by J. D. Robb
It was more personal, Zeke thought, more a part of himself. He spread the diagrams out neatly on the workbench, took his bottle of water from his sack, and sipped contemplatively while he visualized the project, stage by stage.
He offered the work up to the power that had given him the knowledge and skill to build, then took his first measurements.
When he heard Clarissa’s voice, his pencil faltered. The flush was already working up his neck as he turned. The fact that there was no one there only made the blush deepen. He’d been thinking too much about her, he told himself. And had no right to think about another man’s wife. No matter how lovely she was, no matter if something in her big, troubled eyes called to him.
Especially because of that.
Because he was flustered, it took him a moment to realize the murmur of sound he heard was coming through the old vents. They should be sealed, he mused. He would ask her if she wanted him to take care of that while he was here.
He couldn’t quite make out the words—not that he would have tried, he assured himself. Not that he would ever, ever, intrude on another’s privacy. But he recognized her tone—the smooth flow of it, and his blood moved a little faster.
He laughed at himself, went back to his measuring with the assurance that it was all right to admire a woman because of her beauty and gentle manner. When he heard a voice join hers, he nodded. Her husband. It was good to remember she had a husband.
And a lifestyle, he added, lifting a board with a casual strength his gangly body disguised. A lifestyle that was far removed from his own.
Even as he carried the board to the braces for his first cuts, he heard the tones change. Voices raised in anger now, loud and clear enough for him to catch a few words.
“Stupid bitch. Get the hell out of my way.”
“B. D., please. Just listen.”
“To what? More whining? You make me sick.”
“I only want to—”
There was a thump, a crash that made Zeke wince, and the sound of Clarissa’s voice, begging now: “Don’t, don’t, don’t.”
“Just remember, you pathetic cunt, who’s in charge.”
Another bullet of sound, a door slamming. Then a woman’s wild and miserable weeping.
He’d had no right, Zeke told himself, no right to listen to the intimacies of a marriage. No right to want to go upstairs and comfort her.
But, my God, how could anyone treat their life partner so callously, so cruelly? She should be cherished.
Despising himself for imagining doing just that, of going upstairs, gathering Clarissa against him, Zeke slipped on his ear protectors and gave her the privacy that was her right.
“I appreciate you changing your schedule and coming here.” Eve scooped her jacket off her ratty chair and tried not to obsess that her tiny, cluttered office was a far cry from the elegant Dr. Mira’s work space.
“I know you’re working against the clock on this one.” Mira glanced around. Odd, she thought, she’d never been in Eve’s office before. She doubted Eve realized just how completely the cramped little room suited her. No fuss, no frills, and very little comfort.
She took the chair Eve offered, crossed her smooth legs, lifted a brow when Eve remained standing.
“I should have come to you. I don’t even have any of that tea you drink in here.”
Mira merely smiled. “Coffee would be fine.”
“That I’ve got.” She turned to the AutoChef, which did little more than spit at her. Eve rammed it with the heel of her hand. “Goddamn budget cuts. One of these days I’m taking every lousy piece of equipment in this room and chucking it out the window. And I hope to God every piss-head in maintenance is down below when I do.”
Mira laughed and glanced at the narrow slit of grimy glass. “You’d have a hard time fitting anything through that window.”
“Yeah, well, I’d manage. It’s coming up,” she said as the AutoChef gave a coughing hum. “The rest of the team is working in their areas. We’re meeting in an hour. I want to be able to take them something.”
“I wish I had more to give you.” Mira sat back, accepting the mug of coffee Eve offered. It was barely seven A.M., yet Mira looked as elegant and polished as fine glass. Her sable-toned hair waved gently back from her serene face. She wore one of her trim suits, this one in a quiet sage green she’d accented with a single strand of pearls.
In her tired jeans and bulky sweater, Eve felt scruffy, gritty-eyed, and unkempt.
