Midnight in Death (In Death #7.5)(13)



“It suits you, Dallas. You’d’ve stood up wherever, whenever.”

Looking up, Eve met her eyes. “You stand, Peabody. I wouldn’t have called you in today if I thought different.”

“I guess I needed to hear that. Thanks. Well…” She hesitated, then lifted her brows in question.

“Problem?”

“No, I just…” She pouted, giving her square, sober face a painfully young look. “Hmmm.”

“You didn’t like your present?” Eve said lightly. “You’ll have to take that up with Leonardo.”

“What present? What’s he got to do with it?”

“He made that wardrobe for your undercover work. If you don’t like it…”

“The clothes.” Like magic, Peabody’s face cleared. “I get to keep all those mag clothes? All of them?”

“What the hell am I supposed to do with them? Now are you going to stand around grinning like an idiot or can I get on with things here?”

“I can grin and work at the same time, sir.”

“Settle down. Start a run and trace on this rope.” She pushed a hard-copy description across the desk. “I want any sales within the last week, bulk sales. He uses a lot of it.”

“Who?”

“We’ll get to that. Run the rope, then get me a list of private residences—upscale—sold or rented in the metro area within the last week. Also private luxury vehicles—pickup or delivery on those within the last week. He needs transpo and he’d go classy. The cage,” she muttered as she began to pace. “Where the hell did he get the cage? Wildlife facility, domestic animal detention? We’ll track it. Start the runs, Peabody, I’ll brief you when Feeney gets here.”

She’d called in Feeney, Peabody thought as she sat down at a computer. It was big. Just what she needed.

“You’ll both want to review the investigation discs, profiles, transcripts from the Palmer case of three years ago. Feeney,” Eve added, “you’ll remember most of it. You tracked and identified the electronic equipment he used in those murders.”

“Yeah, I remember the little bastard.” Feeney sat, scowling into his coffee. His habitually weary face was topped by wiry red hair that never seemed to decide which direction it wanted to take.

He was wearing a blue shirt, so painfully pressed and bright that Eve imagined it had come out of its gift box only that morning. And would be comfortably rumpled by afternoon.

“Because we know him, his pattern, his motives, and in this case his victims or intended victims, he’s given us an edge. He knows that, enjoys that because he’s sure he’ll be smarter.”

“He hates you, Dallas.” Feeney’s droopy eyes lifted, met hers. “He hated your ever-f*cking guts all along. You stopped him, then you played him until he spilled everything. He’ll come hard for you.”

“I hope you’re right, because I want the pleasure of taking him out again. He got the first two on his list because he had a lead on us,” she continued. “The others have been notified, warned, and are under guard. He may or may not make an attempt to continue in order. But once he runs into a snag, he’ll skip down.”

“And come for you,” Peabody put in.

“Everything the others did happened because I busted him. Under the whack is a very logical mind. Everything he does has a reason. It’s his reason, so it’s bent—but it’s there.”

She glanced at her wrist unit. “I’ve got a meeting with Mira at her residence in twenty minutes. I’m going to leave it to Feeney to fill you in on any holes in this briefing, Peabody. Once you have the lists from the runs I ordered, do a probability scan. See if we can narrow the field a bit. Feeney, when you review the disc he sent through Nadine, you might be able to tag some of the equipment. You get a line on it, we can trace the source. We do it in steps, but we do it fast. If he misses on the list, he might settle for someone else, anyone else. He’s been out a week and already killed twice.”

She broke off as her communicator signaled. She walked to retrieve her jacket as she answered. Two minutes later she jammed it back in her pocket. And her eyes were flat and cold.

“Make that three times. He got to Carl Neissan.”

Eve was still steaming when she rang the bell of Mira’s dignified brownstone. The fact that the guard on door duty demanded that she show her ID and had it verified before entry mollified her slightly. If the man posted at Neissan’s had done the same, Palmer wouldn’t have gotten inside.

Mira came down the hall toward her. She was dressed casually in slacks and sweater, with soft matching shoes. But there was nothing casual about her eyes. Before Eve could speak, she lifted a hand.

“I appreciate your coming here. We can talk upstairs in my office.” She glanced to the right as a child’s laughter bounced through an open doorway. “Under different circumstances I’d introduce you to my family. But I’d rather not put them under any more stress.”

“We’ll leave them out of it.”

“I wish that were possible.” Saying nothing more, Mira started upstairs.

The house reflected her, Eve decided. Calming colors, soft edges, perfect style. Her home office was half the size of her official one and must at one time have been a small bedroom. Eve noted that she’d furnished it with deep chairs and what she thought of as a lady’s desk, with curved legs and fancy carving.

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