by J. D. Robb
“Despite male propaganda, I can officially attest that one man’s balls are pretty much the same as another’s.” But he twitched the sheets back up to his waist. “But when you fantasize about me later, and you will, make it good. Now, what do you need?”
“You’ve got a victim checking into the morgue. McNamara, Theodore.”
“Dr. Theodore McNamara?”
“That’s the one.”
Morris whistled. “Since I’m talking to you, I have to assume the famous doctor didn’t buy it from natural causes.”
“He’s recently been plucked out of the East River, and it doesn’t appear he’d decided to take a little swim.”
“If you’re calling to ask me to flag him priority, you’re wasting a favor. High-profile name, high-profile treatment.”
“That’s not the favor. I’m not primary on this one, but McNamara’s connected to my sexual homicides. I had a chat with him this afternoon, and had him booked for formal tomorrow. I need a head’s-up on the autopsy. All the data from the body and from the primary’s interaction with the pathologist assigned.”
“Why doesn’t the primary copy you?”
“He doesn’t like me. I gotta tell you, my feelings are real hurt over it.”
“Who’s primary?”
“Renfrew, Detective Matthew.”
“Ah.” Morris plumped the pillows behind him, laid back. “Territorial little bastard, poor social skills, and a tendency to refuse to broaden his focus.”
“In other words, a flaming asshole.”
“In other words. I think I’ll go in and take a look at the recently departed myself. I’ll get back to you.”
“Thanks, Morris. I owe you one.”
“Yeah, I like that part.”
“Morris? What’s the tattoo?”
Grinning, Morris tapped a finger on the illustration just under his left nipple. “The Grim Reaper. An equal opportunity employer.”
“You’re a sick man, Morris.” She clicked off. “A sick man.”
She’d kept her back to the reporters as she talked, and her radar up. Most of them, with nothing to feed on, were slipping away to do quick live-remotes.
McNab jogged up to her.
“Walk and talk,” she ordered. “I want to keep clear of the media. Once they make a connection, we lose whatever advantage we’ve got.”
“It was McNamara’s sedan. Good and torched. NYFD’s saying there was a chemical accelerant. RD-52. It’s a kind of flammable acid. You get a flash, fire burst, and it eats right through the metal while it burns. Really thorough. Witness saw the flash, went to take a look-see, and had the presence of mind to note down the vehicle ID before it evaporated. Five, ten more minutes, we’d have had nothing.”
“Smart, but not smart enough. They should’ve blasted off the ID before they torched it. Little mistakes.” She looked back toward the river. “Robbery, my ass. Who rolls a guy, even takes his clothes, then wastes a luxury sedan? What do you bet McNamara paid his killer a visit after I talked to him?”
“I’d put the bank on it.”
“If Renfrew was less of a moron, we could wrap this up tonight.” Staring into middle distance, she juggled possibilities. “Dunwood doesn’t know Renfrew’s a moron. Renfrew’ll notify next of kin, but that’s the wife. No reason for the grandson to come into play there. And no reason for me not to pay him a visit to express my sympathy for his loss and question him. Lucias Dunwood. Get his address. Let’s shake him up.”
“You got it.”
They separated, and Eve made another call. This one to home. “Hi.” She tried a smile when Roarke came on. “I guess they’re still there, huh?”
As there was music blasting and the sound of half-drunken laughter rolling over it, Roarke just shrugged.
“Look, I’m sorry I dumped it on you. Maybe you should lock yourself in one of the rooms. They’ll never find you in that place.”
“I’m considering it. I take it you’ve called to let me know you’ll be some time yet.”
“I don’t know how long. A lot going on. If I can’t close it down tonight, I’m still going to need Mavis and Trina tomorrow. Maybe you should lock them in a room.”
“Not to worry. I suspect they’ll pass out soon enough.”
“There’s that. Hold on.” She turned to McNab. “What?”
“Got an address, but it’s bogus.”
“What do you mean, bogus?”
