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The In Death Collection, Books 21-25 Page 8
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“Why am I working out at five in the morning?”
“Five-fifteen, actually, and because it’s good for you.” He tossed her a pair of shorts. “Suit up, Lieutenant.”
“When do you leave town again?”
He tossed a top into her face.
She dragged on the clothes, then set her equipment for a beach run. If she was going to work out before the sun came up, at least she could pretend she was at the beach. She liked the feel of sand under her feet, and the sounds and scents and sights of surf.
Roarke set up next to her with the same program. “We could make this a reality after the holidays.”
“What holidays?”
Amused when she picked up her pace, he matched her. “We’re nearly to Thanksgiving. Which is actually something I wanted to discuss with you.”
“It’s on a Thursday. You eat turkey whether you like it or not. I know about Thanksgiving.”
“It’s also an American holiday. A . . . family holiday, traditionally. I thought it might be appropriate to invite my Irish relations here for dinner.”
“Bring them to New York to eat turkey?”
“Essentially.”
She watched him out of the corner of her eye, noted he was slightly embarrassed. A rarity for him. “How many of them are there, anyway?”
“About thirty or so.”
Her breath wheezed in. “Thirty?”
“More or less. I’m not entirely sure, though I doubt all of them could get away, with a farm to run and other work. All those children. But I thought Sinead, at least, with her family, might be able to take a day or two here, and the holiday seemed the right time. We might invite Mavis and Leonardo, Peabody and so on. Whoever you’d like. Make a right bash of it.”
“Gonna need one big-ass turkey.”
“I think the food will be the simplest of the details. How would you feel about having them here?”
“A little weird, but okay. How about you?”
He relaxed. “A little weird, but okay. I appreciate it.”
“As long as I don’t have to bake a pie.”
“God forbid.”
The workout did indeed clear her mind, and she added a stint with weights, polished it off with twenty laps in the pool.
She’d intended to do twenty-five, but Roarke caught her on the twenty-first turn. And she ended the workout with a different sort of water exercise.
She was alert and ravenous by the time she’d showered and grabbed her first cup of coffee.
She went for waffles, exchanged beady eyes with Galahad when the cat tried to slink up to her plate.
“He’s got to have space.”
“Cat’s got the run of the bloody house.”
“Not the cat. Icove,” Eve said and got an absentminded mmm-hmm from Roarke as he scanned the morning stock reports on-screen in the sitting area of their bedroom. “Not in the apartment,” she continued. “Too many patients coming in and out. Lab. Maybe in the Center, maybe someplace else entirely. He’d need privacy. Even if it’s not anything illegal, it’s strange. He didn’t go through all the trouble to private the discs and his unit, then conduct all these exams or experiments or case studies in the open.”
“It’s a big facility, the Center,” Roarke began, and switched to the media bulletins. “But there are a lot of people through there. Patients, staff, visitors, stockholders. Very possible, if he was careful enough, to have a private area. But wiser, I’d think, to do this other work—particularly if it skirts the law—off-site.”
“The son would know. If they were as close, personally and professionally, as I think they were, the father and the son would both be involved with this . . . project. We’ll call it a project. Peabody and I’ll pay him another visit, see if we can go at this the direct way. We’ll take a deeper look at the financials. If this is a by-fee project, it would have generated big bucks. And I’ll look at property in his name, the son’s, the daughter-in-law, grandchildren, under the Center or his other arms. If he’s got a place, we’ll find it.”
“You’ll want to save them. The girls,” he continued when she said nothing. “You’ll want to stop them from being arranged, let’s say, if that’s the case.” He turned from the screen to look at her. “If this is some sort of training ground, some kind of preparation area, you’ll see them as victims.”
“Aren’t they?”
“Not like you were.” He took her hand. “I doubt very much it’s anything like that, or that you’ll be able to stop yourself from seeing it that way regardless. It’ll hurt you.”
