closest
unit. Domestic violence -- it's always messy, but I was practically on
the doorstep. So I took it. Some of the neighbors were outside, they
were all talking at once."
The scene came back to her, perfectly, like a video exactly cued. "A
woman was in her nightgown, and she was crying. Her face was battered,
and one of the neighbors was trying to bind up a gash on her arm. She
was bleeding badly, so I told them to call the MTs. She kept saying,
'He's got her. He's got my baby.'"
Eve took another drink. "She grabbed me, bleeding on me, screaming and
crying and telling me I had to stop him, I had to save her baby. I
should have called for backup, but I didn't think I could wait. I took
the stairs, and I could hear him before I got to the third floor where
he was locked in. He was raging. I think I heard the little girl
screaming, but I'm not sure."
She closed her eyes then, praying she'd been wrong. She wanted to
believe that the child had already been dead, already beyond pain. To
have been that close, only steps away... No, she couldn't live with
that.
"When I got to the door, I used the standard. I'd gotten his name from
one of the neighbors. I used his name, and the child's name. It's
supposed to make it more personal, more real if you use names. I
identified myself and said I was coming in. But he just kept raging. I
could hear things breaking. I couldn't hear the child now. I think I
knew. Before I broke down the door, I knew. He'd used the kitchen knife
to slice her to pieces."
Her hand shook as she raised the glass again. "There was so much blood.
She was so small, but there was so much blood. On the floor, on the
wall, all over him. I could see it was still dripping off the knife. Her
face was turned toward me. Her little face, with big blue eyes. Like a
doll's."
She was silent for a moment, then set her glass aside. "He was too wired
up to be stunned. He kept coming. There was blood dripping off the
knife, and splattered all over him, and he kept coming. So I looked in
his eyes, right in his eyes. And I killed him."
"And the next day," Roarke said quietly, "you dived straight into a
murder investigation."
"Testing's postponed. I'll get to it in another day or two." She moved
her shoulders. "The shrinks, they'll think it's the termination. I can
make them think that if I have to. But it's not. I had to kill him. I
can accept that." She looked straight into Roarke's eyes and knew she
could tell him what she hadn't been able to say to herself. "I wanted to
kill him. Maybe even needed to. When I watched him die, I thought, He'll
never do that to another child. And I was glad that I'd been the one to
stop him."
"You think that's wrong."
"I know it's wrong. I know anytime a cop gets pleasure of any sort out
of termination, she's crossed a line."
He leaned forward so that their faces were close. "What was the child's
name?"
"Mandy." Her breath hitched once before she controlled it. "She was
three."
"Would you be torn up this way if you'd killed him before he'd gotten to
her?"
She opened her mouth, closed it again. "I guess I'll never know, will
I?"
"Yes, you do." He laid a hand over hers, watched her frown and look down
at the contact. "You know, I've spent most of my life with a basic
dislike of police -- for one reason or another. I find it very odd that
I've met, under such extraordinary circumstances, one I can respect and
be attracted to at the same time."
She lifted her gaze again, and though the frown remained, she didn't
draw her hand free of his. "That's a strange compliment."
"Apparently we have a strange relationship." He rose, drawing her to her
feet. "Now you need to sleep." He glanced toward the dinner she'd barely
touched. "You can heat that up when you've gotten your appetite back."
"Thanks. Next time I'd appreciate you waiting until I'm home before you
come in."
"Progress," he murmured when they'd reached the door. "You accept
there'll be a next time." With a hint of a smile, he brought the hand he
still held to his lips. He caught bafflement, discomfort and, he
thought, a trace of embarrassment in her eyes as he brushed a light kiss
over her knuckles. "Until next time," he said, and left.
Frowning, Eve rubbed her knuckles over her jeans as she headed to the
bedroom. She stripped, letting her clothes lay wherever they dropped.
She climbed into bed, shut her eyes, and willed herself to sleep.
She was just dozing off when she remembered Roarke had never told her
who he'd called and what he'd discovered.
*** CHAPTER EIGHT ***
In her office, with the door locked, Eve reviewed the disc of Lola
Starr's murder with Feeney. She didn't flinch at the little popping
sound of the silenced weapon. Her system no longer recoiled at the
insult the bullet caused in flesh.
The screen held steady on the ending caption: Two of Six. Then it went
blank. Without a word, Eve cued up the first murder, and they watched
Sharon DeBlass die again.
"What can you tell me?" Eve asked when it was finished.
"Discs were made on a Trident MicroCam, the five thousand model. It's
only been available about six months, very pricey. Big seller last
Christmas, though. More than ten thousand moved in Manhattan alone
during the traditional shopping season, not to mention how many went
through the gray market. Not as much of a flood like less expensive
models, but still too many to trace."
He looked over at Eve with his drooping camel eyes. "Guess who owns
Trident?"
"Roarke Industries."
"Give the lady a bouquet. I'd say the odds were pretty good the boss man
owns one himself."
"He'd certainly have access." She made a note of it and resisted the
memory of how his lips had felt brushing over her knuckles. "The killer
uses a fairly exclusive piece of equipment he manufactures himself.
Arrogance or stupidity?"
"Stupidity doesn't fly with this boy."
"No, it doesn't. The weapon?"
"We've got a couple thousand out there in private collections," Feeney
began, nibbling on a cashew. "Three in the boroughs. Those are the ones
that've been registered," he added with a thin smile. "The silencer
doesn't have to be registered, as it doesn't qualify as deadly on its
own. No way of tracing it."
He leaned back, tapped the monitor. "As far as the first disc, I've been
running it. I came up with a couple of shadows. Makes me certain he
recorded more than the murder. But I haven't been able to enhance
anything. Whoever edited that disc knew all the tricks or had access to
equipment that knew them for him."
"What about the sweepers?"
"Commander ordered them for this morning, per your request." Feeney
glanced at his watch. "Should be there now. I picked up the security
discs on my way in, ran them. We've got a twenty-minute time lapse
starting at three-ten, night before last."
"Bastard waltzed right in," she muttered. "It's a shitty neighborhood,
Feeney, but an upscale building. Nobody noticed him either time, which
means he blends."
"Or they're used to seeing him."
"Because he was one of Sharon's regulars. Tell me why a man who was a
regular client for an expensive, sophisticated, experienced prostitute,
chose a green, low-scale what do you call it, ingenue like Lola Starr
for his second hit?"
Feeney pursed his lips. "He likes variety?"
Eve shook her head. "Maybe he liked it so much the first time, he's not
going to be choosy now. Four more to go, Feeney. He told us right off
the bat we had a serial killer. He announced it, letting us know Sharon
wasn't particularly important. Just one of six."
She blew out a breath, unsatisfied. "So why'd he go back?" she said to
herself. "What was he looking for?"
"Maybe the sweepers'll tell us."
"Maybe." She picked up a list from her desk. "I'm going to check out
Sharon's client list again, then hit Lola's."
Feeney cleared his throat, chose another cashew from his little bag. "I
hate to be the one to tell you, Dallas. The senator's demanding an
update."
"I have nothing to tell him."
"You're going to have to tell him this afternoon. In East Washington."
She stopped a pace in front of the door. "Bullshit."
"Commander gave me the news. We're on the two o'clock shuttle." Feeney
thought resignedly of how his stomach reacted to air travel. "I hate
politics."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Eve was still gritting her teeth over her briefing with Whitney when she
ran headlong into DeBlass's security outside his office in the New
Senate Office Building, East Washington.
Their identification aside, both she and Feeney were scanned, and
according to the revised Federal Property Act of 2022, were obliged to
hand over their weapons.
"Like we're going to zap the guy while he's sitting at his desk," Feeney
muttered as they were escorted over red, white, and blue carpet.
"I wouldn't mind giving several of these guys a quick buzz." Flanked by
suits and shined shoes, Eve slouched in front of the glossy door of the
senator's office, waiting for the internal camera to clear them.
"If you ask me, East Washington's been paranoid since the terrorist
hit." Feeney sneered into the camera. "Couple dozen legislators get
whacked, and they never forget it."
The door opened, and Rockman, pristine in needle-thin pin stripes,
nodded. "Long memories are an advantage in politics, Captain Feeney.
Lieutenant Dallas," he added with another nod. "We appreciate your
promptness."
"I had no idea the senator and my chief were so close," Eve said as she
stepped inside. "Or that both of them would be so anxious to waste the
taxpayers' money."
"Perhaps they both consider justice priceless." Rockman gestured them
toward the gleaming desk of cherry wood -- certainly priceless -- where
DeBlass waited.
He had, as far as Eve could see, benefited from the change of
temperature in the country -- too lukewarm in her opinion -- and the
repeal of the Two Term Bill. Under current law, a politician could now
retain his seat for life. All he had to do was buffalo his constituents
into electing him.
DeBlass certainly looked at home. His paneled office was as hushed as a
cathedral and every bit as reverent with its altarlike desk, the visitor
chairs as subservient as pews.
"Sit," DeBlass barked, and folded his large-knuckled hands on the desk.
"My latest information is that you are no closer to finding the monster
who murdered my granddaughter than you were a week ago." His dark brows
beetled over his eyes. "I find this difficult to understand, considering
the resources of the New York Police Department."
"Senator." Eve let Commander Whitney's terse instructions play in her
head: Be tactful, respectful, and tell him nothing he doesn't already
know. "We're using those resources to investigate and gather evidence.
While the department is not now prepared to make an arrest, every
possible effort is being made to bring your granddaughter's murderer to
justice. Her case is my first priority, and you have my word it will
continue to be until it can be satisfactorily closed."
The senator listened to the little speech with all apparent interest.
Then he leaned forward. "I've been in the business of bullshit for more
than twice your life, lieutenant. So don't pull out your tap dance with
me. You have nothing."
Fuck tact, Eve decided instantly. "What we have, Senator DeBlass, is a
complicated and delicate investigation. Complicated, given the nature of
the crime; delicate, due to the victim's family tree. It's my
commander's opinion that I'm the best choice to conduct the
investigation. It's your right to disagree. But pulling me off my job to
come here to defend my work is a waste of time. My time." She rose. "I
have nothing new to tell you."
With the vision of both their butts hanging in a sling, Feeney rose as
well, all respect. "I'm sure you understand, senator, that the delicacy
of an investigation of this nature often means progress is slow. It's
difficult to ask you to be objective when we're talking of your
granddaughter, but Lieutenant Dallas and I have no choice but to be
objective."
With an impatient gesture, DeBlass waved them to sit again. "Obviously
my emotions are involved. Sharon was an important part of my life.
Whatever she became, and however I was disappointed in her choices, she
was blood." He drew a deep breath, let it loose. "I cannot and will not
be placated with bits and pieces of information."
"There's nothing else I can tell you," Eve repeated.
"You can tell me about the prostitute who was murdered two nights ago."
His eyes flicked up to Rockman.
"Lola Starr," he supplied.
"I imagine your sources of information on Lola Starr are as thorough as
ours." Eve chose to speak directly to Rockman. "Yes, we believe that
there is a connection between the two murders."
"My granddaughter might have been misguided," DeBlass broke in, "but she
did not socialize with people like Lola Starr."
So, prostitutes had class systems, Eve thought wearily. What else was
new? "We haven't determined whether they knew each other. But there's
little doubt that they both knew the same man. And that man killed them.
Each murder followed a specific pattern. We'll use that pattern to find
him. Before, we hope, he kills again."
"You believe he will," Rockman put in.
"I'm sure he will."
"The murder weapon," DeBlass demanded. "Was it the same type?"
"It's part of the pattern," Eve told him. She'd commit no more than
that. "There are basic and undeniable similarities between the two
homicides. There's no doubt the same man is responsible."
Calmer now, Eve stood again. "Senator, I never knew your granddaughter
and have no personal tie to her, but I'm personally offended by murder.
I'm going after him. That's all I can tell you."
He studied her for a moment, saw more than he'd expected to see. "Very
well, lieutenant. Thank you for coming."
Dismissed, Eve walked with Feeney to the door. In the mirror she saw
DeBlass signal to Rockman, Rockman acknowledged. She waited until she
was outside before she spoke.
"The son of a bitch is going to tail us."
"Huh?"
"DeBlass's guard dog. He's going to shadow us."
"What the hell for?"
"To see what we do, where we go. Why do you tail anyone? We're going to
lose him at the transport center," she told Feeney as she flagged down a
cab. "Keep your eyes out and see if he follows you to New York."
"Follows me? Where are you going?"
"I'm going to follow my nose."
-=O=-***-=O=-
It wasn't a difficult maneuver. The west wing boarding terminal at
National Transport was always bedlam. It was even worse at rush hour
when all northbound passengers were jammed into the security line and
herded along by computerized voices. Shuttles and runabouts were going
to be jammed.
Eve simply lost herself in the crowd, crammed herself into a cross
terminal transport to the south wing, and caught an underground to
Virginia.
After settling in her tube, ignoring the four o'clocks who were heading
to the suburban havens, she took out her pocket directory. She requested
Elizabeth Barrister's address, then asked for directions.
So far her nose was just fine. She was on the right tube and would have
to make only one change in Richmond. If her luck held, she could finish
the trip and be back in her apartment in time for dinner.
With her chin on her fist, she toyed with the controls of her video
screen. She would have bypassed the news -- something she made a habit
of doing -- but when an all-too-familiar face flashed on-screen, she
stopped scanning.
Roarke, she thought, narrowing her eyes. The guy sure kept popping up.
Lips pursed, she tuned in the audio, plugged in her ear receiver.
"... in this international, multibillion dollar project, Roarke
Industries, Tokayamo, and Europa will join hands," the announcer stated.
"It's taken three years, but it appears that the much debated, much
anticipated Olympus Resort will begin construction."
Olympus Resort, Eve mused, flipping through her mental files. Some
high-class, high-dollar vacation paradise, she recalled. A proposed
space station built for pleasure and entertainment.
She snorted. Wasn't it just like him to spend his time and money on
fripperies?
If he didn't lose his tailored silk shirt, she imagined he'd make
another fortune.
"Roarke -- one question, sir."
She watched Roarke pause on his way down a long flight of marble steps
and lift a brow -- exactly as she remembered he did -- at the reporter's
interruption.
"Could you tell me why you've spent so much time and effort, and a
considerable amount of your own capitol, on this project -- one
detractors say will never fly?"
"Fly is precisely what it will do," Roarke replied. "In a manner of
speaking. As to why, the Olympus Resort will be a haven for pleasure. I
can't think of anything more worthwhile on which to spend time, effort,
and capital."
You wouldn't, Eve decided, and glanced up just in time to realize she
was about to miss her stop. She dashed to the doors of the tube, cursed
the computer voice for scolding her for running, and made the change to
Fort Royal.
When she came above ground again, it was snowing. Soft, lazy flakes
drifted over her hair and shoulders. Pedestrians were stomping it to
mush on the sidewalks, but when she found a cab and gave her
destination, she found the swirl of white more picturesque.
There was still countryside to be had, if you possessed the money or the
prestige. Elizabeth Barrister and Richard DeBlass possessed both, and
their home was a striking two stories of rosy brick set on a sloping
hill and flanked by trees.
Snow was pristine on the expansive lawn, ermine draped on the bare
branches of what Eve thought might be cherry trees. The security gate
was an artful symphony of curling iron. However decorative it might have
been, Eve was certain it was as practical as a vault.
She leaned out the cab window, flashed her badge at the scanner.
"Lieutenant Dallas, NYPSD."
"You are not listed in the appointment directory, Lieutenant Dallas."
"I'm the officer in charge of the DeBlass case. I have some questions
for Ms. Barrister or Richard DeBlass."
There was a pause, during which time Eve began to shiver in the cold.
"Please step out of the cab, Lieutenant Dallas, and up to the scanner
for further identification."
"Tough joint," the cabbie muttered, but Eve merely shrugged and
complied.
"Identification verified. Dismiss your transport, Lieutenant Dallas. You
will be met at the gate."
"Heard the daughter got whacked up in New York," the cabbie said as Eve
paid the fare. "Guess they're not taking any chances. Want I should pull
back a ways and wait for you?"
"No, thanks. But I'll ask for your number when I'm ready to go."
With a half salute, the cabbie backed up, swung away. Eve's nose was
beginning to numb when she saw the little electric cart slide through
the gate. The curved iron opened.
"Please go inside, step into the cart," the computer invited. "You will
be taken to the house. Ms. Barrister will see you."
"Terrific." Eve climbed into the cart and let it take her noiselessly to
the front steps of the brick house. Even as she started up them, the
door opened.
Either the servants were required to wear boring black suits, or the
house was still in mourning. Eve was shown politely into a room off the
entrance hall.
Where Roarke's home had simply whispered money, this one said old money.
The carpets were thick, the walls papered in silk. The wide windows
offered a stunning view of rolling hills and falling snow. And solitude,
Eve thought. The architect must have understood that those who lived
here preferred to consider themselves alone.
"Lieutenant Dallas." Elizabeth rose. There was nervousness in the
deliberate movement, in the rigid stance and, Eve saw, in the shadowed
eyes that held grief.
"Thank you for seeing me, Ms. Barrister."
"My husband's in a meeting. I can interrupt him if necessary."
"I don't think it will be."
"You've come about Sharon."
"Yes."
"Please sit down." Elizabeth gestured toward a chair upholstered in
ivory. "Can I offer you anything?"
"No, thanks. I'll try not to keep you very long. I don't know how much
of my report you've seen -- "
"All of it," Elizabeth interrupted. "I believe. It seems quite thorough.
As an attorney, I have every confidence that when you find the person
who killed my daughter, you'll have built a strong case."
"That's the plan." Running on nerves, Eve decided, watching the way
Elizabeth's long, graceful fingers clenched, unclenched. "This is a
difficult time for you."
"She was my only child," Elizabeth said simply. "My husband and I were
-- are -- proponents of the population adjustment theory. Two parents,"
she said with a thin smile. "One offspring. Do you have any further
information to give me?"
"Not at this time. Your daughter's profession, Ms. Barrister. Did this
cause friction in the family?"
In another of her slow, deliberate gestures, Elizabeth smoothed down the
ankle-skimming skirt of her suit. "It was not a profession I dreamed of
my daughter embracing. Naturally, it was her choice."
"Your father-in-law would have been opposed. Certainly politically
opposed."
"The senator's views on sexual legislation are well known. As a leader
of the Conservative Party, he is, of course, working to change many of
the current laws regarding what is popularly called the Morality Issue."
"Do you share his views?"
"No, I don't, though I fail to see how that applies."
Eve cocked her head. Oh, there was friction there, all right. Eve
wondered if the streamlined attorney agreed with her outspoken
father-in-law on anything. "Your daughter was killed -- possibly by a
client, possibly by a personal friend. If you and your daughter were at
odds over her lifestyle, it would be unlikely she would have confided in
you about professional or personal acquaintances."
"I see." Elizabeth folded her hands and forced herself to think like a
lawyer. "You're assuming that, as her mother, as a woman who might have
shared some of the same viewpoints, Sharon would talk to me, perhaps
share with me some of the more intimate details of her life." Despite
her efforts, Elizabeth's eyes clouded. "I'm sorry, lieutenant, that's
not the case. Sharon rarely shared anything with me. Certainly not about
her business. She was... aloof, from both her father and me. Really,
from her entire family."
"You wouldn't know if she had a particular lover -- someone she was more
personally involved with? One who might have been jealous?"
"No. I can tell you I don't believe she did. Sharon had..." Elizabeth
took a steadying breath. "A disdain for men. An attraction to them, yes,
but an underlying disdain. She knew she could attract them. From a very
early age, she knew. And she found them foolish."
"Professional companions are rigidly screened. A dislike -- or disdain,
as you put it -- is a usual reason for denial of licensing."
"She was also clever. There was nothing in her life she wanted she
didn't find a way to have. Except happiness. She was not a happy woman,"
Elizabeth went on, and swallowed the lump that always seemed to hover in
her throat. "I spoiled her, it's true. I have no one to blame but myself
for it. I wanted more children." She pressed a hand to her mouth until
she thought her lips had stopped trembling. "I was philosophically
opposed to having more, and my husband was very clear in his position.
But that didn't stop the emotion of wanting children to love. I loved
Sharon, too much. The senator will tell you I smothered her, babied her,
indulged her. And he would be right."
"I would say that mothering was your privilege, not his."
This brought a ghost of a smile to Elizabeth's eyes. "So were the
mistakes, and I made them. Richard, too, though he loved her no less
than I. When Sharon moved to New York, we fought with her over it.
Richard pleaded with her. I threatened her. And I pushed her away,
lieutenant. She told me I didn't understand her -- never had, never
would -- and that I saw only what I wanted to see, unless it was in
court; but what went on in my own home was invisible."
"What did she mean?"
"That I was a better lawyer than a mother, I suppose. After she left, I
was hurt, angry. I pulled back, quite certain she would come to me. She
didn't, of course."
She stopped speaking for a moment, hoarding her regrets. "Richard went
to see her once or twice, but that didn't work, and only upset him. We
let it alone, let her alone. Until recently, when I felt we had to make
a new attempt."
"Why recently?"
"The years pass," Elizabeth murmured. "I'd hoped she would be growing
tired of the lifestyle, perhaps have begun to regret the rift with
family. I went to see her myself about a year ago. But she only became
angry, defensive, then insulting when I tried to persuade her to come
home. Richard, though he'd resigned himself, offered to go up and talk
to her. But she refused to see him. Even Catherine tried," she murmured
and rubbed absently at a pain between her eyes. "She went to see Sharon
only a few weeks ago."
"Congresswoman DeBlass went to New York to see Sharon?"
"Not specifically. Catherine was there for a fund-raiser and made a
point to see and try to speak with Sharon." Elizabeth pressed her lips
together. "I asked her to. You see, when I tried to open communications
again, Sharon wasn't interested. I'd lost her," Elizabeth said quietly,
"and moved too late to get her back, I didn't know how to get her back.
I'd hoped that Catherine could help, being family, but not Sharon's
mother."
She looked over at Eve again. "You're thinking that I should have gone
again myself. It was my place to go."
"Ms. Barrister -- "
But Elizabeth shook her head. "You're right, of course. But she refused
to confide in me. I thought I should respect her privacy, as I always
had. I was never one of those mothers who peeked into her daughter's
diary."
"Diary?" Eve's antenna vibrated. "Did she keep one?"
"She always kept a diary, even as a child. She changed the password in
it regularly."
"And as an adult?"
"Yes. She'd refer to it now and again -- joke about the secrets she had
and the people she knew who would be appalled at what she'd written
about them."
There'd been no personal diary in the inventory, Eve remembered. Such
things could be as small as a woman's thumb. If the sweepers missed it
the first time...
"Do you have any of them?"
"No." Abruptly alert, Elizabeth looked up. "She kept them in a deposit
box, I think. She kept them all."
"Did she use a bank here in Virginia?"
"Not that I'm aware of. I'll check and see what I can find out for you.
I can go through the things she left here."
"I'd appreciate that. If you think of anything -- anything at all -- a
name, a comment, no matter how casual, please contact me."
"I will. She never spoke of friends, lieutenant. I worried about that,
even as I used it to hope that the lack of them would draw her back
home. Out of the life she'd chosen. I even used one of my own, my own
friends, thinking he would be more persuasive than I."
"Who was that?"
"Roarke." Elizabeth teared up again, fought them back. "Only days before
she was murdered, I called him. We've known each other for years. I
asked him if he would arrange for her to be invited to a certain party I
knew he'd be attending. If he'd seek her out. He was reluctant. Roarke
isn't one to meddle in family business. But I used our friendship. If he
would just find a way to befriend her, to show her that an attractive
woman doesn't have to use her looks to feel worthwhile. He did that for
me, and for my husband."
"You asked him to develop a relationship with her?" Eve said carefully.
"I asked him to be her friend," Elizabeth corrected. "To be there for
her. I asked him because there's no one I trust more. She'd cut herself
off from all of us, and I needed someone I could trust. He would never
hurt her, you see. He would never hurt anyone I loved."
"Because he loves you?"
"Cares." Richard DeBlass spoke from the doorway. "Roarke cares very much
for Beth and for me, and a few select others. But loves? I'm not sure
he'd let himself risk quite that unstable an emotion."
"Richard." Elizabeth's control wobbled as she got to her feet. "I wasn't
expecting you quite yet."
"We finished early." He came to her, closed his hands over hers. "You
should have called me, Beth."
"I didn't -- " She broke off, looked at him helplessly. "I'd hoped to
handle it alone."
"You don't have to handle anything alone." He kept his hand closed over
his wife's as he turned to Eve. "You'd be Lieutenant Dallas?"
"Yes, Mr. DeBlass. I had a few questions and hoped it would be easier if
I asked them in person."
"My wife and I are willing to cooperate in any way we can." He remained
standing, a position Eve judged as one of power and of distance.
There was none of Elizabeth's nerves or fragility in the man who stood
beside her. He was taking charge, Eve decided, protecting his wife and
guarding his own emotions with equal care.
"You were asking about Roarke," he continued. "May I ask why?"
"I told the lieutenant that I'd asked Roarke to see Sharon. To try
to..."
"Oh, Beth." In a gesture that was both weary and resigned, he shook his
head. "What could he do? Why would you bring him into it?"
She stepped away from him, her face so filled with despair, Eve's heart
broke. "I know you told me to let it alone, that we had to let her go.
But I had to try again. She might have connected with him, Richard. He
has a way." She began to speak quickly now, her words tumbling out,
tripping over each other. "He might have helped her if I'd asked him
sooner. With enough time, there's very little he can't do. But he didn't
have enough time. Neither did my child."
"All right," Richard murmured, and laid a hand on her arm. "All right."
She controlled herself again, drew back, drew in. "What can I do now,
lieutenant, but pray for justice?"
"I'll get you justice, Ms. Barrister."
She closed her eyes and clung to that. "I think you will. I wasn't sure
of that, even after Roarke called me about you."
"He called you -- to discuss the case?"
"He called to see how we were -- and to tell me he thought you'd be
coming to see me personally before long." She nearly smiled. "He's
rarely wrong. He told me I'd find you competent, organized, and
involved. You are. I'm grateful I've had the opportunity to see that for
myself and to know that you're in charge of my daughter's murder
investigation."
"Ms. Barrister," Eve hesitated only a moment before deciding to take the
risk. "What if I told you Roarke is a suspect?"
Elizabeth's eyes went wide, then calmed again almost immediately. "I'd
say you were taking an extraordinarily big wrong step."
"Because Roarke is incapable of murder?"
"No, I wouldn't say that." It was a relief to think of it, if only for a
moment, in objective terms. "Incapable of a senseless act, yes. He might
kill cold-bloodedly, but never the defenseless. He might kill, I
wouldn't be surprised if he had. But would he do to anyone what was done
to Sharon -- before, during, after? No. Not Roarke."
"No," Richard echoed, and his hand searched for his wife's again. "Not
Roarke."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Not Roarke, Eve thought again when she was back in her cab and headed
for the underground. Why the hell hadn't he told her he'd met Sharon
DeBlass as a favor to her mother? What else hadn't he told her?
Blackmail. Somehow she didn't see him as a victim of blackmail. He
wouldn't give a damn what was said or broadcast about him. But the diary
changed things and made blackmail a new and intriguing motive.
Just what had Sharon recorded about whom, and where were the goddamn
diaries?
*** CHAPTER NINE ***
"No problem reversing the tail," Feeney said as he shoveled in what
passed for breakfast at the eatery at Cop Central. "I see him cue in on
me. He's looking around for you, but there's plenty of bodies. So I get
on the frigging plane."
Feeney washed down irradiated eggs with black bean coffee without a
wince. "He gets on, too, but he sits up in First Class. When we get off,
he's waiting, and that's when he knows you're not there." He jabbed at
Eve with his fork. "He was pissed, makes a quick call. So I get behind
him, trail him to the Regent Hotel. They don't like to tell you anything
at the Regent. Flash your badge and they get all offended."
"And you explained, tactfully, about civic duty."
"Right." Feeney pushed his empty plate into the recycler slot, crushed
his empty cup with his hand, and sent it to follow. "He made a couple of
calls -- one to East Washington, one to Virginia. Then he makes a local
-- to the chief."
"Shit."
"Yeah. Chief Simpson's pushing buttons for DeBlass, no question. Makes
you wonder what buttons."
Before Eve could comment, her communicator beeped. She pulled it out and
answered the call from her commander.
"Dallas, be in Testing. Twenty minutes."
"Sir, I'm meeting a snitch on the Colby matter at oh nine hundred."
"Reschedule." His voice was flat. "Twenty minutes."
Slowly, Dallas replaced her communicator. "I guess we know one of the
buttons."
"Seems like DeBlass is taking a personal interest in you." Feeney
studied her face. There wasn't a cop on the force who didn't despise
Testing. "You going to handle it okay?"
"Yeah, sure. This is going to tie me up most of the day, Feeney. Do me a
favor. Do a run on the banks in Manhattan. I need to know if Sharon
DeBlass kept a safe deposit box. If you don't find anything there,
spread out to the other boroughs."
"You got it."
-=O=-***-=O=-
The Testing section was riddled with long corridors, some glassed, some
done in pale green walls that were supposed to be calming. Doctors and
technicians wore white. The color of innocence and, of course, power.
When she entered the first set of reinforced glass doors, the computer
politely ordered her to surrender her weapon. Eve took it out of her
holster, set it on the tray, and watched it slide away.
It made her feel naked even before she was directed into Testing Room
1-C and told to strip.
She laid her clothes on the bench provided and tried not to think about
the techs watching her on their monitors or the machines with the
nastily silent glide and their impersonal blinking lights.
The physical exam was easy. All she had to do was stand on the center
mark in the tubelike room and watch the lights blip and flash as her
internal organs and bones were checked for flaws.
Then she was permitted to don a blue jumpsuit and sit while a machine
angled over to examine her eyes and ears. Another, snicking out from one
of the wall slots, did a standard reflex test. For the personal touch, a
technician entered to take a blood sample.
Please exit door marked Testing 2-C. Phase one is complete, Dallas,
Lieutenant Eve.
In the adjoining room, Eve was instructed to lie on a padded table for
the brain scan. Wouldn't want any cops out there with a brain tumor
urging them to blast civilians, she thought wearily.
Eve watched the techs through the glass wall as the helmet was lowered
onto her head.
Then the games began.
The bench adjusted to a sitting position and she was treated to virtual
reality. The VR put her in a vehicle during a high-speed chase. Sounds
exploded in her ears: the scream of sirens, the shouts of conflicting
orders from the communicator on the dash. She could see that it was a
standard police unit, fully charged. The control of the vehicle was
hers, and she had to swerve and maneuver to avoid flattening a variety
of pedestrians the VR hurled in her path.
In one part of her brain she was aware her vitals were being monitored:
blood pressure, pulse, even the amount of sweat that crawled on her
skin, the saliva that pooled and dried in her mouth. It was hot, almost
unbearably hot. She narrowly missed a food transport that lumbered into
her path.
She recognized her location. The old ports on the east side. She could
smell them: water, bad fish, and old sweat. Transients wearing their
uniform of blue coveralls were looking for a handout or a day's labor.
She flew by a group of them jostling for position in front of a
placement center.
Subject armed. Rifle torch, hand explosive. Wanted for robbery homicide.
Great, Eve thought as she careened after him. Fucking great. She punched
the accelerator, whipped the wheel, and kissed off the fender of the
target vehicle in a shower of sparks. A spurt of flame whooshed by her
ear as he fired at her. The proprietor of a port side roach coach dived
for cover, along with several of his customers. Rice noodles flew along
with curses.
She rammed the target again, ordering her backup to maneuver into a
pincer position.
This time her quarry's vehicle shuddered, tipped. As he fought for
control, she used hers to batter his to a stop. She shouted the standard
identification and warning as she bolted from the vehicle. He came out
blasting, and she brought him down.
The shock from her weapon jolted his nervous system. She watched him
jitter, wet himself, then collapse.
She'd hardly taken a breath to readjust when the bastard techs tossed
her into a new scene. The screams, the little girl's screams; the raging
roar of the man who was her father.
They had reconstructed it almost too perfectly, using her own report,
visuals of the site, and the mirror of her memory they'd lifted in the
scan.
Eve didn't bother to curse them, but held back her hate, her grief, and
sent herself racing up the stairs and back into her nightmare.
No more screams from the little girl. She beat on the door, calling out
her name and rank. Warning the man on the other side of the door, trying
to calm him.
"Cunts. You're all cunts. Come on in, cunt bitch. I'll kill you."
The door folded like cardboard under her ramming shoulder. She went in,
weapon drawn.
"She was just like her mother -- just like her fucking mother. Thought
they'd get away from me. Thought they could. I fixed it. I fixed them.
I'm going to fix you, cunt cop."
The little girl was staring at her with big, dead eyes. Doll's eyes. Her
tiny, helpless body mutilated, blood spreading like a pool. And dripping
from the knife.
She told him to freeze: "You son of a bitch, drop the weapon. Drop the
fucking knife!" But he kept coming. Stunned him. But he kept coming.
The room smelled of blood, of urine, of burned food. The lights were too
bright, unshaded and blinding so that everything, everything stood out
in jarring relief. A doll with a missing arm on the ripped sofa, a
crooked window shield that let in a hard red glow from the neon across
the street, the overturned table of cheap molded plastic, the cracked
screen of a broken 'link.
The little girl with dead eyes. The spreading pool of blood. And the
sharp, sticky gleam of the blade.
"I'm going to ram this right up your cunt. Just like I did to her."
Stunned again. His eyes were wild, jagged on homemade Zeus, that
wonderful chemical that made gods out of men, with all the power and
insanity that went with delusions of immortality.
The knife, with the scarlet drenched blade hacked down, whistled.
And she dropped him.
The jolt zipped through his nervous system. His brain died first, so
that his body convulsed and shuddered as his eyes turned to glass.
Strapping down on the need to scream, she kicked the knife away from his
still twitching hand and looked at the child.
The big doll's eyes stared at her, and told her -- again -- that she'd
been too late.
Forcing her body to relax, she let nothing into her mind but her report.
The VR section was complete. Her vitals were checked again before she
was taken to the final testing phase. The one-on-one with the
psychiatrist.
Eve didn't have anything against Dr. Mira. The woman was dedicated to
her calling. In private practice, she could have earned triple the
salary she pulled in under the Police and Security Department.
She had a quiet voice with the faintest hint of upper class New England.
Her pale blue eyes were kind -- and sharp. At sixty, she was comfortable
with middle age, but far from matronly.
Her hair was a warm honey brown and scooped up in the back in a neat yet
complicated twist. She wore a tidy, rose toned suit with a sedate gold
circle on the lapel.
No, Eve had nothing against her personally. She just hated shrinks.
"Lieutenant Dallas." Mira rose from a soft blue scoop chair when Eve
entered.
There was no desk, no computer in sight. One of the tricks, Eve knew, to
make the subjects relax and forget they were under intense observation.
"Doctor." Eve sat in the chair Mira indicated.