“I mean the address listed for Lucias Dunwood is the Fun House, Time’s Square. I know because I spend a lot of time there. It’s a big e-amusement center. No residences on premises.”
“He likes to play games,” she replied. “Give me some room here.” She stepped away until she was out of earshot. “Listen—”
“You’d like me to find Dunwood’s actual address.”
“McNamara would’ve had it. I’m not going to be able to access his files from here because the primary on this is playing big stud dog with the investigation.”
“I see.” Roarke was already moving away from the music.
“I could call Whitney and get clearance, but that’s messy. Plus, it makes me feel like a tattlettale or something.”
“Mm-hmm.”
“I could tag Feeney, and he’d wangle authorization through EDD, but I’ve already gotten one person out of bed tonight.” She glanced back at McNab. “Maybe more.”
“And I’m already up.”
“Yeah. Technically . . . well, just skimming the technicalities, I’m authorized to access some data because he’s a suspect. Whether this data includes his address files or personal data is debatable, but I’d have clearance for it in the morning anyway so . . .”
“Why wait? Would you like that address now, or would you like to keep rationalizing a bit longer?”
She blew out a breath, noting that he’d gone up to his office while she’d been talking. “I’ll just take the address.”
He gave it to her. “Oh, Lieutenant? Since that’s only a few blocks from here, perhaps you’ll make it home while I still have my sanity.”
“I’ll do my best. Guess I owe you one, too.”
“Be sure I’ll collect.”
She broke transmission, signalled McNab. “Get Peabody. We’re moving.”
She was nearly to her vehicle when she saw Nadine, leaning on the hood and examining her nails.
“That’s city property you’re resting your ass on.”
“Why do they go out of their way to make official vehicles so ugly?”
“I don’t know, but I’m taking it up with my Congressman first chance I get.”
“Rumor is you and Detective Renfrew got into a little power tussle.”
“Rumors are your department.”
“Then you wouldn’t be interested that rumor continues that he’s a jerk and you cut him down bloodlessly.” Nadine tossed her streaky blonde hair. “But you may be interested in a deduction, since deductions are your department. I deduce that Dr. Theodore McNamara plays into the sexual homicides you’re investigating, that robbery had nothing to do with his ending up in the river, and that you have a very good idea who bashed him about the head and face earlier this evening. And whoever that may be has a starring role in your homicides.”
“That’s a lot of deducing, Nadine.”
“Will you confirm?”
Eve merely crooked a finger, walked away. When the camera operator fell into step behind Nadine, Eve stopped her with one steely stare.
“Wait for me,” Nadine told her. “She’s just doing her job, Dallas.”
“We’re all just doing our jobs. Turn the recorder off.”
“Recorder?”
“Don’t waste my time. We go off record, or you get nothing.”
Nadine sighed, heavily and strictly for form, then disconnected the recorder worked into her gold lapel pin. “Off record.”
“You don’t go on the air with anything until I tell you.”
“Do I get a one-on-one?”
&n
bsp; “Nadine, I don’t have time to negotiate with you. For all I know there’s another woman dead tonight and no one’s found her yet. You go on air with your deductions and there could be another one dead tomorrow.”
“Okay. It stays in holding until you say.”
“McNamara’s connected. I talked to him this afternoon. He wasn’t cooperative. I believe he knew or suspected the identity of the killer. I believe he confronted that individual after our conversation, and as a result ended up a floater.”
“That only confirms my deductions.”
“I’m not finished. I believe the root of these murders goes back to a project partnered by J. Forrester and Allegany Pharmaceuticals nearly twenty-five years ago. Sex, scandals, illegals abuse, payoffs, and coverups. Dig there for your background and you’ll be several steps ahead of the other networks.”
“Was McNamara directly involved in the killings?”
“Years ago he spent a lot of time, energy, and money making sure that facts, actions, and criminal activities that should have been part of the public record were sealed. He refused to cooperate by volunteering information pertinent to the investigation of the murder of two women and the attack on another, instead opting to withhold that information. Did he kill them? No. Is he responsible? That’s a moral call. That’s not my department either.”
