Origin in Death edahr-24
Page 18
But they sat, stood, sprawled around Roarke's lush and elegant parlor happy as a pack of puppies.
They chattered. She'd never understood why women chattered, and seemed to have an endless supply of stuff to talk about. Food, men, each other, clothes, men, hair. Even shoes. She'd never knew there was so much to say about shoes, and that none of it actually correlated to walking in them.
And since Mavis was knocked up, babies were high on the chatter.
«I feel completely mag.» Mavis gobbled up fancy cheese, crackers, stuffed veggies, and whatever else was in reach as if food were about to be declared illegal. «We're going into week thirty-three, and they say he/she can, like, hear stuff, and even see in there, and its head's down now-assuming the position. Sometimes you can feel his/her foot poking.»
Poking what? Eve wondered. The kidneys, the liver? The very idea had her avoiding the plate.
«How's Leonardo handling it?» Nadine asked.
«He's aces. We're taking classes now. Hey, Dallas, you and Ro need to sign up for your coaching class.»
Eve made some sound, but found it impossible to express the full terror.
«That's right, you're coaching.» Louise beamed. «That's wonderful. It's so good for the mom to have people she loves and trusts with her during labor and delivery.»
Eve was saved from coming up with a comment when Louise began to ask Mavis what method she planned to use, where she intended give birth.
But she did manage a muttered «Coward» under her breath when she spotted Roarke slipping out of the room.
So she poured a second glass of wine.
Despite her strange and expanding shape, Mavis never stopped moving. She had traded her usual heels or platforms for gel-soles, but even they were what Eve assumed was the height of fashion. The boots were some sort of abstract pattern of pink on green and rose to the knees.
With them Mavis wore a sparkly green skirt with a snug green top that highlighted her protruding belly rather than disguising it. The sleeves of the shirt carried the same pattern as the boots and ended in a lot of pink and green feathers.
Her hair was wound high, pink and green ropes. There were feathers hanging from her ears. And a sparkly miniature heart at the corner of one eye.
«We should get started.» Trina, who'd transformed her own hair into a waterfall down her back, in blinding white, smiled—evilly, Eve thought. «Lots to do. Where we going for it?»
«Roarke had the pool house set up,» Mavis said and popped something else in her mouth. «I asked if we could play there. Swimming's good for me and the belly.»
«I need to talk with Nadine and Louise. Separately,» Eve added.
«Official.»
«That's chilly. We can split off down there. We can take the food, right?» Mavis grabbed a tray, just in case.
It was no way to conduct official business, Eve thought, sitting in the steam room with Louise.
«I'm in,» Louise said, and chugged from a bottle of water. «I'll set up the time with Roarke. If I see anything suspicious, I'll let you know. It's doubtful—if there is illegal genetic manipulation or engineering going on—that they'd be in accessible areas, but I might get a sense of something.»
«You agreed pretty fast.»
«Adds a little excitement to my day. Plus, there are lines, or should be in medicine and science. This is one of them for me. I don't have a problem with the illegality, frankly. Hell, birth control for women was illegal right here in the U.S. of A. less than two hundred years ago. Without research and underground movements, we might still be having kids every year and burning our bodies out by forty. No, thanks.»
«So what's the problem with tidying up genes until everything's just perfect?»
Louise shook her head. «Have you looked at Mavis?»
«Hard not to.»
With a laugh, Louise took another drink. «What's happening to her is a miracle. Anatomy and biological process aside, creating life is a miracle, and should stay that way. Yes, we can—and we should—use our knowledge and our technology to insure the health and safety of the mother and child. Eliminate birth defects and disease whenever possible. But crossing that line into designing babies? Manipulate emotions, physical appearance, mental capacity, even personality traits? That's no miracle. It's ego.»
The door to the steam room opened, and Peabody, her face covert in blue gunk, stuck her head in. «You're up, Dallas.»
«No, I'm not. I have to brief Nadine.»
«I'll go now.» With what Eve considered sick enthusiasm, Louise sprang up.
«Send Nadine into my office,» Eve ordered Peabody.
«Can't. She's in stage one of detoxification. Wrapped up like a mummy,» Peabody explained. «In a seaweed deal.»
«That's revolting.»
Eve pulled on a robe. The pool area, always lush with paints and tropical trees, had become a horrifying treatment center. Padded tables with bodies stretched on them. Weird smells, weirder music. Trina had decked herself out in a lab coat. The splatters on it were a rainbow. Eve might have preferred blood. At least she understood blood.
Mavis lay, her colorful hair covered with a clear, protective cap, the rest of her coated with various hues of substances Eve didn't want to identify.
The belly was… prodigious.
«Check out the tits.» Mavis lifted her arms, waggled her fingers toward her breasts. «They're, like, mongo now. It's a total side benny of being pregs.»
«Great.» She patted Mavis on the head and moved on toward Nadine.
«I'm in heaven,» Nadine murmured.
«No, you're naked in a bunch of seaweed. Pay attention.»
«The toxins are oozing out of my pores, even as we speak. Which means, yay, more wine for me when I'm done.»
«Pay attention,» Eve repeated. «Off the record until I give you the go-ahead.»