"I was just about to have some tea. You'll join me?"
"Sure."
Mira moved gracefully to the server, ordered two teas, then brought the
cups to the sitting area. "It's unfortunate that your testing was
postponed, lieutenant." With a smile, she sat, sipped. "The process is
more conclusive and certainly more beneficial when run within
twenty-four hours of an incident."
"It couldn't be helped."
"So I'm told. Your preliminary results are satisfactory."
"Fine."
"You still refuse autohypnosis?"
"It's optional." Hating the defensive sound of her voice.
"Yes, it is." Mira crossed her legs. "You've been through a difficult
experience, lieutenant. There are signs of physical and emotional
fatigue."
"I'm on another case, a demanding one. It's taking a lot of my time."
"Yes, I have that information. Are you taking the standard sleep
inducers?"
Eve tested the tea. It was, as she'd suspected, floral in scent and
flavor. "No. We've been through that before. Night pills are optional,
and I opt no."
"Because they limit your control."
Eve met her eyes. "That's right. I don't like being put to sleep, and I
don't like being here. I don't like brain rape."
"You consider Testing a kind of rape?"
There wasn't a cop with a brain who didn't. "It's not a choice, is it?"
Mira kept her sigh to herself. "The termination of a subject, no matter
the circumstances, is a traumatic experience for a police officer. If
the trauma affects the emotions, the reactions, the attitude, the
officer's performance will suffer. If the use of full force was caused
by a physical defect, that defect must be located and repaired."
"I know the company line, doctor. I'm cooperating fully. But I don't
have to like it."
"No, you don't." Mira neatly balanced the cup on her knee. "Lieutenant,
this is your second termination. Though that is not an unusual amount
for an officer with your length of duty, there are many who never need
to make that decision. I'd like to know how you feel about the choice
you made, and the results."
I wish I'd been quicker, Eve thought. I wish that child was playing with
her toys right now instead of being cremated.
"As my only choice was to let him carve me into pieces, or stop him, I
feel just fine about the decision. My warning was issued and ignored.
Stunning was ineffective. The evidence that he would, indeed, kill was
lying on the floor between us in a puddle of blood. Therefore, I have no
problem with the results."
"You were disturbed by the death of the child?"
"I believe anyone would be disturbed by the death of a child. Certainly
that kind of vicious murder of the defenseless."
"And do you see the parallel between the child and yourself?" Mira asked
quietly. She could see Eve draw in and close off. "Lieutenant, we both
know I'm fully aware of your background. You were abused, physically,
sexually, and emotionally. You were abandoned when you were eight."
"That has nothing to do with -- "
"I think it may have a great deal to do with your mental and emotional
state," Mira interrupted. "For two years between the ages of eight and
ten, you lived in a communal home while your parents were searched for.
You have no memory of the first eight years of your life, your name,
your circumstances, your birthplace."
However mild they were, Mira's eyes were sharp and searching. "You were
given the name Eve Dallas and eventually placed in foster care. You had
no control over any of this. You were a battered child, dependent on the
system, which in many ways failed you."
It took every ounce of will for Eve to keep her eyes and her voice
level. "As I, part of the system, failed to protect the child. You want
to know how I feel about that, Dr. Mira?"
Wretched. Sick. Sorry.
"I feel that I did everything I could do. I went through your VR and did
it again. Because there was no changing it. If I could have saved the
child, I would have saved her. If I could have arrested the subject, I
would have."
"But these matters were not in your control."
Sneaky bitch, Eve thought. "It was in my control to terminate. After
employing all standard options, I exercised my control. You've reviewed
the report. It was a clean, justifiable termination."
Mira said nothing for a moment. Her skills, she knew, had never been
able to more than scrape at Eve's outer wall of defense. "Very well,
lieutenant. You're cleared to resume duty without restriction." Mira
held up a hand before Eve could rise. "Off the record."
"Is anything?"
Mira only smiled. "It's true that very often the mind protects itself.
Yours refuses to acknowledge the first eight years of your life. But
those years are a part of you. I can get them back for you when you're
ready. And Eve," she added in that quiet voice, "I can help you deal
with them."
"I've made myself what I am, and I can live with it. Maybe I don't want
to risk living with the rest." She got up and walked to the door. When
she turned back, Mira was sitting just as she had been, legs crossed,
one hand holding the pretty little cup. The scent of brewed flowers
lingered in the air.
"A hypothetical case," Eve began and waited for Mira's nod.
"A woman, with considerable social and financial advantages, chooses to
become a whore." At Mira's lifted brow, Eve swore impatiently. "We don't
have to pretty up the terminology here, doctor. She chose to make her
living from sex. Flaunted it in front of her well-positioned family,
including her arch-conservative grandfather. Why?"
"It's difficult to come up with one specific motive from such general
and sketchy information. The most obvious would be the subject could
find her self-worth only in sexual skill. She either enjoyed or detested
the act."
Intrigued, Eve stepped away from the door. "If she detested it, why
would she become a pro?"
"To punish."
"Herself?"
"Certainly, and those close to her."
To punish, Eve mused. The diary. Blackmail.
"A man kills," she continued. "Viciously, brutally. The killing is tied
to sex, and is executed in a unique and distinctive fashion. He records
it, has bypassed a sophisticated security system. A recording of the
murder is delivered to the investigating officer. A message is left at
the scene, a boastful message. What is he?"
"You don't give me much," Mira complained, but Eve could see her
attention was caught. "Inventive," she began. "A planner, and a voyeur.
Confident, perhaps smug. You said distinctive, so he wishes to leave his
mark, and he wants to show off his skill, his brain. Using your
observation and deductive talents, lieutenant, did he enjoy the act of
murder?"
"Yes. I think he reveled in it."
Mira nodded. "Then he will certainly enjoy it again."
"He already has. Two murders, barely a week apart. He won't wait long
before the next, will he?"
"It's doubtful." Mira sipped her tea as if they were discussing the
latest spring fashions. "Are the two murders connected in any way other
than the perpetrator and the method?"
"Sex," Eve said shortly.
"Ah." Mira tilted her head. "With all our technology, with the amazing
advances that have been made in genetics, we are still unable to control
human virtues and flaws. Perhaps we are too human to permit the
tampering. Passions are necessary to the human spirit. We learned that
early this century when genetic engineering nearly slipped out of
control. It's unfortunate that some passions twist. Sex and violence.
For some it's still a natural marriage."
She stood then to take the cups and place them beside the server. "I'd
be interested in knowing more about this man, lieutenant. If and when
you decide you want a profile, I hope you'll come to me."
"It's Code Five."
Mira glanced back. "I see."
"If we don't tie this up before he hits again, I may be able to swing
it."
"I'll make myself available."
"Thanks."
"Eve, even strong, self-made women have weak spots. Don't be afraid of
them."
Eve held Mira's gaze for another moment. "I've got work to do."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Testing left her shaky. Eve compensated by being surly and antagonistic
with her snitch and nearly losing a lead on a case involving bootlegged
chemicals. Her mood was far from cheerful when she checked back in to
Cop Central. There was no message from Feeney.
Others in her department knew just where she'd spent the day and did
their best to stay out of her way. As a result, she worked in solitude
and annoyance for an hour.
Her last effort was to put through a call to Roarke. She was neither
surprised nor particularly disappointed when he wasn't available. She
left a message on his E-mail requesting an appointment, then logged out
for the day.
She intended to drown her mood in cheap liquor and mediocre music at
Mavis's latest gig at the Blue Squirrel.
It was a joint, which put it one slippery step up from a dive. The light
was dim, the clientele edgy, and the service pitiful. It was exactly
what Eve was looking for.
The music struck her in one clashing wave when she walked in. Mavis was
managing to lift her appealing screech of a voice over the band, which
consisted of one multitattooed kid on a melody master.
Eve snarled off the offer from a guy in a hooded jacket to buy her a
drink in one of the private smoking booths. She jockeyed her way to a
table, pressed in an order for a screamer, and settled back to watch
Mavis perform.
She wasn't half bad, Eve decided. Not half good either, but the
customers weren't choosy. Mavis was wearing paint tonight, her busty
little body a canvas for splatters and streaks of orange and violet,
with strategically brushed splotches of emerald. Bracelets and chains
jangled as she jittered around the small, raised stage. One step below,
a mass of humanity gyrated in sympathy.
Eve watched a small, sealed package pass from hand to hand on the edge
of the dance floor. Drugs, of course. They'd tried a war on them,
legalizing them, ignoring them, and regulating them. Nothing seemed to
work.
She couldn't raise the interest to make a bust and lifted a hand in a
wave to Mavis instead.
The vocal part of the song ended -- such as it was. Mavis leaped
offstage, wiggled through the crowd, and plopped a painted hip on the
edge of Eve's table.
"Hey, stranger."
"Looking good, Mavis. Who's the artist?"
"Oh, this guy I know." She shifted, tapped an inch-long fingernail on
the left cheek of her butt. "Caruso. See, he signed me. Got the job free
for passing his name around." Her eyes rounded when the waitress set the
long, slim glass filled with frothy blue liquid in front of Eve. "A
screamer? Wouldn't you rather I find a hammer and just knock you
unconscious?"
"It's been a shitty day," Eve muttered and took the first shocking sip.
"Jesus. These never get any better."
Worried, Mavis leaned closer. "I can cut out for a little while."
"No, I'm okay." Eve risked her life with another sip. "I just wanted to
check out your gig, let off some steam. Mavis, you're not using, are
you?"
"Hey, come on." More concerned than insulted, Mavis shook Eve's
shoulder. "I'm clean, you know that. Some shit gets passed around in
here, but it's all minor league. Some happy pills, some calmers, a few
mood patches." She pokered up. "If you're looking to make a bust, you
could at least do it on my night off."
"Sorry." Annoyed with herself, Eve rubbed her hands over her face. "I'm
not fit for human consumption at the moment. Go back and sing. I like
hearing you."
"Sure. But if you want company when you split, just give me a sign. I
can fix it."
"Thanks." Eve sat back, closed her eyes. It was a surprise when the
music slowed, even mellowed. If you didn't look around, it wasn't so
bad.
For twenty credits she could have hooked on mood enhancer goggles,
treated herself to lights and shapes that fit the music. At the moment,
she preferred the dark behind her eyes.
"This doesn't seem quite your den of iniquity, lieutenant."
Eve opened her eyes and stared up at Roarke. "Every time I turn around."
He sat across from her. The table was small enough that their knees
bumped. His way of adjusting was to slide his thighs against hers. "You
called me, remember, and you'd left this address when you logged out."
"I wanted an appointment, not a drinking buddy."
He glanced at the drink on the table, leaned over to take a sniff.
"You're not going to get one with that poison."
"This joint doesn't run to fine wine and aged scotch."
He laid a hand over hers for the simple purpose of watching her scowl
and jerk away. "Why don't we go somewhere that does?"
"I'm in a pisser of a mood. Roarke. Give me an appointment, at your
convenience, then take off."
"An appointment for what?" The singer caught his attention. He cocked a
brow, watching her roll her eyes and gesture. "Unless she's having some
sort of seizure, I believe the vocalist is signaling you."
Resigned, Eve glanced over, shook her head. "She's a friend of mine."
She shook her head more emphatically when Mavis grinned and turned both
thumbs up. "She thinks I got lucky."
"You did." Roarke picked the drink up and set it on an adjoining table
where greedy hands fought over it. "I just saved your life."
"Goddamn it -- "
"If you want to get drunk, Eve, at least do it with something that will
leave you most of your stomach lining." He scanned the menu, winced.
"Which means nothing that can be purchased here." He took her hand as he
rose. "Come on."
"I'm fine right here."
All patience, he bent down until his face was close to hers. "What you
are is hoping to get drunk enough so that you can take a few punches at
someone without worrying about the consequences. With me, you don't have
to get drunk, you don't have to worry. You can take all the punches you
want."
"Why?"
"Because you have something sad in your eyes. And it gets to me." While
she was dealing with the surprise of that statement, he hauled her to
her feet and toward the door.
"I'm going home," she decided.
"No, you're not."
"Listen, pal -- "
That was as far as she got before her back was shoved against the wall
and his mouth crushed hard on hers. She didn't fight. The wind had been
knocked out of her by the suddenness, and the rage under it, and the
shock of need that slammed into her like a fist.
It was quick, seconds only, before her mouth was free. "Stop it," she
demanded, and hated that her voice was only a shaky whisper.
"Whatever you think," he began, struggling for his own composure, "there
are times when you need someone. Right now, it's me." Impatience
shimmering around him, he pulled her outside. "Where's your car?"
She gestured down the block and let him propel her down the sidewalk. "I
don't know what your problem is."
"It seems to be you. Do you know how you looked?" he demanded as he
yanked open the car door. "Sitting in that place with your eyes closed,
shadows under them?" Picturing it again only fired his anger. He shoved
her into the passenger seat and rounded the car to take the driver's
position himself. "What's your fucking code?"
Fascinated with the whiplash temper, she shifted to key it in herself.
With the lock released, he pressed the starter and pulled away from the
curb.
"I was trying to relax," Eve said carefully.
"You don't know how," he shot back. "You've packed it in, but you
haven't gotten rid of it. You're walking a real straight line, Eve, but
it's a damn thin one."
"That's what I'm trained to do."
"You don't know what you're up against this time."
Her fingers curled into a fist at her side. "And you do."
He was silent for a moment, banking his own emotions. "We'll talk about
it later."
"I like now better. I went to see Elizabeth Barrister yesterday."
"I know." Calmer, he adjusted to the jerky rhythm of her car. "You're
cold. Turn up the heater."
"It's busted. Why didn't you tell me that she'd asked you to meet
Sharon, to talk to her?"
"Because Beth asked me in confidence."
"What's your relationship with Elizabeth Barrister?"
"We're friends." Roarke slanted her a look. "I have a few. She and
Richard are among them."
"And the senator?"
"I hate his fucking, pompous, hypocritical guts," Roarke said calmly.
"If he gets his party's nomination for president, I'll put everything
I've got into his opponent's campaign. If it's the devil himself."
"You should learn to speak your mind, Roarke," she said with a ghost of
a smile. "Did you know that Sharon kept a diary?"
"It's a natural assumption. She was a businesswoman."
"I'm not talking about a log, business records. A diary, a personal
diary. Secrets, Roarke. Blackmail."
He said nothing as he turned the idea over. "Well, well. You found your
motive."
"That remains to be seen. You have a lot of secrets, Roarke."
He let out a half laugh as he stopped at the gates of his estate. "Do
you really think I'd be a victim of blackmail, Eve? That some lost,
pitiful woman like Sharon could unearth information you can't and use it
against me?"
"No." That was simple. She put a hand on his arm. "I'm not going inside
with you." That was not.
"If I were bringing you here for sex, we'd have sex. We both know it.
You wanted to see me. You want to shoot the kind of weapon that was used
to kill Sharon and the other, don't you?"
She let out a short breath. "Yes."
"Now's your chance."
The gates opened. He drove through.
*** CHAPTER TEN ***
The same stone-faced butler stood guard at the door. He took Eve's coat
with the same faint disapproval.
"Send coffee down to the target room, please," Roarke ordered as he led
Eve up the stairs.
He was holding her hand again, but Eve decided it was less a sentimental
gesture than one to make sure she didn't balk. She could have told him
she was much too intrigued to go anywhere, but found she enjoyed that
ripple of annoyance under his smooth manner.
When they'd reached the third floor, he went through his collection
briskly, choosing weapons without fuss or hesitation. He handled the
antiques with the competence of experience and, she thought, habitual
use.
Not a man who simply bought to own, but one who made use of his
possessions. She wondered if he knew that counted against him. Or if he
cared.
Once his choices were secured in a leather case, he moved to a wall.
Both the security console and the door itself were so cleverly hidden in
a painting of a forest, she would never have found it. The trompe l'oeil
slid open to an elevator.
"This car only opens to a select number of rooms," he explained as Eve
stepped into the elevator with him. "I rarely take guests down to the
target area."
"Why?"
"My collection, and the use of it, are reserved for those who can
appreciate it."
"How much do you buy through the black market?"
"Always a cop." He flashed that grin at her, and she was sure, tucked
his tongue in his cheek. "I buy only through legal sources, naturally."
His eyes skimmed down to her shoulder bag. "As long as you've got your
recorder on."
She couldn't help but smile back. Of course she had her recorder on. And
of course he knew it. It was a measure of her interest that she opened
the bag, took out her recorder, and manually disengaged.
"And your backup?" he said smoothly.
"You're too smart for your own good." Willing to take the chance, she
slipped a hand into her pocket. The backup unit was nearly paper thin.
She used a thumbnail to deactivate it. "What about yours?" She glanced
around the elevator as the doors opened. "You'd have video and audio
security in every corner of this place."
"Of course." He took her hand again and drew her out of the car.
The room was high ceilinged, surprisingly spartan given Roarke's love of
comfort. The lights switched on the moment they stepped in, illuminating
plain, sand colored walls, a bank of simple high-backed chairs, and
tables where a tray holding a silver coffeepot and china cups had
already been set.
Ignoring them, Eve walked over to a long, glossy black console. "What
does it do?"
"A number of things." Roarke set the case he carried down on a flat
area. He pressed his palm to an identiscreen. There was a soft green
glow beneath it as his print was read and accepted, then lights and
dials glowed on.
"I keep a supply of ammunition here." He pressed a series of buttons. A
cabinet in the base of the console slid open. "You'll want these." From
a second cabinet, he took earplugs and safety glasses.
"This is, what, like a hobby?" Eve asked as she adjusted the glasses.
The small, clear lenses cupped her eyes, the attached earplugs fit
snugly.
"Yes. Like a hobby."
His voice came with a faint echo through her ear protectors, linking
them, closing out the rest. He chose the. 38, loaded it.
"This was standard police issue in the mid-twentieth century. Toward the
second millennium, nine millimeters were preferred."
"The RS-fifties were the official weapon of choice during the Urban
Revolt and into the third decade of the twenty-first century."
He lifted a brow, pleased. "You've been doing your homework."
"Damn right." She glanced at the weapon in his hand. "Into the mind of a
killer."
"Then you'd be aware that the hand laser you have strapped to your side
didn't gain popular acceptance until about twenty-five years ago."
She watched with a slight frown as he slapped the cylinder shut. "The NS
laser, with modifications, has been standard police issue since 2023. I
didn't notice any lasers in your collection."
His eyes met hers, and there was a laugh in them. "Cop toys only.
They're illegal, lieutenant, even for collectors." He pressed a button.
Against the far wall a hologram flashed, so lifelike that Eve blinked
and braced before she caught herself.
"Excellent image," she murmured, studying the big, bull-shouldered man
holding a weapon she couldn't quite identify.
"He's a replica of a typical twentieth-century thug. That's an
AK-forty-seven he's holding."
"Right." She narrowed her eyes at it. It was more dramatic than in the
photos and videos she'd studied. "Very popular with urban gangs and drug
dealers of the era."
"An assault weapon," Roarke murmured. "Fashioned to kill. Once I
activate, if he hits target, you'd feel a slight jolt. Low level
electrical shock, rather than the much more dramatic insult of a bullet.
Want to try it?"
"You go first."
"Fine." Roarke activated. The hologram lunged forward, swinging up his
weapon. The sound effects kicked in instantly.
The thunder of noise had Eve jerking back a step. Snarled obscenities,
street sounds, the terrifyingly rapid explosion of gunfire.
She watched, slack jawed, as the image spurted what looked entirely too
much like blood. The wide chest seemed to erupt with it as the man flew
back. The weapon spiraled out of his hand. Then both vanished.
"Jesus."
A little surprised that he'd been showing off, like a kid at an arcade,
Roarke lowered his weapon. "It hardly makes the point of what something
like this can do to flesh and bone if the image isn't realistic."
"Guess not." She had to swallow. "Did he hit you?"
"Not that time. Of course, one on one, and when you can fully anticipate
your opponent, doesn't make it very difficult to win your round."
Roarke pushed more buttons, and the dead gunman was back, whole and
ready to rock. Roarke took his stance with the ease and automation, Eve
thought, of a veteran cop. Or, to borrow his word, a thug.
Abruptly, the image lunged, and as Roarke fired, other holograms
appeared in rapid succession. A man with some sort of wicked looking
handgun, a snarling woman aiming a long barreled weapon -- a. 44 Magnum,
Eve decided -- a small, terrified child carrying a ball.
They flashed and fired, cursed, screamed, bled. When it was over, the
child was sitting on the ground weeping, all alone.
"A random choice like that's more difficult," Roarke told her. "Caught
my shoulder."
"What?" Eve blinked, focused on him again. "Your shoulder."
He grinned at her. "Don't worry, darling. It's just a flesh wound."
Her heart was thudding in her ears, no matter how ridiculous she told
herself was her reaction. "Hell of a toy, Roarke. Real fun and games
time. Do you play often?"
"Now and again. Ready to try it?"
If she could handle a session with VR, Eve decided, she could handle
this. "Yeah, run another random pattern."
"That's what I admire about you, lieutenant." Roarke selected ammo,
loaded fresh. "You jump right in. Let's try a dry run first."
He brought up a simple target, circles and a bull's-eye. He stepped
behind her, putting the. 38 in her hands, his over them. He pressed his
cheek to hers. "You have to sight it, as it doesn't sense heat and
movement as your weapon does." He adjusted her arms until he was
satisfied. "When you're ready to fire, you want to squeeze the trigger,
not pump it. It's going to jerk a bit. It's not as smooth or as silent
as your laser."
"I've got that," she muttered. It was foolish to be susceptible to his
hands over hers, the press of his body, the smell of him. "You're
crowding me."
He turned his head, just enough to have his lips brushing up to her
earlobe. It was innocently unpierced, rather sweet, like a child's.
"I know. You need to brace yourself more than you're used to. Your
reaction will be to flinch. Don't."
"I don't flinch." To prove it, she squeezed the trigger. Her arms
jerked, annoying her. She shot again, and a third time, missing the
heart of the target by less than an inch. "Christ, you feel it, don't
you?" She rolled her shoulders, fascinated by the way they sang in
response to the weapon in her hands.
"It makes it more personal. You've got a good eye." He was impressed,
but his tone was mild. "Of course, it's one thing to shoot at a circle,
another to shoot at a body. Even a reproduction."
A challenge? she noted. Well, she was up for it. "How many more shots in
this?"
"We'll reload it full." He programmed in a series. Curiosity and, he had
to admit, ego had him choosing a tough one. "Ready?"
She flicked a glance at him, adjusted her stance. "Yeah."
The first image was an elderly woman clutching a shopping bag with both
hands. Eve nearly took the bystander's head off before her finger froze.
A movement flickered to the left, and she shot a mugger before he could
bring an iron pipe down on the old woman. A slight sting in her left hip
had her shifting again, and taking out a bald man with a weapon similar
to her own.
They came fast and hard after that.
Roarke watched her, mesmerized. No, she didn't flinch, he mused. Her
eyes stayed flat and cool. Cop's eyes. He knew her adrenaline was up,
her pulse hammering. Her movements were quick but as smooth and studied
as a dance. Her jaw was set, her hands steady.
And he wanted her, he realized as his gut churned. Quite desperately he
wanted her.
"Caught me twice," she said almost to herself. She opened the chamber
herself, reloaded as she'd seen Roarke do. "Once in the hip, once in the
abdomen. That makes me dead or in dire straits. Run another."
He obliged her, then tucked his hands in his pockets and watched her
work.
When she was done, she asked to try the Swiss model. She found she
preferred the weight and the response of it. Definitely an advantage
over a revolver, she reflected. Quicker, more responsive, better fire
power, and a reload took seconds.
Neither weapon fit as comfortably in her hand as her laser, yet she
found both primitively and horribly efficient.
And the damage they caused, the torn flesh, the flying blood, turned
death into a gruesome affair.
"Any hits?" Roarke asked.
Though the images were gone, she stared at the wall, and the afterimages
that played in her mind. "No. I'm clean. What they do to a body," she
said softly, and put the weapon down. "To have used these -- to have
faced having to use them day after day, and know going in they could be
used against you. Who could face that," she wondered, "without going a
little insane?"
"You could." He removed his eye and ear protectors. "Conscience and
dedication to duty don't have to equal any kind of weakness. You got
through Testing. It cost you, but you got through it."
Carefully, she set her protectors beside his. "How do you know?"
"How do I know you were in Testing today? I have contacts. How do I know
it cost you?" He cupped her chin. "I can see it," he said softly. "Your
heart wars with your head. I don't think you realize that's what makes
you so good at your job. Or so fascinating to me."
"I'm not trying to fascinate you. I'm trying to find a man who used
those weapons I just fired; not for defense, but for pleasure." She
looked straight into his eyes. "It isn't you."
"No, it isn't me."
"But you know something."
He brushed the pad of his thumb over, into the dip in her chin before
dropping his hand. "I'm not at all sure that I do." He crossed over to
the table, poured coffee. "Twentieth-century weapons, twentieth-century
crimes, with twentieth-century motives?" He flicked a glance at her.
"That would be my take."
"It's a simple enough deduction."
"But tell me, lieutenant, can you play deductive games in history, or
are you too firmly entrenched in the now?"
She'd wondered the same herself, and she was learning. "I'm flexible."
"No, but you're smart. Whoever killed Sharon had a knowledge, even an
affection, perhaps an obsession with the past." His brow lifted
mockingly. "I do have a knowledge of certain pieces of the past, and
undoubtedly an affection for them. Obsession?" He lifted a careless
shoulder. "You'd have to judge for yourself."
"I'm working on it."
"I'm sure you are. Let's take a page out of old-fashioned deductive
reasoning, no computers, no technical analysis. Study the victim first.
You believe Sharon was a blackmailer. And it fits. She was an angry
woman, a defiant one who needed power. And wanted to be loved."
"You figured all that out after seeing her twice?"
"From that." He offered the coffee to her. "And from talking to people
who knew her. Friends and associates found her a stunning, energetic
woman, yet a secretive one. A woman who dismissed her family, yet
thought of them often. One who loved to live, yet one who brooded
regularly. I imagine we've covered much of the same ground."
Irritation jumped in. "I wasn't aware you were covering any ground,
Roarke, in a police investigation."
"Beth and Richard are my friends. I take my friendships seriously.
They're grieving, Eve. And I don't like knowing Beth is blaming
herself."
She remembered the haunted eyes and nerves. She sighed. "All right, I
can accept that. Who have you talked to?"
"Friends, as I said, acquaintances, business associates." He set his
coffee aside as Eve sipped hers and paced. "Odd, isn't it, how many
different opinions and perceptions you find on one woman. Ask this one,
and you'll hear Sharon was loyal, generous. Ask another and she was
vindictive, calculating. Still another saw her as a party addict who
could never find enough excitement, while the next tells you she enjoyed
quiet evenings on her own. Quite a role player, our Sharon."
"She wore different faces for different people. It's common enough."
"Which face, or which role, killed her?" Roarke took out a cigarette,
lighted it. "Blackmail." Thoughtfully he blew out a fragrant stream of
smoke. "She would have been good at it. She liked to dig into people and
could dispense considerable charm while doing it."
"And she dispensed it on you."
"Lavishly." That careless smile flashed again. "I wasn't prepared to
exchange information for sex. Even if she hadn't been my friend's
daughter and a professional, she wouldn't have appealed to me in that
way. I prefer a different type." His eyes rested on Eve's again,
broodingly. "Or thought I did. I haven't yet figured out why the
intense, driven, and prickly type appeals to me so unexpectedly."
She poured more coffee, looked at him over the rim. "That isn't
flattering."
"It wasn't meant to be. Though for someone who must have a very
poor-sighted hairdresser and doesn't choose the standard enhancements,
you are surprisingly easy to look at."
"I don't have a hairdresser, or time for enhancements." Or, she decided,
the inclination to discuss them. "To continue the deduction. If Sharon
DeBlass was murdered by one of her blackmail victims, where does Lola
Starr come in?"
"A problem, isn't it?" Roarke took a contemplative drag. "They don't
appear to have anything in common other than their choice of profession.
It's doubtful they knew each other or shared the same taste in clients.
Yet there was one who, at least briefly, knew them both."
"One who chose them both."
Roarke lifted a brow, nodded. "You put it better."
"What did you mean when you said I didn't know what I was getting into?"
His hesitation was so brief, so smoothly covered, it was barely
noticeable. "I'm not sure if you understand the power DeBlass has or can
use. The scandal of his granddaughter's murder could add to it. He wants
the presidency, and he wants to dictate the mood and moral choices of
the country and beyond."
"You're saying he could use Sharon's death politically? How?"
Roarke stubbed his cigarette out. "He could paint his granddaughter as a
victim of society, with sex for profit as the murder weapon. How can a
world that allows legalized prostitution, full conception control,
sexual adjustment, and so forth not take responsibility for the
results?"
Eve could appreciate the debate, but shook her head. "DeBlass also wants
to eliminate the gun ban. She was shot by a weapon not really available
under current law."
"Which makes it more insidious. Would she have been able to defend
herself if she, too, had been armed?" When Eve started to disagree, he
shook his head. "It hardly matters what the answer is, only the question
itself. Have we forgotten our founders and the basic tenets of their
blueprint for the country? Our right to bear arms. A woman murdered in
her own home, her own bed, a victim of sexual freedom and
defenselessness. More, yes, much more, of moral decline."
He strolled over to disengage the console. "Oh, you'll argue that murder
by handgun was the rule rather than the exception when anyone with the
desire and the finances could purchase one, but he'll drown that out.
The Conservative Party is gaining ground, and he's the spearhead."
He watched her assimilate as she poured yet more coffee. "Has it
occurred to you that he might not want the murderer caught?"
Off guard, she looked up. "Why wouldn't he? Over and above the personal,
wouldn't that give him even more ammunition? 'Here's the low-life,
immoral scum that murdered my poor, misguided granddaughter.'"
"That's a risk, isn't it? Perhaps the murderer is a fine, upstanding
pillar of his community who was equally misguided. But a scapegoat is
certainly required."
He waited a moment, watching her think it through. "Who do you think
made certain you went to Testing in the middle of this case? Who's
watching every step you take, monitoring every stage of your
investigation? Who'd digging into your background, your personal life as
well as your professional one?"
Shaken, she set her cup down. "I suspect DeBlass put the pressure on
about Testing. He doesn't trust me, or he hasn't decided I'm competent
to head the investigation. And he had Feeney and me followed from East
Washington." She let out a long breath. "How do you know he's digging on
me? Because you are?"
He didn't mind the anger in her eyes, or the accusation. He preferred it
to the worry another might have shown. "No, because I'm watching him
while he's watching you. I decided I'd find it more satisfying to learn
about you from the source, over time, than by reading reports."
He stepped closer, skimmed his fingers over her choppy hair. "I respect
the privacy of the people I care about. And I care about you, Eve. I
don't know why, precisely, but you pull something from me."
When she started to step back, he tightened his fingers. "I'm tired of
every time I have a moment with you, you put murder between us."
"There is murder between us."
"No. If anything, that's what brought us here. Is that the problem? You
can't shed Lieutenant Dallas long enough to feel?"
"That's who I am."
"Then that's who I want." His eyes had darkened with impatient desire.
The frustration he felt was only with himself, for being so impossibly
driven he might, at any moment, beg. "Lieutenant Dallas wouldn't be
afraid of me, even if Eve might."
The coffee had wired her. That's what had her system so jittery with
nerves. "I'm not afraid of you, Roarke."
"Aren't you?" He moved closer, curling his hands on the lapels of her
shirt. "What do you think will happen if you step over the line?"
"Too much," she murmured. "Not enough. Sex isn't high on my priority
list. It's distracting."
The temper in his eyes lighted to a laugh. "Damn right it is. When it's
done well. Isn't it time you let me show you?"
She gripped his arms, not sure if she intended to move in or away. "It's
a mistake."
"So we'll have to make it count," he muttered before his mouth captured
hers.
She moved in.
Her arms went around him, fingers diving into his hair. Her body slammed
into his, vibrating as the kiss grew rough, then nearly brutal. His
mouth was hot, almost vicious. The shock of it sent flares of reaction
straight to her center.
Already, his fast, impatient hands were tugging her shirt from her
jeans, finding her skin. In response, she dragged at his, desperate to
get through silk and to flesh.
He had a vision of himself dragging her to the floor, pounding himself
into her until her screams echoed like gunshots, and his release erupted
like blood. It would be quick, and fierce. And over.
With the breath shuddering in his lungs, he jerked back. Her face was
flushed, her mouth already swollen. He'd torn her shirt at the shoulder.
A room filled with violence, the smell of gunsmoke still stinking the
air, and weapons still within reach.
"Not here." He half carried, half dragged her to the elevator. By the
time the doors opened, he'd ripped aside the torn sleeve. He shoved her
against the back wall as the doors closed them in, and fumbled with her
holster. "Take this damn thing off. Take it off."
She hit the release and let the holster dangle from one hand as she
fought open his buttons with the other. "Why do you wear so many
clothes?"
"I won't next time." He ripped the tattered shirt aside. Beneath she
wore a thin, nearly transparent undershirt that revealed small, firm
breasts and hardened nipples. He closed his hands over them, watched her
eyes glaze. "Where do you like to be touched?"
"You're doing fine." She had to brace a hand on the side wall to keep
from buckling.
When the doors opened again, they were fused together. They circled out
with his teeth nipping and scraping along her throat. She let her bag
and her holster drop.
She got a glimpse of the room: wide windows, mirrors, muted colors. She
could smell flowers and felt the give of carpet under her feet. As she
struggled to release his slacks, she caught sight of the bed.
"Holy God."
It was huge, a lake of midnight blue cupped between high carved wood. It
stood on a platform beneath a domed sky window. Across from it was a
fireplace of pale green stone where fragrant wood sizzled.
"You sleep here?"
"I don't intend to sleep tonight."
He interrupted her gawking by pulling her up the two stairs to the
platform and tumbling her onto the bed.
"I have to check in by oh seven hundred."
"Shut up, lieutenant."
"Okay."
With a half laugh, she rolled on top of him and fastened her mouth to
his. Wild, reckless energy was bursting inside her. She couldn't move
quickly enough, her hands weren't fast enough to satisfy the craving.
She fought off her boots, let him peel the jeans over her hips. A wave
of pleasure rippled through her when she heard him groan. It had been a
long time since she'd felt the tension and heat of a man's body -- a
very long time since she'd wanted to.
The need for release was driving and fierce. The moment they were naked,
she would have straddled him and satisfied it. But he flipped their
positions, muffled her edgy protests with a long, rough kiss.
"What's your hurry?" he murmured, sliding a hand down to take her breast
and watching her face while his thumb quietly tortured her nipple. "I
haven't even looked at you."
"I want you."
"I know." He levered back, running a hand from her shoulder to her thigh
while his gaze followed the movement. The blood was pounding in his
loins. "Long, slim..." His hand squeezed lightly on her breast. "Small.
Very nearly delicate. Who would have guessed?"
"I want you inside me."
"You only want one aspect inside you," he murmured.