Nadine touched her arm as Eve turned away. “I have a contact at the morgue. McNamara was struck several blows on the head and face nearly an hour before he died. One defensive wound, right wrist. While the initial injuries came from a blunt instrument about eight inches wide, the killing blow was delivered by a different weapon. A long, slim metal object such as a crowbar or tire iron that might be found in the tool kit of a car.”
She paused. “I believe in the courtesy and cooperation of shared information.”
“I really hate knowing that phrase is going to follow me around for the next six weeks.”
Eve walked back to the car. “Backseat, McNab.”
“How come I can’t sit in front? I outrank her. And my legs’re longer.”
“She’s my aide, you’re ballast.” She climbed in, and didn’t speak again until McNab had stopped grumbling and arranged himself on the backseat. “We’re going to pay a visit to Lucias Dunwood.”
“How’d you get the address?”
She glanced at McNab in the rearview mirror. “I have my ways of ascertaining data. Peabody, you’ll go in with me. McNab, you’ll stay in the vehicle.”
“But—”
“I go in with a uniform, not a uniform and a detective. And not a detective who looks like he spent his evening brawling in the streets. You’ll stay behind, with your communicator open as mine will be. If we run into any trouble, you call for backup, then, using your judgment, decide whether you wait for that backup or come in and assist. Now I want you to get me another address. Kevin Morano.”
Making the best of things he pulled out his PPC and stretched his length out on the backseat. “Hey, there’s a candy bar taped to the back of the passenger’s seat.”
Even as Peabody swiveled around to try to look, Eve bared her teeth. “First one who touches it gets their fingers ripped off and stuffed up their nose.”
Peabody sprang back into position. “You’re hoarding candy.”
“It’s not a hoard. It’s an emergency supply, which the sneaking candy thief who keeps raiding my office hasn’t found yet. And if he or she does find it, I’ll know why.” She paused significantly. “And you will pay.”
“I’m on a diet anyway.”
“You don’t need to diet, She-Body. You are a just-right female.”
“McNab?” Eve said.
“Yes, sir.”
“Shut up.”
“It’s all right, Dallas. We’re a couple.”
“A couple of what? No, don’t tell me. Don’t talk to me. Don’t talk to each other. Let there be silence across the land.”
Peabody managed to muffle a snicker, then tried to adjust the climate control manually.
“It’s busted. Shut up.”
Saying nothing, Peabody rolled down her window.
McNab shifted in the back. “Permission to speak on official business, sir?”
“What?”
“Kevin Morano’s address. Yankee Stadium. Do you want me to contact Roarke and have him . . . I mean,” he amended when she glared in the rearview, “do you want to implement your ways of ascertaining data?”
“No. I know where he lives.”
When she stopped in front of the grand old brownstone, it was after one A.M. The house was dark but for the red pinprick of light on the armed security system.
“Are you armed, McNab?”
“My off-duty stunner.”
“Keep it set on low, keep your communicator open. Don’t approach the house unless I signal you to do so. Come on, Peabody, let’s go wake this prick up.”
She crossed the sidewalk. When she stepped onto the first stone stair, the security system went into a warning hum. She pressed the bell. Instantly light washed down from overhead and the security system went on first alert.
YOU ARE CURRENTLY UNDER SURVEILLANCE. PLEASE STATE YOUR NAME AND YOUR BUSINESS. ANY ATTEMPT TO ENTER THE PREMISES OR CAUSE DAMAGE TO SAME, AND THIS SYSTEM WILL IMMEDIATELY NOTIFY THE POLICE AND THE NEIGHBORHOOD WATCH.
“Lieutenant Dallas, NYPSD.” She held her badge up to the view screen. “I need to speak with Lucias Dunwood regarding a police matter.”
ONE MOMENT, PLEASE, WHILE YOUR IDENTIFICATION IS PROCESSED AND VERIFIED . . . PLEASE WAIT WHILE MR. DUNWOOD IS INFORMED OF YOUR REQUEST . . .
