"Boy, that was careless of her."
"Not her. He laid those bread crumbs, he lowered the security. We're exactly where he wants us to be." She pushed open the door, swept it, then holstered her weapon.
The room was cold, nearly frigid. A way to keep the body as fresh as possible, she thought as she studied Dana Buckley. He'd arranged the bloody shell of her in a chair angled to face a framed photo of his wife and daughter, and the single rose he'd placed by it.
"Well." Peabody hissed out a breath. "She's not lost anymore."
"Call it in. You'd better go get the field kits."
While she waited, Eve studied the room. Her lair, she thought. She expected they'd find the equipment unregistered, and much of the data on it illegally hacked. Not so different from her killer's, she thought, right down to the photograph.
On the wall screen the current status of the bidding was displayed. Up to four-point-f our billion, she mused, with several hours yet to go.
He hadn't taken the body for proof. Not for a trophy, and only in part to gain that time. In the end he'd brought it here so while her greed ran behind her back she would stare sightlessly at the innocents she'd killed.
He'd taken the body, she thought, to pay homage to his family.
"We've got an e-team and sweepers on the way." Peabody opened a field kit, passed Eve the Seal It.
Eve nodded and thought they'd find nothing he hadn't wanted them to find. "I want all the data found copied. We'll have to turn it over to whatever agency the commander orders, but we'll have backup." She turned to her partner. "I think we've just spearheaded a breakdown on a whole bunch of really bad guys. The sort of thing that leaks to the media."
"I don't know whether to be happy or scared."
"Be satisfied. Now let's do the job and deal with her. Record on."
Roarke sat back, absorbing the data he'd just uncovered. Odd, he thought, the world was a very odd and ironically small place. And the people in it were never completely predictable. He saved and copied the data, slipped the copy into his pocket.
He walked to the house monitor. "Where is Summerset?"
Summerset is in the parlor, main level.
"All right then, a fine place for a chat."
As he came downstairs he heard voices, and the roll of Summerset's amused laughter. It wasn't unprecedented for Summerset to have company in the house, but it certainly wasn't usual.
Curious, he stepped in. Then stopped and shook his head. "Aye, unpredictable."
"Roarke, I'm glad you've come down. I didn't want to disturb you, but I'm happy to introduce you to an old friend. Ivan Draski."
As the man rose, Roarke crossed the room to shake hands with his wife's current quarry.
"Ivan and I worked together in very dark times. He was hardly more than a boy, but made himself indispensable. We haven't seen each other in years, so we've been catching up on old times, and new."
"Really?" Roarke slid his hands into his pocket where the disc bumped up against the gray button he carried for luck, and for love. "How new?"
"We haven't quite caught up to the present." Ivan smiled a little. "I thought that should wait until your wife comes home. I believe she'll have an interest."
"I'll fetch more cups for coffee." Summerset laid a hand briefly on Ivan's shoulder before leaving the room.
"Are you armed?" Roarke asked.
"No." Ivan lifted his arms, inviting a search. "I'm not here to bring harm to anyone."
"Have a seat then, and maybe you should bring Summerset and myself up-to-date."
Ivan sat, and an instant later Galahad jumped into his lap. "He's a nice cat."
"We like him."
"I don't keep pets," Ivan continued as he stroked Galahad's length. "I couldn't handle the idea of having a living thing depending on me again. And droids, well, it's not the same, is it? I don't want to bring trouble into your home, or cause my old friend distress. If it had been anyone but your wife involved in this, I believe I would be somewhere else."
"Why my wife?"
"I'd like to tell her," Ivan said as Summerset came back.
"The lieutenant's come through the gate." He set the cup down to pour.
"This should be interesting," Roarke murmured. He waved off the coffee Summerset offered, deciding he might need both hands.
Eve walked into the house and frowned. It was rare not to find Summerset lurking in the foyer with the cat at his heels. She heard the rattle of china from the parlor, hesitated at the base of the stairs.
Roarke came to the doorway and said her name.
"Good, you're here. We need to talk. The situation's changed."
"Oh, it has, yes."
"We might as well have this out before I - " She broke off at the parlor doorway when she spotted the man she hunted sitting cozily in a chair with her cat on his lap. She drew her weapon. "Son of a bitch."
"Have you lost your mind!" Summerset exploded as she stormed across the room.
"Get out of the way or I'll stun you first."
He stood his ground while shock and fury radiated from him. "I won't have a guest, and a dear friend, threatened in our home."
"Friend?" She flicked a glance toward Roarke, a heated one.
"Don't waste your glares on me. I just got here myself." But he touched a hand to her arm. "You don't need that."
"My prime suspect is sitting in my house, petting my cat, and you're all having coffee? Move aside," she said coldly to Summerset, "or I swear to God - "
Ivan spoke in a language she didn't understand. Summerset turned sharply, stared. His answer was just as unintelligible, and with a tone of incredulity.
"I'm sorry, that's rude." Ivan kept his hands in plain sight. "I've just told my friend that I've killed a woman. He didn't know. I hope there's no trouble for him over this. I hope I can explain. Will you let me explain? Here, in an easy way, with a friend. After, I'll go with you if that's your decision."
Eve skirted around Summerset. She lowered her weapon, but kept it drawn. "What are you doing here?"
"Waiting for you."
"For me?"
"I feel you need an explanation. You need information. I won't try to harm you, any of you. This man?" He gestured to Summerset. "I owe him my life. What belongs to him is sacred to me."
"Brandy, I think." Roarke handed Summerset a snifter he'd filled. "Instead of coffee." And gave another to Ivan.
"Thank you. You're very kind. I killed the woman calling herself Dana Buckley. You know this already, and, I think, some of the how. I read a great deal about you in the night, Lieutenant. You're smart and clever, good at your work. But the why matters, it must, when it's life and death. You know this," he said, searching her face. "I think you believe this."
"She killed your wife and daughter."
His eyes widened in surprise. "You work quickly. They were beautiful and innocent. I didn't protect them. I loved my work in my own homeland." He glanced at Summerset. "The purpose, the challenge, the deep belief in making a difference."
"You were - are - a scientist," Eve interrupted. "I read your file."
"Then you're very good indeed. Did you find the rest?"
"Yes. Just shortly ago," Roarke answered. "I'm very sorry. Homeland wanted to recruit him," he told Eve, "possibly use him as a mole or simply bring him over."
"I was happy where I was. I believed in what I was doing."
"They considered various options," Roarke continued. "Abducting him, torture, abducting his child, discrediting him. The decision was, as time was of some essence, to strip him of his ties, and offer him not only asylum but revenge."
"They sent that woman to murder my wife, my child, to make it seem like my own people had ordered it. They showed me documentation, gave me the name of the assassins, the orders to terminate me and my family. I should have been home, you see, but I had car trouble that delayed me. They'd rigged it, of course, but I believed them. I of all people should have known how these things can be faked, but I was grieving, I was wild with grief, and I believed. I betrayed good men and women because I believed the lie and was happy to take my pound of flesh. And I became one of them. Everything I've done for these twenty years has been on the blood of my wife and child. They killed them to use me."