The In Death Collection 06-10 (163 page)

BOOK: The In Death Collection 06-10
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“I want to know the minute he can talk.”

“I’ll make sure you’re informed. Now, I have patients to see.”

“Lieutenant.” Clark stepped up. “This is the nurse you wanted to see.”

“Ormand,” Eve said, reading the ID badge. “Talk to me.”

“I had no idea he meant to try self-termination. I wouldn’t have believed he was capable of it, physically I mean. He was weak as a baby.”

“A man wants to do himself, he finds a way. Nobody’s blaming you.”

She nodded, relaxed her defensive stance. “I was in there for a routine check of his vitals. He was conscious, and he told me he wanted to confess. I thought he meant to a priest. We get a lot of that, even from patients who aren’t Catholic or Egatarian. But he became agitated, and asked for you by name. Said I was to tell you he wanted to confess.”

“To what?”

“He didn’t say. I thought he killed that other actor. Richard Draco.” When Eve didn’t respond, the nurse shrugged. “I calmed him down, promised to find you. Then I told the guard after I arranged for the patient’s afternoon nutrition. I don’t know anything else.”

“All right.” She dismissed the nurse, turned back to Clark. “I need you to stand by up in the ICU. I’ll arrange for a relief in an hour. If there’s any change in Stiles’s condition before that, I want to know.”

“Yes, sir. His own sheets,” Clark murmured. “That takes balls.”

“It takes something.” Eve turned on her heel and strode to the waiting area where Peabody had taken Areena.

“Kenneth?” Areena got shakily to her feet.

“They’re moving him to Intensive Care.”

“I thought he was . . . when I saw him, I thought . . .” She sank to her chair again. “Oh, how much more can happen?”

“Eliza Rothchild said tragedies happen in threes.”

“Superstition. I’ve never been overly superstitious, but now . . . He’ll be all right?”

“The doctor seemed optimistic. How did you know Kenneth Stiles was here?”

“How? Why, I heard it on the news just this morning. They’re saying he was injured while trying to leave the city. That he’s the prime suspect in Richard’s death. I don’t believe that. Not for a moment. I wanted to see him, to tell him that.”

“Why don’t you believe it?”

“Because Kenneth’s not capable of murder. It’s cold-blooded and calculating. He’s neither.”

“Sometimes murder’s hot-blooded and impulsive.”

“You’d know more about that than I. But I know Kenneth. He killed no one.”

“Do you know a woman named Anja Carvell?”

“Carvell? I don’t think so. Should I? Will they let me see Kenneth?”

“I don’t know.”

“I should try.”

Eve got to her feet as Areena rose. “You realize, don’t you, that if Kenneth Stiles did plan the murder of Richard Draco, he’s the one who put the knife in your hand.”

Areena shivered, and the faint color in her cheeks faded. “That’s only one more reason I know it couldn’t have been Kenneth.”

“Why is that?”

“He’s too much of a gentleman. May I go, Lieutenant?”

“Yeah, you can go.”

Areena paused at the doorway. “You fought to save
his life. I watched you. You believe he’s a murderer, yet you fought to save his life. Why?”

“Maybe I didn’t want him to escape justice.”

“I think it’s more than that. But I’m not sure what.”

“Hell of a day so far,” Peabody said when they were alone.

“We’re just getting started. Up and at ’em, Peabody. We’ve got places to go.”

She turned out of the room and nearly walked into Nadine.

“Ambulance chasing?” Eve said mildly. “I thought you were too important for that routine.”

“You’re never too important for that routine. What’s the status on Kenneth Stiles?”

“No comment.”

“Come on, Dallas. I have a source in the hospital. I heard he tried to hang himself. Did he kill Richard Draco?”

“Which part didn’t you get, the
no
or the
comment
?”

Nadine’s fashionable heels made the rapid stride down the corridor tricky, but she managed to keep up with Eve. “Are you charging him with murder? Are there any other suspects? Will you confirm Stiles was injured during flight?”

“The media’s already broadcasting that one.”

“Sure, with
allegedly
and
believed to be
sprinkled all through the reports. I need confirmation.”

“I need a vacation. Neither of us look to be getting our wish anytime soon.”

“Dallas.” Giving up, Nadine took Eve’s arm, tugged her aside out of the way of Peabody and her own long-suffering camera operator. “I have to know something. I can’t sleep. Give me something, make it off the record. I need to close this circle before I can move on.”

“You shouldn’t be on this story.”

