by J. D. Robb
“You didn’t like her.”
“I hated her guts. Look, like I said to the other cop, to know her was to hate her. I didn’t see anything, didn’t hear anything, and I wouldn’t have cared if I did.”
“What cop did you talk to?”
“One of her kind.” She jerked up her chin in Peabody’s direction. “Then one of your kind. They didn’t make a big deal out of it. Why should you?”
“You don’t know my kind, Mandy. But I know yours.” She stepped closer, leaned down. “Woman runs a stable, she keeps some cash around. She deals in cash, and she doesn’t run out at night to make a deposit until the shift’s over. She was dead before that, and I don’t see anything on the report about any cash being found in this place.”
Mandy crossed her legs. “So, one of the cops helped himself. So the fuck what?”
“I think a cop’s going to be smart enough not to take the whole stash. I don’t think there was anything to take once they got here. Now, you either play straight with me, or I’ll take you and your book into interview and sweat it out of you. I don’t give a damn if you took her stash, but I can care about what happened in here that night.”
She waited a beat to make sure Mandy caught the full drift. “To review: Your pal came screaming to your door and told you what was up in here. Now, we both know you didn’t turn around and go back to bed. So let’s try that part again.”
Mandy studied Eve’s face, measured. A woman in her profession who intended to survive until retirement learned to read faces and attitudes. This cop, she decided, would push until she got her answers. “Somebody was going to take the money, so I did. Lida and I split it. Who cares?”
“You went in and looked at her.”
“I made sure she was dead. Didn’t have to go past the bedroom door for that. Not with the blood and the smell.”
“Okay, now tell me about the night before. You said you were in and out, busy night. You know the kind of johns that use this place. Did you see anybody who didn’t fit?”
“Look, I’m not getting tangled up in some cop shit over that old bitch.”
“You want to stay untangled, you tell me who and what you saw. Otherwise, you become a material witness, one who may have compromised the crime scene.” A new and nastier drift, Eve mused, another pause to let it sink in thoroughly. “I can get an order for a truth test out of that, and some time for you in holding.”
“Goddamn it.” Mandy pushed out of the chair, walked over to a minifridge, and found a beer. “Look, I was busy, working my ass off. Maybe I saw a couple guys who looked out of place coming out of the building when I was bringing a john in. I just thought, Fuck it, I got this half-wit to get off, and one of the other girls got these two dudes who looked like they had money enough to tip just fine.”
“What did they look like?”
“Expensive coats. They were each carrying something, like bags. I figured they brought their own sex toys.”
“Men? You’re certain you saw two men?”
“Two of them.” Her lips pursed briefly before she took another slug of beer. “I figured them for men, but I didn’t get a good look because the half-wit was already drooling on me.”
Eve nodded, sat on the corner of the desk. “Okay, Mandy, let’s see if talking all this over again improves your memory.”
chapter nine
Normally, Eve approached splashy social events like medicine. She avoided them whenever possible—which wasn’t often enough now that she was married to Roarke—and when she couldn’t wiggle out, she gritted her teeth, swallowed fast and hard, and tried to ignore the bad taste in her mouth.
But she was looking forward to the fund-raiser for the Drake Center.
This time, she approached the event like a job.
But she was going to miss the comforting weight of her weapon. There was no place to conceal it in the dress she wore. It had seemed appropriate to wear one of Leonardo’s designs, as he would be one of the couturiers spotlighted in the fashion show.
She’d had a lot to choose from. Since Leonardo had come into Mavis’s life—and therefore Eve’s—her wardrobe had expanded dramatically from jeans, trousers, shirts, and one boxy gray suit to include what she considered enough fancy clothes to outfit a theater troupe.
She’d picked the dress out of the closet at random, because she liked the dark copper tone of it. A long, smooth column, it fell straight from its off-the-shoulder neckline to her ankles, which made her consider strapping her clutch piece to her calf.
In the end, she stuck it and her shield in the little evening bag she carried. Just, she told herself, in case.