“They all hurt me. Even when they have nothing to do with what happened to me. They all take a toll.”
“I know.” He kissed her hand. “Some more than others.”
“You’ll ask your family here for Thanksgiving, and it’ll hurt you. Because your mother can’t be here, and you’ll think of that. Won’t be able to stop yourself from remembering what happened to her when you were only a baby. It’ll hurt you, but it won’t stop you from asking them here. We do what we have to do, Roarke. Both of us.”
“So we do.”
She rose, reached for her weapon harness. “You’re off, then?” he asked her.
“Might as well get an early start, since I’m up.”
“Then I’d best give you your present.” He watched her face—the surprise, the chagrin, the resignation. And burst out laughing. “Thought you’d gotten away clean, did you?”
“Hand it over, get it done.”
“Gracious to the last.” To her surprise he went to his closet, opened it, and pulled out a large box. He set it on the sofa. “Open it, then.”
Another fancy dress, she supposed. As if she didn’t already have enough of them to clothe an army of fashion plates. Of which she was the chipped one, hidden on the top shelf. But buying glam made him happy.
She pulled off the top, stared. “Oh. Oh wow.”
“An atypical reaction for you, Lieutenant,” he said with a grin, but she was already yanking the long black leather coat out of the box, burying her nose in it to sniff.
“Oh boy, oh boy.” She whirled it around, swirled it on while he watched. It hit her an inch above the ankles, carried deep pockets, and was smooth as butter.
“You make a picture,” he complimented, pleased that she’d already spun toward the mirror to see for herself. It was masculine—a deliberate choice on his part. No frills, no feminine touches. In it she looked sexy and dangerous, and just a little aloof.
“Now this is what it is. This is a goddamn coat. I’ll bung it up before the end of shift, but it’ll look even better with a few scars.” She spun around, and the coat swirled around her legs. “Nice job. Thanks.”
“My pleasure.” He tapped his lips so that she walked over to plant hers on them. Then he slid his arms under the coat and around her.
My God, he thought, it was good to be home.
“There are a number of inside pockets, if someone needed to secret a weapon of some sort.”
“Frosty. Man, Baxter’s going to crap himself when I walk in wearing this.”
“Lovely image, thanks.”
“It’s really great.” She kissed him again. “I really love it. I gotta go.”
“See you tonight.”
He watched her walk away, and thought she looked like a warrior.
Since she had nearly an hour before the start of her shift, Eve took a chance and headed to Mira’s office first. As she had expected, the doctor was in, and her dragon of an admin wasn’t.
Eve knocked on Mira’s open office door.
“Sorry.”
“Eve. Did we have an early appointment?”
“No.” Mira looked tired, Eve noted. And sad. “I know you usually try to get in before hours, catch up on paperwork or whatever. Sorry to get in the way of that.”
“It’s all right. Come in. Is this about Wilfred?”
“Wanted to run something by you.” And she felt lousy for doing it. “Doctor-patient relat
ion sort of deal. You keep case files.”
“Of course.”
“And in addition to the consult position with the department, you do some private work. Counseling, therapy, and the like. You sometimes treat patients on an ongoing basis. Over the course of years, say.”
“Certainly.”
“How do you keep the files, the data?”
“I’m not sure what you mean.”
“You passcode your unit, for security?”
“Absolutely. All files are confidential. The private cases. And the consults for the department are on a need-to-know basis.”
“The discs themselves? Those protected, too?”
“I would add a layer onto the more sensitive material, if I felt it necessary.”
“You encode the data?”
“Codes?” This time Mira smiled. “That would be a bit paranoid of me, wouldn’t it? Are you worried about leaks on my end, Eve?”
“No. Other than paranoia, why would a doctor passcode unit, discs, then encode the data on the discs?”
The smile had faded. “I would have to assume the structure in which the doctor worked required such precautions, or the data itself was hypersensitive. There is the possibility the doctor had reason to suspect someone might attempt to access the data. Or the work being documented was highly experimental.”