“I know it, and if it comes out that Richard and I were involved, I’ll take a lot of heat for that, personally and
professionally. But if I just sit around and wait, I’ll go crazy with those options, I’ll risk the heat.”

“How much did he mean to you?”

“Entirely too much. That’s been dead a lot longer than he has. That doesn’t mean I don’t need to close the circle.”

“Meet me at Central, an hour. I’ll give you what I can.”

“Thanks. If you could just tell me if Kenneth—”

“An hour, Nadine.” Eve skirted around her. “Don’t push your luck.”

In twenty minutes, they were inside Anja Carvell’s suite. There wasn’t a trace of her.

“She jumped.” Peabody hissed at the empty closet. Then she frowned and turned to stare at Eve. “You knew she wouldn’t be here.”

“I didn’t expect to find her. She’s smart. Smart enough to know I’d be back.”


She
killed Draco?”

“She’s part of it.” Eve wandered into the bath. Anja’s scent was still there, coolly female.

“Should I contact the authorities in Montreal? Start arranging for extradition?”

“Don’t bother. She’d be expecting that. If she ever lived in Montreal, she wouldn’t go back there now. She’s gone under,” Eve murmured, “but she won’t go far. So we play it out. Call for the sweepers.”

“No warrant?”

“My husband owns the joint. Take care of it. I’m going down to security.”

 

By the time Eve had finished at The Palace Hotel, returned to Central, and made her case to Whitney, she was late for her appointment with Nadine.

It irritated her, as it always did, to find Nadine already in her office.

“Why do they let you in here?”

“Because I bring donuts. Cops have been weak for them for generations.”

“Where’s mine?”

“Sorry, the squad descended on them like rats. I think Baxter licked up the crumbs.”

“He would.” She settled at her desk. “Where’s your camera?”

“She’s outside.”

“Well, get her in here. I haven’t got all damn day.”

“But I thought—”

“Look, do you want a one-on-one or not?”

“You bet I do.” She grabbed her palm-link and called her camera. “You could use a few layers of concealer on those tote bags under your eyes.” She dug into the hefty and well-packed makeup kit in her purse. “Try this.”

“Keep that crap away from me.”

“Suit yourself, but you look like you haven’t slept in days.” Nadine flipped open a mirror, began to enhance her own face. “Still, it makes you look fierce and dedicated.”

“I am fierce and dedicated.”

“And it never fails to look good on-screen. Great sweater, by the way. Cashmere?”

Baffled, Eve looked down at her navy turtleneck. “I don’t know. It’s blue. Will this air tonight?”

“Bet your ass.”

“Good.” Someone, Eve thought, wasn’t going to get a good night’s sleep. And this time, it wouldn’t be her.

 

Nadine fussed with the camera angles, looked in the monitor, and ordered a light adjustment.

“It’s not a damn beauty contest, Nadine.”

“Shows what you know about on-air reporting. There, that looks good. Can you cut out some of that air traffic, Lucy? It’s like sitting in a transpo center.”

“I’m filtering out most of it.” The operator fiddled another moment, then nodded. “Ready when you are.”

“We’ll do the bumper back at the shop. Start record. This is Nadine Furst for Channel 75,” she began, her eyes on the pinpoint lens. “Reporting from Cop Central and the office of Lieutenant Eve Dallas, the primary investigator in the murder of actor Richard Draco. Lieutenant.” Nadine shifted, faced Eve. “Can you give us an update on your investigation?”

“The investigation is ongoing. The department is following a number of leads.”

“Mr. Draco was killed onstage, in front of a packed house. You yourself were a witness.”

“That’s correct. The nature of the crime, its location, and execution have resulted in literally thousands of interviews and witness statements.”

And because it was always best to pay your debts, Eve tagged on an addendum. “Detective Baxter of this division has reviewed the bulk of those statements and taken on the arduous task of elimination and corroboration.”

“It’s true, isn’t it, that people often see the same event, but see it differently?”

“It’s often true of civilians. Police officers are trained to see.”

“Does that make you your own best witness?”

“In a manner of speaking.”

“Is it true that Kenneth Stiles, a colleague and acquaintance of Draco’s who was in the cast of the play, is your lead suspect?”

“That individual has been questioned, as have all members of the cast. As I stated, we are following a number of leads, and as the focus of the investigation has narrowed, we expect to make an arrest within twenty-four hours.”

“An arrest.” It threw Nadine off stride, but only for one beat. “Can you give us the name of your primary suspect?”

“I’m not free to give that information at this time. I can tell you that the person who killed Richard Draco,
who killed Linus Quim, will be in custody within twenty-four hours.”