"Goddamn it," she began, then groaned when he dipped his head and took
her breast into his mouth.
She writhed against him, against herself as he suckled, so gently at
first it was torture, then harder, faster until she had to bite back a
scream. His hands continued to skim over her, kindling exotic little
fires of need.
It wasn't what she was used to. Sex, when she chose to have it, was
quick, simple, and satisfied a basic need. But this was tangling
emotions, a war on the system, a battering of the senses.
She struggled to get a hand between them, to reach him where he lay hard
and heavy against her. Pure panic set in when he braceleted her wrists
and levered her hands over her head.
"Don't."
He'd nearly released her in reflex before he saw her eyes. Panic yes,
even fear, but desire, too. "You can't always be in control, Eve." As he
spoke he ran his free hand over her thigh. She trembled, and her eyes
unfocused when his fingers brushed the back of her knee.
"Don't," she said again, fighting for air.
"Don't what? Find a weakness, exploit it?" Experimentally, he caressed
that sensitive skin, tracing his fingers up toward the heat, then back
again. Her breath was coming in pants now as she fought to roll away
from him.
"Too late, it seems," he murmured. "You want the kick without the
intimacy?" He began a trail of slow, open-mouthed kisses at the base of
her throat, working his way down while her body shivered like a plucked
wire beneath his. "You don't need a partner for that. And you have one
tonight. I intend to give as much pleasure as I get."
"I can't." She strained against him, bucked, but each frantic movement
brought only a new and devastating sensation.
"Let go." He was mad to have her. But her struggle to hold back both
challenged and infuriated.
"I can't."
"I'm going to make you let go, and I'm going to watch it happen." He
slid back up her, feeling every tremble and quake, until his face was
close to hers again. He pressed his palm firmly on the mound between her
thighs.
Her breath hissed out. "You bastard. I can't."
"Liar," he said quietly, then slid a finger down, over her, into her.
His groan melded with hers as he found her tight, hot, wet. Clinging to
control, he focused on her face, the change from panic to shock, from
shock to glazed helplessness.
She felt herself slipping, battled back, but the pull was too strong.
Someone screamed as she fell, then her body imploded. One moment the
tension was vicious, then the spear of pleasure arrowed into her, so
sharp, so hot. Dazed, disoriented, she went limp.
He went mad.
He dragged her up so that she was kneeling, her head heavy on his
shoulder. "Again," he demanded, dragging her head back by the hair and
plundering her mouth. "Again, goddamn it."
"Yes." It was building so quickly. The need like teeth grinding inside
her. Free, her hands raced over him, and her body arched fluidly back so
that his lips could taste where and how they liked.
Her next climax ripped through him like claws. With something like a
snarl, he shoved her onto her back, levered her hips high, and drove
himself inside her. She closed around him, a hot, greedy fist.
Her nails scraped at his back, her hips pistoned as he plunged. When her
hands slid weakly from his sweat-slicked shoulders, he emptied himself
into her.
*** CHAPTER ELEVEN ***
She didn't speak for a long time. There really wasn't anything to say.
She had taken an inappropriate step with her eyes wide open. If there
were consequences, she would pay them.
Now, she needed to gather whatever dignity she could scrape together and
get out.
"I have to go." With her face averted, she sat up and wondered how she
was going to find her clothes.
"I don't think so." Roarke's voice was lazy, confident, and infuriating.
Even as she started to get off the bed, he snagged her arm, overbalanced
her, and had her on her back again.
"Look, fun's fun."
"It certainly is. I don't know as I'd qualify what just happened here as
fun. I say it was too intense for that. I haven't finished with you,
lieutenant." When her eyes narrowed, he grinned. "Good, that's what I
wanted to -- "
He lost his breath and with it the words when her elbow shot into his
stomach. In the blink of an eye, she'd reversed their positions. That
well-aimed elbow was now pressing dangerously on his windpipe.
"Listen, pal, I come and go as I please, so check your ego."
Like a white flag, he lifted his palms out for peace. Her elbow lifted a
half inch before he shifted and sprang.
She was tough, strong, and smart. That was only one more reason why,
after a sweaty struggle, she was infuriated to find herself under him
again.
"Assaulting an officer will earn you one to five, Roarke. That's in a
cage, not cushy home detention."
"You're not wearing your badge. Or anything else, for that matter." He
gave her a friendly nip on the chin. "Be sure to put that in your
report."
So much for dignity, she decided. "I don't want to fight with you." It
pleased her that her voice was calm, even reasonable. "I just have to
go."
He shifted, watched as her eyes widened, then fluttered half closed when
he slipped inside her again. "No, don't shut your eyes." His voice was
whisper rough.
So she watched him, incapable of resisting the fresh onslaught of
pleasure. He kept the rhythm slow now, with long, deep strokes that
stirred the soul.
Her breath quickened, thickened. All she could see was his face, all she
could feel was that lovely, fluid slide of his body in hers, the
tireless friction of it that had an orgasm shivering through her like
gold.
His fingers linked with hers, and his lips curved on hers. She felt his
body tighten an instant before he buried his face in her hair. They lay
quiet, bodies meshed but still. He turned his head, pressed a kiss to
her temple.
"Stay," he murmured. "Please."
"Yes." She closed her eyes now. "All right, yes."
-=O=-***-=O=-
They didn't sleep. It wasn't fatigue so much as bafflement that
assaulted Eve when she stepped into Roarke's shower in the early hours
of the morning.
She didn't spend nights with men. Always she'd been careful to keep sex
simple, straightforward and, yes, impersonal. Yet here she was, the
morning after, letting herself be pummeled by the hot pulse of his
shower sprays. For hours, she'd let herself be pummeled by him. He'd
assaulted then invaded parts of her she'd thought impregnable.
She was trying to regret it. It seemed important that she realize and
recognize her mistake, and move on. But it was difficult to regret
anything that made her body feel so alive and kept the dreams at bay.
"You look good wet, lieutenant."
Eve turned her head as Roarke stepped through the criss crossing sprays.
"I'm going to need to borrow a shirt."
"We'll find you one." He pressed a knob on the tiled walls, cupped his
hand under a fount to catch a puddle of clear, creamy liquid.
"What are you doing?"
"Washing your hair," he murmured and proceeded to stroke and massage the
shampoo into her short, sopping cap of hair. "I'm going to enjoy
smelling my soap on you." His lips curved. "You're a fascinating woman,
Eve. Here we are, wet, naked, both of us half dead from a very memorable
night, and still you watch me with very cool, very suspicious eyes."
"You're a suspicious character, Roarke."
"I think that's a compliment." He bent his head to bite her lip, as the
steam rose and the spray began to pulse like a heartbeat. "Tell me what
you meant, the first time I made love to you, when you said, 'I can't.
'"
He angled her head back, and Eve closed her eyes in defense as water
chased the shampoo away. "I don't remember everything I said."
"You remember." From another fount, he drew pale green soap that smelled
of wild forests. Watching her, he slicked it over her shoulders, down
her back, then around and up to her breasts. "Hadn't you had an orgasm
before?"
"Of course I have." True, she'd always equated them with the subtle pop
of a cork from a bottle of stress, not the violent explosion that
destroyed a lifetime of restraint. "You're flattering yourself, Roarke."
"Am I?" Didn't she know that those cool eyes, that wall of resistance
she was scrambling to rebuild was an irresistible challenge? Obviously
not, he mused. He tugged lightly at her soap-slicked nipples, smiling
when she sucked in a breath. "I'm about to flatter myself again."
"I haven't got time for this," she said quickly, and found her back
pressed against the tile wall. "It was a mistake in the first place. I
have to go."
"It won't take long." He felt a hard slap of lust when he cupped her
hips, lifted her. "It wasn't a mistake then, or now. And I have to have
you."
His breath was coming faster. It stunned him how much he could want her
still, baffled him that she could be blind to how helpless he was under
the clawing need for her. It infuriated him that she could, simply by
existing, be his weakness.
"Hold onto me," he demanded, his voice harsh, edgy. "Goddamn it, hold
onto me."
She already was. He pierced her, pinned her to the wall with an erection
that filled her to bursting. Her frantic, helpless mewing echoed off the
walls. She wanted to hate him for that, for making her a victim of her
own rampant passions. But she held onto him, and let herself spin
dizzily out of control.
He climaxed violently, slapped a hand on the wall, his arm rigid to
maintain balance as her legs slid slowly off his hips. Suddenly he was
angry, furious that she could strip away his finesse until he was no
more than a beast rutting.
"I'll get you a shirt," he said briskly, then stepped out, flicking a
towel from a rack, and leaving her alone in the billowing steam.
-=O=-***-=O=-
By the time she was dressed, frowning over the feel of raw silk against
her skin, there was a tray of coffee waiting in the sitting area of the
bedroom.
The morning news chattered quietly on the view screen, the curiosity
corner at the lower left running fields of figures. The stock exchange.
The monitor on a console was open to a newspaper. Not the Times or one
of the New York tabs, Eve noted. It looked like Japanese.
"Do you have time for breakfast?" Roarke sat, sipping his coffee. He
wasn't able to give his full attention to the morning data. He'd enjoyed
watching her dress: the way her hands had hesitated over his shirt
before she'd shrugged into it, how her fingers had run quickly up the
buttons, the quick wriggle of hip as she'd tugged on jeans.
"No, thanks." She wasn't sure of her moves now. He'd fucked her blind in
the shower, then had withdrawn to play well-mannered host. She strapped
into her holster before crossing to accept the coffee he'd already
poured her.
"You know, lieutenant, you wear your weapon the way other women wear
pearls."
"It's not a fashion accessory."
"You misunderstand. To some, jewelry is as vital as limbs." He tilted
his head, studying her. "The shirt's a bit large, but it suits you."
Eve thought anything she could wear on her back that cost close to a
week's pay couldn't suit her. "I'll get it back to you."
"I have several others." He rose, unnerving her again by tracing a
fingertip over her jaw. "I was rough before. I'm sorry."
The apology, so quiet and unexpected, embarrassed her. "Forget it." She
shifted away, drained her cup, set it aside.
"I won't forget it; neither will you." He took her hand, lifted it to
his lips. Nothing could have pleased him more than the quick suspicion
on her face. "You won't forget me, Eve. You'll think of me, perhaps not
fondly, but you'll think of me."
"I'm in the middle of a murder investigation. You're part of it. Sure,
I'll think of you."
"Darling," he began, and watched with amusement as his use of the
endearment knitted her brow. "You'll be thinking of what I can do to
you. Unfortunately, I won't be able to do more than imagine it myself
for a few days."
She tugged her hand free and reached, casually she hoped, for her bag.
"Going somewhere?"
"The preliminary work on the resort requires my attention, and my
presence on FreeStar One for a number of meetings with the directorship.
I'll be tied up, a few hundred thousand miles away, for a day or two."
An emotion moved through her she wasn't ready to admit was
disappointment. "Yeah, I heard you wrapped the deal on that major
indulgence for the bored rich."
He only smiled. "When the resort's complete, I'll take you there. You
may form another opinion. In the meantime, I have to ask you for your
discretion. The meetings are confidential. There's still a loose end or
two to tie up, and it wouldn't do for my competitors to know we're
getting under way so quickly. Only a few key people will know I'm not
here in New York."
She finger combed her hair. "Why did you tell me?"
"Apparently, I've decided you're a key." As disconcerted by that as she,
Roarke led the way to the door. "If you need to contact me, tell
Summerset. He'll put you through."
"The butler?"
Roarke smiled as they descended the stairs. "He'll see to it," was all
he said. "I should be gone about five days, a week at the most. I want
to see you again." He stopped, took her face in his hands. "I need to
see you again."
Her pulse jumped, as if it had nothing to do with the rest of her.
"Roarke, what's going on here?"
"Lieutenant." He leaned forward, touched his lips to hers. "Indications
are we're having a romance." Then he laughed, kissed her again, hard and
quick. "I believe I could have held a gun to your head and you wouldn't
have looked as terrified. Well, you'll have several days to think it
through, won't you?"
She had a feeling several years wouldn't be enough.
There, at the base of the stairs, was Summerset, stone-faced,
stiff-necked, holding her jacket. She took it and glanced back at Roarke
as she shrugged it on.
"Have a good trip."
"Thanks." Roarke laid a hand on her shoulder before she could walk out
the door. "Eve, be careful." Annoyed with himself, he dropped his hands.
"I'll be in touch."
"Sure." She hurried out, and when she glanced back, the door was closed.
When she opened her car door, she noticed the electronic memo on the
driver's seat. Scooping it up, she got behind the wheel. As she headed
toward the gate, she flicked on the memo. Roarke's voice drawled out.
"I don't like the idea of you shivering unless I cause it. Stay warm."
Frowning, she tucked the memo in her pocket before experimentally
touching the temperature gauge. The blast of heat had her yelping in
shock.
She grinned all the way to Cop Central.
-=O=-***-=O=-
Eve closed herself in her office. She had two hours before her official
shift began, and she wanted to use every minute of it on the
DeBlass-Starr homicides. When her shift kicked in, her duties would
spread to a number of cases in varying degrees of progress. This time
was her own.
As a matter of routine, she cued IRCCA to transmit any and all current
data and ordered it in hard copy to review later. The transmission was
depressingly brief and added nothing solid.
Back, she thought, to deductive games. On her desk she'd spread out
photos of both victims. She knew them intimately now, these women.
Perhaps now, after the night she'd spent with Roarke, she understood
something of what had driven them.
Sex was a powerful tool to use or have used against you. Both of these
women had wanted to wield it, to control it. In the end, it had killed
them.
A bullet in the brain had been the official cause of death, but Eve saw
sex as the trigger.
It was the only connection between them, and the only link to their
murderer.
Thoughtfully, she picked up the. 38. It was familiar in her hand now.
She knew exactly how it felt when it fired, the way the punch of it sung
up the arm. The sound it made when the mechanism and basic physics sent
the bullet flying.
Still holding the gun, she cued up the disc she'd requisitioned and
watched Sharon DeBlass's murder again.
What did you feel, you bastard? she wondered. What did you feel when you
squeezed the trigger and sent that slug of lead into her, when the blood
spewed out, when her eyes rolled up dead?
What did you feel?
Eyes narrowed, she reran the disc. She was almost immune to the
nastiness of it now. There was, she noted, the slightest waver in the
video, as if he'd jostled the camera.
Did your arm jerk? she wondered. Did it shock you, the way her body flew
back, how far the blood splattered?
Is that why she could hear the soft sob of breath, the slow exhale
before the image changed?
What did you feel? she asked again. Revulsion, pleasure, or just cold
satisfaction?
She leaned closer to the monitor. Sharon was carefully arranged now, the
scene set as the camera panned her objectively and, yes, Eve thought,
coldly.
Then why the jostle? Why the sob?
And the note. She picked up the sealed envelope and read it again. How
did you know you'd be satisfied to stop at six? Have you already picked
them out? Selected them?
Dissatisfied, she ejected the disc, replaced it and the. 38. Loading the
Starr disc, taking the second weapon, Eve ran through the process again.
No jostle this time, she noted. No quick, indrawn breath. Everything's
smooth, precise, exact. You knew this time, she thought, how it would
feel, how she'd look, how the blood would smell.
But you didn't know her. Or she didn't know you. You were just John
Smith in her book, marked as a new client.
How did you choose her? And how are you going to pick the next one?
Just before nine, when Feeney knocked on her door, she was studying a
map of Manhattan. He stepped behind her, leaned over her shoulder, and
breathed candy mints.
"Thinking of relocating?"
"I'm trying geography. Widen view five percent," she ordered the
computer. The image adjusted. "First murder, second murder," she said,
nodding toward the tiny red pulses on Broadway and in the West Village.
"My place." There was a green pulse just off Ninth Avenue.
"Your place?"
"He knows where I live. He's been there twice. These are three places we
can put him. I was hoping I'd be able to confine the area, but he
spreads himself out. And the security." She indulged in one little sigh,
as she eased back in her chair. "Three different systems. Stair's was
all but nonexistent. Electronic doorman, inoperable -- and it had been,
according to other residents, for a couple of weeks. DeBlass had top
grade, key code for entry, hand plate, full building security -- audio
and video. Had to be breached on-site. Our time lag only hits one
elevator, and the victim's hallway. Mine's not as fancy. I could breach
the entry, any decent B and E man could. But I've got a System Five
thousand police lock on the door. You have to be a real pro to pop it
without the master code."
Drumming her fingers on the desk, she scowled at the map. "He's a
security expert, knows his weapons -- old weapons, Feeney. He'd cued in
enough to department procedure to tag me for the primary investigator
within hours of the first hit. He doesn't leave fingerprints or bodily
fluids. Not even a fucking pubic hair. What does that tell you?"
Feeney sucked air through his teeth, rocked back on his heels. "Cop.
Military. Maybe paramilitary or government security. Could be a security
hobbyist; there are plenty of them. Possible professional criminal, but
unlikely."
"Why unlikely?"
"If the guy was making a living off crime, why murder? There's no profit
in either of these hits."
"So, he's taking a vacation," Eve said, but it didn't play for her.
"Maybe. I've run known sex offenders, crossed with IRCCA. Nobody pops
who fits the MO. You look at this report yet?" he asked, indicating the
IRCCA transmission.
"No. Why?"
"I already tagged it this morning. You might be surprised that there
were about a hundred gun assaults last year, country wide. About that
many accidental, too." He jerked a shoulder. "Bootlegged, homemade,
black market, collectors."
"But nobody fits our profile."
"Nope." He chewed contemplatively. "Perverts either, though it's a real
education to scan the data. Got a favorite. This guy in Detroit, hit on
four before they tagged him. Liked to pick up a lonely heart, go back to
her place. He'd tranq her, then he'd strip her down, spray her with
glow-in-the-dark red paint, top to toe."
"Weird."
"Lethal. Skin's gotta breathe, so she'd suffocate, and while she was
smothering to death, he'd play with her. Wouldn't bang her, no sperm or
penetration. He'd just run his eager little hands over her."
"Christ, that's sick."
"Yeah, well, anyway. He gets a little too eager, a little too impatient
with one, starts rubbing her before she's dry, you know. Some of the
paint rubs off, and she starts to come around. So he panics, runs. Now
our girl's naked, covered with paint, wobbly from the tranq, but she's
pissed, runs right outside on the street and starts screaming. The unit
comes by, catches on quick 'cause she's glowing like a laser show, and
starts a standard search. Our boy's only a couple of blocks away. So
they catch him..."
"Don't say it."
"Red-handed," Feeney said with a wicked grin. "Kiss my ass, that's a
good one. Caught him red-handed." When Dallas just rolled her eyes,
Feeney decided the guys in his division would appreciate the story more.
"Anyway, we maybe got a pervert. I'll bump up the pervs and the pros.
Maybe we'll get lucky. I like the idea of that better than a cop."
"So do I." Lips pursed, she swiveled to look at him. "Feeney, you've got
a small collection, know something about antique firearms."
He held out his arms, wrists tight together. "I confess. Book me."
She nearly smiled. "You know any other cops who collect?"
"Sure, a few. It's an expensive hobby, so most of the ones I know
collect reproductions. Speaking of expensive," he added, fingering her
sleeve. "Nice shirt. You get a raise?"
"It's borrowed," she muttered, and was surprised that she had to control
a flush. "Run them for me, Feeney. The ones that have genuine antiques."
"Ah, Dallas." His smile faded away at the thought of focusing in on his
own people. "I hate that shit."
"So do I. Run them anyway. Keep it to the city for now."
"Right." He blew out a breath, wondered if she realized his name would
be on the list. "Hell of a way to start the day. Now I've got a present
for you, kid. There was a memo on my desk when I got in. The chief's on
his way in to the commander's office. He wants both of us."
"Fuck that."
Feeney just looked at his watch. "I make it in five minutes. Maybe you
want to put on a sweater or something, so Simpson doesn't get a good
look at that shirt and decide we're overpaid."
"Fuck that, too."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Chief Edward Simpson was an imposing figure. Well over six feet,
fighting trim, he preferred dark suits and vivid ties. His waving brown
hair was tipped with gray.
It was well known throughout the department that those distinguished
highlights were added by his personal cosmetician. His eyes were a
steely blue -- a color his polls indicated inspired voter confidence --
that rarely showed humor, his mouth a thin comma of command. Looking at
him, you thought of power and authority.
It was disillusioning to know how carelessly he used both to do laps in
the heady pool of politics.
He sat down, steepling his long, creamy hands that winked with a trio of
gold rings. His voice, when he spoke, had an actor's resonance.
"Commander, captain, lieutenant, we have a delicate situation."
And an actor's timing. He paused, let those hard blue eyes scan each
face in turn.
"You're all aware of how the media enjoys sensationalism," he continued.
"Our city has, in the five years of my jurisdiction, lowered its crime
rate by five percent. A full percentage a year. However, with recent
events, it isn't the progress that will be touted by the press. Already
there are headlines of these two killings. Stories that question the
investigation and demand answers."
Whitney, detesting Simpson in every pore, answered mildly. "The stories
lack details, chief. The Code Five on the DeBlass case makes it
impossible to cooperate with the press or feed it."
"By not feeding it," Simpson snapped back. "We allow them to speculate.
I'll be making a statement this afternoon." He held up a hand even as
Whitney started to protest. "It's necessary to give the public something
to assess, and by assessing feel confident that the department has the
matter under control. Even if that isn't the case."
His eyes zeroed in on Eve. "As the primary, lieutenant, you'll attend
the press conference as well. My office is preparing a statement for you
to give."
"With all respect, Chief Simpson, I can't divulge to the public any
details of the case that could undermine the investigation."
Simpson plucked a piece of lint from his sleeve. "Lieutenant, I have
thirty years of experience. I believe I know how to handle a press
conference. Secondly," he continued, dismissing her by turning back to
Commander Whitney, "it's imperative that the link the press has made
between the DeBlass and Starr homicides be broken. The department can't
be responsible for embarrassing Senator DeBlass personally, or damaging
his position, by joining these cases at the hip."
"The murderer did that for us," Eve said between her teeth.
Simpson spared her a glance. "Officially, there is no connection. When
asked, deny."
"When asked," Eve corrected. "Lie."
"Save your personal ethics. This is reality. A scandal that starts here
and reverberates to East Washington will come back on us like a monsoon.
Sharon DeBlass has been dead over a week, and you have nothing."
"We have the weapon," she disagreed. "We have possible motive as
blackmail, and a list of suspects."
His color came up as he rose out of the chair. "I'm head of this
department, lieutenant, and the mess you make is left to me to clean.
It's time you stop digging at dirt and close the 'case."
"Sir." Feeney stepped forward. "Lieutenant Dallas and I -- "
"Can both be on Traffic Detail in a fucking heartbeat," Simpson
finished.
Fists clenched, Whitney lunged to his feet. "Don't threaten my officers,
Simpson. You play your games, smile for the cameras, and rub asses with
East Washington, but don't you come in on my turf and threaten my
people. They're on and they stay on. You want to change that, you try
going through me."
Simpson's color deepened further. In fascination, Eve watched a vein
throb at his temple. "Your people press the wrong buttons on this, it'll
be your ass. I've got Senator DeBlass under control for the moment, but
he's not happy having the primary running off to pressure his
daughter-in-law, to invade the privacy of her grief and ask her
embarrassing, irrelevant questions. Senator DeBlass and his family are
victims, not suspects, and are to be accorded respect and dignity during
this investigation."
"I accorded Elizabeth Barrister and Richard DeBlass respect and
dignity." Very deliberately Eve shut down her temper. "The interview was
conducted with their consent and cooperation. I was not aware that I was
required to receive permission from you or the senator to proceed as I
see warranted on this case."
"And I will not have the press speculating that this department harasses
grieving parents, or why the primary resisted required testing after a
termination."
"Lieutenant Dallas's testing was postponed at my order," Whitney said
with snarling fury. "And with your approval."
"I'm well aware of that." Simpson angled his head. "I'm talking about
speculation in the press. We will, all of us, be under a microscope
until this man is stopped. Lieutenant Dallas's record and her actions
will be up for public dissection."
"My record'll stand it."
"And your actions," Simpson said with a faint smile. "How will you
answer the fact that you're jeopardizing the case and your position by
indulging in a personal relationship with a suspect? And what do you
think my official position will be if and when it comes out that you
spent the night with that suspect?"
Control kept her in place, made her eyes flat, had her voice even. "I'm
sure you'd hang me to save yourself, Chief Simpson."
"Without hesitation," he agreed. "Be at City Hall. Noon, sharp."
When the door clinked shut behind him, Commander Whitney sat again.
"Dickless son of a bitch." Then his eyes, still sharp as razors, cut
into Eve. "What the fuck are you doing?"
Eve accepted -- was forced to accept -- that her privacy was no longer
an issue. "I spent the night with Roarke. It was a personal decision, on
my personal time. In my professional opinion, as primary investigator,
he has been eliminated as a suspect. It doesn't negate the fact that my
behavior was inadvisable."
"Inadvisable," Whitney exploded. "Try asinine. Try career suicide.
Goddamn it, Dallas, can't you hold your glands in check? I don't expect
this from you."
She didn't expect it from herself. "It doesn't affect the investigation,
or my ability to continue it. If you think differently, you're wrong. If
you pull me off, you'll have to take my badge, too."
Whitney stared at her another moment, swore again. "You make damn sure
Roarke is eliminated from the short list, Dallas. Damn sure he's
eliminated or booked within thirty-six hours. And you ask yourself a
question."
"I've already asked it," she interrupted, with a giddy relief only she
knew she experienced when he didn't call for her badge -- yet. "How did
Simpson know where I spent last night? I'm being monitored. Second
question is why. Is it on Simpson's authority, is it DeBlass? Or, did
someone leak the information to Simpson in order to damage my
credibility and therefore, the investigation."
"I expect you to find out." He jerked a thumb toward the door. "Watch
yourself at that press conference, Dallas."
They'd taken no more than three strides down the corridor when Feeney
erupted. "What the hell are you thinking of? Jesus Christ, Dallas."
"I didn't plan it, okay?" She jabbed for an elevator, jammed her hands
in her pockets. "Back off."
"He's on the short list. He's one of the last people we know of who saw
Sharon DeBlass alive. He's got more money than God, and can buy
anything, including immunity."
"He doesn't fit type." She stormed into the elevator, barked out her
floor. "I know what I'm doing."
"You don't know shit. All the years I've known you, I've never seen you
so much as stub your toe on a guy. Now you've fallen fucking over on
one."
"It was just sex. Not all of us have a nice comfortable life with a nice
comfortable wife. I wanted someone to touch me, and he wanted to be the
one. It's none of your goddamn business who I sleep with."
He caught her arm before she could storm out of the elevator. "The hell
with that. I care about you."
She fought back the rage at being questioned, at being probed, at having
her most private moments invaded. She turned back, lowering her voice so
that those who walked the corridor wouldn't overhear.
"Am I a good cop, Feeney?"
"You're the best I ever worked with. That's why -- "
She held up a hand. "What makes a good cop?"
He sighed. "Brains, guts, patience, nerve, instinct."
"My brains, my guts, my instincts tell me it's not Roarke. Every time I
try to turn it around and point it at him, I hit a wall. It's not him.
I've got the patience, Feeney, and the nerve to keep at it until we find
out who."
His eyes stayed on hers. "And if you're wrong this time, Dallas?"
"If I'm wrong, they won't have to ask for my badge." She had to take a
steadying breath. "Feeney, if I'm wrong about this, about him, I'm
finished. All the way finished. Because if I'm not a good cop, I'm
nothing."
"Jesus, Dallas, don't -- "
She shook her head. "Run the cop list for me, will you? I've got some
calls to make."
*** CHAPTER TWELVE ***
Press conferences left a bad taste in Eve's mouth. She stood on the
steps of City Hall, on a stage set by Simpson with his patriotic tie and
his gold I Love New York lapel pin. In his Big Brother of the City mode,
his voice rose and fell while he read his statement.
A statement, Eve thought in disgust, that was riddled with lies, half
truths, and plenty of self aggrandizements. According to Simpson he
would have no rest until the murderer of young Lola Starr was brought to
justice.
When questioned as to whether there was any connection between the Starr
homicide and the mysterious death of Senator DeBlass's granddaughter, he
flatly denied it.
It wasn't his first mistake and, Eve thought glumly, it would hardly be
his last.
The words were barely out of his mouth when he was peppered with shouts
from Channel 75's on-air ace, Nadine Furst.
"Chief Simpson, I have information that indicates the Starr homicide is
linked with the DeBlass case -- not only because both women were engaged
in the same profession."
"Now, Nadine." Simpson flashed his patient, avuncular smile. "We all
know that information is often passed to you and your associates, and
it's often inaccurate. That's why I set up the Data Verification Center
in the first year of my term as chief of police. You have only to check
with the DVC for accuracy."
Eve managed to hold back a snort, but Nadine, with her sharp cat's eyes
and lightning brain didn't bother. "My source claims that Sharon
DeBlass's death was not an accident -- as the DVC claims -- but murder.
That both DeBlass and Starr were killed by the same method and the same
man."
This caused an uproar in the huddle of news teams, a scatter shot of
demands and questions that had Simpson sweating under his monogrammed
shirt.
"The department stands behind its position that there is no connection
between these unfortunate incidents," Simpson shouted out, but Eve saw
little lights of panic flickering in his eyes. "And my office stands
behind the investigators."
Those jittery eyes shot to Eve, and she knew, in that instant, what it
was to be picked up bodily and thrown to the wolves.
"Lieutenant Dallas, a veteran officer with more than ten years of
experience on the force, is in charge of the Starr homicide. She'll be
happy to answer your questions."
Trapped, Eve stepped forward while Simpson bent down so that his weasley
aide could whisper rapid-fire advice in his ear.
Questions rained down on her, and she waited, filtering them until she
found one she could deal with.
"How was Lola Starr murdered?"
"In order to protect the credibility of the investigation, I'm not at
liberty to divulge the method." She suffered through the shouts, cursing
Simpson. "I will state that Lola Starr, an eighteen-year-old licensed
companion, was murdered, with violence and premeditation. Evidence
indicates that she was murdered by a client."
That fed them for awhile, Eve noted. Several reporters checked their
links with base.
"Was it a sexual crime?" someone shouted out, and Eve lifted a brow.
"I've just stated that the victim was a prostitute and that she was
killed by a client. Put it together."
"Was Sharon DeBlass also killed by a client?" Nadine demanded.
Eve met those cagey feline eyes levelly. "The department has not issued
any official statement that Sharon DeBlass was murdered."
"My source names you as primary in both cases. Will you confirm?"
Boggy ground. Eve stepped onto it. "Yes. I'm the primary on several
ongoing investigations."
"Why would a ten-year vet be assigned to an accidental death?"
Eve smiled. "Want me to define bureaucracy?"
That drew some chuckles, but it didn't pull Nadine off the scent.
"Is the DeBlass case still ongoing?"
Any answer would stir a hornet's nest. Eve opted for the truth. "Yes.
And it will remain ongoing until I, as primary, am satisfied with its
disposition. However," she continued, rolling over the shouts. "No more
emphasis will be given to Sharon DeBlass's death than any other.
Including Lola Starr. Any case that comes across my desk is treated
equally, regardless of family or social background. Lola Starr was a
young woman from a simple family. She had no social status, no
influential background, no important friends. Now, after a few short
months in New York, she's dead. Murdered. She deserves the best I can
give her, and that's what she's going to get."
Eve scanned the crowd, zeroed in on Nadine. "You want a story, Ms.
Furst. I want a killer. I figure my wants are more important than yours,
so that's all I have to say."
She turned on her heel, shot Simpson one fulminating look, then strode
away. She could hear him fighting off questions as she headed for her
car.
"Dallas." Nadine, in low-heeled shoes built for style and movement,
raced after her.
"I said I'm finished. Talk to Simpson."
"Hey, if I want to wade through bullshit, I can call the DVC. That was a
pretty impassioned statement. Didn't sound like Simpson's speech
writer."
"I like to talk for myself." Eve reached her car and started to open the
door when Nadine touched her shoulder.
"You like to play it straight. So do I. Look, Dallas, we've got
different methods, but similar goals." Satisfied that she had Eve's
attention, she smiled. When her lips curved, her face turned into a tidy
triangle, dominated by those upslanted green eyes. "I'm not going to
pull out the old public's right to know."
"You'd be wasting your time."
"What I am going to say is we've got two women dead in a week. My
information, and my gut tells me they were both murdered. I don't figure
you're going to confirm that."
"You figure right."
"What I want's a deal. You let me know if I'm on the right track, and I
hold off going out with anything that undermines your investigation.
When you've got something solid and you're ready to move on it, you call
me. I get an exclusive on the arrest -- live."
Almost amused, Dallas leaned against her car. "What are you going to
give me for that, Nadine? A handshake and a smile?"
"For that I'm going to give you everything my source has passed to me.
Everything."
Now she was interested. "Including the source?"
"I couldn't do that if I had to. Point is, I don't. What I do have,
Dallas, is a disc, delivered to me at the studio. On the disc are copies
of police reports, including autopsies on both victims, and a couple of
nasty little videos of two dead women."
"Fuck that. If you had half of what you're telling me, you'd have been
on air in a heartbeat."
"I thought about it," Nadine admitted. "But this is bigger than ratings.
Hell of a lot bigger. I want a story, Dallas, one that's going to cop me
the Pulitzer, the International News Award, and a few other major
prizes."
Her eyes changed, darkened. She wasn't smiling anymore. "But I saw what
someone did to those woman. Maybe the story comes first with me, but
it's not all. I pushed Simpson today, and I pushed you. I liked the way
you pushed back. You can deal with me, or I can go out on my own. Your
choice."
Eve waited. A fleet of taxis cruised by, and a maxibus with its humming
electric motor. "We deal." Before Furst's eyes could light in triumph,
Eve turned on her. "You cross me on this, Nadine, you cross me by so
much as an inch, and I'll bury you."
"Fair enough."
"The Blue Squirrel, twenty minutes."
-=O=-***-=O=-
The afternoon crowd at the club was too bored to do much more than
huddle over their drinks. Eve found a corner table, ordered a Pepsi
Classic and the veggie pasta. Nadine slid in across from her. She chose
the chicken plate with no-oil fries. An indication, Eve thought glumly,
of the wide difference between a cop's salary and a reporter's.
"What have you got?" Eve demanded.
"A picture's worth several hundred thousand words." Nadine took a
personal palm computer out of her bag -- her red leather bag, Eve noted
with envy. She had a weakness for leather and bold colors that she could
rarely indulge.
Nadine popped in the disc, handed Eve the PPC. There was little use in
swearing, Eve decided as she watched her own reports flick on-screen.
Brooding, she let the disc run over Code Five data, through official
medical reports, the ME's findings. She stopped it when the videos
began. There was no need to check out death over a meal.
"Is it accurate?" Nadine asked when Eve passed back the computer.
"It's accurate."
"So the guy's some sort of gun freak, a security expert who patronizes
companions."