“Illegal.”
“I didn’t say illegal.”
“Would you if you weren’t aware I was asking about Icove?”
“There are a lot of reasons, as I’ve just told you, why such data might be particularly protected.”
Eve sat without invitation, kept her eyes level with Mira’s. “He gave the patients labels rather than names. They were all female, all between the ages of seventeen and twenty-two. There was little surgery of the type he’s known for. They were all tested and graded in areas such as cognitive skills, language, artistic talents, physical prowess. Depending on their progress and level, treatment—which was never clearly detailed—was either continued or terminated. If continued, it ended in what was termed ‘placement,’ at which time the file was ended. What does it mean?”
“I can’t say.”
“Best guess.”
“Don’t do this to me, Eve.” Mira’s voice trembled. “Please.”
“Okay.” Eve pushed to her feet. “Okay, I’m sorry.”
Mira only shook her head. Eve stepped back out of the office, and left her alone.
On the way to Homicide, Eve pulled her ’link out of her pocket. It was still early, but as far as she was concerned, doctors and cops had no schedule. She had no problem waking Dr. Louise Dimatto.
Louise looked dewy, her gray eyes blurry with sleep, her blond hair tousled. She said. “Ugh.”
“Got some questions. When can you meet me?”
“Morning off. Sleepy. Go far, far away.”
“I’ll come to you.” Eve checked the time. “Thirty minutes.”
“I hate you, Dallas.”
The screen wavered a moment, then a handsome and sleepy male face joined Louise’s. “So do I.”
“Hey, Charles.” Charles Monroe was a professional LC, and the other half of the couple who were Charles and Louise. “Thirty minutes,” she repeated, and ended the transmission before anyone could argue.
She backtracked, deciding it would be simpler to pick up Peabody at her home and head straight out. When Peabody came on screen her hair was wet and she had a towel clutched to her breasts.
“I’m picking you up in fifteen,” Eve told her.
“Somebody dead?”
“No. I’ll fill you in. Just—” McNab stepped out of what she saw now was the shower, and she thanked God the video cut off at his sternum. “In fifteen. And for the sake of all that’s decent and holy, learn to block video.”
Peabody managed to pull it together in fifteen, Eve noted with satisfaction. She came quickly out of the door hustling on those airskids she favored. Dark green today, to go with a green-and-white-striped jacket that fell just past her hips.
She jumped in the car, then her eyes went wide and glassy. “The coat! The coat!” Her hand shot out to rub leather, and Eve slapped it away.
“No touching the coat.”
“Can I sniff it? Please, please? Please!”
“Nose one full inch from sleeve. One sniff.”
Peabody complied, dramatically rolled her eyes. “Roarke got home early, right?”
“Maybe I bought it for myself.”
“Yeah, right. Maybe little pink piggies fly on gossamer wings. Okay, if nobody else is dead, why are we on the clock early?”
“Need to consult a medical. It’s touchy with Mira—personal relationship with vic—so I’ve got Louise as backup. We’re heading there.”
Out of her bag, Peabody dug lip dye. “Didn’t have time to finish,” she said when Eve slanted her a look. “And if we’re going to see Louise and Charles?”
“Probably.”
“I want to be spruced.”
“Do you have any interest whatsoever in the progress of the investigation?”
“Sure. I can listen, access, deduce while I spruce. Deduce while I spruce,” Peabody repeated in a jaunty rhythm.
Eve ignored the lip dying, the hair brushing, the scent spritzing while she relayed the information and fought with traffic.
“Off-the-record and potentially illegal experimentation,” Peabody mused. “His son would know.”
“Agreed.”
“Admin?”
“She’s straight office drone. No medical training on her record, but we’ll interview her with this angle. What I want first is a medical opinion. I want a doctor’s eyes to see the data. Mira was too close to this guy.”