Weapons seemed out of place in the glitter of the ballroom, in the sweeping sparkle of beautiful people dressed in shimmering clothes and draped with glinting gold and flashing stones. The air was rich with the fragrances of hothouse flowers, of perfumed flesh and hair. And music, a low, elegant throb, played discreetly.
Champagne and other fashionable, exotic drinks were served in crystal glasses by waiters in distinguished black uniforms. Conversation was a sophisticated murmur, punctuated by an occasionally muted laugh.
To Eve’s eye, nothing could have looked more contrived, more staged, or more tedious. She was about to say just that to Roarke when there was a delighted squeal, a flurry of color and movement, and the sharp sound of crystal shattering on the floor.
Mavis Freestone waved a jubilant hand that was stud-ded with rings on every finger, offered a giggling apology to the waiter she’d bumped, and dashed across the ballroom through the perfectly poised crowd on five-inch silver heels designed to show off toenails painted a blistering blue.
“Dallas!” She squealed again and all but launched herself into Eve’s arms. “This is so mag! I didn’t think you’d show. Wait till Leonardo sees you. He’s back in the dressing area having a real case of nerves. I told him to take a chill pill or something or I swear he’s just going to woof all over somebody. Hey, Roarke!”
Before Eve could speak, Mavis had leaped over to hug Roarke. “Man, do you two look frigid! Have you had a drink yet? The tornadoes are killers. I’ve had three.”
“They seem to agree with you.” Roarke couldn’t help but grin. She was small as a fairy, lark happy, and well on her way to being completely drunk.
“Yeah, you bet. I’ve got some Sober-Up with me so I can maintain while Leonardo’s designs hit the ramp. But for now . . .”
She started to snag another glass from a passing waiter, nearly teetered over. Eve simply slid an arm around her shoulders. “For now, let’s check out the eats.”
They made an interesting picture: Roarke, sexy and elegant in suave black tie; Eve, long and lanky in her copper column; and Mavis, in a silver dress that looked wet to the touch and faded into transparency a wink below her crotch, while a temporary tattoo of a grinning lizard slithered up her right thigh. Her hair spilled over her shoulder and was dyed the same eye-popping blue as her nails.
“We get real food after the show,” Mavis commented, but popped a canapé into her mouth.
“Why wait?” Amused by the brilliant shine in Mavis’s eyes, Eve nonetheless piled a plate with finger food, then held it while her friend plowed through.
“Man, this stuff rocks.” She swallowed. “What is it?”
“Fancy.”
With a snorting laugh, Mavis pressed a hand to her stomach. “I better watch it or I’ll be the one woofing. I guess I’ll take my Sober-Up and go back to see if I can hold Leonardo’s hand. He gets so wired up before a show. Really glad you guys are here. Most of these people are, you know . . . drags.”
“You get to go back and hang with Leonardo,” Eve said. “I have to stay out here and talk to the drags.”
“We’ll sit together at dinner, okay? And make fun of them. I mean, some of these outfits!” With a shake of her blue hair, she scampered off.
“We’re releasing her recording and video later this month,” Roarke told Eve. “What is the world going to make
of Mavis Freestone?”
“They won’t be able to resist her.” Smiling now, she looked up at Roarke. “So, introduce me to some of the drags. I’m hoping to make somebody very nervous tonight.”
Eve didn’t think of the tedium now. Every new face she met was a potential suspect. Some smiled, some nodded, some lifted eyebrows when they learned she was a homicide cop.
She spotted Dr. Mira, Cagney, and with some surprise, Louise Dimatto. She’d save them for later, Eve decided, and held out her hand to formalize her introduction to Dr. Tia Wo.
“I’ve heard of you, Lieutenant.”
“Really?”
“Yes, I never miss the local news. You’ve been featured quite a bit the last year or so—through your own exploits and your connection with Roarke.”
Her voice was gravel rough but not unpleasant. She looked both stark and dignified in basic black. She wore no jewelry but for a small, gold pin, the ancient medical symbol of two snakes wound around a staff topped by wings.
“I never thought about police work being exploits.”