"The evidence indicates that profile."
"How far have you narrowed it down?"
"Obviously, not far enough."
Nadine waited while their food was served. "There's got to be a lot of
political pressure on you -- the DeBlass end."
"I don't play politics."
"Your chief does." Nadine took a bite of her chicken. Eve smirked as she
winced. "Christ, this is terrible." Philosophically, she shifted to the
fries. "It's no secret DeBlass is front runner for the Conservative
Party's nomination this summer. Or that the asshole Simpson is shooting
for governor. Given the show this afternoon, it looks like cover-up."
"At this point, publicly, there is no connection between the cases. But
I meant what I said about equality, Nadine. I don't care who Sharon
DeBlass's granddaddy is. I'm going to find the guy who did her."
"And when you do, is he going to be charged with both murders, or only
with Stair's?"
"That's up to the prosecuting attorney. Personally, I don't give a shit,
as long as I hang him."
"That's the difference between you and me, Dallas." Nadine waved a fry,
then bit in. "I want it all. When you get him, and I break the story,
the PA's not going to have a choice. The fallout's going to keep DeBlass
busy for months."
"Now who's playing politics?"
Nadine lifted a shoulder. "Hey, I just report the story, I don't make
it. And this one's got it all. Sex, violence, money. Having a name like
Roarke's involved is going to shoot the ratings through the roof."
Very slowly, Eve swallowed pasta. "There's no evidence linking Roarke to
the crimes."
"He knew DeBlass -- he's a friend of the family. Christ, he owns the
building where Sharon was killed. He's got one of the top weapon
collections in the world, and rumor is he's an expert shot."
Eve picked up her drink. "Neither murder weapon can be traced to him. He
has no connection with Lola Starr."
"Maybe not. But even as a periphery character, Roarke sells news. And
it's no state secret that he and the senator have bumped heads in the
past. The man's got ice in his veins," she added with a shrug. "I don't
imagine he'd have any problem with a couple of cold-blooded killings.
But..." She paused to lift her own drink. "He's also a fanatic about
privacy. It's hard to picture him bragging about the murders by sending
discs to reporters. Somebody does that, they want publicity as much as
they want to get away with the crime."
"An interesting theory." Eve had had enough. A headache was beginning to
brew behind her eyes, and the pasta wasn't going to sit well. She rose,
then leaned over the table close to Nadine. "I'll give you another one,
formulated by a cop. Do you want to know who your source is, Nadine?"
Her eyes glittered. "Damn right."
"Your source is the killer." Eve paused, watching the light go out of
Nadine's eyes. "I'd watch my step if I were you, friend."
Eve strode off, heading around behind the stage. She hoped Mavis was in
the narrow cubicle that served as a dressing room. Just then, she needed
a pal.
Eve found her, huddled under a blanket and sneezing into a tattered
tissue.
"Got a fucking cold." Mavis glared out of puffy eyes and blew like a
bullhorn. "I had to be crazy, wearing nothing but goddamn paint for
twelve hours in goddamn lousy February."
Warily, Eve kept her distance. "Are you taking anything?"
"I'm taking everything." She gestured to a tabletop littered with
over-the-counter drugs and touch-up cosmetics. "It's a fucking
pharmaceutical conspiracy, Eve. We've wiped out just about every known
plague, disease, and infection. Oh, we come up with a new one every now
and again, to give the researchers something to do. But none of these
bright-eyed medical types, none of the medi-computers can figure out how
to cure the common fucking cold. You know why?"
Even couldn't stop the smile. She waited patiently until Mavis finished
another bout of explosive sneezing. "Why?"
"Because the pharmaceutical companies need to sell drugs. You know what
a damn sinus tab costs? You can get anticancer injections cheaper. I
swear it."
"You can go to the doctor, get a prescription to eradicate the
symptoms."
"I got that, too. Damn stuff's only good for eight hours, and I've got a
performance tonight. I have to wait until seven o'clock to take it."
"You should be home in bed."
"They're exterminating the building. Some wise guy said he saw a
cockroach." She sneezed again, then peered owlishly at Eve from under
unpainted lashes. "What are you doing here?"
"I had some business. Look, get some rest. I'll see you later."
"No, stick around. I'm boring myself." She reached for a bottle of some
nasty looking pink liquid and glugged it down. "Hey, nice shirt. You get
a bonus or something?"
"Or something."
"So, sit down. I was going to call you, but I've been too busy hacking
up my lungs. That was Roarke who came in our fine establishment last
night, wasn't it?"
"Yeah, it was Roarke."
"I almost passed out when he walked up to your table. What's the story?
You helping him with some security or something?"
"I slept with him," Eve blurted out, and Mavis responded with a fit of
helpless choking.
"You -- Roarke." Eyes watering, she reached for more tissue. "Jesus,
Eve. Jesus Christ, you never sleep with anybody. And you're telling me
you slept with Roarke?"
"That's not precisely accurate. We didn't sleep."
Mavis let out a moan. "You didn't sleep. How long?"
Eve jerked a shoulder. "I don't know. I stayed the night. Eight, nine
hours, I guess."
"Hours." Mavis shuddered delicately. "And you just kept going. ".
"Pretty much."
"Is he good? Stupid question," she said quickly. "You wouldn't have
stayed otherwise. Wow, Eve, what got into you? Besides his incredibly
energetic cock?"
"I don't know. It was stupid." She dragged her hands through her hair.
"It's never been like that for me before. I didn't think it could --
that I could. It's just never been important, then all of a sudden --
shit."
"Honey." Mavis snaked a hand from under her blanket and took Eve's
tensed fingers. "You've been blocking off normal needs all your life
because of things you barely remember. Somebody just found a way to get
through. You should be happy."
"It puts him in the pilot's seat, doesn't it?"
"Oh, that's bullshit," Mavis interrupted before Eve could go on. "Sex
doesn't have to be a power trip. It sure as hell doesn't have to be a
punishment. It's supposed to be fun. And now and again, if you're lucky,
it gets to be special."
"Maybe." She closed her eyes. "Oh God, Mavis, my career's on the line."
"What are you talking about?"
"Roarke's involved in a case I'm working on."
"Oh shit." She had to break off and blow again. "You're not going to
have to bust him for something, are you?"
"No." Then more emphatically. "No. But if I don't tie it all up fast,
with a nice, tidy bow, I'll be out. I'll be finished. Somebody's using
me, Mavis." Her eyes sharpened again. "They're clearing the path in one
direction, tossing roadblocks in the other. I don't know why. If I don't
find out, it's going to cost me everything I have."
"Then you're going to have to find out, aren't you?" Mavis squeezed
Eve's fingers.
-=O=-***-=O=-
She would find out, Eve promised herself. It was after ten P. M. when
she let herself into the lobby of her building. If she didn't want to
think just then, it wasn't a crime. She'd had to swallow a reprimand
from the chief's office for veering from the official statement during
the press conference.
The commander's unofficial support didn't quite ease the sting.
Once she was inside her apartment she checked her E-mail. She knew it
was foolish, this nagging hope that she'd find a message from Roarke.
There wasn't one. But what she found had her flesh crawling with ice.
The video message was unnamed, sent from a public access. The little
girl. Her dead father. The blood.
Eve recognized the angles of the official department record, the one
taken to document the site of murder and justified termination.
The audio came over it. A playback of her auto-record of the child's
screams. Her beating on the door. The warning, and all the horror that
followed.
"You bastard," she whispered. "You're not going to get to me with this.
You're not going to use that baby to get to me."
But her fingers shook as she ejected the disc. And she jolted when her
intercom rang.
"Who is it?"
"Hennessy from apartment two-D." The pale, earnest face of her
downstairs neighbor flicked on screen. "I'm sorry, Lieutenant Dallas. I
didn't know what to do exactly. We've got trouble down here in the
Finestein apartment."
Eve sighed and let the image of the elderly couple flip into her mind.
Quiet, friendly, television addicts. "What's the problem?"
"Mr. Finestein's dead, lieutenant. Keeled over in the kitchen while his
wife was out playing mah-jongg with friends. I thought maybe you could
come down."
"Yeah." She sighed again. "I'll be there. Don't touch anything, Mr.
Hennessy, and try to keep people out of the way." Out of habit she
called dispatch, reported an unattended death and her presence on the
scene.
-=O=-***-=O=-
She found the apartment quiet, with Mrs. Finestein sitting on the living
room sofa with her tiny white hands folded in her lap. Her hair was
white as well, a snowfall around a face that was beginning to line
despite antiaging creams and treatments.
The old woman smiled gently at Eve.
"I'm so sorry to trouble you, dear."
"It's okay. Are you all right?"
"Yes, I'm fine." Her soft blue eyes stayed on Eve's. "It was our weekly
game, the girls and mine. When I got home, I found him in the kitchen.
He'd been eating a custard pie. Joe was overly fond of sweets."
She looked over at Hennessy, who stood, shifting uncomfortably from foot
to foot. "I didn't know quite what to do, and went knocking on Mr.
Hennessy's door."
"That's fine. If you'd stay with her for a minute please," she said to
Mr. Hennessy.
The apartment was set up similarly to her own. It was meticulously neat,
despite the abundance of knickknacks and memorabilia.
At the kitchen table with its centerpiece of china flowers, Joe
Finestein had lost his life, and considerable dignity.
His head was slumped, half in, half out of a fluffy custard pie. Eve
checked for a pulse, found none. His skin had cooled considerably. At a
guess, she put his death at one-fifteen, give or take a couple of hours.
"Joseph Finestein," she recited dutifully. "Male, approximately one
hundred and fifteen years of age. No signs of forced entry, no signs of
violence. There are no marks on the body."
She leaned closer, looked into Joe's surprised and staring eyes, sniffed
the pie. After finishing her prelim notes, she went back to relieve
Hennessy and interview the deceased's widow.
It was midnight before she was able to crawl into bed. Exhaustion
snatched at her like a cross and greedy child. Oblivion was what she
wanted, what she prayed for.
No dreams, she ordered her subconscious. Take the night off.
Even as she closed her eyes, her bedside 'link blipped.
"Fry in hell, whoever you are," she muttered, then dutifully wrapped the
sheet around her naked shoulders and switched it on.
"Lieutenant." Roarke's image smiled at her. "Did I wake you?"
"You would have in another five minutes." She shifted as the audio
hissed with a bit of space interference. "I guess you got where you were
going all right."
"I did. There was only a slight delay in transport. I thought I might
catch you before you turned in."
"Any particular reason?"
"Because I like looking at you." His smile faded as he stared at her.
"What's wrong, Eve?"
Where do you want me to start? she thought, but shrugged. "Long day --
ending with one of your other tenants here croaking in his late night
snack. He went facedown in a custard pie."
"There are worse ways to go, I suppose." He turned his head, murmured to
someone nearby. Eve saw a woman move briskly behind Roarke and out of
view. "I've just dismissed my assistant," he explained. "I wanted to be
alone when I asked if you're wearing anything under that sheet."
She glanced down, lifted a brow. "Doesn't look like it."
"Why don't you take it off?"
"No way I'm going to satisfy your prurient urges by interspace
transmission, Roarke. Use your imagination."
"I am. I'm imagining what I'm going to do to you the next time I get my
hands on you. I advise you to rest up, lieutenant."
She wanted to smile and couldn't. "Roarke, we're going to have to talk
when you get back."
"We can do that as well. I've always found conversations with you
stimulating, Eve. Get some sleep."
"Yeah, I will. See you, Roarke."
"Think of me, Eve."
He ended the transmission, then sat alone, brooding at the blank
monitor. There'd been something in her eyes, he thought. He knew the
moods of them now, could see beyond the training into the emotion.
The something had been worry.
Turning his chair, he looked out at his view of star splattered space.
She was too far away for him to do any more than wonder about her.
And to ask himself, again, why she mattered so much.
*** CHAPTER THIRTEEN ***
Eve studied the report of the bank search for Sharon DeBlass's deposit
box with frustration. No record, no record, no record.
Nothing in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut. Nothing in East Washington
or Virginia.
She had rented one somewhere, Eve thought. She'd had diaries, and had
kept them tucked away someplace where she could get to them safely and
quickly.
In those diaries, Eve was convinced, was a motive for murder.
Unwilling to tag Fenney for another, broader search, she began one
herself, starting with Pennsylvania, working west and north toward the
borders of Canada and Quebec. In slightly less than twice the time it
would have taken Feeney, she came up blank again.
Then, working south, she struck out with Maryland, and down to Florida.
Her machine began to chug noisily at the work. Eve issued a warning
snarl and a sharp bump to the console. She swore she'd risk the morass
of requisition for a new unit if this one just held out for one more
case.
More from stubbornness than hope, she did a scan of the Midwest, heading
toward the Rockies.
You were too smart, Sharon, Eve thought, as the negative results
flickered by. Too smart for your own good. You wouldn't have gone out of
the country, or off planet where you'd have to go through a customs scan
every trip. Why go far away, someplace where you'd need transport or
travel docs? You might want immediate access.
If your mother knew you kept diaries, maybe other people knew it, too.
You bragged about it because you liked to make people uncomfortable. And
you knew they were safely tucked away.
But close, damn it, Eve thought, closing her eyes to bring the woman she
was coming to know so well into full focus. Close enough so that you
could feel the power, use it, toy with people.
But not so simple that just anyone could track it down, gain access,
spoil the game. You used an alias. Rented your safe box under another
name -- just in case. And if you were smart enough to use an alias,
you'd have used one that was basic, that was familiar. One you wouldn't
have to hassle over.
It was so simple, Eve realized as she keyed in Sharon Barrister. So
simple both she and Feeney had overlooked it.
She hit pay dirt at the Brinkstone International Bank and Finance,
Newark, New Jersey.
Sharon Barrister not only had a safe-deposit box, she had a brokerage
account in the amount of $326,000.85.
Grinning at the screen, she hit her tie-in with the PA. "I need a
warrant," she announced.
-=O=-***-=O=-
Three hours later, she was back in Commander Whitney's office, trying
not to gnash her teeth. "She's got another one somewhere," Eve insisted.
"And the diaries are in it."
"Nobody's stopping you from looking for it, Dallas."
"Fine, that's fine." She whirled around the office as she spoke. Energy
was pumping now, and she wanted action. "What are we going to do about
this?"
She jerked a hand at the file on his desk.
"You've got the disc I took from the safe-deposit box and the print out
I ran. It's right there, commander. A blackmail list: names and amounts.
And Simpson's name is there, in tidy alphabetical order."
"I can read, Dallas." He resisted the urge to rub at the tension
gathering at the base of his skull. "The chief isn't the only person
named Simpson in the city, much less the country."
"It's him." She was fuming and there was no place to put the steam. "We
both know it. There are a number of other interesting names there, too.
A governor, a Catholic bishop, a respected leader of the International
Organization of Women, two high-ranking cops, an ex-Vice President -- "
"I'm aware of the names," Whitney interrupted. "Are you aware of your
position, Dallas, and the consequences?" He held up a hand to silence
her. "A few neat columns of names and numbers don't mean squat. This
data gets out of this office, and it's over. You're finished and so's
the investigation. Is that what you want?"
"No, sir."
"You get the diaries, Dallas, find the connection between Sharon DeBlass
and Lola Starr, and we'll see where we go from there."
"Simpson's dirty." She leaned over the desk. "He knew Sharon DeBlass; he
was being blackmailed. And he's doing everything he can to undermine the
investigation."
"Then we'll have to work around him, won't we?" Whitney put the file in
his lock box. "No one knows what we have in here, Dallas. Not even
Feeney. Is that clear?
"Yes, sir." Knowing she had to be satisfied with that, she started for
the door. "Commander, I'd like to point out that there's a name absent
from that list. Roarke's not on it."
Whitney met her eyes, nodded. "As I said, Dallas. I can read."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Her message light was blinking when she got back to her office. A check
of her E-mail turned up two calls from the medical examiner.
Impatiently, Eve put the hot lead aside and returned the call.
"Finished running the tests on your neighbor, Dallas. You hit the
bull's-eye."
"Oh, hell." She ran her hands over her face. "Send through the results.
I'll take it from here."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Hetta Finestein opened her door with a puff of lavender sachet and the
yeasty smell of homemade bread.
"Lieutenant Dallas."
She smiled her quiet smile and stepped back in invitation. Inside, the
viewing screen was tuned to a chatty talk show where interested members
of the home audience could plug in and shoot their holographic images to
the studio for fuller interaction. The topic seemed to be higher state
salaries for professional mothers. Just now the screen was crowded with
women and children of varying sizes and vocal opinions.
"How nice of you to come by. I've had so many visitors today. It's a
comfort. Would you like some cookies?"
"Sure," Eve agreed, and felt like slime. "Thanks." She sat on the couch,
let her eyes scan the tidy little apartment. "You and Mr. Finestein used
to run a bakery?"
"Oh, yes." Hetta's voice carried from the kitchen, along with her
bustling movements. "Until just a few years ago. We did very well.
People love real cooking, you know. And if I do say so myself, I have
quite a hand with pies and cakes."
"You do a lot of baking here, at home."
Hetta came in with a tray of golden cookies. "One of my pleasures. Too
many people never know the joy of a home-baked cookie. So many children
never experience real sugar. It's hideously expensive, of course, but
worth it."
Eve sampled a cookie and had to agree. "I guess you must have baked the
pie your husband was eating when he died."
"You won't find store-bought or simulations in my house," Hetta said
proudly. "Of course, Joe would gobble everything up almost as soon as I
took it out of the oven. There's not an AutoChef on the market as
reliable as a good baker's instincts and creativity."
"You did bake the pie, Mrs. Finestein."
The woman blinked, lowered her lashes. "Yes, I did."
"Mrs. Finestein, you know what killed your husband?"
"Yes, I do." She smiled softly. "Gluttony. I told him not to eat it. I
specifically told him not to eat it. I said it was for Mrs. Hennessy
across the hall."
"Mrs. Hennessy." That jolted Eve back several mental paces. "You -- "
"Of course, I knew he'd eat it, anyway. He was very selfish that way."
Eve cleared her throat. "Could we, ah, turn the program off?"
"Hmm? Oh, I'm sorry." The flustered hostess tapped her cheeks with her
hands. "That's so rude. I'm so used to letting it play all day I don't
even notice it. Um, program -- no, screen off."
"And the audio," Eve said patiently.
"Of course." Shaking her head as the sound continued to run, Hetta
looked sheepish. "I've just never gotten the hang of the thing since we
switched from remote to voice. Sound off, please. There, that's better,
isn't it."
The woman could bake a poisoned pie, but couldn't control her own
television, Eve thought. It took all kinds. "Mrs. Finestein, I don't
want you to say any more until I've read you your rights. Until you're
sure you understand them. You're under no obligation to make any
statement," Eve began, while Hetta continued to smile gently.
Hetta waited until the recitation was over. "I didn't expect to get away
with it. Not really."
"Get away with what, Mrs. Finestein?"
"Poisoning Joe. Although..." She pursed her lips like a child. "My
grandson's a lawyer -- a very clever boy. I think he'd say that since I
did tell Joe, very specifically told him not to eat that pie, it was
more Joe's doing than mine. In any case," she said and waited patiently.
"Mrs. Finestein, are you telling me that you added synthetic cyanide
compound to a custard pie with the intention of killing your husband?"
"No, dear. I'm telling you I added cyanide compound, with a nice dose of
extra sugar to a pie, and told my husband not to touch it. 'Joe,' I
said, 'Don't you so much as sniff this custard pie. I baked it special,
and it's not for you. You hear me, Joe?'"
Hetta smiled again. "He said he heard me all right, and then just before
I left for my evening with the girls, I told him again, just to be sure.
'I mean it, Joe. You let that pie be.' I expected he would eat it,
though, but that was up to him, wasn't it? Let me tell you about Joe,"
she continued conversationally, and picked up the cookie tray to urge
another on Eve. When Eve hesitated, she laughed gaily. "Oh, dear, these
are quite safe, I promise you. I just gave a dozen to the nice little
boy upstairs."
To prove her point she chose one herself and bit in.
"Now, where was I? Oh, yes, about Joe. He's my second husband, you know.
We've been married fifty years come April. He was a good partner, and
quite a fine baker himself. Some men should never retire. The last few
years he's been very hard to live with. Cross and complaining all the
time, forever finding fault. And never would get flour on his fingers.
Not that he'd pass by an almond tart without gobbling it down."
Because it sounded almost reasonable, Eve waited a moment. "Mrs.
Feinstein, you poisoned him because he ate too much?"
Hetta's rosy cheeks rounded. "It does seem that way. But it goes deeper.
You're so young, dear, and you don't have family, do you?"
"No."
"Families are a source of comfort, and a source of irritation. No one
outside can ever understand what goes on in the privacy of a home. Joe
wasn't an easy man to live with, and I'm afraid, though I'm sorry to
speak ill of the dead, that he had developed bad habits. He'd find a
real glee in upsetting me, in ruining my small pleasures. Why just last
month he deliberately ate half the Tower of Pleasure Cake I'd baked for
the International Betty Crocker cook-off. Then he told me it was dry."
Her voice huffed out in obvious insult. "Can you imagine?"
"No," Eve said weakly. "I can't."
"Well, he did it just to make me mad. It was the way he wielded power,
you see. So I baked the pie, told him not to touch it, and went out to
play mah-jongg with the girls. I wasn't at all surprised when I got back
and found he hadn't listened. He was a glutton, you see." She gestured
with the cookie before delicately finishing the last bite. "That's one
of the seven deadly sins, gluttony. It just seemed right that he would
die by sin. Are you sure you won't have another cookie?"
-=O=-***-=O=-
The world was certainly a mad place, Eve decided, when old women
poisoned custard pies. And, she thought, with Hetta's quiet,
old-fashioned, grandmotherly demeanor, the woman would probably get off.
If they sent her up, she'd get kitchen duty and happily bake pastries
for the other inmates.
Eve filed her report, caught a quick dinner in the eatery, then went
back to work on the still simmering lead.
She'd no more than cleared half the New York banks when the call came
through. "Yeah, Dallas."
Her answer was the image that flowed onto her screen. A dead woman,
arranged all too familiarly on blood-soaked sheets.
THREE OF SIX
She stared at the message imposed over the body and snarled at her
computer.
"Trace address. Now, goddamn it."
After the computer obliged, she tagged Dispatch.
"Dallas, Lieutenant Eve, ID 5347BQ. Priority A. Any available units to
156 West Eighty-ninth, apartment twenty-one nineteen. Do not enter
premises. Repeat, do not enter premises. Detain any and all persons
exiting building. Nobody goes in that apartment, uniform or civilian. My
ETA, ten minutes."
"Copy, Dallas, Lieutenant, Eve." The droid on duty spoke coolly and
without rush. "Units five-oh and three-six available to respond. Will
await your arrival. Priority A. Dispatch, out."
She grabbed her bag and her field kit and was gone.
-=O=-***-=O=-
Eve entered the apartment alone, weapon out and ready. The living room
was tidy, even homey with its thick cushions and fringed area rugs.
There was a book on the sofa and a slight dip in the cushion, indicating
someone had spent some time curled up and reading. Frowning over the
image, she moved to a door beyond.
The small room was set up as an office, the workstation tidy as a pin,
with little hints of personality in the basket of perfumed silk flowers,
the bowl of colorful gumdrops, the shiny white mug decorated with a
glossy red heart.
The workstation faced the window, the window faced the sheer side of
another building, but no one had bothered with a privacy screen. Lining
one wall was a clear shelf holding several more books, a large drop box
for discs, another for E-memos, a small treasure trove of pricey
graphite pencils and recycled legal pads. Cuddled between was a lopsided
baked clay blob that might have been a horse, and had certainly been
made by a child.
Eve turned out of the room and opened the opposing door.
She knew what to expect. Her system didn't revolt. The blood was still
very fresh. With only a small sigh, she holstered her weapon, knowing
she was alone with the dead.
Through the thin protective spray on her hands, she felt the body. It
hadn't had time to cool.
She'd been positioned on the bed, and the weapon had been placed neatly
between her legs.
Eve pegged it as a Ruger P-90, a sleek combat weapon popular as home
defense during the Urban Revolt. Light, compact, and fully automatic.
No silencer this time. But she'd be willing to bet the bedroom was
soundproofed -- and that the killer had known it.
She moved over to the fussily female circular dresser, opened a small
burlap bag that was currently a fashion rage. Inside she found the dead
woman's companion's license.
Pretty woman, she mused. Nice smile, direct eyes, really stunning
coffee-and-cream complexion.
"Georgie Castle," Eve recited for the record. "Female. Age fifty-three.
Licensed companion. Death probably occurred between seven and
seven-forty-five P. M., cause of death gunshot wounds. ME to confirm.
Three visible points of violence: forehead, mid-chest, genitalia. Most
likely induced with antique combat style handgun left at scene. No signs
of struggle, no appearance of forced entry or robbery."
A whisper of a sound behind her had Eve whipping out her weapon.
Crouched, eyes hard and cold, she stared at a fat gray cat who slid into
the room.
"Jesus, where'd you come from?" She let out a long, cleansing breath as
she replaced her weapon. "There's a cat," she added for the record, and
when it blinked at her, flashing one gold and one green eye, she bent
down to scoop it up.
The purring sounded like a small, well oiled engine.
Shifting him, she took out her communicator and called for a homicide
team.
-=O=-***-=O=-
A short time later, Eve was in the kitchen, watching the cat sniff with
delicate disdain at a bowl of food she'd unearthed when she heard the
raised voices outside the apartment door.
When she went to investigate, she found the uniform she'd posted trying
to restrain a frantic and very determined woman.
"What's the problem here, officer?"
"Lieutenant." With obvious relief, the uniform deferred to her superior.
"The civilian demands entry. I was -- "
"Of course I demand entry." The woman's dark red hair, cut in a perfect
wedge, moved and settled around her face with each jerky movement. "This
is my mother's home. I want to know what you're doing here."
"And your mother is?" Eve prompted.
"Mrs. Castle. Mrs. Georgie Castle. Was there a break-in?" Anger turned
to worry as she tried to squeeze past Eve. "Is she all right? Mom?"
"Come with me." Eve took a firm hold of her arm and steered her inside
and into the kitchen. "What's your name?"
"Samantha Bennett."
The cat left his bowl and walked over to curl around and through
Samantha's legs. In a gesture Eve recognized as habitual and automatic,
Samantha bent to give the cat one quick scratch between the ears.
"Where's my mother?" Now that the worry was heading toward fear,
Samantha's voice cracked.
There was no part of the job Eve dreaded more than this, no aspect of
police work that scraped at her heart with such dull blades.
"I'm sorry, Ms. Bennett. "I'm very sorry. Your mother's dead."
Samantha said nothing. Her eyes, the same warm honey tone as her
mother's, unfocused. Before she could fold, Eve eased her into a chair.
"There's a mistake," she managed. "There has to be a mistake. We're
going to the movies. The nine o'clock show. We always go to the movies
on Tuesdays." She stared up at Eve with desperately hopeful eyes. "She
can't be dead. She's barely fifty, and she's healthy. She's strong."
"There's no mistake. I'm sorry."
"There was an accident?" Those eyes filled now, flowed over. "She had an
accident?"
"It wasn't an accident." There was no way but one to get it down. "Your
mother was murdered."
"No, that's impossible." The tears kept flowing. Her voice hitched over
them as she continued to shake her head in denial. "Everyone liked her.
Everyone. No one would hurt her. I want to see her. I want to see her
now."
"I can't let you do that."
"She's my mother." Tears plopped on her lap even as her voice rose. "I
have the right. I want to see my mother."
Eve clamped both hands on Samantha's shoulders, forcing her back into
the chair she'd sprung from. "You're not going to see her. It wouldn't
help her. It wouldn't help you. What you're going to do is answer my
questions, and that's going to help me find who did this to her. Now, do
you want me to get you something? Call anyone for you?"
"No. No." Samantha fumbled in her purse for a tissue. "My husband, my
children. I'll have to tell them. My father. How can I tell them?"
"Where is your father, Samantha?"
"He lives -- he lives in Westchester. They divorced about two years ago.
He kept the house because she wanted to move into the city. She wanted
to write books. She wanted to be a writer."
Eve turned to the filtered water unit on the counter, glugged out a
glass, pressed it on Samantha. "Do you know how your mother made her
living?"
"Yes." Samantha pressed her lips together, crushed the damp tissue in
her chilled fingers. "No one could talk her out of it. She used to laugh
and say it was time she did something shocking, and what wonderful
research it was for her books. My mother -- " Samantha broke off to
drink. "She got married very young. A few years ago, she said she needed
to move on, see what else there was. We couldn't talk her out of that,
either. You could never talk her out of anything."
She began to weep again, covering her face and sobbing silently. Eve
took the barely touched glass, waited, let the first wave of grief and
shock roll. "Was it a difficult divorce? Was your father angry?"
"Baffled. Confused. Sad. He wanted her back, and always said this was
just one of her phases. He -- " The question behind the question
abruptly struck her. She lowered her hands. "He would never hurt her.
Never, never, never. He loved her. Everyone did. You couldn't help it."
"Okay." Eve would deal with that later. "You and your mother were
close?"
"Yes, very close."
"Did she ever talk to you about her clients?"
"Sometimes. It embarrassed me, but she'd find a way to make it all so
outrageously funny. She could do that. Called herself Granny Sex, and
you had to laugh."
"Did she ever mention anyone who made her uneasy?"
"No. She could handle people. It was part of her charm. She was only
going to do this until she was published."
"Did she ever mention the names Sharon DeBlass or Lola Starr?"
"No." Samantha started to drag her hair back, then her hand froze in
midair. "Starr, Lola Starr. I heard, on the news, I heard about her. She
was murdered. Oh God. Oh God." She lowered her head and her hair fell in
wings to shield her face.
"I'm going to have an officer take you home, Samantha."
"I can't leave. I can't leave her."
"Yes, you can. I'm going to take care of her." Eve laid her hands over
Samantha's. "I promise you, I'll take care of her for you. Come on now."
Gently, she helped Samantha to her feet. She wrapped an arm around the
distraught woman's waist as she led her to the door. She wanted her out
before the team had finished in the bedroom. "Is your husband home?"
"Yes. He's home with the children. We have two children. Two years, and
six months. Tony's home with the children."
"Good. What's your address?"
The shock was settling in. Eve hoped the numbness she could read on
Samantha's face would help as the woman recited an upscale address in
Westchester.
"Officer Banks."
"Yes, lieutenant."
"Take Mrs. Bennett home. I'll call for another officer for the door.
Stay with the family as long as you're needed."
"Yes, sir." With compassion, Banks guided Samantha toward the elevators.
"This way, Mrs. Bennett," she murmured.
Samantha leaned drunkenly on Banks. "You'll take care of her?"
Eve met Samantha's ravaged eyes. "I promise."
-=O=-***-=O=-
An hour later, Eve walked into the station house with a cat under her
arm.
"Hey there, lieutenant, caught yourself a cat burglar." The desk
sergeant snorted at his own humor.
"You're a laugh riot, Riley. Commander still here?"
"He's waiting for you. You're to go up as soon as you show." He leaned
forward to scratch the purring cat. "Hooked yourself another homicide?"
"Yeah."
A kissing sound had her glancing over at a leering hunk in a spandex
jumpsuit. The jumpsuit, and the blood trickling at the side of his mouth
were approximately the same color. His accessories were a set of thin,
black restraints that secured one arm to a nearby bench. He rubbed his
crotch with his free hand and winked at her.
"Hey, baby. Got something here for you."
"Tell Commander Whitney I'm on my way," she told Riley as the desk
sergeant rolled his eyes.
Unable to resist, she swung by the bench, leaned close enough to smell
sour vomit. "That was a charming invitation," she murmured, then arched
a brow when the man peeled open his fly patch and wagged his personality
at her. "Oh, look, kitty. A teeny-tiny little penis." She smiled, leaned
just a bit closer. "Better take care of it, asshole, or my pussy here
might mistake it for a teeny-tiny little mouse and bite it off."
It made her feel better to see what there was of his pride and joy
shrivel before he closed his flaps. The good humor lasted almost until
she stepped into the elevator and ordered Commander Whitney's floor.
He was waiting, with Feeney, and the report she'd transmitted directly
from the crime scene. In the nature of the repetition required in police
work, she went over the same ground verbally.
"So that's the cat," Feeney said.
"I didn't have the heart to dump him on the daughter in the state she
was in." Eve shrugged. "And I couldn't very well just leave him there."
With her free hand, she reached into her bag. "Her discs. Everything's
labeled. I scanned through her appointments. The last one of the day was
at six-thirty. John Smith. The weapon." She laid the bagged weapon on
Commander Whitney's desk. "Looks like Ruger P-ninety."
Feeney took a look, nodded. "You're learning, kid."
"I've been boning up."
"Early twenty-first, probably oh eight, oh nine." Feeney stated as he
turned the sealed weapon in his hands. "Prime condition. Serial number's
intact. Won't take long to run it," he added, but moved his shoulders.
"But he's too smart to use a registered."
"Run it," Whitney ordered, and gestured to the auxiliary unit across the
room. "I've got surveillance on your building, Dallas. If he tries to
slip you another disc, we'll spot him."
"If he stays true to form, it'll be within twenty-four hours. He's
holding to the pattern so far, though each of his victims has been a
distinctly different type: with DeBlass you've got the glitz, the
sophistication; with Starr you've got fresh, childlike; and with this
one, we've got comfort, still young but mature.
"We're still interviewing neighbors, and I'm going to hit the family
again, look into the divorce. It looks to me like she took this guy spur
of the moment. She had a standing date with her daughter for Tuesdays.
I'd like Feeney to run her 'link, see if he called her direct. We're not
going to be able to keep this from the media, commander. And they're
going to hit us hard."
"I'm already working on media control."
"It may be hotter than we think." Feeney looked up from the terminal.
His eyes lingered on Eve's, made her blood chill.
"The murder weapon's registered. Purchased through silent auction at
Sotheby's last fall. Roarke."
Eve didn't speak for a moment. Didn't care. "It breaks pattern," she
managed. "And it's stupid. Roarke's not a stupid man."
"Lieutenant -- "
"It's a plant, commander. An obvious one. A silent auction. Any
second-rate hacker can use someone's ID and bid. How was it paid for?"
she snapped at Feeney.
"I'll need to access Sotheby's records after they open tomorrow."
"My bet's cash, electronic transfer. The auction house gets the money,
why should they question it?" Her voice might have been calm, but her
mind was racing. "And the delivery. Odds are electronic pick-up station.
You don't need ID for an EPS; all you do is key in the delivery code."
"Dallas." Whitney spoke patiently. "Pick him up for questioning."
"I can't."
His eyes remained level, cool. "That's a direct order. If you have a
personal problem, save it for personal time."
"I can't pick him up," she repeated. "He's on the FreeStar space
station, a fair distance from the murder scene."
"If he put out that he'd be on FreeStar -- "
"He didn't," she interrupted. "And that's where the killer made a
mistake. Roarke's trip is confidential, with only a few key people
apprised. As far as it's generally known, he's right here in New York."
