Rapture in Death (In Death #4)(60)



“It’s a — ” She broke off, struggling not to show her surprise or distress at this new tidbit of information. “Which plant manufactures it?”

“Hell, Sheila’s got that data. Off planet, I’m pretty sure. Cheaper labor. And that baby was right off the ship. Hasn’t been on the open market more than a month.”

Her stomach had clutched and tightened further. “But it’s not defective?”

“Nope. It’s a real honey. I’ve already put in for one of my own.” He wiggled his brows hopefully. “Of course, you could probably get me a unit at cost.”

“You get me the report, now, every single detail, and release the unit to me, and I’ll think about it.”

“It’s Sheila’s flex day,” he whined, his mouth stretching down in a search for pity. “She’ll have the report finished up and on your desk by noon tomorrow.”

“Now, Dickie.” A good cop knew her quarry’s weaknesses. “And I’ll see about making you a gift of your own unit.”

“Well, in that case… hang for ten.” Cheery now, he hurried over to a computer bank tucked in one of the cubbyholes in the lab’s beehive.

“Dallas, one of those units probably goes for two thousand, base.” Peabody stared after Dickie in disgust. “You over-bribed him.”

“I want that report.” Eve imagined that Roarke had a case of the units somewhere for promotional giveaways. Giveaways, she thought with a sick roll in her stomach, to politicians, employees, prominent citizens. “I’m down to three days. And nothing. I won’t be able to waltz Whitney toward an extension.” She looked back over as Dickie pushed out of the cubicle.

“Sheila had it almost nailed down.” He offered a sealed disc and a hard copy. “Look at this. This is a compu-graft of the VR pattern for the last program. Sheila’s highlighted a couple of blips.”

“What do you mean, blips?” Eve snatched the page and studied what appeared to be a series of lightning bolts and swirls.

“Can’t say for certain. Probably the subliminal relaxation, or in this case, substimulation option. Some of the newer units are offering several extended subliminal packages. You can see these shadow the program, slide in every few seconds.”

“Suggestions?” She felt her energy surge. “You mean the program was fitted with subliminal suggestions to the user?”

“Common enough practice. It’s been used for habit breaking, sexual enhancement, mind expanding, and so on for decades. My old man quit tobacco on subliminals fifty years ago.”

“What about planting urges… such as self-termination?”

“Look, subs give you little nudges toward hunger, consumer goods, or aid in habit breaking. That kind of direct suggestion?” He tugged at his lip, shook his head. “You’d have to go deeper, and I’d say it would take a long series of sessions to make the suggestion stick on a normal brain. Survival instinct’s too strong.”

He shook his head again, convinced. “We played those programs over and over.”

Particularly the sexual fantasy sequences, Eve thought.

“Ran them on test subjects, into the droid for analysis. We got nobody jumping off the roof. In fact, we got no unusual reaction from anyone or out of the droid. It’s just a top flight, that’s it.”

“I want a full analysis on the subliminal shadows.”

He’d already anticipated that. “I need to keep the unit then. Sheila’s started on it, as you can see, but it takes time. You’ve got to run the program, back out the overt VR, expunge the subliminals. Then it takes compu time to test, analyze, and report. A good subliminal, and I guarantee this one’s an ace, is subtle. Chasing down its pattern isn’t like reading a truth analysis.”

“How much time?”

“Two days, a day and a half if we get lucky.”

“Get lucky,” she suggested and passed the hard copy to Peabody.

Eve tried not to worry about the fact that the VR was one of Roarke’s toys, or what the consequences could be if it was indeed found to be part of the coercion. Subliminal shadows. That could be the connection she’d been searching for. The next step was to tag the VR units that had been in Fitzhugh’s, Mathias’s, and Pearly’s possession at time of death.

With Peabody keeping pace, she hustled down the sidewalk. Her vehicle was — still — in Maintenance. Eve didn’t think it worth the incredible headache of requisitioning a sub for a three-block hike.

“Autumn’s coming.”

“Huh?”

Curious that Eve seemed oblivious to the freshening in the air, the balmy scent on the eastward breeze, Peabody paused to take a deep breath. “You can smell it.”

“What are you doing?” Eve demanded. “Are you crazy? Suck in enough of New York and you’ll have to spend a day in detox.”

“You get past the transport fumes and the body odor and it’s wonderful. They might just pass that new fresh air bill this election.”

Eve spared her aide a glance. “Your Free-Ager’s showing, Peabody.”

“Nothing wrong with environmental concerns. If it wasn’t for the tree huggers, we’d all be wearing filter masks and sunshades year round.” Peabody looked longingly at a people glide but matched her pace to Eve’s long-legged stride. “Not to put a damper on things, Lieutenant, but you’re going to have to do a major tap dance to access those VR units. SOP would be for them to have been returned to the deceaseds’ estates by this time.”

J.D. Robb's Books