She sat, thinking Roarke had said basically the same thing to her in the early hours of the morning. He’d continued to search, but he was up against equipment and minds as clever and complex as his own. It could be hours, he’d explained, or days before he broke through the tangled blocks and reached the core of Cassandra.
“Give me what you’ve got,” Eve said shortly to Mira. “And it’ll be more than I have now.”
“This organization is exactly that,” Mira began. “Organized. It would be my supposition that whatever they intend to do has been planned out meticulously. They wanted your attention, and they have it. They wanted the attention of the powers of the city, and have that as well. Their politics, however, elude me. The four people they’re demanding be released are from variable points on the political compass. Therefore, this is a test. Will their demands be met? I don’t believe they think they will.”
“But they’ve given us no mechanism to negotiate.”
“Negotiation isn’t their goal. Capitulation is. The destruction of the building yesterday was merely a show. No one was hurt, they can say. We’re giving you a chance to keep it that way. Then, they ask for the impossible.”
“I can’t link any of the four on the list together.” Eve rested a booted ankle on her knee when she sat. She’d spent hours the night before trying to find the connection while Roarke had worked on Cassandra. “No political tenet, as you said. No associations, no memberships. Ages, personal and criminal histories. Nothing connects them. I say they picked those four names out of a hat, for the hell of it. They couldn’t care less if those people are back on the street or not. It’s smoke.”
“I agree. Knowing that, however, doesn’t ease the threat of what they’ll do next. This group calls itself Cassandra, links itself to Mount Olympus, so the symbolism is clear. Power and prophecy, of course, but more a distance between them and mere mortals. A belief, an arrogance, that they, or whoever heads them, has the superior knowledge and ability to direct us. Perhaps even to care for us in the ruthlessly cold directives of gods. They’ll use us—as they did Howard Bassi—when we have the potential to be useful. And when they are done, we are rewarded or punished as they see fit.”
“This new republic, new realm?”
“Theirs, of course.” Mira sampled the coffee, delighted to discover it was Roarke’s marvelous blend. “With their tenets, their rules, their people. It’s the tone that troubles me more than the content, Eve. Underlying what is said is a glee in saying it. ‘We are Cassandra,” ’ she added. “Is that the group, or one person who believes himself to be many? If the latter is partially true, you’re dealing with a clever and damaged mind. ‘We are loyal.’ Loyal, we can assume, to the organization, the mission. And to the terrorist group Apollo from which Cassandra was given its prophetic powers.”
“ ‘Our memory is long,” ’ Eve murmured. “It would have to be. Apollo was broken more than thirty years ago.”
“You’ll note the constant use of the plural pronoun, the short declarative sentences followed by political jargon, propaganda, accusations. There’s nothing new in that part of it, nothing original. It’s recycled, and a great deal older than three decades. But don’t take this to mean they’re not advanced in the ways and means in which they operate. Their foundation may be tired and trite, but I believe their intentions and capabilities are vital.
“They came to you,” she continued, “because they respect you. Possibly admire you—soldier to soldier. Because when they win, as they believ
e they will, victory will have a more satisfying taste if their opponent was worthy.”
“I need their target.”
“Yes, I know you do.” Mira closed her eyes a moment. “A symbol. Again, it would be something worthy. A place of excess, they said, and foolishness. Where mortals gawk at mortals. Perhaps a theater.”
“Or a club, an arena. It could be anything from Madison Square to a sex joint on Avenue C.”
“More likely the first than the second.” Mira set her coffee aside. “A symbol, Eve, a landmark. Something that would have impact.”
“The first hit was an empty warehouse. Not much impact.”
“It was Roarke’s,” Mira pointed out and watched Eve’s eyes flicker. “It got your attention. They mean to keep your attention.”
“You think they’ll target one of his properties again.” Eve pushed to her feet. “Well, that narrows it down. The man owns most of the damn city.”