Commander Whitney inclined his head. "Then we'd better check his
whereabouts. Now."
Her stomach churned as she engaged Whitney's 'link. Within seconds she
was listening to Summerset's prune voice. "Summerset, Lieutenant Dallas.
I have to contact Roarke."
"Roarke is in meetings, lieutenant. He can't be disturbed."
"He told you to put me through, goddamn it. This is police business.
Give me his access number or I'm coming over there and hauling your bony
ass in for obstructing justice."
Summerset's face puckered up. "I am not authorized to give out that
data. I will, however, transfer you. Please stand by."
Eve's palms began to sweat as the screen went to holding blue. She
wondered whose idea it was to pipe in the sugary music. Certainly not
Roarke's. He had too much class.
Oh God, what was she going to do if he wasn't where he said he'd be?
The blue screen contracted into a pinpoint, then opened up. There was
Roarke, a trace of impatience in his eyes, a half smile on his mouth.
"Lieutenant. You've caught me at a bad time. Can I get back to you?"
"No." She could see from the comer of her eye that Feeney was already
tracing the transmission. "I need to verify your whereabouts."
"My whereabouts?" His brow cocked. He must have seen something in her
face, though Eve would have sworn she kept it as smooth and unreadable
as stone. "What's wrong, Eve? What's happened?"
"Your whereabouts, Roarke. Please verify."
He remained silent, studying her. Eve heard someone speak to him. He
flicked away the interruption with a dismissing gesture. "I'm in the
middle of a meeting in the presidential chamber of Station FreeStar, the
location of which is Quadrant Six, Slip Alpha. Scan," he ordered, and
the intergalactic 'link circled the room. A dozen men and women sat at a
wide, circular table.
The long, bowed port showed a scatter of stars and the perfect
blue-green globe of Earth.
"Location of transmission confirmed," Feeney said in an undertone. "He's
just where he says he is."
"Roarke, please switch to privacy mode."
Without a flicker of expression, he lifted a headset. "Yes, lieutenant?"
"A weapon registered to you was confiscated at a homicide. I have to ask
you to come in for questioning at the first possible opportunity. You're
free to bring your attorney. I'm advising you to bring your attorney,"
she added, hoping he understood the emphasis. "If you don't comply
within forty-eight hours, the Station Guard will escort you back
on-planet. Do you understand your rights and obligations in this
matter?"
"Certainly. I'll make arrangements. Good-bye, lieutenant."
The screen went blank.
*** CHAPTER FOURTEEN ***
More shaken than she cared to admit, Eve entered Dr. Mira's office the
following morning. At Mira's invitation, she took a seat, folded her
hands to keep them from any telltale restless movements.
"Have you had time to profile?"
"You requested urgent status." Indeed, Mira had been up most of the
night, reading reports, using her training and her psych diagnostics to
compose a profile. "I'd like more time to work on this, but I can give
you an overall view."
"Okay." Eve leaned forward. "What is he?"
"He is almost certainly correct. Traditionally, crimes of this nature
are not committed within the same sex. He's a man, above average
intelligence, with sociopathic and voyeuristic tendencies. He's bold,
but not a risk taker, though he probably sees himself as such."
In her graceful way, she linked her fingers together, crossed her legs.
"His crimes are well thought out. Whether or not he has sex with his
victims is incidental. His pleasure and satisfaction comes from the
selection, the preparation, and the execution."
"Why prostitutes?"
"Control. Sex is control. Death is control. And he needs to control
people, situations. The first murder was probably impulse."
"Why?"
"He was caught off guard by the violence, his own capability of
violence. He had a reaction, a jerk of a movement, the indrawn breath,
the shaky exhale. He recovered, systematically protected himself. He
doesn't want to be caught, but he wants -- needs to be admired, feared.
Hence the recordings.
"He uses collector's weapons," she continued in that same moderate
voice, "a status symbol of money. Again, power and control. He leaves
them behind so that they can show he's unique among men. He appreciates
the overt violence of guns and the impersonal aspect of them. The kill
from a comfortable distance, the aloofness of that. He's decided on the
number he'll kill to show that he's organized, precise. Ambitious."
"Could he have had the six women in mind from the beginning? Six
targets?"
"The only verified connection between the three victims is their
profession," Mira began, and saw that Eve had already reached the same
conclusion, but wanted it confirmed. "He had the profession in mind. It
would be my opinion the women are incidental. It's likely he holds a
high-level position, certainly a responsible one. If he has a sexual or
marriage partner, he or she is subservient. His opinion of women is low.
He debases and humiliates them after death to show his disgust and his
superiority. He doesn't perceive these as crimes but as moments of
personal power, personal statement.
"The prostitute, male or female, remains a profession of low esteem in
many minds. Women are not his equals; a prostitute is beneath his
contempt, even when he uses her for his own release. He enjoys his work,
lieutenant. He enjoys it very much."
"Is it work, doctor, or a mission?"
"He has no mission. Only ambitions. It isn't religion, not a moral
statement, not a societal stance."
"No, the statement's personal, the stance is control."
"I would agree," Mira said, pleased with the straightforward workings of
Eve's mind. "It is, to him, an interest, a new and somewhat fascinating
hobby that he has discovered himself adept at. He's dangerous,
lieutenant, not simply because he has no conscience, but because he's
good at what he does. And his success feeds him."
"He'll stop at six," Eve murmured. "With this method. But he'll find
another creative way to kill. He's too vain to go back on his word to
the authorities, but he's enjoying his hobby too much to give it up."
Mira angled her head. "One would think, lieutenant, that you've already
read my report. I believe you're coming to understand him very well."
Eve nodded. "Yeah, piece by piece." There was a question she had to ask,
one she had suffered over through a long, sleepless night. "To protect
himself, to make the game more difficult, would he hire someone, pay
someone to kill a victim he'd chosen while he was alibied?"
"No." Mira's eyes softened with compassion as she watched Eve's close in
relief. "In my opinion, he needs to be there. To watch, to record, most
of all to experience. He doesn't want vicarious satisfaction. Nor does
he believe you'll outsmart him. He enjoys watching you sweat,
lieutenant. He's an observer of people, and I believe he focused on you
the moment he learned you were primary. He studies you, and knows you
care. He sees that as a weakness to exploit, and does so by presenting
you with the murders -- not at your place of work, but where you live."
"He sent the last disc. It was in my morning mail drop, posted from a
midtown slot about an hour after the murder. We had my building under
surveillance. He'd have figured that and found a way to get around it."
"He's a born button pusher." Mira handed Eve a disc and a hard copy of
the initial profile. "He is an intelligent and a mature man. Mature
enough to restrain his impulses, a man of means and imagination. He
would rarely show his emotions, rarely have them to show. It's an
intellect with him -- and, as you said, vanity."
"I appreciate you getting this for me so quickly."
"Eve," Mira said before Eve could rise. "There's an addendum. The weapon
that was left at the last murder. The man who committed these crimes
would not make so foolish a mistake to leave a traceable weapon behind.
The diagnostic rejected it at a probability of ninety-three point four
percent."
"It was there," Eve said flatly. "I bagged it myself."
"As I'm sure he wanted you to. It's likely he enjoyed implicating
someone else to further bog the system, twist the investigation process.
And it's likely he chose this particular person to upset you, to
distract you, even to hurt you. I've included that in the profile.
Personally, I want to tell you that I'm concerned about his interest in
you."
"I'm going to see to it that he's a hell of a lot more concerned with my
interest in him. Thank you, doctor."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Eve went directly to Whitney's office to deliver the psychiatric
profile. With any luck at all, Feeney would have verified her suspicions
about the purchase and delivery of the murder weapon.
If she was right, and she had to believe she was, that and the weight of
Mira's profile would clear Roarke.
She already knew, by the way Roarke had looked at her -- through her --
during their last transmission, that her professional duties had
destroyed whatever personal bridge they'd been building.
She was only more sure of it when she was cleared into the office, and
found Roarke there.
He must have used a private transport, she decided. It would have been
impossible for him to have arrived so quickly through normal channels.
He only inclined his head, said nothing as she crossed to give Commander
Whitney the disc and file.
"Dr. Mira's profile."
"Thank you, lieutenant." His eyes shifted to Roarke's. "Lieutenant
Dallas will show you to an interview area. We appreciate your
cooperation."
Still, he said nothing, only rose and waited for Eve to go to the door.
"You're entitled to have your attorney present," she began as she called
for an elevator.
"I'm aware of that. Am I being charged with any crime, lieutenant?"
"No." Cursing him, she stepped inside, requested Area B. "This is just
standard procedure." His silence continued until she wanted to scream.
"Damn it, I don't have a choice here."
"Don't you?" he murmured and preceded her out of the car when the doors
opened.
"This is my job." The doors of the interview area whisked open, then
snapped closed behind them. The surveillance cameras any petty thief
would know were hidden in every wall engaged automatically. Eve took a
seat at a small table and waited for him to sit across from her.
"These proceedings are being recorded. Do you understand?"
"Yes."
"Lieutenant Dallas, ID 5347BQ, interviewer. Subject, Roarke. Initial
date and time. Subject has waived the presence of an attorney. Is that
correct?"
"Yes, the subject has waived the presence of an attorney."
"Are you acquainted with a licensed companion, Georgie Castle?"
"No."
"Have you been to 156 West Eighty-ninth Street?"
"No, I don't believe I have."
"Do you own a Ruger P-ninety, automatic combat weapon, circa 2005?"
"It's likely that I own a weapon of that make and era. I'd have to check
to be certain. But for argument's sake, we'll say I do."
"When did you purchase said weapon?"
"Again, I'd have to check." He never blinked, never took his eyes from
hers. "I have an extensive collection, and don't carry all the details
of it in my head or in my pocket log."
"Did you purchase said weapon at Sotheby's?"
"It's possible. I often add to my collection through auctions."
"Silent auctions?"
"Occasionally."
Her stomach, already knotted, began to roll. "Did you add to your
collection with the aforesaid weapon at a silent auction at Sotheby's on
October second of last year?"
Roarke slipped his log out of his pocket, skimmed back to the date. "No.
I don't have a record of that. It seems I was in Tokyo on that date,
engaged in meetings. You can verify that easily."
Damn you, damn you, she thought. You know that's no answer.
"Representatives are often used in auctions."
"They are." Watching her dispassionately, he tucked the log away again.
"If you check with Sotheby's, you'll be told that I don't use
representatives. When I decide to acquire something, it's because I've
seen it -- with my own eyes. Gauged its worth to me. If and when I
decide to bid, I do so personally. In a silent auction, I would either
attend, or participate by 'link."
"Isn't it traditional to use a sealed electronic bid, or a
representative authorized to go to a certain ceiling?"
"I don't worry about traditions overmuch. The fact is, I could change my
mind as to whether I want something. For one reason or another, it could
lose its appeal."
She understood the underlying meaning of his statement, tried to accept
that he was done with her. "The aforesaid weapon, registered in your
name and purchased through silent auction at Sotheby's in October of
last year was used to murder Georgie Castle at approximately
seven-thirty last evening."
"You and I both know I wasn't in New York at seven-thirty last evening."
His gaze skimmed over her face. "You traced the transmission, didn't
you?"
She didn't answer. Couldn't. "Your weapon was found at the scene."
"Have we established it was mine?"
"Who has access to your collection?"
"I do. Only I do."
"Your staff?"
"No. If you recall, lieutenant, my display cases are locked. Only I have
the code."
"Codes can be broken."
"Unlikely, but possible," he agreed. "However, unless my palm print is
used for entry, any case that is opened by any means triggers an alarm."
Goddamn it, give me an opening. Couldn't he see she was pleading with
him, trying to save him? "Alarm's can be bypassed."
"True. When any case is opened without my authorization, all entry to
the room is sealed off. There's no way to get out, and security is
notified simultaneously. I can assure you, lieutenant, it's quite
foolproof. I believe in protecting what's mine."
She glanced up as Feeney came in. He jerked his head, and she rose.
"Excuse me."
When the doors shut behind them, he dipped his hands into his pockets.
"You called it, Dallas. Electronic bid, cash deal, delivered to an EPS.
The head snoot at Sotheby's claims this was an unusual procedure for
Roarke. He always attends in person, or by direct 'link. Never used this
line before in the fifteen years or so he's dealt with them."
She allowed herself one satisfied breath. "That checks with Roarke's
statement. What else?"
"Ran an undercheck on the registration. The Ruger only appeared on the
books in Roarke's name a week ago. No way in hell we can pin it on him.
The commander says to spring him."
She couldn't afford to be relieved, not yet, and only nodded. "Thanks,
Feeney."
She slipped back inside. "You're free to go."
He stood as she stepped backward through the open door. "Just like
that?"
"We have no reason, at this time, to detain or inconvenience you any
further."
"Inconvenience?" He walked toward her until the doors snicked shut at
his back. "Is that what you call this? An inconvenience?"
He was, she told herself entitled to his anger, to his bitterness. She
was obliged to do her job. "Three women are dead. Every possibility has
to be explored."
"And I'm just one of your possibilities?" He reached out, the sudden
violent movement of his hands closing over her shirt, surprising her.
"Is that what it comes down to between us?"
"I'm a cop. I can't afford to overlook anything, to assume anything."
"To trust," he interrupted. "Anything. Or anyone. If it had leaned a
little the other way, would you have locked me up? Would you have put me
in a cage, Eve?"
"Back off." Eyes blazing, Feeney strode down the corridor. "Back fucking
off."
"Leave us alone, Feeney."
"Hell I will." Ignoring Eve, he shoved against Roarke. "Don't you come
down on her, big shot. She went to bat for you. And the way things
stand, it could have cost her the job. Simpson's already prepping her as
sacrificial lamb because she was dumb enough to sleep with you."
"Shut up, Feeney."
"Goddamn it, Dallas."
"I said shut up." Calm again, detached, she looked at Roarke. "The
department appreciates your cooperation," she said to Roarke and, prying
his hand from her shirt, turned and hurried off.
"What the hell did you mean by that?" Roarke demanded.
Feeney only snorted. "I got better things to do than waste my time on
you."
Roarke backed him into a wall. "You're going to be free to book me for
assaulting an officer in about two breaths, Feeney. Tell me what you
meant about Simpson?"
"You want to know, big shot?" Feeney looked around for a place of
comparative privacy, jerked a head toward the door of a men's room.
"Come into my office, and I'll tell you."
-=O=-***-=O=-
She had the cat for company. Eve was already regretting the fact that
she'd have to turn the useless, overweight feline over to Georgie's
family. She should have done so already, but found solace in even a
pitiful furball's worth of companionship.
Nonetheless, she was nothing but irritated by the beep of her intercom.
Human company was not welcomed. Particularly, as she checked her viewing
screen, Roarke.
She was raw enough to take the coward's way. Leaving the summons
unanswered, she walked back to the couch, curled up with the cat. If
she'd had a blanket handy, she'd have pulled it over her head.
The sound of her locks disengaging moments later had her springing to
her feet. "You son of a bitch," she said when Roarke walked in. "You
cross too many lines."
He simply tucked his master code back in his pocket. "Why didn't you
tell me?"
"I don't want to see you." She hated that her voice sounded desperate
rather than angry. "Take a hint."
"I don't like being used to hurt you."
"You do fine on your own."
"You expect me to have no reaction when you accuse me of murder? When
you believe it?"
"I never believed it." It came out in a hiss, a passionate whisper. "I
never believed it," she repeated. "But I put my personal feelings aside
and did my job. Now get out."
She headed for the door. When he grabbed her, she swung out, fast and
hard. He didn't even attempt to block the blow. Calmly he wiped the
blood from his mouth with the back of his hand while she stood rigid,
her breathing fast and audible.
"Go ahead," he invited. "Take another shot. You needn't worry. I don't
hit women -- or murder them."
"Just leave me alone." She turned away, gripped the back of the sofa
where the cat sat eyeing her coolly. The emotions were welling up,
threatening to fill her chest to bursting. "You're not going to make me
feel guilty for doing what I had to do."
"You sliced me in two, Eve." It infuriated him anew to admit it, to know
she could so easily devastate him. "Couldn't you have told me you
believe in me?"
"No." She squeezed her eyes tight. "God, don't you realize it would have
been worse if I had? If Whitney couldn't believe I'd be objective, if
Simpson even got a whiff that I showed you any degree of preferential
treatment, it would have been worse. I couldn't have moved on the psych
profile so fast. Couldn't have put Feeney on a priority basis to check
the trail of the weapon to eliminate probable cause."
"I hadn't thought of that," he said quietly. "I hadn't thought." When he
laid a hand on her shoulder, she shrugged it off, turned on him with
blazing eyes.
"Goddamn it, I told you to bring an attorney. I told you. If Feeney
hadn't hit the right buttons, they could have held you. You're only out
because he did, and the profile didn't fit."
He touched her again; she jerked back again. "It appears I didn't need
an attorney. All I needed was you."
"It doesn't matter." She battled control back into place. "It's done.
The fact that you have an unassailable alibi for the time of the murder,
and that the gun was an obvious plant shifts the focus away from you."
She felt sick, unbearably tired. "It may not eliminate you completely,
but Dr. Mira's profiles are gold. Nobody overturns her diagnostics.
She's eliminated you, and that carries a lot of weight with the
department and the PA."
"I wasn't worried about the department or the PA."
"You should have been."
"It seems you've worried enough for me. I'm very sorry."
"Forget it."
"I've seen shadows under your eyes too often since I've known you." He
traced a thumb along them. "I don't like being responsible for the ones
I see now."
"I'm responsible for myself."
"And I had nothing to do with putting your job in jeopardy?"
Damn Feeney, she thought viciously. "I make my own decisions. I pay my
own consequences."
Not this time, he thought. Not alone. "The night after we'd been
together, I called. I could see you were worried, but you brushed it
off. Feeney told me exactly why you were worried that night. Your angry
friend wanted to pay me back for making you unhappy. He did."
"Feeney had no right -- "
"Perhaps not. He wouldn't have had to if you'd confided in me." He took
both her arms to stop her quick movement. "Don't turn away from me," he
warned, his voice low. "You're good at shutting people out, Eve. But it
won't work with me."
"What did you expect, that I'd come crying to you? 'Roarke, you seduced
me, and now I'm in trouble. Help.' The hell with that, you didn't
seduce me. I went to bed with you because I wanted to. Wanted to enough
that I didn't think about ethics. I got slammed for it, and I'm handling
it. I don't need help."
"Don't want it, certainly."
"Don't need it." She wouldn't humiliate herself by struggling away now,
but stood passive. "The commander's satisfied that you're not involved
in the murders. You're clear, so other than what the department will
officially term an error in judgment on my part, so am I. If I'd been
wrong about you, it'd be different."
"If you'd been wrong about me, it would have cost you your badge."
"Yes. I'd have lost my badge. I'd have lost everything. I'd have
deserved to. But it didn't happen, so it's over. Move on."
"Do you really think I'm going to walk away?"
It weakened her, that soft, gentle lilt that came into his voice. "I
can't afford you, Roarke. I can't afford to get involved."
He stepped forward, laid his hands on the back of the couch, caged her
in. "I can't afford you, either. It doesn't seem to matter."
"Look -- "
"I'm sorry I hurt you," he murmured. "Very sorry that I didn't trust
you, then accused you of not trusting me."
"I didn't expect you to think any differently. To act any differently."
That stung more than the blow to the face. "No. I'm sorry for that, too.
You risked a great deal for me. Why?"
There were no easy answers. "I believed you."
He pressed his lips to her brow. "Thank you."
"It was a judgment call," she began, letting out a shaky breath when he touched his mouth to her cheek.
"I'm going to stay with you tonight." Then to her temple. "I'm going to see that you sleep."
"Sex as a sedative?"
He frowned, but brushed his lips lightly over hers. "If you like." He
lifted her off her feet, flustering her. "Let's see if we can find the
right dosage."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Later, with the lights still on low, he watched her. She slept facedown,
a limp sprawl of exhaustion. To please himself, he stroked a hand down
her back -- smooth skin, slim bones, lean muscle. She didn't stir.
Experimentally, he let his fingers comb through her hair. Thick as mink
pelt, shades of aged brandy and old gold, poorly cut. It made him smile
as he traced those fingers over her lips. Full, firm, fiercely
responsive.
However surprised he was that he'd been able to take her beyond what
she'd experienced before, he was overwhelmed by the knowledge that had,
unknowingly, taken him.
How much farther, he wondered, would they go?
He knew it had ripped him when he'd believed she'd thought him guilty.
The sense of betrayal, disillusionment was huge, weakening, and
something he hadn't felt in too many years to count.
She'd taken him back to a point of vulnerability he'd escaped from. She
could hurt him. They could hurt each other. That was something he would
have to consider carefully.
But at the moment, the pressing question was who wanted to hurt them
both. And why.
He was still gnawing at the problem when he took her hand, linked
fingers, and let himself slide into sleep with her.
*** CHAPTER FIFTEEN ***
He was gone when she woke. It was better that way. Mornings after
carried a casual intimacy that made her nervous. She was already more
involved with him than she had ever been with anyone. That click between
them had the potential, she knew, to reverberate through the rest of her
life.
She took a quick shower, bundled into a robe, then headed into the
kitchen. There was Roarke, in trousers and a shirt he'd yet to button,
scanning the morning paper on her monitor.
Looking, she realized with a quick tug-of-war of delight and dismay,
very much at home.
"What are you doing?"
"Hmmm?" He glanced up, reached behind him to open the AutoChef. "Making
you coffee."
"Making me coffee?"
"I heard you moving around." He took the cups out, carried them to where
she was still hovering in the doorway. "You don't do that often enough."
"Move around?"
"No." He chuckled and touched his lips to hers. "Smile at me. Just smile
at me."
Was she smiling? She hadn't realized. "I thought you'd left." She walked
around the small table, glanced at the monitor. The stock reports.
Naturally. "You must have gotten up early."
"I had some calls to make." He watched her, enjoying the way she raked
her fingers through her damp hair. A nervous habit he was certain she
was unaware of. He picked up the portalink he'd left on the table,
slipped it back into his pocket. "I had a conference call scheduled with
the station -- five A. M. our time."
"Oh." She sipped her coffee, wondering how she had ever lived without
the zip of the real thing in the morning. "I know those meetings were
important. I'm sorry."
"We'd managed to hammer down most of the details. I can handle the rest
from here."
"You're not going back?"
"No."
She turned to the AutoChef, fiddled with her rather limited menu. "I'm
out of most everything. Want a bagel or something?"
"Eve." Roarke set his coffee down, laid his hands on her shoulders. "Why
don't you want me to know you're pleased I'm staying?"
"Your alibi holds. It's none of my business if you -- " She broke off
when he turned her to face him. He was angry. She could see it in his
eyes and prepared for the argument to come. She hadn't prepared for the
kiss, the way his mouth closed firmly over hers, the way her heart
rolled over slow and dreamy in her chest.
So she let herself be held, let her head nestle in the curve of his
shoulder. "I don't know how to handle this," she murmured. "I don't have
any precedent here. I need rules, Roarke. Solid rules."
"I'm not a case you need to solve."
"I don't know what you are. But I know this is going too fast. It
shouldn't have even started. I shouldn't have been able to get started
with you."
He drew her back so that he could study her face. "Why?"
"It's complicated. I have to get dressed. I have to get to work."
"Give me something." His fingers tightened on her shoulders. "I don't
know what you are, either."
"I'm a cop," she blurted out. "That's all I am. I'm thirty years old and
I've only been close to two people in my entire life. And even with
them, it's easy to hold back."
"Hold back what?"
"Letting it matter too much. If it matters too much, it can grind you
down until you're nothing. I've been nothing. I can't be nothing ever
again."
"Who hurt you?"
"I don't know." But she did. She did. "I don't remember, and I don't
want to remember. I've been a victim, and once you have, you need to do
whatever it takes not to be one again. That's all I was before I got
into the academy. A victim, with other people pushing the buttons,
making the decisions, pushing me one way, pulling me another."
"Is that what you think I'm doing?"
"That's what's happening."
There were questions he needed to ask. Questions, he could see by her
face, that needed to wait. Perhaps it was time he took a risk. He dipped
a hand into his pocket, drew out what he carried there.
Baffled, Eve stared down at the simple gray button in his palm. "That's
off my suit."
"Yes. Not a particularly flattering suit -- you need stronger colors. I
found it in my limo. I meant to give it back to you."
"Oh." But when she reached out, he closed his fingers over the button.
"A very smooth lie." Amused, he laughed at himself. "I had no intention
of giving it back to you."
"You got a button fetish, Roarke?"
"I've been carrying this around like a schoolboy carries a lock of his
sweetheart's hair."
Her eyes came back to his, and something sweet moved through her.
Sweeter yet as she could see he was embarrassed. "That's weird."
"I thought so, myself." But he slipped the button back in his pocket.
"Do you know what else I think, Eve?"
"I don't have a clue."
"I think I'm in love with you."
She felt the color drain out of her cheeks, felt her muscles go lax,
even as her heart shot like a missile to her throat. "That's..."
"Yes, difficult to come up with the proper word, isn't it?" He slid his
hands down her back, up again, but brought her no closer. "I've been
giving it a lot of thought and haven't hit on one myself. But I should
circle back to my point."
She moistened her lips. "There's a point?"
"A very interesting and important point. I'm every bit as much in your
hands as you are in mine. Every bit as uncomfortable, though perhaps not
as resistant, to finding myself in that position. I'm not going to let
you walk away until we've figured out what to do about it."
"It, ah, complicates things."
"Outrageously," he agreed.
"Roarke, we don't even know each other. Outside of the bedroom."
"Yes, we do. Two lost souls. We've both turned away from something and
made ourselves something else. It's hardly a wonder that fate decided to
throw a curve into what had been, for both of us, a straight path. We
have to decide how far we want to follow the curve."
"I have to concentrate on the investigation. It has to be my priority."
"I understand. But you're entitled to a personal life."
"My personal life, this part of it, grew out of the investigation. And
the killer's making it more personal. Planting that gun so that
suspicion would swing toward you was a direct response to my involvement
with you. He's focused on me."
Roarke's hand jerked up to the lapels of her robe. "What do you mean?"
Rules, she reminded herself. There were rules. And she was about to
break them. "I'll tell you what I can while I'm getting dressed."
Eve went to the bedroom with the cat sliding and weaving in front of
her. "Do you remember that night you were here when I got home? The
package that you'd found on the floor?"
"Yes, it upset you."
With a half laugh she peeled out of her robe. "I've got a rep for having
the best poker face in the station."
"I made my first million gambling."
"Really?" She tugged a sweater over her head, reminded herself not to be
distracted. "It was a recording of Lola Stair's murder. He sent me
Sharon DeBlass's as well."
A cold lance of fear stabbed. "He was in your apartment."
She was busy discovering she had no clean underwear and didn't notice
the iced edge of his voice. "Maybe, maybe not. I think not. No signs of
forced entry. He could have shoved it under the door. That's what he did
the first time. He mailed Georgie's disc. We had the building under
surveillance."
Resigned, she pulled slacks over bare skin. "He either knew it or
smelled it. But he saw I got the discs, all three of them. He knew I was
primary almost before I did."
She searched for socks, got lucky, and found a pair that matched. "He
called me, transmitted the video of Georgie Castle's murder scene
minutes after he'd whacked her." She sat on the edge of the bed, pulled
on the socks. "He planted a weapon, made sure it was traceable. To you.
Not to knock how inconvenient a murder charge would have made your life,
Roarke, if I hadn't had the commander behind me on this, I'd have been
off the case, and out of the department in a blink. He knows what goes
on inside Cop Central. He knows what's going on in my life."
"Fortunately, he didn't know that I wasn't even on the planet."
"That was a break for both of us." She located her boots, tugged them
on. "But it's not going to stop him." She rose, picked up her holster.
"He's still going to try to get to me, and you're his best bet."
Roarke watched her automatically check her laser before strapping it on.
"Why you?"
"He doesn't have a high opinion of women. I'd have to say it burns his
ass to have a female heading the investigation. It lowers his status."
She shrugged, raked her fingers through her hair to whip it into place.
"At least that's the shrink's opinion."
Philosophically, she pried the cat free when he started to climb up her
leg, gave him a light toss to the bed where he turned his butt in her
direction and began to wash.
"And is it the shrink's opinion that he could try to eliminate you by
more direct means?"
"I don't fit the pattern."
Fighting back the slippery edge of fear, Roarke fisted his hands in his
pockets. "And if he breaks the pattern?"
"I can handle myself."
"It's worth risking your life for three women who are already dead?"
"Yes." She heard the fury pulsing in his voice and faced it. "It's worth
risking my life to find justice for three women who are already dead,
and to try to prevent three more from dying. He's only half through.
He's left a note under each body. He's wanted us to know, right from the
start that he had a plan. And he's daring us to stop him. One of six,
two of six, three of six. I'll do whatever it takes to keep him from
having the fourth."
"Full-out guts. That's what I first admired about you. Now it terrifies
me."
For the first time she moved to him, laid a hand on his cheek. Almost as
soon as she had, she dropped her hand and stepped back again,
embarrassed. "I've been a cop for ten years, Roarke, never had more than
some bumps and bruises. Don't worry about it."
"I think you're going to have to get used to having someone worry about
you, Eve."
That hadn't been the plan. She walked out of the bedroom to get her
jacket and bag. "I'm telling you this so that you'll understand what I'm
up against. Why I can't split my energies and start analyzing what's
between us."
"There'll always be cases."
"I hope to God there won't always be cases like this one. This isn't
murder for gain, or out of passion. It isn't desperate or frenzied. It's
cold and calculated. It's..."
"Evil?"
"Yes." It relieved her that he'd said it first. It didn't sound so
foolish. "Whatever we've done in genetic engineering, in vitro, with
social programs, we still can't control basic human failings: violence,
lust, envy."
"The seven deadly sins."
She thought of the old woman and her poisoned pie. "Yeah. I've got to
go."
"Will you come to me when you're off duty tonight?"
"I don't know when I'll log out. It could be -- "
"Will you come?"
"Yeah."
Then he smiled, and she knew he was waiting for her to make the move.
She was sure he knew just how hard it was for her to cross to him, to
bring her lips up, to press them, however casually, to his.
"See you."
"Eve. You should have gloves."
She decoded the door, tossed a quick smile over her shoulder. "I know --
but I just keep losing them."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Her up mood lasted until she walked into her office and found DeBlass
and his aide waiting for her.
Deliberately, DeBlass stared at his gold watch. "More banker's hours
than police hours, Lieutenant Dallas."
She knew damn well it was only minutes past eight, but shrugged out of
her jacket. "Yeah, it's a pretty lush life around here. Is there
something I can do for you, senator?"
"I'm aware there's been yet another murder. I'm obviously dissatisfied
with your progress. However, I'm here for damage control. I do not want
my granddaughter's name linked with the two other victims."
"You want Simpson for that, or his press secretary."
"Don't smirk at me, young woman." DeBlass leaned forward. "My
granddaughter is dead. Nothing can change that. But I will not have the
DeBlass name sullied, muddied by the death of two common whores."
"You seem to have a low opinion of women, senator." She was careful not
to smirk this time, but watched him, and considered.
"On the contrary; I revere them. Which is why those who sell themselves,
those who disregard morality and common decency, revolt me."
"Including your granddaughter?"
He lurched out of his chair, his face purpling, eyes bulging. Eve was
quite certain he would have struck her if Rockman hadn't stepped between
them.
"Senator, the lieutenant is only baiting you. Don't give her the
satisfaction."
"You will not besmirch my family." DeBlass was breathing fast, and Eve
wondered if he had any history of heart trouble. "My granddaughter paid
dearly for her sins, and I will not see the rest of my loved ones
dragged down into public ridicule. And I will not tolerate your vile
insinuations."
"Just trying to get my facts straight." It was fascinating watching him
battle for composure. He was having a rough time of it, she noted, hands
shaking, chest heaving. "I'm trying to find the man who killed Sharon,
senator. I assume that's also high on your agenda."
"Finding him won't get her back." He sat again, obviously exhausted by
the outburst. "What's important now is to protect what's left. To do
that, Sharon must be segregated from the other women."
She didn't like his opinion, but neither did she care for his color. It
was still alarmingly high. "Can I get you some water, Senator DeBlass?"
He nodded, waved at her. Eve slipped into the corridor and dispensed a
cup of bottled water. When she came back, his breathing was more
regular, his hands a bit steadier.
"The senator has been overtaxing himself," Rockman put in. "His Morals
Bill goes before the House tomorrow. The pressure of this family tragedy
is a great weight."
"I appreciate that. I'm doing everything I can to close the case." She
tilted her head. "Political pressure is also a great weight on an
investigation. I don't care to be monitored on my personal time."
Rockman gave her a mild smile. "I'm sorry. Could you qualify that?"
"I was monitored, and my personal relationship with a civilian reported
to Chief Simpson. It's no secret that Simpson and the senator are
tight."
"The senator and Chief Simpson have a personal and a political
allegiance," Rockman agreed. "However, it would hardly be ethical, or in
the senator's best interest, to monitor a member of the police force. I
assure you, lieutenant, Senator DeBlass has been much too involved with
his own grief and his responsibilities to the country to worry about
your... personal relationships. It has come to our attention, however,
through Chief Simpson, that you've had a number of liaisons with
Roarke."
"An amoral opportunist." The senator set his cup aside with a snap. "A
man who would stop at nothing to add to his own power."
"A man," Eve added, "who has been cleared of any connection with this
investigation."
"Money buys immunity," DeBlass said in disgust.
"Not in this office. I'm sure you'll request the report from the
commander. In the meantime, whether or not it assuages your grief, I
intend to find the man who killed your granddaughter."
"I suppose I should commend your dedication." DeBlass rose. "See that
your dedication doesn't jeopardize my family's reputation."
"What changed your mind, senator?" Eve wondered. "The first time we
spoke, you threatened to have my job if I didn't bring Sharon's murderer
to justice, and quickly."
"She's buried," was all he said, and strode out.
"Lieutenant." Rockman kept his voice low. "I will repeat that the
pressure on Senator DeBlass is enormous, enough to crush a lesser man."
He let out a slow breath. "The fact is, it's destroyed his wife. She's
had a breakdown."
"I'm sorry."
"The doctors don't know if she'll recover. This additional tragedy has
his son crazed with grief; his daughter has closed herself off from her
family and gone into retreat. The senator's only hope of restoring his
family is to let Sharon's death, the horror of it, pass."
"Then it might be wise for the senator to take a step back and leave due
process to the department."
"Lieutenant -- Eve," he said with that rare and quick flash of charm. "I
wish I could convince him of that. But I believe that would be as
fruitless an endeavor as convincing you to let Sharon rest in peace."
"You'd be right."
"Well then." He laid a hand on her arm briefly. "We must all do what we
can to set things right. It was good to see you again."