«Off the record,» Nadine mimicked, eyes still closed. «I'm going to pay Trina a thousand bucks to tattoo that on your ass.»
«I believe the Icoves headed, or at least actively participated in, a project with its roots in gene manipulation, and a good portion of the funding for said project may have come from selling females who had been engineered and then trained to suit the needs of prospective clients.»
Nadine's eyes popped open, sharp green against skin painted pale yellow. «You are shitting me.»
«No, and you look like a fish. Smell like one, too. It's bad. I believe Avril Icove might have been part of this experimentation, and that she was an accessory in the deaths of her father-in-law and husband.»
«Get me out of this thing.» Nadine tried to sit up, but the thin warming blanket was strapped around the table.
«I don't know how, and I'm not touching it anyway. Just listen. I'm hitting this from a lot of angles. I may be off on some of it, but I know I've got the gist. I want you on Avril Icove.»
«Try to keep me off her.»
«Wheedle an interview, you're good at it. Get her to talk about the work both these guys are known for. Circle around the genetic stuff. You found the connection to Jonah Wilson, so you can touch on that. But you've got to keep it sympathetic, play up what they did for humanity and all that crap.»
«I know how to do my job.»
«You know how to get the story,» Eve agreed. «I want you to get data. And if I'm right, and she's been part of two murders, if she thinks you're digging close to that mine, why would she hesitate to eliminate you? You're research, Nadine. I don't have anything on her, nothing I can use to pull her into Interview.»
«But she may say something to a sympathetic female reporter that could point you.»
«You're smart. That's why I'm asking you to do this, even though you're lying there looking like some sort of mutant trout.»
«I'll get you something. And when I break this story, the fucking sky's the limit for me.»
«It doesn't break until the case is closed. The Icoves couldn't have been the only ones involved in this. I don't know if she's goin
g to be satisfied with taking only them out. So you're looking for the human angle. Her father figure and her husband, father of her kids, both lost to inexplicable violence. Ask her about her education, her art. You want the woman, the daughter, the widow, the mother.»
Nadine pursed her yellow lips. «The many facets of her, appealing to her individuality. So she leads me into her relationships with men, rather than them leading me into her. She's the spotlight. That's good. And it'll keep my producer very happy in the meantime.»
There was a soft triple ding. «I'm done,» Nadine announced.
«I'll get the tarter sauce.»
There was no getting around it. With Mavis sitting beside her hands and feet in frothy blue water, and Peabody snoring lightly nearby under relaxation VR, Eve stoically endured a facial. The cumlike substance Trina swore by was already slicked through her hair.
«What we're gonna do is a full-body facial while your hair soaks in the joy juice.»
«That doesn't make any sense. The body is not the face.»
«Some people'd be better off if their ass was their face.»
Eve snorted out a laugh before she could stop herself.
«Everybody but Mavis is getting hair. Did hers this morning. You want something different with yours.»
«No.» Defensively, Eve reached for her hair, and got her hand covered in slime. «Oh man.»
«Could give you a temp tint, or try extensions. Just for fun.»
«My world can't take any more fun. I don't want different.»
«Can't blame you.»
Eve opened one eye, suspiciously. «For?»
«Keeping it as is. It's working for you. But you don't take care of it, or your skin, like you should. Doesn't take that long for basic maintenance, you know.»
«I maintain,» Eve said, but under her breath.
«Your body, yeah. You got a prime one. Mag muscle tone. Some of my clients? They got shit under the sculpting.»
Eve's eyes blinked open. Fear, she thought in disgust, had blinded her to an excellent source.
«You work on anybody who's used the Icove Center?»
«Shit.» Trina sniffed as she worked. «Probably fifty percent of my base. You don't need them, take my word.»
«Ever worked on Icove's wife? Avril?»
«She uses Utopia. I worked there about three years ago. She had Lolette, but I filled in on her body care one appointment 'cause Lolette was out with a black eye. Boyfriend was an asshole, which I told her, but would she listen. No, not until he—«
«Avril Icove,» Eve interrupted. «Could you tell if she'd had any work done? Sculpting, reconstruction, surgical enhancements.»
«You get a body naked under the scanners, you know all the dish. Sure, she had some. Little face work, little boob job. Top work, but you'd expect that.»
Her husband had claimed she was just blessed, Eve remembered. «You're sure about that?»
«Hey, you know your job, I know mine. Why?»
«Just curious.» Eve closed her eyes again. Thinking about murder made a facial almost bearable.
13
After an endless evening, and more wine than was probably wise—but extremely necessary — Eve trudged up to her office. Maybe a couple hits of strong coffee would counteract the alcohol, and she could squeeze in an hour of work.
First on the list was a check of Avril's standard medicals. She'd be interested to see just what sort of elective surgery she'd find.
Then she wanted a closer look at Brookhollow Academy.
She was taking the first slug of coffee when Roarke walked in from his office.
«Yellow belly,» she said.
«Excuse me?»
«Your belly's as yellow as Nadine's was a couple hours ago.»
«I don't even want to know what that means.»
«You skipped out, left me alone.»
He gave her a look that would have passed for innocence on anyone else.