Wo smiled, a kind of quick reflex that curved the lips up for a brief instant, left the eyes unwarmed, then settled down again. “No offense meant. I often consider the news the highest form of entertainment. More than books or videos, it shows people in their genuine form, reciting their own lines. And I’m quite fascinated with crime.”
“Me, too.” As openings went, it was perfect. “I have one you’d find interesting. I’m investigating a series of murders. The victims are sidewalk sleepers, addicts, street LCs.”
“It’s an unfortunate life for them.”
“An unfortunate death for some. Each of these victims had an organ surgically removed. Quite skillfully removed, stolen from the unwilling donor.”
Wo’s eyes flickered, narrowed. “I’ve heard nothing of this.”
“You will,” Eve said easily. “I’m making connections right now, following leads. You specialize in organ transplants, Dr. Wo.” She waited a bit while Wo’s mouth opened and closed. “I wonder if you might have any theories, from a medical standpoint?”
“Oh, well.” Her wide fingers lifted to toy with her pin. Her nails were trimmed short, left unpainted. “The black market would be a possibility, though the easy availability of artificial organs has cut that venue down dramatically.”
“These weren’t healthy organs.”
“Unhealthy? A madman,” she said with a shake of her head. “I’ve never understood the mind. The body is basic, it is form and function, a machine that can be repaired, tuned, so to speak. But the mind, even when clinically or legally healthy, has so many avenues, so many quirks, so much potential for error. But you’re right, it’s quite fascinating.”
Her eyes had shifted, making Eve smile to herself. She wants to be gone, Eve thought, but hasn’t quite worked out how to ditch me without insulting Roarke—and all his money.
“My wife is a tenacious cop.” Roarke slid a hand over Eve’s shoulder. “She won’t give up until she finds who and what she’s looking for. I suppose you have a lot in common,” he continued smoothly. “Cops and doctors. A demanding schedule and a singular purpose.”
“Yes. Ah—” Wo signaled, lifting one finger.
Eve recognized Michael Waverly from his photo on his data sheet. He was the youngest on her list of surgeons, single, she recalled, and the current president of the AMA.
He was tall enough, she decided, to have had Ledo looking up at him. He was slickly attractive, at ease, and slightly less traditional than his colleagues. His gilded hair curled toward his shoulders, and he wore a black, collarless shirt with dull silver buttons with his formal tux.
His smile was a quick nova flash of power and charm.
“Tia.” Despite her stiff posture, he kissed her on the cheek, then held out a hand to Roarke. “Nice to see you again. We at Drake very much appreciate your generosity.”
“As long as it’s put to good use, it’s my pleasure. My wife,” Roarke said, keeping a possessive hand on Eve’s shoulder. He understood the look of pure male interest in Waverly’s eyes as they settled on her face. And didn’t particularly appreciate it. “Eve Dallas. Lieutenant Dallas.”
“Lieutenant?” Waverly offered his hand and another potent smile. “Oh yes, I’m sure I knew that. I’m delighted to meet you. Can we assume the city’s safe as you’re free to join us tonight?”
“A cop never assumes, Doctor.”
He laughed, giving her hand a friendly squeeze. “Has Tia confessed her secret fascination with crime? The only thing I’ve ever seen her read other than medical journals are murder mysteries.”
“I was just telling her about one of mine. Of the nonfiction variety.” She outlined the facts, watched a variety of expressions cross Waverly’s face. Mild interest, surprise, puzzlement, and finally understanding.
“You believe it’s a doctor—a surgeon. That’s very difficult to accept.”
“Why?”
“Dedicating yourself to years of training and practice to save lives only to take them for no apparent reason? I can’t fathom it. It’s baffling but intriguing. Do you have a suspect?”
“A number of them. But no prime, as yet. I’ll be taking a close look at the top surgeons in the city at this point.”
Waverly gave a short laugh. “That would include me and my friend here. How flattering, Tia, we’re suspects in a murder investigation.”
“Sometimes your humor falls very flat, Michael.” With anger sparking in her eyes, Wo turned her back on them. “Excuse me.”
“She takes things quite seriously,” Waverly murmured. “Well, Lieutenant, aren’t you going to ask me my whereabouts on the night in question?”