Eve closed the door behind him and considered. DeBlass certainly had the
kind of hair-trigger temper that could lead to violence. She was almost
sorry he didn't also have the control, the calculation, to have
meticulously planned three murders.
In any case, she'd have a hard time connecting a rabidly right-wing
senator to a couple of New York prostitutes.
Maybe he was protecting his family, she mused. Or maybe he was
protecting Simpson, a political ally.
That was crap, Eve decided. He might work on Simpson's behalf if the
chief was involved in the Starr and Castle homicides. But a man didn't
protect the killer of his grandchild.
Too bad she wasn't looking for two men, Eve mused. Regardless, she was
going to do some pecking away at Simpson's underpinnings.
Objectively, she warned herself. And it wouldn't do to forget that there
was a strong possibility that DeBlass didn't know one of his favorite
political cronies had been blackmailed by his only granddaughter.
She'd have to find out.
But for now, she had another hunch to follow. She located Charles
Monroe's number and put through a call.
His voice was smeared with sleep, his eyes heavy. "You spend all your
time in bed, Charles?"
"All I can, Lieutenant Sugar." He rubbed a hand over his face and
grinned at her. "That's how I think of you."
"Well, don't. Couple of questions."
"Ah, can't you come on over and ask in person? I'm warm and naked and
all alone."
"Pal, don't you know there's a law against soliciting a police officer?"
"I'm talking freebie here. I told you -- we'd keep it strictly
personal."
"We're keeping it strictly impersonal. You had an associate. Georgie
Castle. Did you know her?"
The seductive smile faded from his face. "Yeah, actually, I did. Not
well, but I met her at a party about a year ago. She was new in the
business. Fun, attractive. Game, you know. We hit it off."
"In what way?"
"In a friendly way. We had a drink now and again. Once when Sharon had
an overbooking, I had her send a couple of clients Georgie's way."
"They knew each other." Eva pounced on it. "Sharon and Georgie?"
"I don't think so. As far as I remember, Sharon contacted Georgie, asked
her if she was interested in a couple of fresh tricks. Georgie gave it
the green light, and that was that. Oh, yeah, Sharon said something
about Georgie sending her a dozen roses. Real ones, like a thank-you
gift. Sharon got a real kick out of the old-fashioned etiquette."
"Just an old-fashioned girl," Eve said under her breath.
"When I heard Georgie was dead, it hit hard. I gotta tell you. With
Sharon it was a jolt, but not that much of a surprise. She lived on the
edge. But Georgie, she was centered, you know?"
"I may need to follow up on this, Charles. Stay available."
"For you -- "
"Knock it off," she ordered, before he could get cute. "What do you know
about Sharon's diaries?"
"She never let me read one," he said easily. "I used to tease her about
them. Seems to me she said she'd kept them since she was a kid. You got
one? Hey, am I in it?"
"Where'd she keep them?"
"In her apartment, I guess. Where else?"
That was the question, Eve mused. "If you think of anything else about
Georgie or about the diaries, contact me."
"Day or night, Lieutenant Sugar. Count on me."
"Right." But she was laughing when she broke transmission.
-=O=-***-=O=-
The sun was just setting when she arrived at Roarke's. She didn't
consider herself off duty. The favor she was going to ask had been
simmering in her mind all day. She'd decided on it, rejected it, and
generally vacillated until she'd disgusted herself.
In the end, she'd left the station for the first time in months right on
the dot of the end of her shift. With what limited progress she'd made,
she'd hardly needed to be there at all.
Feeney had hit nothing but a dead end in his search for a second lock
box. He had, with obvious reluctance, given her the list of cops she'd
requested. Eve intended to run a make on each of them -- on her own time
and in her own way.
With some regret, she realized she was going to use Roarke.
Summerset opened the door with his usual disdain. "You're earlier than
expected, lieutenant."
"If he isn't in, I can wait."
"He's in the library."
"Which is where, exactly?"
Summerset permitted himself the tiniest huff. If Roarke hadn't ordered
him to show the woman in immediately he would have shuffled her off to
some small, poorly lit room. "This way, please."
"What exactly is it about me that rubs you wrong, Summerset?"
With his back poker straight, he led her up a flight and down the wide
corridor. "I have no idea what you mean, lieutenant. The library," he
announced in reverent terms, and opened the door for her.
She'd never in her life seen so many books. She never would have
believed so many existed outside of museums. The walls were lined with
them so that the two-level room positively reeked with books.
On the lower level, on what was surely a leather sofa, Roarke lounged, a
book in his hand, the cat on his lap.
"Eve. You're early." He set the book aside, picked up the cat as he
rose.
"Jesus, Roarke, where did you get all these?"
"The books?" He let his gaze roam the room. Firelight danced and shifted
over colorful spines. "Another of my interests. Don't you like to read?"
"Sure, now and again. But discs are so much more convenient."
"And so much less aesthetic." He stroked the cat's neck and sent him
into ecstasy. "You're welcome to borrow any you like."
"I don't think so."
"How about a drink?"
"I could handle that."
His 'link beeped. "This is the call I've been waiting for. Why don't you
get us both a glass of wine I've had breathing over on the table?"
"Sure." She took the cat from him and walked over to oblige. Because she
wanted to eavesdrop, she forced herself to stay the length of the room
away from where he sat murmuring.
It gave her a chance to browse the books, to puzzle over the titles.
Some she had heard of. Even with a state education, she'd been required
to read Steinbeck and Chaucer, Shakespeare and Dickens. The curriculum
had taken her through King and Grisham, Morrison and Grafton.
But there were dozens, perhaps hundreds of names here she'd never heard
of. She wondered if anyone could handle so many books, much less read
them.
"I'm sorry," he said when the call was complete. "That couldn't wait."
"No problem."
He took the wine she'd poured him. "The cat's becoming quite attached to
you."
"I don't think he has any particular loyalties." But Eve had to admit,
she enjoyed the way he curled under her stroking hand. "I don't know
what I'm going to do about him. I called Georgie's daughter and she said
she just couldn't face taking him. Pressing the matter only made her
cry."
"You could keep him."
"I don't know. You have to take care of pets."
"Cats are remarkably self-sufficient." He sat on the sofa and waited for
her to join him. "Want to tell me about your day?"
"Not very productive. Yours?"
"Very productive."
"A lot of books," Eve said lamely, knowing she was stalling.
"I have an affection for them. I could barely read my name when I was
six. Then I came across a battered copy of Yeats. An Irish writer of
some note," he said when Eve looked blank. "I badly wanted to figure it
out, so I taught myself."
"Didn't you go to school?"
"Not if I could help it. You've got trouble in your eyes, Eve," he
murmured.
She blew out a breath. What was the use of stalling when he could see
right through her? "I've got a problem. I want to do a run on Simpson.
Obviously, I can't go through channels or use either my home or office
units. The minute I tried to dig on the chief of police, I'd be
flagged."
"And you're wondering if I have a secured, unregistered system. Of
course I do."
"Of course," she muttered. "A nonregistered system is in violation of
Code four fifty-three-B, section thirty-five."
"I can't tell you how aroused it makes me when you quote codes,
lieutenant."
"It's not funny. And what I'm going to ask you to do is illegal. It's a
serious offense to electronically breach the privacy of a state
official."
"You could arrest both of us afterward."
"This is serious, Roarke. I go by the book, and now I'm asking you to
help me break the law."
He rose, drew her to her feet. "Darling Eve, you have no idea how many
I've already broken." He fetched the wine bottle, letting it dangle from
two fingers of the hand he slipped around her waist. "I ran an
underground dice game when I was ten," he began, leading her from the
room. "A legacy from my dear old father who'd earned himself a knife
through the gullet in a Dublin alley."
"I'm sorry."
"We weren't close. He was a bastard and no one loved him, least of all
me. Summerset, we'll have dinner at seven-thirty," Roarke added as he
turned toward the stairs. "But he taught me, by means of a fist to the
face, to read the dice, the cards, the odds. He was a thief, not a good
one, as his end proved. I was better. I stole, I cheated, I spent some
time learning the smuggling trade. So you see, you're hardly corrupting
me with such a nominal request."
She didn't look at him as he decoded a locked door on the second floor.
"Do you..."
"Do I steal, cheat, and smuggle now?" He turned and touched a hand to
her face. "Oh, you'd hate that, wouldn't you? I almost wish I could say
yes, then give it all up for you. I learned a long time ago that there
are gambles more exciting for their legitimacy. And winning is so much
more satisfying when you've dealt from the top of the deck."
He pressed a kiss to her brow, then stepped into the room. "But, we have
to keep our hand in."
*** CHAPTER SIXTEEN ***
Compared to the rest of the house she'd seen, this room was spartan,
designed rigidly for work. No fancy statues, dripping chandeliers. The
wide, U-shaped console, the base for communication, research, and
information retrieving devices, was unrelieved black, studded with
controls, sliced with slots and screens.
Eve had heard that IRCCA had the swankiest base system in the country.
She suspected Roarke's matched it.
Eve was no compu-jock, but she knew at a glance that the equipment here
was vastly superior to any the New York Police and Security Department
used -- or could afford -- even in the lofty Electronic Detection
Division.
The long wall facing the console was taken up by six large monitor
screens. A second, auxiliary station held a sleek little tele-link, a
second laser fax, a hologram send-receive unit, and several other pieces
of hardware she didn't recognize.
The trio of comp stations boasted personal monitors with attached
'links.
The floor was glazed tile, the diamond patterns in muted colors that
bled together like liquid. The single window looked over the city and
pulsed with the last lights of the setting sun.
It seemed even here, Roarke demanded ambiance.
"Quite a setup," Eve commented.
"Not quite as comfortable as my office, but it has the basics." He moved
behind the main console, placed his palm on the identiscreen. "Roarke.
Open operations."
After a discreet hum, the lights on the console glowed on. "New palm and
voice print clearance," he continued and gestured to Eve. "Cleared for
yellow status."
At his nod, Eve pressed her hand to the screen, felt the faint warmth of
the reading. "Dallas."
"There you are." Roarke took his seat. "The system will accept your
voice and hand commands."
"What's yellow status?"
He smiled. "Enough to give you everything you need to know -- not quite
enough to override my commands."
"Hmmm." She scanned the controls, the patiently blinking lights, the
myriad screens and gauges. She wished for Feeney and his computer-minded
brain. "Search on Edward T. Simpson, Chief of Police and Security, New
York City. All financial data."
"Going right to the heart," Roarke murmured.
"I don't have time to waste. This can't be traced?"
"Not only can't it be traced, but there'll be no record of the search."
"Simpson, Edward T.," the computer announced in a warm, female tone.
"Financial records. Searching."
At Eve's lifted brow, Roarke grinned. "I prefer to work with melodious
voices."
"I was going to ask," she returned, "how you can access data without
alerting the Compuguard."
"No system's foolproof, or completely breach resistant -- even the
ubiquitous Compuguard. The system is an excellent deterrent to your
average hacker or electronic thief. But with the right equipment, it can
be compromised. I have the right equipment. Here comes the data. On
viewing screen one," he ordered.
Eve glanced up and saw Simpson's credit report flash onto the large
monitor. It was the standard business: vehicle loans, mortgages, credit
card balances. All the automatic E-transactions.
"That's a hefty AmEx bill," she mused. "And I don't think it's common
knowledge he owns a place on Long Island."
"Hardly murderous motives. He maintains a Class A rating, which means he
pays what he owes. Ah, here's a bank account. Screen two."
Eve studied the numbers, dissatisfied. "Nothing out of line, pretty
average deposits and withdrawals -- mostly automatic bill paying
transfers that jibe with the credit report. What's Jeremy's?"
"Men's clothier," Roarke told her with the smallest sneer of disdain.
"Somewhat second rate."
She wrinkled her nose. "Hell of a lot to spend on clothes."
"Darling, I'm going to have to corrupt you. It's only too much if
they're inferior clothes."
She sniffed, stuck her thumbs in the front pockets of her baggy brown
trousers.
"Here's his brokerage account. Screen three. Spineless," Roarke added
after a quick scan.
"What do you mean?"
"His investments, such as they are. All no risk. Government issue, a few
mutual funds, a smattering of blue chip. Everything on-planet."
"What's wrong with that?"
"Nothing if you're content to let your money gather dust." He slanted
her a look. "Do you invest, lieutenant?"
"Yeah, right." She was still trying to make sense of the abbreviations
and percentage points. "I watch the stock reports twice a day."
"Not a standard credit account." He nearly shuddered.
"So what?"
"Give me what you have, I'll double it within six months."
She only frowned, struggling to read the brokerage report. "I'm not here
to get rich."
"Darling," he corrected in that flowing Irish lilt. "We all are."
"How about contributions, political, charities, that kind of thing?"
"Access tax saving outlay," Roarke ordered. "Viewing screen two."
She waited, impatiently tapping a hand on her thigh. Data scrolled on.
"He puts his money where his heart is," she muttered, scanning his
payments to the Conservative Party, DeBlass's campaign fund.
"Not particularly generous otherwise. Hmm." Roarke's brow lifted.
"Interesting, a very hefty gift to Moral Values."
"That's an extremist group, isn't it?"
"I'd call it that, the faithful prefer to think of it as an organization
dedicated to saving all of us sinners from ourselves. DeBlass is a
strong proponent."
But she was flipping through her own mental files. "They're suspected of
sabotaging the main data banks at several large contraception control
clinics."
Roarke clucked his tongue. "All those women deciding for themselves if
and when they want to conceive, how many children they want. What's the
world coming to? Obviously, someone has to bring them back to their
senses."
"Right." Dissatisfied, Eve stuck her hands in her pockets. "It's a
dangerous connection for someone like Simpson. He likes to play middle
of the road. He ran on a Moderate ticket."
"Cloaking his Conservative ties and leanings. In the last few years he's
been cautiously removing the layers. He wants to be governor, perhaps
believes DeBlass can put him there. Politics is a bartering game."
"Politics. Sharon DeBlass's blackmail disc was heavy on politicians.
Sex, murder, politics," Eve murmured. "The more things change..."
"Yes, the more they remain the same. Couples still indulge in courting
rituals, humans still kill humans, and politicians still kiss babies and
lie."
Something wasn't quite right, and she wished for Feeney again.
Twentieth-century murders, she thought, twentieth-century motives. There
was one other thing that hadn't changed over the last millennium. Taxes.
"Can we get his IRS data? The past three years?"
"That's a little trickier." His mouth had already quirked up at the
challenge.
"It's also a federal offense. Listen, Roarke -- "
"Just hold on a minute." He pressed a button and a manual keyboard
slipped out of the console. With some surprise, Eve watched his fingers
fly over the keys. "Where'd you learn to do that?" Even with required
department training, she was barely competent on manual.
"Here and there," he said absently, "in my misspent youth. I have to get
around the security. It's going to take some time. Why don't you pour us
some more wine?"
"Roarke, I shouldn't have asked." An attack of conscience had her
walking to him. "I can't let this come back on you -- "
"Ssh." His brows drew together in concentration as he maneuvered his way
through the security labyrinth.
"But -- "
He head snapped up, impatience vivid in his eyes. "We've already opened
the door, Eve. Now we go through, or we turn away from it."
Eve thought of three women, dead because she hadn't been able to stop
it. Hadn't known enough to stop it. With a nod, she turned away again.
The clatter of the keyboard resumed.
She poured the wine, then moved to stand in front of the screens. Tidy
as they came, she mused. Top credit rating, prompt payment of debts,
conservative and, she assumed, relatively small investments. Surely that
was more money than average spent on clothes, wine shops, and jewelry.
But it wasn't a crime to have expensive taste. Not when you paid for it.
Even the second home wasn't a criminal offense.
Some of the contributions were dicey for a registered Moderate, but
still, not criminal.
She heard Roarke curse softly and looked back. But he was hunkered over
the keyboard. She might not have been there. Odd, she wouldn't have
guessed he had the technical skills to access manually. According to
Feeney, it was almost a lost art except in tech-clerks and hackers.
Yet here he was, the rich, the privileged, the elegant, clattering over
a problem usually delegated to a low-paid, overworked office drone.
For a moment, she let herself forget about the business at hand and
smiled at him.
"You know, Roarke, you're kind of cute."
She realized it was the first time she'd really surprised him. His head
came up, and his eyes were startled -- for perhaps two heartbeats. Then
that sly smile came into them. The one that made her own pulse jitter.
"You're going to have to do better than that, lieutenant. I've got you
in."
"No shit?" Excitement flooded through her as she whirled back to the
screens. "Put it up."
"Screens four, five, six."
"There's his bottom line." She frowned over gross income. "It's about
right, wouldn't you say -- salarywise."
"A bit of interest and dividends from investments." Roarke scrolled
pages. "A few honorariums for personal appearances and speeches. He
lives close, but just within his means, according to all of the data
shown."
"Hell." She tossed back wine. "What other data is there?"
"For a sharp woman, that's an incredibly naive question. Underground
accounts," he explained. "Two sets of books is a tried and true and very
traditional method of hiding illicit income."
"If you had illicit income, why would you be stupid enough to document
it?"
"A question for the ages. But people do. Oh yes, they do. Yes," he said,
answering her unspoken question as to his own bookkeeping methods. "Of
course I do."
She shot him a hard look. "I don't want to know about it."
He only moved his shoulders. "The point being, because I do, I know how
it's done. Everything's above board here, wouldn't you say?" With a few
commands he had the IRS reports merged on one screen. "Now let's go down
a level. Computer, Simpson, Edward T., foreign accounts."
"No known data."
"There's always more data," Roarke murmured, undeterred. He went back to
the keyboard, and something began to hum.
"What's that noise?"
"It's just telling me I'm hitting a wall." Like a laborer, he flicked
open the buttons at his cuffs, rolled up his sleeves. The gesture made
Eve smile. "And if there's a wall, there's something behind it."
He continued to work, one handed, and sipped his wine. When he repeated
his command, the response had shifted.
"Data protected."
"Ah, now we've got it."
"How can you -- "
"Ssh," he ordered again and had Eve subsiding into impatient silence.
"Computer, run numerical and alphabetical combinations for passkey."
Pleased with the progress, he pushed back. "This will take a little
time. Why don't you come here?"
"Can you show me how you -- " She broke off, shocked, when Roarke pulled
her into his lap. "Hey, this is important."
"So's this." He took her mouth, sliding his hand up her hip to just
under the curve of her breast. "It could take an hour, maybe more, to
find the key." Those quick, clever hands were already moving under her
sweater. "You don't like to waste time, as I recall."
"No, I don't." It was the first time in her life she'd ever sat on
anyone's lap, and the sensation wasn't at all unpleasant. She was
sinking, but the next mechanical hum had her pulling back. Speechless,
she stared at the bed gliding out of a panel in the side wall. "The man
who has everything," she managed.
"I will have." He hooked an arm under her legs, lifted her. "Very
shortly."
"Roarke." She had to admit, maybe just this once, she enjoyed being
swept up and carried off.
"Yes."
"I always thought too much emphasis, in society, advertisement,
entertainment, was put on sex."
"Did you?"
"I did." Grinning, she shifted her body, quick and agile, and
overbalanced him. "I've changed my mind," she said as they tumbled onto
the bed.
She'd already learned that lovemaking could be intense, overwhelming,
even dangerously exciting. She hadn't known it could be fun. It was a
revelation to find that she could laugh and wrestle over the bed like a
child.
Quick, nipping kisses, ticklish groping, breathless giggles. She
couldn't remember ever giggling before in her life as she pinned Roarke
to the mattress.
"Gotcha."
"You do indeed." Delighted with her, he let her hold him down, rain
kisses over his face. "Now that you have me, what are you going to do
about it?"
"Use you, of course." She bit down, none too gently, on his bottom lip.
"Enjoy you." With her brows arched, she unfastened his shirt, spread it
open. "You do have a terrific body." To please herself, she ran her
hands over his chest. "I used to think that sort of thing was overrated,
too. After all, anyone with enough money can have one."
"I didn't buy mine," Roarke said, surprised into defending his physique.
"No, you've got a gym in this place, don't you?" Bending, she let her
lips cruise over his shoulder. "You'll have to show it to me sometime. I
think I'd like watching you sweat."
He rolled her over, reversing positions. He felt her freeze, then relax
under his restraining hands. Progress, he thought. The beginnings of
trust. "I'm ready to work out with you, lieutenant, anytime." He tugged
the sweater over her head. "Anytime at all."
He released her hands. It moved him to have her reach up, draw him down
to her to embrace.
So strong, he thought, as the tone of the lovemaking changed from
playful to tender. So soft. So troubled. He took her slowly, and very
gently over the first rise, watched her crest, listened to the low,
humming moan as her system absorbed each velvet shock.
He needed her. It still had the power to shake him to know just how much
he needed her. He knelt, lifting her. Her legs wrapped silkily around
him, her body bowed fluidly back. He could take his mouth over her,
tasting warm flesh while he moved inside her, deep, steady, slow.
Each time she shuddered, a fresh stream of pleasure rippled through him.
Her throat was a slim white feast he couldn't resist. He laved it,
nipped, nuzzled while the pulse just under that sensitized flesh
throbbed like a heart.
And she gasped his name, cupping his head in her hands, pressing him
against her as her body rocked, rocked, rocked.
-=O=-***-=O=-
She discovered lovemaking made her loose, and warm. The slow arousal,
the long, slow finish energized her. She didn't feel awkward climbing
back into her clothes with the scent of him clinging to her. She felt
smug.
"I feel good around you." It surprised her to say it aloud, to give him
-- or anyone -- even so slight an advantage.
He understood that such an admission, for her, was tantamount to a
shouted declaration of devotion from other women.
"I'm glad." He traced a fingertip down her cheek, dipped it into the
faint dent in her chin. "I like the idea of staying around you."
She turned away at that, crossed over to watch the number sequences fly
by on the console screen. "Why did you tell me about being a kid in
Dublin, about your father, the things you did?"
"You won't stay with someone you don't know." He studied her back as he
tucked his shirt into his trousers. "You'd told me a little, so I told
you a little. And I think, eventually, you'll tell me who hurt you when
you were a child."
"I told you I don't remember." She hated even the whisper of panic in
her voice. "I don't need to."
"Don't tighten up." He murmured to her as he walked over to massage her
shoulders. "I won't press you. I know exactly what it is to remake
yourself, Eve. To distance yourself from what was."
What good would it do to tell her that no matter how far, how fast you
ran, the past always stayed two paces behind you?
Instead, he wrapped his arms around her waist, satisfied when she closed
her hands over his. He knew she was studying the screens across the
room. Knew the instant she saw it.
"Son of a bitch, look at the numbers: income, outgo. They're too damn
close. They're practically exact."
"They are exact," Roarke corrected, and released the woman, knowing the
cop would want to stand clear. "To the penny."
"But that's impossible." She struggled to do the math in her head.
"Nobody spends exactly what they make -- not on record. Everyone carries
at least a little cash -- for the occasional vendor on the sidewalk, the
Pepsi machine, the kid who brings the pizza. -Sure, it's mostly plastic
or electronic, but you've got to have some cash floating around."
She paused, turned around. "You'd already seen it. Why the hell didn't
you say something?"
"I thought it would be more interesting to wait until we found his
cache." He glanced down as the-blinking yellow light for searching
switched to green. "And it appears we have. Ah, a traditional man, our
Simpson. As I suspected, he relies on the well respected and discreet
Swiss. Display data on screen five."
"Jesus fucking Christ." Eve gaped at the bank listings.
"That's in Swiss francs," Roarke explained. "Translate to USD, screen
six. About triple his tax portfolio here, wouldn't you say, lieutenant?"
Her blood was up. "I knew he was taking. Goddamn it, I knew it. And look
at the withdrawals, Roarke, in the last year. Twenty-five thousand a
quarter, every quarter. A hundred thousand." She turned back to Roarke,
and her smile was thin. "That matches the figure on Sharon's list.
Simpson -- one hundred K. She was bleeding him."
"You may be able to prove it."
"I damn well will prove it." She began to pace. "She had something on
him. Maybe it was sex, maybe it was graft. Probably a combination of a
lot of ugly little sins. So he paid her to keep her quiet."
Eve thrust her hands into her pockets, pulled them out again. "Maybe she
upped the ante. Maybe he was just sick and tired of shelling out a
hundred a year for insurance. So he offs her. Somebody keeps trying to
scuttle the investigation. Somebody with the power and the information
to complicate things. It points right at him."
"What about the two other victims?"
She was working on it. Goddamn it, she was working on it. "He used one
prostitute. He could have used others. Sharon and the third victim knew
each other -- or of each other. One of them might have known Lola,
mentioned her, even suggested her as a change of pace. Hell, she could
have been a random choice. He got caught up in the thrill of the first
murder. It scared him, but it was also a high for him."
She stopped prowling the room long enough to flick a glance at Roarke.
He'd taken out a cigarette, lighted it, watching her.
"DeBlass is one of his backers," she continued. "And Simpson's come out
strongly in favor of DeBlass's upcoming Morals Bill. They're just
prostitutes, he's thinking. Just legal whores, and one of them was
threatening him. How much more of a danger to him would she have been
once he put in his bid for governor?"
She stopped pacing again, turned back. "And that's just shit."
"I thought it sounded quite reasonable."
"Not when you look at the man." Slowly, she rubbed her fingers between
her brows. "He doesn't have the brains for it. Yeah, I think he could
kill, Christ knows he's into control, but to pull off a series of
murders this slick? He's a desk man -- an administrator, an image, not a
cop. He can't even remember a penal code without an aide prompting him.
Graft's easy, it's just business. And to kill out of panic or passion or
fury, yes. But to plan, to execute the plan step by step? No. He isn't
even smart enough to juggle his public records well."
"So he had help."
"Possible. Maybe if I could put pressure on him, I'd find out."
"I can help you there." Roarke took a final, thoughtful drag before
crushing out his cigarette. "What do you think the media would do if it
received an anonymous transmission of Simpson's underground accounts?"
She dropped the hand she'd lifted to rake through her hair. "They'd hang
him. If he knows anything, even with a fleet of lawyers around him, we
might be able to shake something loose."
"Just so. Your call, lieutenant."
She thought of rules, of due process, of the system she'd made herself
an intregal part of. And she thought of three dead women -- three more
she might be able to protect.
"There's a reporter. Nadine Furst. Give it to her."
-=O=-***-=O=-
She wouldn't stay with him. Eve knew a call would come, and it was best
if she were home and alone when it did. She didn't think she would
sleep, but she drifted into dreams.
She dreamed first of murder. Sharon, Lola, Georgie, each of them smiling
toward the camera. That instant of fear a lightning bolt in the eyes
before they flew back on sex-warmed sheets.
Daddy. Lola had called him Daddy. And Eve stumbled painfully into an
older, more terrifying dream.
She was a good girl. She tried to be good, not to cause trouble. If you
caused trouble, the cops came and got you, and put you in a deep, dark
hole where bugs skittered and spiders crept toward you on silent,
slithery legs.
She didn't have friends. If you had friends you had to make up stories
about where the bruises came from. How you were clumsy when you weren't
clumsy. How you'd fallen when you hadn't fallen. Besides, they never
lived in one place very long. If you did, the fucking social workers
came nosing around, asking questions. It was the fucking social workers
who called the cops that put you away in that dark, bug crawling hole.
Her Daddy had warned her.
So she was a good girl, without any friends, who moved from place to
place when she was taken.
But it didn't seem to make any difference.
She could hear him coming. She always heard him. Even if she was sound
asleep, the creeping shuffle of his bare feet on the floor woke her as
quickly as a thunder clap.
Oh, please, oh, please, oh please. She would pray, but she wouldn't cry.
If she cried she was beaten, and he did the secret things anyway. The
painful and secret thing that she knew, even at five, was somehow bad.
He told her she was good. The whole time he did the secret thing he
would tell her she was good. But she knew she was bad, and she would be
punished.
Sometimes he tied her up. When she heard her door open, she whimpered
softly, praying he wouldn't tie her this time. She wouldn't fight, she
wouldn't, if he just didn't tie her up. If he just didn't hold his hand
over her mouth, she wouldn't scream or call out.
"Where's my little girl? Where's my good little girl?"
Tears gathered in the corners of her eyes as his hands slipped under the
sheets, poking, probing, pinching. She could smell his breath on her
face, sweet, like candy.
His fingers rammed inside her, his other hand coming down hard over her
mouth as she drew in breath to scream. She couldn't help it.
"Be quiet." His breath was coming in short gasps, in a sickening arousal
she didn't understand. His fingers dug into her cheeks where bruises
would form by morning. "Be a good girl. There's a good girl."
She couldn't hear his grunts for the screaming inside her head. She
screamed it over and over and over.
No, Daddy. No, Daddy.
"No!" The scream ripped out of Eve's throat as she reared up in bed.
Gooseflesh prickled on her clammy skin, and she shivered and shivered as
she tugged the blankets up.
Didn't remember. Wouldn't remember, she comforted herself and drew up
her knees, pressed her forehead against them. Just a dream, and it was
already fading. She could will it away -- had done so before -- until
there was nothing left but the faint nausea.
Still shaky, she got up, wrapped herself in her robe to combat the
chill. In the bath she ran water over her face until she was breathing
evenly again. Steadier, she got herself a tube of Pepsi, huddled back
into bed, and switched on one of the twenty-four-hour news stations.
And settled down to wait.
It was the lead story at six A. M., the headline read by a cat-eyed
Nadine. Eve was already dressed when the call came through summoning her
to Cop Central.
*** CHAPTER SEVENTEEN ***
Whatever personal satisfaction Eve felt on finding herself part of the
team who questioned Simpson, she hid it well. In deference to his
position, they used the office of Security Administration rather than an
interrogation area.
The clear wrap of windows and the glossy acrylic table didn't negate the
fact that Simpson was in deep trouble. The beading of sweat above his
top lip indicated he knew just how deep.
"The media is trying to injure the department," Simpson began, using the
statement meticulously prepared by his senior aide. "With the very
visible failure of the investigation into the brutal deaths of three
women, the media is attempting to incite a witch-hunt. As chief of
police, I'm an obvious target."
"Chief Simpson." Not by the flicker of an eyelash did Commander Whitney
expose his inner glee. His voice was grave, his eyes somber. His heart
was celebrating. "Regardless of the motive, it will be necessary for you
to explain the discrepancy in your books."
Simpson sat frozen while one of his attorneys leaned over and murmured
in his ear.
"I have not admitted to any discrepancy. If one exists, I'm unaware of
it."
"Unaware, Chief Simpson, of more than two million dollars?"
"I've already contacted my accounting firm. Obviously, if there is a
mistake of some nature, it was made by them."
"Will you confirm or deny that the account numbered four seventy-eight
nine one one two seven, four ninety-nine is yours?"
After another brief consultation, Simpson nodded. "I will confirm that."
To lie would only tighten the noose.
Whitney glanced at Eve. They'd agreed the account was an IRS matter. All
they'd wanted was for Simpson to confirm.
"Will you explain, Chief Simpson, the withdrawal of one hundred thousand
dollars, in twenty-five thousand dollar increments, every three months
during the past year?"
Simpson tugged at the knot of his tie. "I see no reason to explain how I
spend my money, Lieutenant Dallas."
"Then perhaps you can explain how it is those same amounts were listed
by Sharon DeBlass and accredited to you."
"I don't know what you're talking about."
"We have evidence that you paid to Sharon DeBlass one hundred thousand
dollars, in twenty-five thousand dollar increments in one year's
period." Eve waited a beat. "That's quite a large amount between casual
acquaintances."
"I have nothing to say on the matter."
"Was she blackmailing you?"
"I have nothing to say."
"The evidence says it for you," Eve stated. "She was blackmailing you;
you were paying her off. I'm sure you're aware there are only two ways
to stop extortion, Chief Simpson. One, you cut off the supply. Two...
you eliminate the blackmailer."
"This is absurd. I didn't kill Sharon. I was paying her like clockwork.
I -- "
"Chief Simpson." The elder of the team of lawyers put a hand on
Simpson's arm, squeezed. He turned his mild gaze to Eve. "My client has
no statement to make regarding Sharon DeBlass. Obviously, we will
cooperate in any way with the Internal Revenue Service's investigation
into my client's records. At this time, however, no charges have been
made. We're here only as a courtesy, and to show our goodwill."
"Were you acquainted with a woman known as Lola Starr?" Eve shot out.
"My client has no comment."
"Did you know licensed companion, Georgie Castle?"
"Same response," the lawyer said patiently.
"You've done everything you could to roadblock this murder investigation
from the beginning. Why?"
"Is that a statement of fact, Lieutenant Dallas?" the lawyer asked. "Or
an opinion?"
"I'll give you facts. You knew Sharon DeBlass, intimately. She was
hosing you for a hundred grand a year. She's dead, and someone is
leaking confidential information on the investigation. Two more women
are dead. All the victims made their living through legal prostitution
-- something you oppose."
"My opposition of prostitution is a political, moral, and a personal
stance," Simpson said tightly. "I will support wholeheartedly any
legislation that outlaws it. But I would hardly eliminate the problem by
picking off prostitutes one at a time."
"You own a collection of antique weapons," Eve persisted.
"I do," Simpson agreed, ignoring his attorney. "A small, limited
collection. AH registered, secured, and inventoried. I'll be more than
happy to turn them over to Commander Whitney for testing."
"I appreciate that," Whitney said, shocking Simpson by agreeing. "Thank
you for your cooperation."
Simpson rose, his face a battleground of emotion. "When this matter is
cleared up, I won't forget this meeting." His eyes rested briefly on
Eve. "I won't forget who attacked the office of Chief of Police and
Security."
Commander Whitney waited until Simpson sailed out, followed by his team
of attorneys. "When this is settled, he won't get within a hundred yards
of the office of Chief of Police and Security."
"I needed more time to work on him. Why'd you let him walk?"
"His isn't the only name on the DeBlass list," Whitney reminded her.
"And there's no tie, as yet, between him and the other two victims.
Whittle the list down, get me a tie, and I'll give you all the time you
need." He paused, shuffling through the hard copies of the documents
that had been transmitted to his office. "Dallas, you seemed very
prepared for this interview. Almost as if you'd been expecting it. I
don't suppose I need remind you that tampering with private documents is
against the law."
"No, sir."
"I didn't think I did. Dismissed."
As she headed for the door, she thought she heard him murmur "Good job"
but she might have been mistaken.
She was taking the elevator to her own section when her communicator
blipped. "Dallas."
"Call for you. Charles Monroe."
"I'll get back to him."
She snagged a cup of sludge masquerading as coffee, and what might have
been a doughnut as she passed through the bullpen area of the records
section. It took nearly twenty minutes for her to requisition copies of
the discs for the three homicides.
Closeting herself in her office, she studied them again. She reviewed
her notes, made fresh ones.
The victim was on the bed each time. The bed rumpled each time. They
were naked each time. Their hair was mussed.
Eyes narrowed, she ordered the image of Lola Starr to freeze, pull into
close-up.
"Skin reddened left buttocks," she murmured. "Missed that before.