“Does that bother you?” Mira began, then caught herself and nearly chuckled. “Sorry, knee-jerk psychologist’s question. I think it’s a good possibility since they’ve targeted you that they may focus on Roarke’s properties. It’s certainly not conclusive, no more, really, than what you’d term a hunch. But you have to look somewhere.”
“All right, I’ll contact him.”
“Concentrate on important buildings, something with tradition.”
“Okay, I’ll get started.”
Mira got to her feet. “I haven’t given you much help.”
“I didn’t give you much to work with.” Then Eve jammed her hands in her pockets. “I’m not really in my area here. I’m used to dealing with straight murder, not the threat of wholesale annihilation.”
“Are the steps that different?”
“I don’t know. I’m still feeling my way around. And while I am, somebody’s got their finger on the button.”
She tried Roarke in his home office first, and got lucky. “Do me a favor,” she said immediately. “Work at home today.”
“For any particular reason?”
Who was to say, she thought, that the sumptuous lobby, the theaters and lounges in his midtown office building didn’t make it the target?
And, if she told him that, he’d be down there in a heartbeat, doing a search and scan personally. She wouldn’t risk it.
“I don’t like asking, but if you could keep on that project we were dealing with last night, it would help a lot.”
He studied her face. “All right. I can shift some things around. I’ve got an auto-search going in any case.”
“Yeah, but you get things done faster when you’re working them yourself.”
He lifted a brow. “I believe that was very nearly a compliment.”
“Don’t get puffed up about it.” She leaned back, tried to look casual. “Look, I’m kind of pressed right now, but can you shoot me some data here?”
“Of what kind?”
“Your properties in New York?”
Now both eyebrows winged up. “All?”
“I said I was pressed for time,” she said dryly. “I don’t have a decade or so to deal with this. Just the really jazzy ones. Jazzy old stuff.”
“Why?”
Why? Shit. “I’m just doing a cross-check. Loose ends. Routine.”
“Darling Eve.” He didn’t smile when he said it, and she began to drum her fingers on the desk.
“What?”
“You’re lying to me.”
“I am not. Jesus, ask a guy for some basic data, data which as his wife I’m entitled to, and he calls you a liar.”
“Now I know you’re lying. You don’t give two damns about my properties, and you hate when I call you my wife.”
“No, I don’t. It’s this certain tone you use that I object to. Forget it,” she said with a shrug. “It’s not important anyway.”
“Which one of my properties do you believe is the target?”
She hissed out a breath. “If I knew, don’t you think I’d tell you? Just send me the goddamn data, will you, and let me do my job.”
“You’ll have it.” His eyes were as cool as his voice now. “And if you find the target, let me know. You can reach me at my midtown office.”
“Roarke, damn it—”
“Do your job, Lieutenant, and I’ll do mine.”
Before she could swear at him again, he’d cut her off. She kicked the desk. “Stubborn, tight-assed son of a bitch.” Without hesitation, she tossed procedure out the window and called Anne Malloy.
“I need an E and B team at a midtown address. Full search and scan.”
“You located the target?”
“No.” She said that much between her teeth, then forced her jaw to relax. “It’s a personal favor, Anne, I’m sorry to ask. Mira believes one of Roarke’s properties will likely be today’s target. He’s going into his office, and I—”
“Give me the address,” Anne said briskly, “and it’s done.”
Eve closed her eyes, breathed out slowly. “Thanks. I owe you.”
“No, you don’t. I’ve got a man of my own. I’d do the same thing.”
“I owe you anyway. I’ve got data coming in,” she added when her machine beeped. “It’s a place to start. I’ll be sifting through it, hopefully have it narrowed down by our meeting.”
“Fingers crossed, Dallas,” Anne said and signed off.
“Peabody.” Eve signaled her aide. “My office.”
She sat, tunneled her fingers through her hair, then called up the data Roarke had sent her.
“Sir.” Peabody stepped into the room. “I got the reports back on the Cassandra discs. Analysis doesn’t show anything. Standard units, no initializations or prints. No way to trace.”