«It seemed obvious that tonight's festivities were for women only. Respecting female ritual, I discreetly got lost.»
«To quote you, Yellow Belly, 'Bollocks.' You slithered out as soon as Mavis started yapping about coaching classes.»
«Guilty as charged, and I'm not ashamed. Lot of good it did me, for all that.» He took her coffee, drank. «She hunted me down.»
«Oh yeah?»
«Oh aye, look smug—for you're in it, my friend, as deep as me. Sometime between the body scrub and polish, she scouted me out and gave me the contact information and schedule for the instruction we're going to be forced to take in order to participate in the birthing. There's no escape for us.»
«I know. We're doomed.»
«Doomed,» he repeated. «Eve, there are vids.»
«Oh God.»
«And simulations.»
«Stop. Stop now.» She grabbed her coffee mug and chugged. «It's still months away.»
«Weeks,» he corrected.
«That's like months. It takes weeks to make a month. It's not now, that's the important thing. I have to think of something else. I have to work. And you know,» she added as she walked to her desk, «things could happen. Like… we could get abducted by terrorists right before she goes into labor.»
«Oh, if only.»
She had to grin as she called up the Icoves' client and patient lists. «It turns out Trina slopped cream on Avril Icove once, and claims she found sculpting when she was under the scan. Now, it's most likely that one of the Icoves would've done the work, or at least consulted.»
«Consulted, most likely. I'd think working on a family member might be tricky, ethically.»
«If one or both of them consulted, she'd be listed. That's legal standard. Computer, search for Avril Icove, medical consult and/or procedures.»
Working…Avril Icove is not listed in selected files.
«You see, that just doesn't jibe for me. You're in a medical family—top of the line—and you don't use them for any of your elective work?
You don't have your beloved husband consult on a procedure, one in which he's a leading expert?» She drummed her fingertips. «If I had a cargo ship of money I wanted to invest, I'd go to you, not to some stranger. If I wanted to break into the National Treasury—«
«Now, wouldn't that be fun?»
«I'd go to you.»
«Thank you, darling. They might have examined and consulted off record.»
«Why? See that's the thing. I can get Dr. Will claiming his wife's perfect face and body is God-given—privacy. And hey, nosy cop, none of your business. But I don't get this kind of secrecy for some fine-tuning or whatever. If she had the procedures, on record, and used the Icove Center—which is logical—why not document the consult? It's covering your legal ass, for one thing.»
«So she might have had the procedures off record, at another of their facilities.»
«That's my thought, which leads to another why. I need images of her. Old images, for comparison. Then there's Brookhollow. The most logical place for Avril and Dolores to have met—if they've worked together on the murders—is the school. But there's no Dolores listed on their registry, not as a graduate anyway. So I'm going to generate ID images of everyone who attended during Avril's time there, then do a match search with the image I have of Dolores.»
«Which is, again, logical. It'll take a bit, and you smell delicious.»
«It's the stuff.»
«I'm a helpless victim of cosmetic merchandising.» To prove it he slipped behind her and nipped the nape of her neck.
She gave him an elbow nudge back. «I need to get started on this.»
«Me, too. Computer. Access registry for Brookhollow Academy and College—«
«Hey, this is my machine.»
Ignoring her, he wrapped his arms around her waist. «Search and mark ID photos of students, staff—«
«Female spouses and offspring of staff and any female employees, female spouses, and offspring of employees.»
«Very thorough,» Roarke commented.
>
«Let's keep being thorough.»
«Doing my best,» he said and slid his hands under her sweatshirt.
«Not that way. I'm going to let it run for the whole time. Maybe she met Dolores at some alumni function. Computer, search for a match with—Jeez, Roarke, hold on a minute.»
His hands were very busy. «What did Trina put on you this time? Let's buy a vat of it.»
«I don't know. I'm losing my track. Match the generated images with the ID photo and security image on file for Nocho-Alverez, Dolores.»
Multiple commands acknowledged. Working…
«Or she met her off-site, at the center, at the fricking salon. Hired her. Dozens of options.»
«Have to start with one.» Roarke turned Eve around to face him. «Your hair smells like autumn leaves.»
«Dead?»
«Burnished. And you taste like… let me see.» He nibbled his way down her temple, over her cheekbone, to her mouth. «Sugar and cinnamon, warmed together.» He flipped open the button of her pants as he deepened the kiss.
«Now I have to do a search of my own, see if Trina's left any surprises for me.»
«I told her I'd twist her arms into knots if she put any temp tattoos on me this time.»
He cruised his hands up, over her breasts, and her heart began to shudder.
«You know that only challenges her. Nothing here,» he said as he drew her sweatshirt up, off. «Just my wife's lovely, unadorned breasts.»
«Mavis's are mongo.» Eve let her head fall back as his lips skimmed over her.
«Yes, I noticed.»
«She had Trina paint one nipple blue and the other pink.»
He lifted his head slightly. «That may be just a bit too much information. Why don't I just say I prefer yours.»
Her stomach tightened, pleasurably, as he closed his mouth on hers. «You could say that. I had too much wine. Otherwise, I wouldn't be making this so easy for you.»