Spanking? Domination thrill? Doesn't appear to be bruising or welting.
Have Feeney enhance and determine. Switch to DeBlass tape."
Again, Eve ran it. Sharon laughed at the camera, taunted it, touching
herself, shifting. "Freeze image. Quadrant -- shit -- try sixteen,
increase. No marks," she said. "Continue. Come on, Sharon, show me the
right side, just in case. Little more. Freeze. Quadrant twelve,
increase. No marks on you. Maybe you did the spanking, huh? Run Castle
disc. Come on Georgie, let's see."
She watched the woman smile, flirt, lift a hand to smooth down her
tousled hair. Eve already knew the dialogue perfectly: "That was
wonderful. You're terrific."
She was kneeling, sitting back on her haunches, her eyes pleasant and
companionable. Silently, Eve began to urge her to move, just a little,
shift over. Then Georgia yawned delicately, turned to fluff the pillows.
"Freeze. Oh yeah, paddled you, didn't he? Some guys get off on playing
bad girl and Daddy."
She had a flash, like a stab of a knife through the brain. Memories
sliced through her, the solid slap of a hand on her bottom, stinging,
the heavy breathing. "You have to be punished, little girl. Then Daddy's
going to kiss it better. He's going to kiss it all better."
"Jesus." She rubbed shaking hands over her face. "Stop. Put it away. Put
it away."
She reached for cold coffee and found only dregs. The past was past, she
reminded herself, and had nothing to do with her. Nothing to do with the
job at hand.
"Victim Two and Three show marks of abuse on buttocks. No marks on
Victim One." She let out a long breath, took in a slow one. Steadier.
"Break in pattern. Apparent emotional reaction during first murder,
absent in subsequent two."
Her 'link buzzed, she ignored it.
"Possible theory: Perpetrator gained confidence, enjoyment in subsequent
murders. Note: No security on Victim Two. Time lapse on security
cameras, Victim Three, thirty-three minutes less than Victim One.
Possible theory: More adept, more confident, less inclined to play with
victim. Wants the kick faster."
Possible, possible, she thought, and her computer agreed after a jittery
wheeze, with a ninety-six-three probability factor. But something else
was clicking as she ran the three discs so closely together,
interchanging sections.
"Split screen," she ordered, "Victims One and Two, from beginning."
Sharon's cat smile, Lola's pout. Both women looked toward the camera,
toward the man behind it. Spoke to him.
"Freeze images," Eve said so softly only the sharp ears of the computer
could have heard her. "Oh God, what have we here?"
It was a small thing, a slight thing, and with the eyes focused on the
brutality of the murders, easily missed. But she saw it now, through
Sharon's eyes. Through Lola's.
Lola's gaze was angled higher.
The height of the beds could account for it, Eve told herself as she
added Georgie's image to the screen. Each woman had their head tilted.
After all, they were sitting, he very likely standing. But the angle of
the eyes, the point at which they stared... Only Sharon's was different.
Still watching the screen, Eve called Dr. Mira.
"I don't care what she's doing," Eve spat out at the drone working
reception. "It's urgent."
She snarled as she was put on hold and her ears assaulted with mindless,
sugary music.
"Question," she said the moment Mira was on the line.
"Yes, lieutenant."
"Is it possible we have two killers?"
"A copycat? Unlikely, lieutenant, given as much of the method and style
of the murders has been kept under wraps."
"Shit leaks. I've got breaks in pattern. Small ones, but definite
breaks." Impatient, she outlined them. "Theory, doctor. The first murder
committed by someone who knew Sharon well, who killed on impulse, then
had enough control to clean up behind himself well. The second two are
reflections of the first crime, fined down, thought through, committed
by someone cold, calculating, with no connection to his victims. And
goddamn it, he's taller."
"It's a theory, lieutenant. I'm sorry, but it's just as likely, even
more so, that all three murders were committed by one man who grows more
calculating with each success. In my professional opinion, no one who
wasn't privy to the first crime, to the stages of it, could have so
perfectly mirrored the events in the second two."
Her computer had ditched her theory as well, with a forty-eight-five.
"Okay, thanks." Deflated, Eve disconnected. Stupid to be disappointed,
she told herself. How much worse could it be if she were after two men
instead of one?
Her 'link buzzed again. Teeth bared in annoyance, she flipped on.
"Dallas, What?"
"Hey, Lieutenant Sugar, a guy might think you didn't care."
"I don't have time to play, Charles."
"Hey, don't cut me off. I got something for you."
"Or for lame innuendoes -- "
"No, really. Boy, flirt with a woman once or twice and she never takes
you seriously." His perfect face registered hurt. "You asked me to call
if I remembered anything, right?"
"Right." Patience, she warned herself. "So, did you?"
"It was the diaries that got me thinking. You know how I said she was
always recording everything. Since you're looking for them, I figure
they weren't over at her place."
"You should be a detective."
"I like my line of work. Anyhow, I started wondering where she might put
them for safekeeping. And I remembered the safe-deposit box."
"We've already checked it. Thanks, anyway."
"Oh. Well, how'd you get into it without me? She's dead."
Eve paused on the point of cutting him off. "Without you?"
"Yeah. A couple, three years ago, she asked me to sign for one for her.
Said she didn't want her name on the record."
Eve's heart began to thump. "Then what good would it do her?"
Charles's smile was sheepish and charming. "Well, technically, I signed
her on as my sister. I've got one in Kansas City. So we listed Sharon as
Annie Monroe. She paid the rent, and I just forgot about it, I can't
even say for sure if she kept it, but I thought you might want to know."
"Where's the bank?"
"First Manhattan, on Madison."
"Listen to me, Charles. You're home, right?"
"That's right."
"You stay there. Right there. I'll be over in fifteen minutes. We're
going to go banking, you and me."
"If that's the best I can do. Hey, did I give you a hot lead, Lieutenant
Sugar?"
"Just stay put."
She was up and shrugging into her jacket when her 'link buzzed again.
"Dallas."
"Dispatch, Dallas. We have a transmission on hold for you. Video
blocked. Refuses to identify."
"Tracing?"
"Tracing now."
"Then put it through." She swung up her bag as the audio clicked. "This
is Dallas."
"Are you alone?" It was a female voice, tremulous.
"Yes. Do you want me to help you?"
"It wasn't my fault. You have to know it wasn't my fault."
"No one's blaming you." Training had Eve picking up on both fear and
grief. "Just tell me what happened."
"He raped me. I couldn't stop him. He raped me. He raped her, too. Then
he killed her. He could kill me."
"Tell me where you are." She studied her screen, waiting for the trace
to come through. "I want to help, but I have to know where you are."
Breath hitching, a whimper. "He said it was supposed to be a secret. I
couldn't tell. He killed her so she couldn't tell. Now there's me. No
one will believe me."
"I believe you. I'll help you. Tell me -- " She swore as the
transmission broke. "Where?" she demanded after switching to dispatch.
"Front Royal, Virginia. Number seven oh three, five five five,
thirty-nine oh eight. Address -- "
"I don't need it. Get me Captain Ryan Feeney in EDD. Fast."
Two minutes wasn't fast enough. Eve nearly drilled a hole in her temple
rubbing it while she waited. "Feeney, I've got something, and it's big."
"What?"
"I can't go into it yet, but I need you to go pick up Charles Monroe."
"Christ, Eve, have we got him?"
"Not yet. Monroe's going to take you to Sharon's other safe box. You
take good care of him, Feeney. We're going to need him. And you take
damn good care of whatever you find in the box."
"What are you going to be doing?"
"I've got to catch a plane." She broke transmission, then called Roarke.
It took another three minutes of very precious time before he came
on-line.
"I was about to call you, Eve. It looks like I have to fly to Dublin.
Care to join me?"
"Roarke, I need your plane. Now. I have to get to Virginia fast. If I go
through channels or take public transport -- "
"The plane will be ready for you. Terminal C, Gate 22."
She closed her eyes. "Thanks. I owe you."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Her gratitude lasted until she arrived at the gate and found Roarke
waiting for her.
"I don't have time to talk." Her voice was a snap, her long legs eating
up the distance from gate to lift.
"We'll talk on the plane."
"You're not going with me. This is official -- "
"This is my plane, lieutenant," he interrupted smoothly as the lift
closed them in together, gliding silently up.
"Can't you do anything without strings?"
"Yes. This isn't one of them." The hatch opened. The flight attendant
waited efficiently.
"Welcome aboard, sir, lieutenant. Can I offer you refreshments?"
"No, thank you. Have the pilot take off as soon as we're cleared."
Roarke took his seat while Eve stood fuming. "We can't take off until
you're seated and secured."
"I thought you were going to Ireland." She could argue with him just as
easily sitting down.
"It's not a priority. This is. Eve, before you state your case, I'll
outline mine. You're going to Virginia in quite a rush. That points to
the DeBlass case and some new information. Beth and Richard are friends,
close friends. I don't have many close friends, nor do you. Reverse
situations. What would you do?"
She drummed her fingers on the arm of her chair as the plane began to
taxi. "This can't be personal."
"Not for you. For me, it's very personal. Beth contacted me even as I
was arranging for the plane to be readied. She asked me to come."
"Why?"
"She wouldn't say. She didn't have to -- she only had to ask."
Loyalty was a trait Eve had a difficult time arguing against. "I can't
stop you from going, but I'm warning you, this is department business."
"And the department is in upheaval this morning," he said evenly,
"because of certain information leaked to the media -- by an unnamed
source."
She hissed out a breath. Nothing like backing yourself into a corner.
"I'm grateful for your help."
"Enough to tell me the outcome?"
"I imagine the cap will be off by the end of the day." She moved her
shoulders restlessly, staring out the window, willing the miles away.
"Simpson's going to try to ditch the whole business on his accounting
firm. I can't see him pulling it off. The IRS'll get him for tax fraud.
I imagine the internal investigation will uncover where he got the
money. Considering Simpson's imagination, I'd bet on the standard
kickbacks, bribes, and graft."
"And the blackmail?"
"Oh, he was paying her. He admitted as much before his lawyer shut him
up. And he'll cop to it, once he realizes paying blackmail's a lot less
dicey than accessory to murder."
She took out her communicator, requested Feeney's access.
"Yo, Dallas."
"Did you get them?"
Feeney held a small box up so that she could see it in the tiny viewing
screen. "All labeled and dated. About twenty years' worth."
"Start with the last entry, work back. I should hit destination in about
twenty minutes. I'll contact you as soon as I can for a status report."
"Hey, Lieutenant Sugar." Charles edged his way on-screen and beamed at
her. "How'd I do?"
"You did good. Thanks. Now, until I say different, forget about the safe
box, the diaries, everything."
"What diaries?" he said with a wink. He blew her a kiss before Feeney
elbowed him aside.
"I'm heading back to Cop Central now. Stay in touch."
"Out." Eve switched off, slipped the communicator back in her pocket.
Roarke waited a beat. "Lieutenant Sugar?"
"Shut up, Roarke." She closed her eyes to ignore him, but couldn't quite
wipe the smirk off her face.
-=O=-***-=O=-
When they landed, she was forced to admit that Roarke's name worked even
faster than a badge. In minutes they were in a powerful rental car and
eating up the miles to Front Royal. She might have objected about being
delegated to the passenger seat, but she couldn't fault his driving.
"Ever done the Indy?"
"No." He spared her a brief glance as they bulleted up Route 95 at just
under a hundred. "But I've driven in a few Grand Prix."
"Figures." She tapped her fingers against the chicken stick when he shot
the car into a vertical rise, skimmed daringly -- and illegally -- over
the top of a small jam of cars. "You say Richard is a good friend. How
would you describe him?"
"Intelligent, dedicated, quiet. He rarely speaks unless he has something
to say. Overshadowed by his father, often at odds with him."
"How would you describe his relationship with his father?"
He brought the vehicle down again, wheels barely skidding on the road
surface. "From the little he might have said, and the things Beth let
drop, I'd have to say combative, frustrated."
"And his relationship with his daughter?"
"The choices she made were in direct opposition to his lifestyle, his,
well, morals, if you wish. He's a staunch believer in freedom of choice
and expression. Still, I can't imagine any father wanting his daughter
to become a woman who sells herself for a living."
"Wasn't he involved in designing his father's security for the last
senatorial campaign?"
He took the vehicle up again, maneuvered it off the road, muttering
something about a shortcut. In the time he took to skim through a glade
of trees, over a few residential buildings, and down again onto a quiet
suburban street, he was silent.
She stopped counting the traffic violations.
"Family loyalty transcends politics. A man with DeBlass's views is
either well loved or well hated. Richard may disagree with his father,
but he'd hardly want him assassinated. And as he specializes in security
law, it follows he'd assist his father in the matter."
A son protects his father, Eve thought. "And how far would DeBlass go to
protect his son?"
"From what? Richard is a moderate's moderate. He maintains a low
profile, supports his causes quietly. He -- " The import of the question
struck. "You're off target," Roarke said between his teeth. "Way off
target."
"We'll see."
-=O=-***-=O=-
The house on the hill looked peaceful. Under the cold blue sky, it sat
serenely, warmly, with a few brave crocuses beginning to peep out of the
winter stung grass.
Appearances, Eve thought, were deceiving more often than not. She knew
this wasn't a home of easy wealth, quiet happiness, and tidy lives. She
was certain now that she knew what had gone on behind those rosy walls
and gleaming glass.
Elizabeth opened the door herself. If anything, she was paler and more
drawn than when Eve had last seen her. Her eyes were puffy from weeping,
and the mannishly tailored suit she wore bagged at the hips from recent
weight loss.
"Oh, Roarke." As Elizabeth went into his arms, Eve could all but hear
the fragile bones knocking together. "I'm sorry I dragged you out here.
I shouldn't have bothered you."
"Don't be silly." He tilted her face up with a gentleness that tugged at
the heart Eve was struggling to hold distant. "Beth, you're not taking
care of yourself."
"I can't seem to function, to think, or to do. Everything's crumbling
away at my feet, and I -- " She broke off, remembering abruptly that
they weren't alone. "Lieutenant Dallas."
Eve caught the quick accusation in Elizabeth's eyes when she looked at
Roarke. "He didn't bring me, Ms. Barrister. I brought him. I received a
call this morning from this location. Did you make it?"
"No." Elizabeth stepped back. Her hands reached for each other, twisted.
"No, I didn't. It must have been Catherine. She arrived here last night,
suddenly. Hysterical, overwrought. Her mother has been hospitalized, and
the prognosis is poor. I can only think the stress of the last few weeks
has been too much for her. That's why I called you, Roarke. Richard's at
his wit's end. I don't seem to be any help. We needed someone."
"Why don't we go in and sit down?"
"They're in the parlor." In a jittery move, Elizabeth turned to look
down the hall. "She won't take a sedative, she won't explain. She
refused to let us do more than call her husband and son and tell them
she was here, and not to come. She's frantic at the idea they might be
in some sort of danger. I suppose what happened to Sharon has made her
worry more about her own child. She's obsessed with saving him from God
knows what."
"If she called me," Eve put in. "Then maybe she'll talk to me."
"Yes. Yes, all right."
She led the way down the hall, and into the tidy, sunwashed parlor.
Catherine DeBlass sat on a sofa, leaning into her brother's arms. Eve
couldn't be sure if he was comforting, or restraining.
Richard raised stricken eyes to Roarke's. "It's good of you to come.
We're a mess, Roarke." His voice shook, nearly broke. "We're a mess."
"Elizabeth." Roarke crouched in front of Catherine. "Why don't you ring
for coffee?"
"Oh, of course. I'm sorry."
"Catherine." His voice was gentle, as was the hand he laid on her arm.
But the touch had Catherine jerking up, her eyes going wide.
"Don't. What -- what are you doing here?"
"I came to see Beth and Richard. I'm sorry you're not well."
"Well?" She gave what might have been a laugh as she curled into
herself. "None of us will ever be well again. How can we? We're all
tainted. We're all to blame."
"For what?"
She shook her head, pushed herself into the far corner of the sofa. "I
can't talk to you."
"Congresswoman DeBlass, I'm Lieutenant Dallas. You called me a little
while ago."
"No, no I didn't." Panicked, Catherine wrapped her arms tightly around
her chest. "I didn't call. I didn't say anything."
As Richard leaned over to touch her, Eve shot him a warning glance.
Deliberately, she put herself between them, sat and took Catherine's
frigid hand. "You wanted me to help. And I will help you."
"You can't. No one can. I was wrong to call. We have to keep it in the
family. I have a husband, I have a little boy." Tears began to swim in
her eyes, "I have to protect them. I have to go away, far away, so I can
protect them."
"We'll protect them," Eve said quietly. "We'll protect you. It was too
late to protect Sharon. You can't blame yourself."
"I didn't try to stop it," Catherine said in a whisper. "Maybe I was
even glad, because it wasn't me anymore. It wasn't me."
"Ms. DeBlass, I can help you. I can protect you and your family. Tell me
who raped you."
Richard let out a hiss of shock. "My God, what are you saying? What -- "
Eve turned on him, eyes fierce. "Be quiet. There's no more secrets
here."
"Secrets," Catherine said between trembling lips. "It has to be a
secret."
"No, it doesn't. This kind of secret hurts. It crawls inside you and
eats at you. It makes you scared, and it makes you guilty. The ones who
want it to be secret use that -- the guilt, the fear, the shame. The
only way you can fight back is to tell. Tell me who raped you."
Catherine's breath shuddered out. She looked at her brother, terror
bright in her eyes. Eve turned her face back, held it.
"Look at me. Just me. And tell me who raped you. Who raped Sharon?"
"My father." The words burst from her in a howl of pain. "My father. My
father. My father." She buried her face in her hands and sobbed.
"Oh God." Across the room, Elizabeth stumbled back into the server
droid. China shattered. Coffee seeped dark into the lovely rug. "Oh my
God. My baby."
Richard shot off the couch, reaching her as she swayed. He caught her
hard against him. "I'll kill him for this. I'll kill him." Then he
pressed his face into her hair. "Beth. Oh, Beth."
"Do what you can for them," Eve murmured to Roarke as she gathered
Catherine to her.
"You thought it was Richard," Roarke said in an undertone.
"Yes." Her eyes were dull and flat when she lifted them to his. "I
thought it was Sharon's father. Maybe I didn't want to think that
something so foul could flourish in two generations."
Roarke leaned forward. His face was hard as rock. "One way or the other,
DeBlass is a dead man."
"Help your friends," Eve said evenly. "I have work to do here."
*** CHAPTER EIGHTEEN ***
She let Catherine cry it out, though she knew, too well, that the tears
wouldn't wash the wound clean. She knew, too, that she wouldn't have
been able to handle the situation alone. It was Roarke who calmed
Elizabeth and Richard, who ordered in the domestic droid to gather up
the broken crockery, who held their hands, and when he gauged the time
was right, it was he who gently suggested bringing Catherine some tea.
Elizabeth fetched it herself, carefully closing the parlor doors behind
her before she carried the cup to her sister-in-law. "Here, darling,
drink a little."
"I'm sorry." Catherine put both shaky hands around the cup to warm them.
"I'm sorry. I thought it had stopped. I made myself believe it had
stopped. I couldn't live otherwise."
"It's all right." Her face blank, Elizabeth went back to her husband.
"Ms. DeBlass, I need you to tell me everything. Congress-woman DeBlass?"
Eve waited until Catherine focused on her again. "Do you understand this
is being recorded?"
"He'll stop you."
"No, he won't. That's why you called me, because you know I'll stop
him."
"He's afraid of you," Catherine whispered. "He's afraid of you. I could
tell. He's afraid of women. That's why he hurts them. I think he may
have given something to my mother. Broke her mind. She knew."
"Your mother knew your father was abusing you?"
"She knew. She pretended she didn't, but I could see it in her eyes. She
didn't want to know -- she just wanted everything quiet and perfect, so
she could give her parties and be the senator's wife." She lifted a
hand, shielding her eyes. "When he would come into my room at night, I
could see it on her face the next morning. But when I tried to talk to
her, to tell her to make him stop, she pretended she didn't know what I
meant. She told me to stop imagining things. To be good, to respect the
family."
She lowered her hand again, cupped her tea with both hands, but didn't
drink. "When I was little, seven or eight, he would come in at night and
touch me. He said it was all right, because he was Daddy, and I was
going to pretend to be Mommy. It was a game, he said, a secret game. He
told me I had to do things -- to touch him. To -- "
"It's all right," Eve soothed as Catherine began to tremble violently.
"You don't have to say. Tell me what you can."
"You had to obey him. You had to. He was a force in our house. Richard?"
"Yes." Richard caught his wife's hand in his and squeezed, squeezed. "I
know."
"I couldn't tell you because I was ashamed, and I was afraid, and Mom
just looked away, so I thought I had to do it." She swallowed hard. "On
my twelfth birthday, we had a party. Lots of friends, and a big cake,
and the ponies. You remember the ponies, Richard?"
"I remember." Tears tracked silently down his cheeks. "I remember."
"And that night, the night of my birthday, he came. He said I was old
enough now. He said he had a present for me, a special present because I
was growing up. And he raped me." She buried her face in her hands and
rocked. "He said it was a present. Oh God. And I begged him to stop,
because it hurt. And because I was old enough to know it was wrong, it
was evil. I was evil. But he didn't stop. And he kept coming back. All
those years until I could get away. I went to college, far away, where
he couldn't touch me. And I told myself it never happened. It never,
never happened.
"I tried to be strong, to make a life. I got married because I thought I
would be safe. Justin was so kind, so gentle. He never hurt me. And I
never told him. I thought if he knew, he'd despise me. So I kept telling
myself it never happened."
She lowered her hands and looked at Eve. "I believed it, sometimes. Most
of the time. I could lose myself in my work, in my family. But then I
could see, I knew he was doing the same thing to Sharon. I wanted to
help, but I didn't know how. So I pushed it away, just like my mother
did. He killed her. Now he'll kill me."
"Why do you think he killed Sharon?"
"She wasn't weak like me. She turned it on him, used it against him. I
heard them arguing. Christmas Day. When we all went to his house to
pretend we were a family. I saw them go into his office, and I followed
them. I opened the door, and I watched and I listened through the crack.
He was so furious with her because she was making a public mockery of
everything he stood for. And she said, 'You made me what I am, you
bastard.' It warmed me to hear that. It made me want to cheer. She
stood up to him. She threatened to expose him unless he paid her. She
had it all documented, she said, every dirty detail. So he'd have to
play the game her way. They fought, hurling words at each other. And
then..."
Catherine glanced over at Elizabeth, at her brother, then looked away.
"She took off her blouse." Elizabeth's moan had Catherine trembling
again. "She told him he could have her, just like any client. But he'd
pay more. A lot more. He was looking at her. I knew the way he was
looking at her, his eyes glazed over, his mouth slack. He grabbed her
breasts. She looked at me. Right at me. She'd known I was there, and she
looked at me with such disgust. Maybe even with hate, because she knew
I'd do nothing. I closed the door, closed it and ran. I was sick. Oh,
Elizabeth."
"It's not your fault. She must have tried to tell me. I never saw, I
never heard. I never thought. I was her mother, and I didn't protect
her."
"I tried to talk to her." Catherine gripped her hands together. "When I
went to New York for the fund-raiser. She said I'd chosen my way, and
she'd chosen hers. And hers was better. I played politics, kept my head
buried, and she played with power and kept her eyes opened.
"When I heard she was dead, I knew. At the funeral I watched him, and he
watched me watching him. He came up to me, put his arms around me, held
me close as if in comfort. And he whispered to me to pay attention. To
remember, and to see what happened when families don't keep secrets. And
he said what a fine boy Franklin was. What big plans he had for him. He
said how proud I should be. And how careful." She closed her eyes. "What
could I do? He's my child."
"No one's going to hurt your son." Eve closed a hand over Catherine's
rigid ones. "I promise you."
"I'll never know if I could have saved her. Your child, Richard."
"You can know you're doing everything possible now." Hardly aware she'd
taken Catherine's hand, Eve tightened her grip in reassurance. "It's
going to be difficult for you, Ms. DeBlass, to go over all of this
again, as you'll have to. To face the publicity. To testify, should it
come to trial."
"He'll never let it go to trial," Catherine said wearily.
"I'm not going to give him a choice." Maybe not on murder, she thought.
Not yet. But she had him cold on sexual abuse. "Ms. Barrister, I think
your sister-in-law should rest now. Could you help her upstairs?"
"Yes, of course." Elizabeth rose, walked over to help Catherine to her
feet. "Let's go lie down for a bit, darling."
"I'm sorry." Catherine leaned heavily against Elizabeth as she was led
from the room. "God forgive me, I'm so sorry."
"There's a psychiatric counselor attached to the department, Mr.
DeBlass. I think your sister should see her."
"Yes." He said it absently, staring at the closed door. "She'll need
someone. Something."
You all will, Eve thought. "Are you up to a few questions?"
"I don't know. He's a tyrant, difficult. But this makes him a monster.
How am I to accept that my own father is a monster?"
"He has an alibi for the night of your daughter's death," Eve pointed
out. "I can't charge him without more."
"An alibi?"
"The record shows that Rockman was with your father, working with him in
his East Washington office until nearly two on the night of your
daughter's death."
"Rockman would say whatever my father told him to say."
"Including covering up murder?"
"It's simply a matter of the easiest way out. Why should anyone believe
my father is connected?" He shuddered once, as if blasted with a sudden
chill. "Rockman's statement merely detaches his employer from any
suspicion."
"How would your father travel back and forth to New York from East
Washington if he wanted no record of the trip?"
"I don't know. If his shuttle went out, there would be a log."
"Logs can be altered," Roarke said.
"Yes." Richard looked up as if remembering all at once that his friend
was there. "You'd know more about that than I."
"A reference to my smuggling days," Roarke explained to Eve. "Long
behind me. It can be done, but it would require some payoffs. The pilot,
perhaps the mechanic, certainly the air engineer."
"So I know where to put the pressure on." And if Eve could prove his
shuttle had taken the trip on that night, she'd have probable cause.
Enough to break him. "How much do you know about your father's weapon
collection?"
"More than I care to." Richard rose on unsteady legs. He went to a
cabinet, splashed liquor into a glass. He drank it fast, like medicine.
"He enjoys his guns, often shows them off. When I was younger, he tried
to interest me in them. Roarke can tell you, it didn't work."
"Richard believes guns are a dangerous symbol of power abuse. And I can
tell you that yes, DeBlass occasionally used the black market."
"Why didn't you mention that before?"
"You didn't ask."
She let it drop, for now. "Does your father have a knowledge of security
-- the technical aspects?"
"Certainly. He takes pride in knowing how to protect himself. It's one
of the few things we can discuss without disagreeing."
"Would you consider him an expert?"
"No," Richard said slowly. "A talented amateur."
"His relationship with Chief Simpson? How would you describe it?"
"Self-serving. He considered Simpson a fool. My father enjoys utilizing
fools." Abruptly, he sank into a chair. "I'm sorry. I can't do this. I
need some time. I need my wife."
"All right. Mr. DeBlass, I'm going to order surveillance on your father.
You won't be able to reach him without being monitored. Please don't
try."
"You think I'll try to kill him?" Richard gave a mirthless laugh and
stared down at his own hands. "I want to. For what he did to my
daughter, to my sister, to my life. I wouldn't have the courage."
-=O=-***-=O=-
When they were outside again, Eve headed straight for the car without
looking at Roarke. "You suspected this?" she asked.
"That DeBlass was involved? Yes, I did."
"But you didn't tell me."
"No." Roarke stopped her before she could wrench open the door. "It was
a feeling, Eve. I had no idea about Catherine. Absolutely none. I
suspected that Sharon and DeBlass were having an affair."
"That's too clean a word for it."
"I suspected it," he continued, "because of the way she spoke of him
during our single dinner together. But again, it was a feeling, not a
fact. That feeling would have done nothing to enhance your case. And,"
he added, turning her to face him, "once I got to know you, I kept that
feeling to myself, because I didn't want to hurt you." She jerked her
head away. He brought it patiently back with his fingertips. "You had no
one to help you?"
"It isn't about me." But she let out a shuddering breath. "I can't think
about it, Roarke. I can't. I'll mess up if I do, and if I mess up, he
could get away with it. With rape and murder, with abusing the children
he should have been protecting. I won't let him."
"Didn't you say to Catherine that the only way to fight back was to
tell?"
"I have work to do."
He fought back frustration. "I assume you'll want to go to the
Washington Airport where DeBlass keeps his shuttle."
"Yes." She climbed in the car when Roarke walked around to get in the
driver's side. "You can drop me at the nearest transport station."
"I'm sticking, Eve."
"All right, fine. I need to check in."
As he drove down the winding lane, she put in a call to Feeney. "I've
got something hot here," she said before he could speak. "I'm on my way
to East Washington."
"You've got something hot?" Feeney's voice was almost a song. "Didn't
have to look farther than her final entry, Dallas, logged the morning of
her murder. God knows why she took it to the bank. Blind luck. She had a
date at midnight. You'll never guess who."
"Her grandfather."
Feeney goggled, sputtered. "Fuck it, Dallas, how'd you get it?"
Eve closed her eyes briefly. "Tell me it's documented, Feeney. Tell me
she names him."
"Calls him the senator -- calls him her old fart of a grand-daddy. And
she writes pretty cheerfully about the five thousand she charges him for
each boink. Quote: 'It's almost worth letting him slobber all over me --
and there's a lot of energy left in dear old Granddad. The bastard. Five
thousand every couple of weeks isn't such a bad deal. I sure as hell
give him his money's worth. Not like when I was a kid and he used me.
Table's turned. I won't turn into a dried up prune like poor Aunt
Catherine. I'm thriving on it now. And one day, when it bores me enough,
I'm sending my diaries to the media. Multiple copies. It drives the
bastard crazy when I threaten to do that. Maybe I'll twist the knife a
little tonight. Give the senator a good scare. Christ, it's wonderful to
have the power to make him squirm after all he's done to me.'"
Feeney shook his head. "It was a long-time deal, Dallas. I've run
through several entries. She earned a nice income from blackmail, and
names names and deeds. But this puts the senator at her place on the
night of her death. And that puts his balls in the old nutcracker."
"Can you get me a warrant?"
"Commander's orders are to patch it through the minute you called in. He
says to pick him up. Murder One, three counts."
She let out a slow breath. "Where do I find him?"
"He's at the Senate building, hawking his Morals Bill."
"Fucking perfect. I'm on my way." She switched off, turned to Roarke.
"How much faster can this thing go?"
"We'll find out."
-=O=-***-=O=-
If Whitney's orders hadn't come through with the warrant, instructing
her to be discreet, Eve would have marched onto the Senate floor and
cuffed him in front of his associates. Still, there was considerable
satisfaction in the way it went down.
She waited while he completed his impassioned speech on the moral
decline of the country, the insidious corruption that stemmed from
promiscuity, conception control, genetic engineering. He expounded on
the lack of morality in the young, the dearth of organized religion in
the home, the school, the workplace. Our one nation under God had become
godless. Our constitutional right to bear arms sundered by the liberal
left. He touted figures on violent crime, on urban decay, on bootlegged
drugs, all a result, the senator claimed, of our increasing moral
decline, our softness on criminals, our indulgence in sexual freedom
without responsibility.
It made Eve sick to listen.
"In the year 2016," she said softly, "at the end of the Urban Revolt,
before the gun ban, there were over ten thousand deaths and injuries
from guns in the borough of Manhattan alone."
She continued to watch DeBlass sell his snake oil while Roarke laid a
hand at the base of her spine.
"Before we legalized prostitution, there was a rape or attempted rape
every three seconds. Of course, we still have rape, because it has much
less to do with sex than with power, but the figures have dropped.
Licensed prostitutes don't have pimps, so they aren't beaten, battered,
killed. And they can't use drugs. There was a time when women went to
butchers to deal with an unwanted pregnancy. When they had to risk their
lives or ruin them. Babies were born blind, deaf, deformed before
genetic engineering and the research it made possible to repair in
vitro. It's not a perfect world, but you listen to him and you realize
it could be a lot worse."
"Do you know what the media is going to do to him when this hits?"
"Crucify him," Eve murmured. "I hope to God it doesn't make him a
martyr."
"The voice of the moral right suspected of incest, trucking with
prostitutes, committing murder. I don't think so. He's finished." Roarke
nodded. "In more ways than one."
Eve heard the thunderous applause from the gallery. From the sound of
it, DeBlass's team had been careful to pepper the spectators with their
own.
Discretion be damned, she thought as the gavel was struck and an hour's
recess was called. She moved through the milling aides, assistants, and
pages until she came to DeBlass. He was being congratulated on his
eloquence, slapped on the back by his senatorial supporters.
She waited until he saw her, until his gaze skimmed over her, then
Roarke, until his mouth tightened. "Lieutenant. If you need to speak
with me, we can adjourn briefly to my office. Alone. I can spare ten
minutes."
"You're going to have plenty of time, senator. Senator DeBlass, you're
under arrest for the murders of Sharon DeBlass, Lola Starr, and Georgie
Castle." As he blustered in protest and the murmurs began, she lifted
her voice. "Additional charges include the incestuous rapes of Catherine
DeBlass, your daughter, and Sharon DeBlass, your granddaughter."
He was still standing, frozen in shock when she linked the restraints
over his wrist, turned him, and secured his hands behind his back. "You
are under no obligation to make a statement."
"This is an outrage." He exploded over the standard recitation of
revised Miranda. "I'm a senator of the United States. This is federal
property."
"And these two federal agents will escort you," she added. "You are
entitled to an attorney or representative." As she continued to recite
his rights, a flash from her eyes had the federal deputies and onlookers
backing off. "Do you understand these rights?"
"I'll have your badge, you bitch." He began to wheeze as she muscled him
through the crowd.
"I'll take that as a yes. Catch your breath, senator. We can't have you
popping off with a cardiac." She leaned closer to his ear. "And you
won't have my badge, you bastard. I'm going to have your ass." She
turned him over to the federal agents. "They're waiting for him in New
York," she said briefly.
She could hardly be heard now. DeBlass was screaming, demanding
immediate release. The Senate had erupted with voices and bodies.
Through it, she spotted Rockman. He came toward her, his face a cold
mask of fury.
"You're making a mistake, lieutenant."
"No, I'm not. But you made one in your statement. The way I see it,
that's going to make you accessory after the fact. I'm going to start
working on that when I get back to New York."
"Senator DeBlass is a great man. You're nothing but a pawn for the
Liberal Party and their plans to destroy him."
"Senator DeBlass is an incestuous child molester. A rapist and a
murderer. And what I am, pal, is the cop who's taking him down. You'd
better call a lawyer unless you want to sink with him."
Roarke had to force himself not to snatch her up as she swept through
the hallowed Senate halls. Members of the media were already leaping
toward her, but she cut through them as if they weren't there.
"I like your style, Lieutenant Dallas," he said when they'd fought their
way to the car. "I like it a lot. And by the way, I don't think I'm in
love with you anymore. I know I am."