“Who—”

“That’s all you get, Nadine. Shut it down.”

Nadine might have argued, but Eve was already getting to her feet. “Shut it down, Lucy. That was a hell of a bombshell, Dallas. If you’d given me a head’s up, we could’ve gone live.”

“Tonight’s soon enough. You got your story, Nadine. You’ll hit with it first.”

“Can’t argue with that. Can you give me any more, just some filler for the follow-up? Procedural details, some of the hard data. The exact number of interviews, number of man-hours, that kind of thing.”

“You can get that from media relations.” Eve glanced at the camera operator, pointed a finger, then jerked a thumb at the door.

With a look at Nadine for confirmation, Lucy hauled the equipment out.

“Off the record, Dallas—”

“You’ll know everything you need to know tomorrow. I have a question for you. You didn’t mention Roarke in your report, his connection to the theater, to the play, to me. Why?”

“It’s been done. Overdone. I want the meat.”

“Doesn’t fly, Nadine. Roarke’s name boosts ratings.”

“Okay, consider it payback.” She shrugged and hauled up her purse. “For the girl night.”

“Okay.” Eve reached into her back pocket, drew out a sealed disc. “Here.”

“What’s this?” But the minute it was in her hand, Nadine understood. Her fingers closed tightly around it. “It’s the recording Richard did. Of me.”

“It’s been removed from the evidence log. It’s the only copy. I figure it should close that circle.”

As her throat filled with conflicting emotions, Nadine stared down at the disc. “Yes. Yes, it does. Better, it breaks it.” Using both hands she snapped the disc in two.

Eve nodded with approval. “Some women wouldn’t have been able to resist watching it. I figured you were smarter than that.”

“I am now. Thanks, Dallas. I don’t know how to—”

Eve took a deliberate step back. “Don’t even think about kissing me.”

With a shaky laugh, Nadine stuffed the broken disc in her bag. It would go into the first recyler she came across. “Okay, no sloppy stuff. But I owe you, Dallas.”

“Damn right you do. So next time, save me a donut.”

chapter twenty-one

She slept for ten hours, pretty much where she had fallen after giving Roarke the briefest of updates. She woke, recharged, clearheaded, and alone.

Since he wasn’t around to nag her, she had an ice-cream bar for breakfast, washed it down with coffee while she watched the morning news reports on-screen. She caught a replay of her one-on-one with Nadine and, satisfied with it, considered herself set for the day.

She dressed, dragging on dung brown trousers and a white shirt that had narrow brown stripes. She had no idea how long the shirt had been there, but since Roarke had started filling her closet, she’d stopped paying attention.

He bought her a ridiculous amount of clothes, but it saved her from the torture of shopping.

Since it was there, and the weather promised to remain cool, she buttoned on a waist-length vest that appeared to go with the rest of the deal.

She strapped on her weapon, then she set off to find Roarke.

He was already in his office, the morning stock reports on one screen, off-planet trading on another, and what
seemed to be a serious math problem on the third.

“How can you deal with numbers first thing in the morning?”

“I live for numbers.” He tapped his keyboard, and the math problem shifted into tidy columns she had no doubt added up to the smallest decimal point. “And as it happens, I’ve been up for some time. You look rested,” he said after a moment’s study of her face. “And very well-tailored as well. You’re a resilient creature, Eve.”

“I slept like a slug.” She came around the counter, leaned down, and kissed him. “You’ve been putting in some long days yourself.” She patted his shoulder in a way that made his antenna quiver. “Maybe we need a little vacation.”

He sent the figures on-screen to his broker for immediate application, then swiveled around in his chair. “What do you want?”

“Just some quiet time somewhere. You and me. We could take a long weekend.”

“I repeat.” He picked up his coffee, sipped. “What do you want?”

Irritation gleamed in her eyes. “Didn’t I just say? Don’t pull that crap on me again. You had to grovel the last time.”

“I won’t this time around. Do I look stupid?” he said in a conversational tone. “I’m not above a bribe, Lieutenant, but I like to know the deal. Why am I being softened up?”

“I couldn’t soften you up with a vat of skin regenerator. Anyway, it’s not a bribe. I’m a damn city official.”

“And they are, as we know, complete strangers to bribes.”

“Watch it, ace. Who says I can’t want a break? If I want a favor, it doesn’t have to connect.”

“I see. Well then, here’s what I’ll bring to the table. I’ll give you your favor, whatever it may be, in exchange for a week of your time anywhere I want to go.”

“A week’s out. I’ve got court dates, paperwork. Three days.”

