McNab stared at the ceiling as if fascinated by the dull white tone of the paint. Peabody simply frowned at her shoes.
"I take that as a no. Peabody, you're with McNab; Feeney, you're with me. Start on the West Side; we'll take the East. We'll do as many venues as possible until…" She checked her wrist unit, calculated. "Twenty-one hundred. We'll meet at my home office tomorrow, oh eight hundred for a full briefing. Feeney, let's pitch this to Whitney."
Feeney strolled out after her, whistling. "You could've split us up another way."
"Yeah." She glanced back down the corridor and hoped she wasn't making a mistake. "But I'm thinking this way maybe the two of them will duke it out and we can all get back to normal."
He considered that as they hopped on a glide. "I got twenty on Peabody."
"Shit." She jammed her hands in her pockets. "Okay, but if I've got to lay down on McNab's bony ass, I want odds. Three to five."
"Done."
Back in the conference room, Peabody and McNab sat just as they were.
"I've got no problem working with you,"' McNab said.
"Why should you? I haven't got one working with you either."
"Good."
"Good."
They stared, ceiling and shoes, for another twenty seconds. McNab broke first. "You're the one who's been avoiding me anyway."
"I have not. Why should I? We are so over."
"Who said anything different?" And it burned him that she could say it, just that coolly, when he thought about her all the time.
"And you wouldn't think I'd been avoiding you ifyou hadn't been trying to get my attention."
"Shit. For what? I'm a busy boy, She-Body. Too busy to worry about some stiff-necked uniform who spends her off-time playing with LCs."
"You leave Charles out of this." She leaped to her feet, rage boiling in her blood. And a new little tear in her heart.
"Me, I don't have to hunt up pros. I got all the amateurs I can handle." He kicked out his legs, worked up a sneer. "But that's neither here nor there, right? We got the job, and that's it. If you can handle it."
"I can handle anything you can. More."
"Fine. I'll put the list together, and we'll get started."
CHAPTER FOUR
"You don't have his face."
Eve scowled at Dickie Berenski, the chief lab tech. He might have had a smarmy smile, an attitude that had earned him the not-so-affectionate nickname of Dickhead and a personality defect that deluded him into thinking of himself as a ladies' man, but he was a genius in his little world of fibers, fluids, and follicles.
"You called me out of the field to tell me I don't have his face?"
"Figured you'd want to know." Dickie pushed himself away from the station, sent his chair spinning toward another monitor. His spidery fingers danced over a keyboard. "See that there?"
Eve studied the color-washed image on monitor. "It's a hair."
"Give the lady a prize. But what kinda hair, you might ask, and I'm here to tell you. This didn't come out of your perp's head, it didn't come out of your victim's head, or any other area of their bodies. Came out of a wig. Expensive, human hair wig."
"Can you track it down?"
"Working on it." He scooted his chair to yet another post. "Know what this is?"
There were colored shapes and circles and formulas on the monitor. Eve blew out a breath. She hated the guessing games, but knew her job when it came to Dickie. "No, Dickie, why don't you tell me what it is?"
"It's makeup, Dallas. Base cream number 905/4. Traces of it found on the bed linens. And it don't match what was on the dead girl. Got more." He switched the image. "We got here traces of face putty. Stuff people use to give 'em more chin or cheekbone, whatever, if they don't want to go for permanent face sculpting and shit."
"And she wasn't using any face putty."
"Another prize for the little lady! Guy was wearing a wig, face putty, makeup. You don't have his face."
"Well, this is just wonderful news, Dickie. You got any more?"
"Got a couple of his pubic hairs. The real thing – medium brown. Be able to give you more on him from that before we're finished. Got his fingerprints on the wineglasses, on the bottle, on the body, balcony doors, and rail. And here and there. You find him, we'll box him up real pretty."
"Send me what you've got. Track down those brand names. I want that data by morning."
"Hey!" he shouted as she strode out. "You could say thanks."
"Yeah. Thanks. Goddamn it."
She let it play through her head all the way home, trying to see what kind of man lived inside her killer. She was afraid she did see. He was smart – smart enough to change his appearance so the security cameras and Bryna Bankhead wouldn't identify him. But he hadn't taken her out, or gone back to her apartment with the idea of killing her. Eve was sure of it.
He'd gone to seduce her.
But things had gotten out of hand, she mused, and he'd found himself with a dead woman on his rose petals. He'd reacted, panicked or angry, and had tossed her.Panicked rang with her. It hadn't been temper on his face when he'd come out of the apartment.
He had money, or access to it. After more than a year with Roarke she knew the signs. She'd recognized the exclusive cut of the killer's suit, even the pricey gleam of his shoes.
But he'd let Bryna pay for the drinks.A two for one, Eve thought. No paper trail, and a boost to his ego by having the woman pay for him.
He had solid tech skills and a knowledge of chemistry. Or again, access to that knowledge and skill.
He was sexually twisted. Perhaps inadequate, even impotent under normal circumstances. He'd be single, she decided as she approached the gates of home. Unlikely to have had any long-term or healthy relationships in his past. Nor had he been looking for one. He'd wanted complete control. The romantic trappings had been for his benefit, not hers.
An illusion,she decided,his fantasy. So that he could envision himself as lover.
Now that he'd achieved that control, he would do one of two things. He'd hole up in fear and guilt over what he'd done. Or he'd start hunting again.
Predators, in Eve's experience, rarely stopped at one.
The house loomed into view, with all its fanciful and elegant angles softened by twilight. Lights glowed richly against too many windows to count. Ornamental trees and shrubs she couldn't name were in wild bloom, perfuming the air so delicately, so completely, you could almost forget you were in the city.
Then again, sometimes she thought of this strange and perfect space behind stone walls and iron gates as its own country. She just happened to live in it.
She'd come to love the house. Even a year before she wouldn't have believed that possible. She'd admired it, certainly. Been both intimidated and fascinated by its sheer beauty, its amazing warren of rooms and treasures. But the love had caught her, and held her. Just as love for the man who owned it had caught her. Had held her.
Knowing he wasn't inside tempted her to turn around and drive away again. She could spend the night at Central.
Because the idea depressed her, because it reminded her of what she might have done before her life had opened to Roarke, she pulled to a stop in front of the house.
She climbed the old stone steps, pulled open the grand front door, and stepped out of the dusk into the glamorous light of the entrance foyer.
And Summerset, a skinny crow in his habitual black, stood waiting. His stony face matched his stony voice.
"Lieutenant. You left the premises in the middle of the night and failed to inform me of your schedule or your expected return."
"Gee, Dad, am I grounded?"
Because it would irritate him, and irritating Roarke's majordomo was one of life's guaranteed pleasures, she stripped off her jacket and tossed it on the polished newel of the main staircase.
Because it would irritate her, and irritating Roarke's cop was one of Summerset's pleasures, he lifted the scarred leather jacket with two thin fingers. "Informing me of your comings and goings is a basic courtesy, which naturally you're incapable of understanding."