“Pull up a chair,” Eve ordered. “I’ve got a list here of potential targets. We’ll run a probability scan, try to slim it down.”
“How did you generate the list?”
“Mira’s take is that we’re likely looking for a club or theater. I agree with that. She thinks it’s a pretty good bet they’ll go for one of Roarke’s again.”
“Follows,” Peabody said after a moment, then sat down next to Eve. And gaped at the list scrolling on-screen. “Man, those are his? He owns all that?”
“Don’t get me started,” Eve muttered. “Computer, analysis current data, select properties considered landmarks or traditional symbols of New York, and list. Ah, add buildings constructed on historic sites.”
Working . . . .
“That’s a good call,” Peabody said. “You know, I was in a lot of these places with Zeke. We’d have been even more impressed if we’d known you owned them.”
“Roarke owns them.”
Task complete, the computer announced with such efficiency Eve eyed it suspiciously.
“Why do you think this thing’s working so well today, Peabody?”
“I’d knock wood when I make statements like that, Lieutenant.” Peabody’s brows drew together as she studied the new list. “That didn’t whittle it down by a whole lot.”
“That’s what he gets for liking old things. The guy has a real obsession for old shit.” She let out a breath. “Okay, we’re thinking club or theater. Mortals gawking at mortals. Computer, which of this list runs matinees today?”
Working. . . .
“They want people inside,” Eve murmured as the computer burped rudely. “Lives lost. Not just a couple of tour groups, not just employees. Why not go for a full house. Impact.”
“If you’re right, we could still have time enough to stop it.”
“Or we could be peeking in the wrong window and some bar downtown blows up. Okay, okay.” Eve nodded when the new data emerged. “That’s better, that’s workable. Computer, copy current list to disk, print hard copy.”
Eve checked the time, rose. “Let’s get this in to the conference room.” She snatched up the hard copy, stared at it. “What the hell is this?”
Peabody looked over her shoulder. “I think it’s Japan
ese. I told you to knock on wood, Dallas.”
“Get the damn disc. If it’s in Japanese, Feeney can run it through a translator. Out the fucking window,” she muttered as she strode from the room. “One of these days, out the fucking window.”
The disc proved to be in Mandarin Chinese, but Feeney dealt with it and put it on the wall screen.
“Mira’s preliminary profile,” Eve began, “and the computer analysis of data and supposition indicates these are the most likely targets. All are entertainment complexes, either landmarks or constructed on the site of destroyed landmarks. All have performances scheduled this afternoon.”
“That’s a good angle.” Anne tucked her hands in her back pockets as she read the screen. “I’ll send out teams for a search and scan.”
“How much time will you need?” Eve asked her.
“Every damn bit of it.” She whipped out her communicator.
“No uniforms and unmarked vehicles,” Eve said quickly. “They may have the buildings under surveillance. Let’s not tip them off.”
With a nod, Anne began to bark orders into her communicator.
“We got through the fail-safe.” Feeney picked up with EDD’s progress. “The old bastard coded his data. I’m running a code breaker, but he used a good one. It’s going to take more time.”
“Let’s hope it’s something worth looking at.”
“McNab tracked down a couple of names from Fixer’s old unit. Men still in the area. I’ve got interviews set up for noon today.”
“Good.”
“Teams are moving.” Anne tucked her communicator away. “I’ll be in the field. You’ll know when I know. Oh, Dallas,” she added as she headed for the door. “That address we discussed earlier? It’s clean.”
“Thanks.”
Anne sent her a grin. “Any time.”
“I’ll be on the code until we have something to move on.” Feeney rattled his bag of candied nuts. “This kind of shit went on all the damn time during the Urban Wars. Mostly we suppressed and subdued, but there’s bigger and better shit out there now.”
“Yeah, but we’re bigger and better, too.”
It made him smile a little. “Goddamn right.”