Negotiations, he thought, were his favorite hobby. “Five days now, five days next month.”

“That’s ten days, not a week. Even I can do the math on that. Three days now, two days next month.”

“Four now, three next month.”

“All right, all right.” Her head was starting to spin. “I’ll work it out.”

“Then we have a deal.” He offered his hand, clasped hers.

“So, are we going to the beach?”

“We can do that. The Olympus Resort has a stunning man-made beach.”

“Olympus.” She blanched. “Off planet? I’m not going off planet. That’s got to be a deal breaker.”

“Deal’s done. Buck up. Now, what’s the favor?”

She sulked. It was a rare attitude for her, but she was damn good at it. “It’s not even a big favor.”

“You should’ve thought of that before you tried to scam me. You might have, if you’d had a decent breakfast instead of ice cream.”

“How did you—” She broke off, and the single word was a vicious hiss. “Summerset.”

“Now, when a woman asks her husband for a favor, it’s a lovely touch if she sits on his lap.” He patted his knee.

“You won’t have much of a lap if I break both your legs.” Seriously annoyed, she sat on the counter. “Look, it’s police business, and you always want to stick your nose in anyway. I’m giving you a chance.”

“Now, there you are.” Enjoying himself, he lifted a hand, palm up. “If you’d presented it that way initially, put me in the position of being given a favor rather than giving one, you wouldn’t have made what you consider a poor deal. And you wouldn’t be cross.”

“I’m not cross. You know I hate when you say I’m
cross. And before I forget, what’s the deal with this Authorization One shit?”

“Did you buy something?” He handed her the rest of his coffee. “I must make a celebrational note on my calendar. Eve Dallas went shopping. Strike up the band.”

She scowled off into space. “I was in a pretty good mood before I came in here.”

“See, you’re cross. As to Authorization One, what sense does it make for you to pay for products manufactured by one of my companies?”

“Next time I’m going to a competitor. If I can find one.” She huffed out a breath, brought herself back on track. “I’m going to close the case today. I’ve worked it how to smoke out the killer, get a confession. It’s roundabout,” she murmured. “I have reasons not to take the straight line. I had to do a tap dance for Whitney to clear it. If it doesn’t work . . .” She trailed off.

“What do you need?”

“To start, I need your theater. And I need you to help me script and produce a little performance.”

 

An hour later, Eve was on her way to Central, and Roarke was making the first phone call.

In her office, Eve loaded the disc recording of the play in her computer. With her mind elsewhere, she barely noted how smoothly the disc was accepted, how clear the audio and video. When she ordered it to fast-forward to the final scene, it did so without a single bump.

There they were, she thought. Draco as Vole blithely confessing to a murder he could no longer be charged with. His face handsome, smug, as he drew Carly’s hand, Diana’s hand, through his arm.

And she stood by him, pretty and charming, with a loving smile.

Kenneth Stiles, the cantankerous and sly Sir Wilfred, stunned fury on his face, as the realization struck that he’d been used, exploited, manipulated. Eliza’s fussy Miss Plimsoll standing beside him, outraged, her hands
gripping the back of Kenneth’s chair, and white to the knuckles.

Areena, the beautiful and multifaceted Christine, who had sacrificed everything, risked prison, to save the one she loved.

Michael Proctor, merely a shadow, watching from the wings, wondering when he would step into the spotlight and into the role of murderer.

And hovering over all was the ghost of Anja Carvell.

Eve didn’t flinch as she watched murder done, as the knife that should have been harmless plunged deep into the heart.

There
, she thought and froze the screen.
There it is.

Ten thousand witnesses would have missed it.

Hadn’t she?

The performance of a lifetime, she realized. In death.

“End program,” she ordered. “Eject disc.”

She bagged it, gathered others. She engaged her office link for interdepartmental transmission. “Peabody, alert Feeney and McNab. We’re moving out.”

With a final check of her weapon, she prepared to begin a performance of her own.

 

Eve’s driving, Mira observed from the backseat, was a mirror reflection of her personality. Competent, direct, focused. And fierce. As the car whipped through traffic, bulling into gaps, challenging other charging bumpers, Mira quietly checked the tension on her safety harness.

“You’re taking a risk.”

Eve gave a quick glance in the rearview, met Mira’s eyes. “A calculated one.”

“I believe . . .” Mira trailed off, found herself falling back into childhood prayers as Eve shot into sharp vertical, swung hard to the right, and skimmed crossways over jammed traffic.