“I have more than one night in question,” Eve said easily. “And that would be very helpful.”
He blinked in surprise, and his smile didn’t shine quite so brightly. “Well this hardly seems the time and place to discuss it.”
“I’ll schedule an interview as soon as possible.”
“Will you?” His voice had dropped several degrees and bordered on cold. “You’re straight to the point, I see, Lieutenant.”
Eve decided she’d insulted him but hadn’t unnerved him. He wasn’t a man who expected to be questioned, she concluded. “I appreciate your cooperation. Roarke, we should say hello to Mira.”
“Of course. Excuse us, Michael. That was smoothly done,” he murmured in Eve’s ear as they moved through the crowd.
“I’ve watched you cut somebody off at the knees politely often enough to get the hang of it.”
“Thank you, darling. I’m so proud.”
“Good. Find me another one.”
Roarke scanned the crowd. “Hans Vanderhaven should suit your mood.”
He steered her through the crowd toward a big man with a gleaming bald head and a natty white beard, standing beside a tiny woman with enormous breasts and a waterfall of gilt-edged red hair.
“That would be the doctor’s newest wife,” Roarke murmured in Eve’s ear.
“Likes them young, doesn’t he?”
“And built,” Roarke agreed, moving forward before Eve could add a pithy comment to his observation. “Hans.”
“Roarke.” His voice was huge, barreling out and echoing through the room. Lively eyes the color of chestnuts landed on Eve, took her measure. “This must be your wife. Enchanted. You’re with the police department?”
“That’s right,” She didn’t much care for the way he took her hand, or the way those eager eyes played over her as he kissed her knuckles. But it didn’t seem to bother the newest Mrs. Vanderhaven, who stood smiling inanely with a glass of champagne in one hand and a diamond the size of Pittsburgh on the other. “My wife Fawn, Roarke and . . .”
“Dallas, Eve Dallas.”
“Oh.” Fawn giggled, batted eyes of Easter egg blue. “I’ve never talked to a policewoman before.”
If Eve had anything to do with it, they weren’t going to change that record by much.
She merely smiled, giving Roarke a light but none-too-subtle elbow nudge. Understanding, he shifted toward Fawn and, recognizing type and priorities, began to compliment her on her dress.
Eve turned away from the giggle and gave her attention to Vanderhaven. “I noticed Dr. Wo had a pin like the one you’re wearing.”
He lifted a wide, capable hand to the gold pin on his lapel. “The caduceus. Our little medal of honor. I imagine those in your profession have their own symbols. Now, I don’t imagine you asked Roarke to distract my delightful wife so we could discuss accessories.”
“No. You’re observant, Doctor.”
His eyes sobered, his barrel voice lowered. “Colin told me you were investigating a homicide that involves organ theft. Is it true you believe a surgeon is involved?”
“That’s right, a very skilled one.” So there would be no dancing, no pleasantries. Vanderhaven might have been on her short list of suspects at the moment, but she could find room to be grateful. “I hope I can count on your cooperation. I’ll be scheduling interviews over the next several days.”
“It’s insulting.” He lifted a short, squat glass. From the color and scent, she took it to be whiskey, straight up, rather than one of the elegant party drinks. “Necessary from your viewpoint, I’m sure, but insulting. No surgeon, no doctor would have willfully, uselessly terminated a life as you described to Colin.”
“It’s only useless until we know his motive,” Eve said evenly and watched Vanderhaven’s lips tighten. “The murder was done, the organ taken, and according to several expert sources, the surgical procedure was performed by skilled hands. Do you have another theory?”
“A cult.” He said it shortly, then took a sip of whiskey, took a deep breath. “You’ll pardon me for being sensitive about this issue, but we’re speaking about my community, my family, in a very real way. A cult,” he repeated in a tone that demanded she accept. “With a member or members trained in the medical field, certainly. The days of doctors mining bodies for parts went out with catgut. We have no use for damaged organs.”
She kept her eyes level on his. “I don’t believe I mentioned the organ taken was damaged.”