“Lieutenant, do you think—”
Eve shifted her body subtly, and stepped on Peabody’s foot under camera range. “I think it’s difficult having to wake Mr. Dunwood up to tell him about his grandfather’s death. But there’s never a good time for hard news, and no point in waiting for morning to give it.”
“No, sir.” Peabody cleared her throat, fixed a sober expression on her face as she realized she was being told they were likely under audio as well as video surveillance.
It took several minutes before the light in the first floor windows flashed on. She didn’t hear locks being disengaged, which told her the door was fully soundproofed. It opened silently, and she got her first look at Lucias.
His bright red hair was disheveled. He wore a long white nightrobe belted loosely at the waist. And gave every appearance of a young man just roused out of sleep, and puzzled as to the reason why.
“I’m sorry.” He blinked owlishly. “You’re the police?”
“Yes.” She offered her badge again. “Are you Lucias Dunwood?”
“That’s right. What’s this about? Is there some trouble in the neighborhood?”
“Not that I’m aware of. May we come in and speak to you, Mr. Dunwood?”
“All right. Sorry, I’m a little punchy.” He stepped back, gestured them into a wide foyer with marble floors glowing under the lights from a three-tiered silver chandelier. “I’ve been in bed a couple of hours. I’m not used to having the police come to my door.”
“I’m sorry to disturb you so late. I have some difficult news. It might be better if we sat down.”
“What kind of news? What’s wrong?”
“Mr. Dunwood, I’m sorry to tell you that your grandfather is dead.”
“My grandfather?”
Eve watched with reluctant admiration as he paled, lifted a hand that trembled very slightly to his lips. “Dead? My grandfather’s dead? Was there an accident?”
“No, he was murdered.”
“Murdered? Oh God, oh my God. I do need to sit down.” He made it as far as a long silver bench in the foyer, then collapsed on it. “I can’t believe this. It’s like I’m dreaming. What happened? What happened to him?”
“Your grandfather was found in the East River earlier tonight. The investigation into his death is underway. I’m sorry for your loss, Mr. Dunwood, but it would help us if you’d ans
wer some questions.”
“Of course. Of course I will.”
“Are you here alone?”
“Alone?” His head came up and she saw suspicion pass quickly over his face before he lowered it again.
“If you’re alone, perhaps there’s someone you’d like my aide to call. To stay with you.”
“No. No, I’m all right. I’ll be all right.”
“When’s the last time you saw your grandfather?”
“He’s been away, some consult business off planet. I suppose it’s been several weeks.”
“Did he at that time express to you any concerns, any fears for his safety?”
“Why no.” Lucias looked up again. “I don’t understand.”
“There’s a possibility your grandfather was killed by someone he knew. A car registered in his name was set on fire only hours before his body was found. The car was parked near the ground-shuttle tracks off East One-forty-three. Are you aware of any business that would take him to that area?”
“None whatsoever. His car was set on fire? That sounds like—like some sort of vendetta. But Grandfather was, he was a humanitarian, a great man who dedicated his life to medicine and research. This has to be some terrible mistake.”
“Are you studying to be a doctor?”
“I’m taking a leave from schooling just now.” He pressed his fingers to his temple, covering most of his face. And Eve studied the dragon’s head carved into the sapphire in the blended gold ring on his right hand.
“I wanted time to think, to explore, to decide what area of medicine would suit me best. My grandfather . . .” His voice broke, he looked away. “He leaves big footprints to fill. He was my mentor, my inspiration.”
“I’m sure he was very proud of you. You were close then?”
“I think so. He was larger than life, a man who drove himself to excel. I hope to be worthy of his memory. To end like this, thrown in the river like . . . sewage. My God, to have been stripped of his dignity at the end of his life. How he would hate that. You have to find who did this to him, Lieutenant. They have to pay for what they did.”
“We’ll find them, and they’ll pay. I’m sorry, but I have to ask, it’s standard procedure. Can you account for your whereabouts tonight, between the hours of seven and midnight?”