Devoted in Death (In Death #41)(86)
“Sloppy, on both sides. They can’t help but steal, and they’ll get caught sooner or later trying to cop fancy underwear or something shiny. We don’t have later, so we close in on the area. They walk, they drive, they eat, they shop.”
She shifted back to her map. “We’ve got twenty-four, Baxter, I figure twenty-four at the outside before Campbell’s finished. Same amount before the feds release the names and faces, and that’ll finish Campbell and Mulligan for sure, and send those two f*ckers running.”
“I can take Banner back out. The boy, too. He’s on his way back in from the exam. But we covered all the ground, Dallas. The best we could do is cruise and hoof it, hope to spot them on the street.”
It was something she’d considered, but… “I’ve got uniforms doing that. We’ve got other DBs who need attention. Peabody’s working one, and she’s got another set up for you. Work it with Trueheart.”
“It’ll keep his mind off the exam results. He thinks he did okay, but said he got nervous a couple times. They’re backed up – surprise. Told him results in about forty-eight.”
He slid her a look. “Maybe you can speed that up.”
“Dead bodies, Baxter, and two I’d like to keep breathing. Let’s keep focused here.”
“Right, yeah, right. He’s okay with the forty-eight. It’s me sweating it. I’ll get moving on it.”
She wanted to get moving herself – and stop talking to every-damn-body.
She grabbed her coat again, and got the hell out before someone else interrupted her.
She’d cruise the target area. Maybe do a walk-around.
These two had murdered their way east and gotten away with it not because they were criminal geniuses, but because they’d kept moving, because it had taken time for locals to call in the feds, time to put the murders together.
But now they were… nesting, she thought as she wedged herself into the cop can of an elevator. Making themselves a home of sorts, getting to know the neighborhood, the city.
Out and about.
And, for now, they still felt free and clear.
Not hiding, not running, not moving on.
Yet.
She elbowed off on her level of the garage, and pulled out her signaling ’link on the way to her car.
“A big howdy from the Rope ’N Ride,” Carmichael said. “Yee-haw.”
“You’ve gotta get the hell out of there soon.”
“Oh, f*cking A, Dallas. Somebody just called me little lady. I’m not little, I’m not a lady. I wanted to punch him, and he was seriously cute. But I digress. Ella-Loo Parsens did her waitress thing here, and offered sexual services, for a fee, on the side. Unlicensed. But it’s not the kind of place that sets much store in licenses. The seriously cute bartender told Santiago – as he wouldn’t discuss such matters in front of the little lady – that bjs were her specialty.”
“Keeps her in control.”
“In my personal experience, you bet. She could be bitchy, always talked about going east. Claimed she was saving up, marking time until she could head to New York City, shake the prairie dust off her boots and live the big-city life.”
“A girl with a dream. And James?”
“Bartender’s vague there, but I found another waitress – who I suspect also offers sexual favors – who remembers him.”
“Hey there, pretty little thing!”
Eve heard the drunken male voice, watched Carmichael’s gaze slide over.
“Why don’t you and me take a spin on the dance floor?”
“Why don’t you go on out, start spinning, and I’ll catch up when I’m done here?”
“Alrighty.”
“A woman could rope and ride a half dozen men, should she be so inclined, in a single visit to this establishment. Just saying,” Carmichael added.
“How many do you have spinning?”
“Lost count.” Carmichael fluttered her lashes. “But I suspect Ella-Loo made more dispensing sexual favors than she did dispensing brews. Her coworker remembers Ella-Loo homed right in on Darryl Roy James like he was the answer to a prayer. And, in fact, warned her coworker off, got physical about it. Shoved her into a bathroom stall and threatened to slice her tits off – that’s a quote – if she went near James.
“Later, said coworker walked out the back for a break – that possibly included imbibing an illegal substance – and saw the two of them banging like hammers against the recycler.”
“So, straight to sex.”
“Do not pass the bjs. Neither of them ever came back. Ella-Loo had two nights’ pay coming, but they figure she made that up by stealing a case of brew from the storeroom. And the till was a few hundred short that night, according to Seriously Cute. We’re going to go by, dig up her former landlord, but the word here is, she left most everything, and owed two weeks’ rent.”
Eve pulled out in traffic as she listened. “Sex and stealing, but they couldn’t keep it at that. What the hell is that noise?”
“They’ve got a band coming in later, we’re told, but they’re doing Country Karaoke this afternoon – two to four. The fun never ends.”
“It’s sixteen-thirty. Why don’t they stop?”
J.D. Robb's Books
- Indulgence in Death (In Death #31)
- Brotherhood in Death (In Death #42)
- Leverage in Death: An Eve Dallas Novel (In Death #47)
- Apprentice in Death (In Death #43)
- Brotherhood in Death (In Death #42)
- Echoes in Death (In Death #44)
- J.D. Robb
- Obsession in Death (In Death #40)
- Festive in Death (In Death #39)
- Concealed in Death (In Death #38)