“You said fifty or so patients. Seems like too many for him to handle alone.”
“What I’ve got covers more than five years. Various stages of testing or prep, or whatever the hell it is. There were some groupings—A-one, -two, -three. Like that. But no, even with that schedule, he most likely had help. His son, certainly. Possibly lab techs, other doctors. If this placement business is fee-based, there have to be records of income, and somebody who handled that end.”
“Daughter-in-law? She was his ward first.”
“We’ll give that a push, but no medical training on record there, either. No business experience, no tech skills. Why is there never any parking around here?”
“A question for the ages.”
Eve considered double-parking. Considered further the probability that her fairly new ride would get bashed by a pissed-off commuter, and circled around until she found a second-level street slot two blocks from Louise’s building.
She didn’t mind the walk, especially in her icy new coat.
6
THEY LOOKED LIKE A COUPLE OF SLEEPY CATS, Eve thought. All limber and loose, like they were ready to curl up together for a little morning nap in a block of sunlight.
Louise wore some sort of long white tunic that struck Eve as a bit goddessy—but it suited her. Her feet were bare, the toes painted a shimmery pink. Charles hadn’t bothered with shoes either, but at least he didn’t go for pink toes. He’d chosen white as well, in roomy white pants and a generously sized shirt.
They looked so rosy, Eve wondered if they’d managed to sneak in a quickie since her call. Then immediately wished her brain hadn’t delved in that area.
She liked them both, had even started to get used to the idea of them as a couple. But she didn’t want to think about the coupling part.
“Bright and early, Lieutenant Sugar.” Charles kissed Eve on the cheek before she could evade. “Look at you.” He took Peabody by the arms and gave her a quick, warm buss on the lips. “Detective Delish.”
Peabody pinked and fluttered until Eve jabbed a finger in her side. “Official business.”
“We’re having coffee.” Louise walked back into the living area, plopped on the sofa, lifted a cup. “Don’t ask me anything official until I’ve had my first jolt. Bet
ween the clinic and the shelter, I put in fourteen full ones yesterday. Today is for sloth.”
“Did you know Wilfred Icove?”
Louise sighed. “At least sit down, have some coffee that my gorgeous lover so gallantly arranged. Have a bagel.”
“I already had breakfast.”
“Well, I didn’t.” Peabody sat, plucked up a bagel. “She got me out of the shower.”
“You look great,” Louise commented. “Cohabbing agrees with you. How are you feeling, physically?”
“Good. Finished the PT, got a thumbs-up.”
“You did good.” Louise patted Peabody’s knee. “The injuries you sustained from the assault were damned serious, and it was only a few weeks ago. You worked hard to come back this fast.”
“Sturdy constitution helps.” Secretly, Peabody wished she were more delicate, more fine-boned, like Louise.
“If we’re all caught up now?” Eve narrowed her eyes.
“Yes, I knew Dr. Icove, and know his son a little, professionally. What happened is a tragedy. He was a pioneer in his field, and very likely had decades left to work and enjoy life.”
“You knew him personally?”
“Through my family somewhat.” Louise’s blood was wealthy blue. “I admired his work and his dedication. I hope you quickly find who killed him.”
“I’m looking through some of his case files, particularly at this point the ones he kept in his home office. He had his unit passcoded, his discs sealed, and the text coded.”
Louise pursed her lips. “Very cautious.”
“In them, he refers to his patients by letter and number, never by name.”
“Extremely cautious. He had many important people, political types, celebrities, business moguls, and so on as patients—or so one assumes as he never revealed names.”
“Doubtful in this case. All female, all between the ages of seventeen and twenty-two.”
Louise’s elegant eyebrows drew together. “All?”
“More than fifty, all documented for treatment over the course of four to five years on these discs.”
Her attention was caught now as Louise straightened. “What kind of treatment?”
“You tell me.” Eve took out a hard copy of one of the discs, passed the several pages across the coffee table.