“I believe,” she continued when she had her breath back, “you’ve assessed the situation correctly. Still,
there’s a wide margin for error, which you could eradicate by adhering to strict procedure.”

“If I’m wrong, it’s on me. Either way, the person who killed Draco and Quim will be in custody by the end of day.”

The car dove into an underground parking tunnel, barely slacking speed. It winged like an arrow from a bow toward a reserved slot. Mira’s mouth came open, she made some small sound, as they roared toward the security barricade. Eve flipped down her visor to display her ID pass.

Mira would have sworn the barricade emitted a terrified squeal as it leaped clear. They nipped under it, tucked into the narrow slot.

“Well,” Mira managed. “Well. That was exciting.”

“Huh?”

“It occurs to me, Eve, I’ve never done a ride-along with you. I begin to see why.”

Peabody snorted, shoved open her door. “Take my word, Dr. Mira, that was a leisurely drive around the park.”

“Something wrong with my driving?”

“Not that a case of Zoner wouldn’t cure,” Peabody said under her breath.

“In any case.” Mira stepped out of the car, drew Eve’s attention away from her aide. “I’m pleased you asked me to be here. Not only because I might be useful, but it gives me an opportunity to observe how you work in the field.”

“You’re going to have to stay out of the thick.” Eve left her car in the secured slot Roarke had arranged, started out to the street and the theater.

“Yes, but I’ll be monitoring.”

“We’ve got a little while before the show starts.” At the stage door, Eve punched in the code she’d been given. “You’ll likely get bored.”

“Oh, I sincerely doubt that.”

They walked out on the stage, where preparations were already under way.

“Hey, Lieutenant! Heads up, She-Body!”

Twenty feet overhead, McNab swung by in a safety harness. He gave a kick of his shiny green boots and sailed in a very graceful arc.

“Stop that horsing around.” Feeney squinted up, wincing when his detective pretended to swim through the air.

“What’s he doing up there?” Eve demanded. “Besides making an ass of himself.”

“Overhead cams. You gotta be young to enjoy that kind of duty. Most of the equipment was already in place. Roarke didn’t miss a trick. But he wasn’t setting up for a police op. We’re adjusting. We’ll be able to monitor the action from all angles.”

“Is Roarke on-scene yet?”

“Yeah, he’s in control, showing a couple of my techs more than they’d ever hoped to know. The man’s a genius with electronics. What I couldn’t do with him in EDD.”

“Do me a favor and don’t mention it. He’s hard enough to deal with. Auto-locks set on all exits?”

“Yep. Once everybody’s in, nobody gets out. We’ve got three uniforms, two techs, you, me, and Peabody. And flyboy up there. McNab, get the hell down from there now! You sure you don’t want a bigger team?”

Eve did a slow turn, scanned the theater. “We won’t need it.”

“Feeney.” Roarke stepped from the shadows onto the stage. “Your control appears to be set.”

“I’ll go look it over. McNab! Don’t make me come up there. Christ, how many times did I say that to my kids?” With a shake of his head, he walked offstage.

“He’s going to hurt himself.” Torn between amusement and concern, Peabody nudged Eve’s shoulder. “Tell him to come down, Dallas.”

“Why me?”

“Because he fears you.”

Because the idea of that was pleasing, Eve set her hands on her hips, scowled up, and shouted. “McNab, stop screwing around and get your ass down here.”

“Yes, sir.”

He came down in a whoosh, cheeks flushed with the thrill. “Man, you gotta try that. What a rush.”

“I’m happy we could provide you with some entertainment, Detective. Why shouldn’t we have a little fun and frivolity during the course of an elaborate and expensive police operation, particularly when we’re employing multimillion dollar civilian equipment and facilities.”

“Um,” was the best he could do before he cleared his throat. The grin had already been wiped off his face. “The overhead cams are set and operational, Lieutenant. Sir.”

“Then maybe you can make yourself useful elsewhere. If it’s not too much trouble.”

“No, sir. I’ll just . . . go.”
Somewhere,
he thought, and escaped.

“That ought to keep him straight for the next five minutes.” She turned to Roarke.

“I don’t fear you,” he told her. “But I brought you a present.” He handed her a mini-remote. “You can signal control,” he explained. “For lights, sound, set change. You can direct from any location in the theater. The play’s in your hands.”

“Opening act’s up to you.”

“It’s already in place.” He checked his wrist unit. “You have just over an hour before curtain.”

“I need to check all ops. Peabody, do a round. Confirm that all egresses leading below, back, or above stage are secure, then take and maintain your assigned position until further orders.”

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