She swallowed hard on the nausea rising in her throat. "Let's get out of
here. Let's get the hell out of here."
Sheer force of will kept her steady until she got to the plane. It kept
her voice flat and expressionless as she reported in to her superior.
Then she stumbled, and shoving away from Roarke's supporting arms,
rushed into the head to be wretchedly and violently ill.
On the other side of the door, Roarke stood helplessly. If he understood
her at all, it was to know that comforting would make it worse. He
murmured instructions to the flight attendant and took his seat. While
he waited, he stared out at the tarmac.
He looked up when the door opened. She was ice pale, her eyes too big,
too dark. Her usually smooth gait was coltish and stiff.
"Sorry. I guess it got to me."
When she sat, he offered a mug. "Drink this. It'll help."
"What is it?"
"It's tea, a whiff of whiskey."
"I'm on duty," she began, but his quick, vicious eruption cut her off.
"Drink, goddamn it, or I'll pour it into you." He flipped a switch and
ordered the pilot to take off.
Telling herself it was easier than arguing, she lifted the mug, but her
hands weren't steady. She barely managed to get a sip through her
chattering teeth before she set it aside.
She couldn't stop shaking. When Roarke reached for her, she drew herself
back. The sickness was still there, sliding slyly through her stomach,
making her head pound evilly.
"My father raped me." She heard herself say it. The shock of it, hearing
her own voice say the words, mirrored in her eyes. "Repeatedly. And he
beat me, repeatedly. If I fought or I didn't fight, it didn't matter. He
still raped me. He still beat me. And there was nothing I could do.
There's nothing you can do when the people who are supposed to take care
of you abuse you that way. Use you. Hurt you."
"Eve." He took her hand then, holding firm when she tried to yank free.
"I'm sorry. Terribly sorry."
"They said I was eight when they found me, in some alley in Dallas. I
was bleeding, and my arm was broken. He must have dumped me there. I
don't know. Maybe I ran away. I don't remember. But he never came for
me. No one ever came for me."
"Your mother?"
"I don't know. I don't remember her. Maybe she was dead. Maybe she was
like Catherine's mother and pretended not to know. I only get flashes,
nightmares of the worst of it. I don't even know my name. They weren't
able to identify me."
"You were safe then."
"You've never been shuffled through the system. There's no feeling of
safety. Only impotence. They strip you bare with good intentions." She
sighed, let her head fall back, her eyes close. "I didn't want to arrest
DeBlass, Roarke. I wanted to kill him. I wanted to kill him with my own
hands because of what happened to me. I let it get personal."
"You did your job."
"Yeah. I did my job. And I'll keep doing it." But it wasn't the job she
was thinking of now. It was life. Hers, and his. "Roarke, you've got to
know I've got some bad stuff inside. It's like a virus that sneaks
around the system, pops out when your resistance is low. I'm not a good
bet."
"I like long odds." He lifted her hand, kissed it. "Why don't we see it
through? Find out if we can both win."
"I've never told anybody before."
"Did it help?"
"I don't know. Maybe. Christ, I'm so tired."
"You could lean on me." He slipped an arm around her, nestled her head
in the curve of his shoulder.
"For a little while," she murmured. "Until we get to New York."
"For a little while then." He pressed his lips to her hair and hoped she
would sleep.
*** CHAPTER NINETEEN ***
DeBlass wouldn't talk. His lawyers put the muzzle on him early, and they
put in on tight. The interrogation process was slow, and it was tedious.
There were times Eve thought he would burst, when the temper that
reddened his face would tip the scales in her favor.
She'd stopped denying it was personal. She didn't want a tricky, media
blitzed trial. She wanted a confession.
"You were engaged in an incestuous affair with your granddaughter,
Sharon DeBlass."
"My client has not confirmed those allegations."
Eve ignored the lawyer, watched DeBlass's face. "I have here a
transcript of a portion of Sharon DeBlass's diary, dated on the night of
her murder."
She shoved the paper across the table. DeBlass's lawyer, a trim, tidy
man with a neat sandy beard and mild blue eyes picked it up, studied it.
Whatever his reaction was, he hid it behind cool indifference.
"This proves nothing, lieutenant, as I'm sure you know. The destructive
fantasies of a dead woman. A woman of dubious reputation who has long
been estranged from her family."
"There's a pattern here, Senator DeBlass." Eve stubbornly continued to
address the accused rather than his knight at arms. "You sexually abused
your daughter, Catherine."
"Preposterous," DeBlass blurted out before his attorney lifted a hand to
silence him.
"I have a statement, signed and verified before witnesses from
Congresswoman Catherine DeBlass." Eve offered it, and the lawyer nipped
it out of her fingers before the senator could move.
He scanned it, then folded his carefully manicured hands over it. "You
may not be aware, lieutenant, that there is an unfortunate history of
mental disorder here. Senator DeBlass's wife is even now under
observation for a breakdown."
"We are aware." She spared the lawyer a glance. "And we will be
investigating her condition, and the cause of it."
"Congresswoman DeBlass has also been treated for symptoms of depression,
paranoia, and stress," the lawyer continued in the same neutral tone.
"If she has, Senator DeBlass, we'll find that the roots of it are due to
your systematic and continued abuse of her as a child. You were in New
York on the night of Sharon DeBlass's murder," she said, switching gears
smoothly. "Not, as you previously claimed, in East Washington."
Before the lawyer could block her, she leaned forward, her eyes steady
on DeBlass's face. "Let me tell you how it went down. You took your
private shuttle, paying the pilot and the flight engineer to doctor the
log. You went to Sharon's apartment, had sex with her, recorded it for
your own purposes. You took a weapon with you, a thirty-eight caliber
Smith & Wesson antique. And because she taunted you, because she
threatened you, because you couldn't take the pressure of possible
exposure any longer, you shot her. You shot her three times, in the
head, in the heart and in the genitalia."
She kept the words coming fast, kept her face close to his. It pleased
her that she could smell his sweat. "The last shot was pretty clever.
Messed up any chance for us to verify sexual activity. You ripped her
open at the crotch. Maybe it was symbolic, maybe it was
self-preservation. Why'd you take the gun with you? Had you planned it?
Had you decided to end it once and for all?"
DeBlass's eyes darted left and right. His breathing grew hard and fast.
"My client does not acknowledge ownership of the weapon in question."
"Your client's scum."
The lawyer puffed up. "Lieutenant Dallas, you're speaking of a United
States Senator."
"That makes him elected scum. It shocked you, didn't it, senator? All
the blood, the noise, the way the gun jerked in your hand. Maybe you
hadn't really believed you could go through with it. Not when push came
to shove and you had to pull the trigger. But once you had, there was no
going back. You had to cover it up. She would have ruined you, she never
would have let you have peace. She wasn't like Catherine. Sharon
wouldn't fade into the background and suffer all the shame and the guilt
and the fear. She used it against you, so you had to kill her. Then you
had to cover your tracks."
"Lieutenant Dallas -- "
She never took her eyes from DeBlass, and ignoring the lawyer's warning,
kept beating at him. "That was exciting, wasn't it? You could get away
with it. You're a United States senator, the victim's grandfather. Who
would believe it of you? So you arranged her on the bed, indulged
yourself, your ego. You could do it again, and why not? The killing had
stirred something in you. What better way to hide than to make it seem
as if there was some maniac at large?"
She waited while DeBlass reached for a glass of water and drank
thirstily. "There was a maniac at large. You printed out the note,
slipped it under her. And you dressed, calmer now, but excited. You set
the 'link to call the cops at two fifty-five. You needed enough time to
go down and fix the security tapes. Then you got back on your shuttle,
flew back to East Washington, and waited to play the outraged
grandfather."
Through it all, DeBlass said nothing. But a muscle jerked in his cheek
and his eyes couldn't find a place to land.
"That's a fascinating story, lieutenant," the lawyer said. "But it
remains that -- a story. A supposition. A desperate attempt by the
police department to fight their way out of a difficult situation with
the media and the people of New York. And, of course, it's perfect
timing that such ridiculous and damaging accusation should be levied
against the senator just as his Morals Bill is coming up for debate."
"How did you pick the other two? How did you select Lola Starr and
Georgie Castle? Have you already picked the fourth, the fifth, the
sixth? Do you think you could have stopped there? Could you have stopped
when it made you feel so powerful, so invincible, so righteous?"
DeBlass wasn't red now. He was gray, and his breathing was harsh and
choppy. When he reached for a glass again, his hand jerked and sent it
rolling to the floor.
"This interview is over." The lawyer stood, helped DeBlass to his feet.
"My client's health is precarious. He requires medical attention
immediately."
"Your client's a murderer. He'll get plenty of medical attention in a
penal colony, for the rest of his life." She pressed a button. When the
doors of the interrogation room opened, a uniform stepped in. "Call the
MTs," she ordered. "The senator's feeling a little stressed. It's going
to get worse," she warned, turning back to DeBlass. "I haven't even
gotten started."
-=O=-***-=O=-
Two hours later, after filing reports and meeting with the prosecuting
attorney, Eve fought her way through traffic. She had read a good
portion of Sharon DeBlass's diaries. It was something she needed to set
aside for now, the pictures of a twisted man and how he had turned a
young girl into a woman almost as unbalanced as he.
Because she knew it could have been, all too easily, her story. Choices
were there to be taken, she thought, brooding. Sharon's had killed her.
She wanted to blow off some steam, go over the events step by step with
someone who would listen, appreciate, support. Someone who, for a little
while, would stand between her and the ghosts of what was. And what
could have been.
She headed for Roarke's.
When the call came through on her car 'link, she prayed it wasn't a
summons back to duty. "Dallas."
"Hey, kid." It was Feeney's tired face on-screen. "I just watched the
interrogation discs. Good job."
"Didn't get as far as I'd like, fencing with the damn lawyer. I'm going
to break him, Feeney. I swear it."
"Yeah, my money's on you. But, ah, I got to tell you something that's
not going to go down well. DeBlass had a little heart blip."
"Christ, he's not going to code out on us?"
"No. No, they medicated him. Some talk about getting him a new one next
week."
"Good." She blew out a stream of breath. "I want him to live a long time
-- behind bars."
"We've got a strong case. The prosecutor's ready to canonize you, but in
the meantime, he's sprung."
She hit the brakes. A volley of testy horn blasts behind her had her
whipping over to the edge of Tenth and blocking the turning lane. "What
the hell do you mean, he's sprung?"
Feeney winced, as much in empathy as reaction. "Released on his own
recognizance. U. S. senator, lifetime of patriotic duty, salt of the
earth, dinky heart -- and a judge in his pocket."
"Fuck that." She pulled her hair until the pain equaled her frustration.
"We got him on murder, three counts. Prosecutor said she was going for
no bail."
"She got shot down. DeBlass's lawyer made a speech that would have wrung
tears from a stone and had a corpse saluting the flag. DeBlass is back
in East Washington by now, under doctor's orders to rest. He got a
thirty-six-hour hold on further interrogation."
"Shit." She punched the wheel with the heel of her hand. "It's not going
to make any difference," she said grimly. "He can play the ill elder
statesman, he can do a tap dance at the fucking Lincoln Memorial, I've
got him."
"Commander's worried that the time lag will give DeBlass an opportunity
to pool his resources. He wants you back working with the prosecutor,
going over everything we've got by oh eight hundred tomorrow."
"I'll be there. Feeney, he's not going to slip out of this noose."
"Just make sure you've got the knot nice and tight, kid. See you at
eight."
"Yeah." Steaming, she swung back into traffic. She considered going
home, burying herself in the chain of evidence. But she was five minutes
from Roarke's. Eve opted to use him as a sounding board.
She could count on him to play devil's advocate if she needed it, to
point out flaws. And, she admitted, to calm her down so that she could
think without all these violent emotions getting in the way. She
couldn't afford those emotions, couldn't afford to let Catherine's face
pop into her head, as it had time and time again. The shame and the fear
and the guilt.
It was impossibly hard to separate it. She knew she wanted DeBlass to
pay every bit as much for Catherine as for the three dead women.
She was cleared through Roarke's gate, drove quickly up the sloped
driveway. Her pulse began to thud as she raced up the steps. Idiot, she
told herself. Like some hormonal plagued teenager. But she was smiling
when Summerset opened the door.
"I need to see Roarke," she said, brushing by him.
"I'm sorry, lieutenant. Roarke isn't at home."
"Oh." The sense of deflation made her feel ridiculous. "Where is he?"
Summerset's face pokered up. "I believe he's in a meeting. He was forced
to cancel an important trip to Europe, and was therefore compelled to
work late."
"Right." The cat pranced down the steps and immediately began twining
himself through Eve's legs. She picked him up, stroked his underbelly.
"When do you expect him?"
"Roarke's time is his business, lieutenant. I don't presume to expect
him."
"Look, pal, I haven't been twisting Roarke's arm to get him to spend his
valuable time with me. So why don't you pull the stick out of your ass
and tell me why you act like I'm some sort of embarrassing rodent
whenever I show up."
Shock turned Summerset's face paper white. "I am not comfortable with
crude manners, Lieutenant Dallas. Obviously, you are."
"They fit me like old slippers."
"Indeed." Summerset drew himself up. "Roarke is a man of taste, of
style, of influence. He has the ear of presidents and kings. He has
escorted women of unimpeachable breeding and pedigree."
"And I've got lousy breeding and no pedigree." She would have laughed if
the barb hadn't stuck so close to the heart. "It seems even a man like
Roarke can find the occasional mongrel appealing. Tell him I took the
cat," she added and walked out.
-=O=-***-=O=-
It helped to tell herself Summerset was an insufferable snob. And the
cat's silent interest as she vented on the drive home was curiously
smoothing. She didn't need some tight-assed butler's approval. As if in
agreement, the cat walked over onto her lap and began to knead her
thighs.
She winced a little as his claws nipped through her trousers, but didn't
move him aside. "I guess we've got to come up with a name for you. Never
had a pet before," she murmured. "I don't know what Georgie called you,
but we'll start fresh. Don't worry, we won't go for anything wimpy like
Fluffy."
She pulled into her garage, parked, saw the yellow light blipping on the
wall of her spot. A warning that her payment on the space was overdue.
If it went red, the barricade would engage and she'd be screwed.
She swore a little, more from habit than heat. She hadn't had time to
pay bills, damn it, and now realized she could face an evening of
catching up playing the credit juggle with her bank account.
Hauling the cat under her arm, she walked to the elevator. "Fred,
maybe." She tilted her head, stared into his unreadable two-toned eyes.
"No, you don't look like Fred. Jesus, you must weigh twenty pounds."
Shifting her bag, she stepped into the car. "We'll give the name some
thought, Tubbo."
The minute she set him down inside the apartment, he darted for the
kitchen. Taking her responsibilities as pet owner seriously, and
deciding it was one way to postpone crunching figures, Eve followed and
came up with a saucer of milk and some leftover Chinese that smelled
slightly off.
The cat apparently had no delicacies when it came to food, and attacked
the meal with gusto.
She watched him a moment, letting her mind drift. She'd wanted Roarke.
Needed him. That was something else she'd have to give some thought to.
She didn't know how seriously to take the fact that he claimed to be in
love with her. Love meant different things to different people. It had
never been a part of her life.
She poured herself a half glass of wine, then merely frowned into it.
She felt something for him, certainly. Something new, and uncomfortably
strong. Still, it was best to let things coast as they were. Decisions
made quickly were almost always regretted quickly.
Why the hell hadn't he been home?
She set the untouched wine aside, dragged a hand through her hair. That
was the biggest problem with getting used to someone, she thought. You
were lonely when they weren't there.
She had work to do, she reminded herself. A case to close, a little
Russian roulette with her credit status. Maybe she'd indulge in a long,
hot bath, letting some of the stress steam away before prepping for her
morning meeting with the prosecutor.
She left the cat gulping sweet and sour and went to the bedroom.
Instincts, sluggish after a long day and personal questions, kicked in a
moment too late.
Her hand was on her weapon before she fully registered the move. But it
dropped away slowly as she stared into the long barrel of the revolver.
Colt, she thought. Forty-five. The kind that tamed the American west,
six bullets at a time.
"This isn't going to help your boss's case, Rockman."
"I disagree." He stepped from behind the door, kept the gun pointed at
her heart. "Take your weapon out slowly, lieutenant, and drop it."
She kept her eyes on his. The laser was fast, but it wouldn't be faster
than a cocked. 45. At this range, the hole it would put in her would
make a nasty impression. She dropped her weapon.
"Kick it toward me. Ah!" He smiled pleasantly as her hand slid toward
her pocket. "And the communicator. I prefer keeping this between you and
me. Good," he said when her unit hit the floor.
"Some people might find your loyalty to the senator admirable, Rockman.
I find it stupid. Lying to give him an alibi is one thing. Threatening a
police officer is another."
"You're a remarkably bright woman, lieutenant. Still, you make
remarkably foolish mistakes. Loyalty isn't an issue here. I'd like you
to remove your jacket."
She kept her moves slow, her eyes on his. When the jacket was off one
shoulder, she engaged the recorder in its pocket. "If holding me at
gunpoint isn't due to loyalty to Senator DeBlass, Rockman, what is it?"
"It's a matter of self-preservation and great pleasure. I'd hoped for
the opportunity to kill you, lieutenant, but didn't see clearly how to
work it into the plan."
"What plan is that?"
"Why don't you sit down? The side of the bed. Take off your shoes and
we'll chat."
"My shoes?"
"Yes, please. This gives me my first, and I'm sure only opportunity to
discuss what I've managed to accomplish. Your shoes?"
She sat, choosing the side of the bed nearest her 'link. "You've been
working with DeBlass through it all, haven't you?"
"You want to ruin him. He could have been president, and eventually the
Chair of the World Federation of Nations. The tide's swinging, and he
could have swept it along and sat in the Oval Office. Beyond."
"With you at his side."
"Of course. And with me at his side, we would have taken the country,
then the world, in a new direction. The right direction. One of strong
morals, strong defense."
She took her time, letting one shoe drop before unstrapping the other.
"Defense -- like your old pals in SafeNet?"
His smile was hard, his eyes bright. "This country has been run by
diplomats for too long. Our generals discuss and negotiate rather than
command. With my help, DeBlass would have changed that. But you were
determined to bring him down, and me with him. There's no chance for the
presidency now."
"He's a murderer, a child abuser -- "
"A statesman," Rockman interrupted. "You'll never bring him to trial."
"He'll be brought to trial, and he'll be convicted. Killing me won't
stop it."
"No, but it will destroy your case against him -- posthumously on both
parts. You see, when I left him less than two hours ago, Senator DeBlass
was in his office in East Washington. I stood by him as he chose a four
fifty-seven Magnum, a very powerful gun. And I watched as he put the
barrel into his mouth, and died like a patriot."
"Christ." It jolted her, the image of it. "Suicide."
"The warrior falling on his sword." Admiration shone in Rockman's voice.
"I told him it was the only way, and he agreed. He would never have been
able to tolerate the humiliation. When his body is found, when yours is
found, the senator's reputation will be intact once again. It will be
proven that he was dead hours before you. He couldn't have killed you,
and as the method will be exactly as the other murders, and as there
will be two more, as promised, the evidence against him will cease to
matter. He'll be mourned. I'll lead the charge of fury and insult -- and
step into his bloody shoes."
"This isn't about politics. Goddamn you." She rose then, braced for the
blow. She was grateful he didn't use the gun, but the back of his hand
to knock her back. She turned with it, fell heavily onto the night
table. The glass she'd left there shattered to the floor.
"Get up."
She moaned a little. Indeed, the flash of pain had her cheek singing and
her vision blurred. She pushed herself up, turned, careful to keep her
body in front of the 'link she'd switched on manually.
"What good is it going to do to kill me, Rockman?"
"It will do me a great deal of good. You were the spearhead of the
investigation. You're sexually involved with a man who was an early
suspect. Your reputation, and your motives will come under close
scrutiny after your death. It's always a mistake to give a woman
authority."
She wiped the blood from her mouth. "Don't like women, Rockman?"
"They have their uses, but under it all, they're whores. Perhaps you
didn't sell your body to Roarke, but he bought you. Your murder won't
really break the pattern I've established."
"You've established?"
"Did you really believe DeBlass was capable of planning out and
executing such a meticulous series of murders?" He waited until he saw
that she understood. "Yes, he killed Sharon. An impulse. I wasn't even
aware he was considering it. He panicked afterward."
"You were there. You were with him the night he killed Sharon."
"I was waiting for him in the car. I always accompanied him on his
trysts with her. Driving him so that only I, who he trusted, would be
involved."
"His own granddaughter." Eve didn't dare turn to be certain she was
transmitting. "Didn't it disgust you?"
"She disgusted me, lieutenant. She used his weakness. Every man's
entitled to one, but she used it, exploited it, then threatened him.
After she was dead, I realized it was for the best. She would have
waited until he was president, then twisted the knife."
"So you helped him cover it up."
"Of course." Rockman lifted his shoulders. "I'm glad we have this
opportunity. It was frustrating for me not to be able to take credit.
I'm delighted to share it with you."
Ego, she remembered. Not just intelligence, but ego and vanity. "You had
to think fast," she commented. "And you did. Fast and brilliantly."
"Yes." His smile spread. "He called me on the car 'link, told me to come
up quickly. He was half mad with fear. If I hadn't calmed him, she might
have succeeded in ruining him."
"You can blame her?"
"She was a whore. A dead whore." He shrugged it off, but held the gun
steady. "I gave the senator a sedative, and I cleaned up the mess. As I
explained to him, it was necessary to make Sharon only part of the
whole. To use her failings, her pathetic choice of profession. It was a
simple matter to doctor the security discs. The senator's penchant for
recording his sexual activities gave me the idea to use that as part of
the pattern."
"Yes," she said through numbed lips. "That was clever."
"I wiped the place down, wiped the gun. Since he'd been sensible enough
not to use one that was registered, I left it behind. Again,
establishing pattern."
"So you used it," Eve said quietly. "Used him, used Sharon."
"Only fools waste opportunities. He was more himself once we were away,"
Rockman mused. "I was able to outline the rest of my plan. Using Simpson
to apply pressure, leak information. It was unfortunate that the senator
didn't remember until later to tell me about Sharon's diaries. I had to
risk going back. But, as we know now, she was clever enough to hide them
well."
"You killed Lola Starr and Georgie Castle. You killed them to cover up
the first murder."
"Yes. But unlike the senator, I enjoyed it. From beginning to end. It
was a simple matter to select them, choose names, locations."
It was a little difficult at the moment to enjoy the fact that she'd
been right, and her computer wrong. Two killers after all. "You didn't
know them? You didn't even know them?"
"Did you think I should?" He laughed at that. "Who they were hardly
mattered. Only what. Whores offend me. Women who spread their legs to
weaken a man offend me. You offend me, lieutenant."
"Why the discs?" Where the hell was Feeney? Why wasn't a roving unit
breaking down her door right now? "Why did you send me the discs?"
"I liked watching you scramble around like a mouse after cheese -- a
woman who believed she could think like a man. I pointed you at Roarke,
but you let him talk you onto your back. All too typical. You
disappointed me. You were emotional, lieutenant: over the deaths, over
that little girl you didn't save. But you got lucky. Which is why you're
about to become very unlucky."
He sidestepped over to the dresser where he had a camera waiting. He
switched it on. "Take off your clothes."
"You can kill me," she said as her stomach began to churn. "But you're
not going to rape me."
"You'll do exactly what I want you to do. They always do." He lowered
the gun until it pointed at her midsection. "With the others, it was a
shot to the head first. Instant death, probably painless. Do you have
any idea what sort of pain you'll experience with a forty-five slug in
your gut? You'll be begging me to kill you."
His eyes lit brilliantly. "Strip."
Eve's hands fell to her sides. She'd face the pain, but not the
nightmare. Neither of them saw the cat slink into the room.
"Your choice, lieutenant," Rockman said, then jerked when the cat
brushed between his legs.
Eve sprang forward, head low, and used the force of her body to drive
him against the wall.
*** CHAPTER TWENTY ***
Feeney stopped on his way back from the eatery, a half a soy burger in
his hand. He loitered by the coffee dispenser, gossiping with a couple
of cops on robbery detail. They swapped stories, and Feeney decided he
could use one more cup of coffee before calling it a night.
He nearly bypassed his office altogether, with visions of an evening in
front of the TV screen and a nice cold beer swimming in his head. His
wife might even be up for a little cuddle if he was lucky.
But he was a creature of habit. He breezed in to make certain his
precious computer was secured for the night. And heard Eve's voice.
"Hey, Dallas, what brings you -- " He stopped, scanning his empty
office. "Working too hard," he muttered, then heard her again.
"You were with him. You were with him the night he killed Sharon."
"Oh my Jesus."
He could see little on the screen: Eve's back, the side of the bed.
Rockman was blocked from view, but the audio was clear. Feeney was
already praying when he called Dispatch.
-=O=-***-=O=-
Eve heard the cat's annoyed screech when her foot stomped his tail,
heard too, the clatter as the gun hit the floor. Rockman had her in
height, he had her in weight. And he'd recovered from her full body slam
too quickly. He proved graphically that he was military trained.
She fought viciously, unable to restrain herself to the cool, efficient
moves of hand to hand. She used nails and teeth.
The shortened blow to the ribs stole her breath. She knew she was going
down, and she made sure she took him with her. They hit the floor hard,
and though she rolled, he came down on top of her.
Lights starred behind her eyes when her head rapped hard against the
floor.
His hand was around her throat, bruising her windpipe. She went for the
eyes, missed, and raked furrows down his cheek that had him howling like
an animal. If he'd used his other hand for a blow to the face, he might
have stunned her, but he was too focused on reaching the gun. Her
stiff-handed chop to his elbow had his hand shaking from her throat.
Painfully gasping in air, she scrambled with him for the gun.
His hand closed over it first.
-=O=-***-=O=-
Roarke tucked a package under his arm as he walked into the lobby of
Eve's building. He enjoyed the fact that she'd come to him. It was a
habit he didn't intend to see her break. He thought now that she'd
closed her case, he could talk her into taking a couple of days off. He
had an island in the West Indies he thought she'd enjoy.
He pressed her intercom, and was smiling over the image of swimming
naked with her in clear blue water, making love under a hot, white sun
when all hell broke loose behind him.
"Get the hell out of the way." Feeney came in like a steamroller, a
dozen uniforms in his wake. "Police business."
"Eve!" Roarke's blood drained even as he muscled his way onto the
elevator.
Feeney ignored him and barked into his communicator. "Secure all exits.
Get those fucking sharpshooters in position."
Roarke fisted his hand uselessly at his sides. "DeBlass?"
"Rockman," Feeney corrected, counting every beat of his own heart. "He's
got her. Stay out of the way, Roarke."
"The fuck I will."
Feeney flicked his eyes over, measured. No way he was going to spare a
couple of cops to restrain a civilian, and he had a hunch this civilian
would go to the wall, as he would, for Eve.
"Then do what I tell you."
They heard the gunshot as the elevator doors opened.
Roarke was two steps ahead of Feeney when he rammed Eve's apartment
door. He swore, reared back. They hit it together.
-=O=-***-=O=-
The pain was like being stabbed with ice. Then it was gone, numbed with
fury. Eve clamped her hand over the wrist of his gun hand, dug her short
nails into his flesh. Rockman's face was close to hers, his body pinning
her in an obscene parody of love. His wrist was slippery with his own
blood where she clawed at it.
She swore as she lost her grip, as he began to smile.
"You fight like a woman." He shook his hair back from his eyes, and the
blood from his torn cheek welled red. "I'm going to rape you. The last
thing you'll know before I kill you is that you're no better than a
whore."
She sagged, and aroused with victory, he ripped at her blouse.
His smile shattered when she pumped her fist into his mouth. Blood
splattered over her like warm rain. She hit him again, heard the crunch
of cartilage as his nose fountained more blood. Quick as a snake, she
scissored up.
And again, she jabbed at him, an elbow to the jaw, torn knuckles to the
face, screaming and cursing as if her words would pummel him as well as
her fists.
She didn't hear the battering of the door, the crash of it falling in.
With rage behind her, she shoved Rockman to his back, straddled him, and
continued to plunge her fists into his face.
"Eve. Sweet God."
It took Roarke and Feeney together to haul her off. She fought,
snarling, until Roarke pressed her face into his shoulder.
"Stop. It's done. It's over."
"He was going to kill me. He killed Lola and Georgie. He was going to
kill me, but he was going to rape me first." She pulled back, wiped at
the blood and sweat on her face. "That's where he made a mistake."
"Sit down." His hands were trembling and slicked with blood when he
eased her onto the bed. "You're hurt."
"Not yet. It'll start in a minute." She gathered in a breath, let it
out. She was a cop, damn it, she reminded herself. She was a cop, and
she'd act like one. "You got the transmission," she said to Feeney.
"Yeah." He took out a handkerchief to wipe his clammy face.
"Then what the hell took you so long?" She managed a ghost of a smile.
"You look a little upset, Feeney."
"Shit. All in a day's work." He flipped on his communicator. "Situation
under control. We need an ambulance."
"I'm not going to any health center."
"Not for you, champ. For him." He glanced down at Rockman, who managed a
weak groan.
"Once you clean him up, book him for the murders of Lola Starr and
Georgie Castle."
"You sure about that?"
Her legs were a bit wobbly, but she rose and picked up her jacket. "Got
it all." She held out the recorder. "DeBlass did Sharon, but our boy
here is accessory after the fact. And I want him charged with the
attempted rape and murder of a police officer. Toss in B and E for the
hell of it."
"You got it." Feeney tucked the recorder into his pocket. "Christ,
Dallas, you're a mess."
"I guess I am. Get him out of here, will you, Feeney?"
"Sure thing."
"Let me help you." Roarke bent down, lifted Rockman by the lapels. He
jerked the man up, steadied him. "Look at me, Rockman. Vision clear?"
Rockman blinked blood out of his eyes. "I can see you."
"Good." Roarke's arm shot up, quick as a bullet, and his fist connected
with Rockman's already battered face.
"Oops," Feeney said mildly, when Rockman crumbled to the floor again.
"Guess he's not too steady on his feet." He bent over himself, slipped
on the cuffs. "Maybe a couple of you boys ought to carry him out. Hold
the ambulance for me. I'll ride with him."
He took out an evidence bag, slipped the gun into it. "Nice piece --
ivory handle. Bet it packs a wallop."
"Tell me about it." Her hand went automatically to her arm.
Feeney stopped admiring the gun and gaped at her. "Shit, Dallas, you
shot?"
"I don't know." She said it almost dreamily, surprised when Roarke
ripped off the sleeve of her already tattered shirt. "Hey."
"Grazed her." His voice was hollow. He ripped the sleeve again, used it
to stanch the wound. "She needs to be looked at."
"I figure I can leave that to you," Feeney remarked. "You might want to
stay somewhere else tonight, Dallas. Let a team come in and clean this
up for you."
"Yeah." She smiled as the cat leaped onto the bed. "Maybe."
He whistled through his teeth. "Busy day."
"It comes and goes," she murmured, stroking the cat. Galahad, she
thought, her white knight.
"See you around, kid."
"Yeah. Thanks, Feeney."
Determined to get through, Roarke crouched in front of her. He waited
until Feeney's whistling faded away. "Eve, you're in shock."
"Sort of. I'm starting to hurt though."
"You need a doctor."
She moved her shoulders. "I could use a pain pill, and I need to clean
up."
She looked down at herself, took inventory calmly. Her blouse was torn,
spotted with blood. Her hands were a mess, ripped and swollen knuckles
-- she couldn't quite make a fist. A hundred bruises were making
themselves known and the wound on her arm where the bullet had nicked it
was turning to fire.
"I don't think it's as bad as it looks," she decided, "but I'd better
check."
When she started to rise, he picked her up. "I kind of like when you
carry me. Makes me all wobbly inside. Then I feel stupid about it after.
There's stuff in the bathroom."
Since he wanted to see the damage for himself, he carried her in, set
her on the toilet. He found strong, police issue pain pills in a nearly
empty medicine cabinet. He offered one, and water, before dampening a
cloth.
She pushed at her hair with her good arm. "I forgot to tell Feeney.
DeBlass is dead. Suicide. What they used to call eating your gun. Hell
of a phrase."
"Don't worry about it now." Roarke worked on the bullet wound first. It
was a nasty gash, but the bleeding had already slowed. Any competent MT
could close it in a matter of minutes. It didn't make his hands any
steadier.
"There were two killers." She frowned at the far wall. "That was the
problem. I clicked onto it, but then I let it go. Data indicated low
probability percentage. Stupid."
Roarke rinsed out the cloth and started on her face. He was deliriously
relieved that most of the blood on it wasn't hers. Her mouth was cut,
her left eye already beginning to swell. There was raw color along her
cheekbone.
He managed to take a full, almost easy breath. "You're going to have a
hell of a bruise."
"I've had them before." The medication was seeping in, turning pain into
a mist. She only smiled when he stripped her to the waist and began
checking for other injuries. "You've got great hands. I love when you
touch me. Nobody ever touched me like that. Did I tell you?"
"No." And he doubted she'd remember she was telling him now. He'd make
sure to remind her.
"And you're so pretty. So pretty," she repeated, lifting a bleeding hand
to his face. "I keep wondering what you're doing here."
He took her hand, wrapped a cloth gently around it. "I've asked myself
the same question."
She grinned foolishly, let herself float. Need to file my report, she
thought hazily. Soon. "You don't really think we're going to make
anything out of this, do you? Roarke and the cop?"
"I guess we'll have to find out." There were plenty of bruises, but the
bluing along her ribs worried him most.
"Okay. Maybe I could lie down now? Can we go to your place, 'cause
Feeney's going to send a team in to record the scene and all that. If I
could just take a little nap before I go in to make my report."
"You're going to the closest health center."
"No, uh-uh. Can't stand them. Hospitals, health centers, doctors." She
gave him a glassy-eyed smile and lifted her arms. "Let me sleep in your
bed, Roarke. Okay? The great big one, up on the platform, under the
sky."
For lack of anything closer to hand, he took off his jacket and slipped
it around her. When he picked her up again, her head lolled on his
shoulder.
"Don't forget Galahad. The cat saved my life. Who'd have thought?"
"Then he gets caviar for the whole of his nine lives." Roarke snapped
his fingers and the cat fell happily into step.
"Door's broken." Eve chuckled as Roarke stepped around it and into the
hall. "Landlord's going to be pissed. But I know how to get around him."
She pressed a kiss to Roarke's throat. "I'm glad it's over," she said,
sighing. "I'm glad you're here. Be nice if you stuck around."
"Count on it." Shifting her, he bent down and retrieved the package he'd
dropped in the hallway in his race to her door. There was a fresh pound
of coffee inside. He figured he'd need it as a bribe when she woke up
and found herself in a hospital bed.
"Don't wanna dream tonight," she murmured as she drifted off.
He stepped into the elevator, the cat at his feet. "No." He brushed his
lips over Eve's hair. "No dreams tonight."