J D Robb - Dallas 17 - Imitation in Death

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J D Robb - Dallas 17 - Imitation in Death Page 11

by Imitation in Death(lit)


  Eve spotted the long green robe beside the bed.: He'd used the robe sash to strangle her.

  He'd have wanted you conscious when he hurt you. He'd want to see your face, the pain, the horror, the terror. Yes, he'd want that this time. He'd want to hear you scream. Nice building like this ought to have decent soundproofing. He'd checked it out, checked you out before today. Did he tell you what he was going to do to you? Or did he work in silence while you begged?

  She recorded the scene, documenting the position of the body, the placement of the robe, the broomstick, the carefully drawn curtains..

  Then she took the envelope, opened it, and read.

  Hello again, Lieutenant Dallas. Isn't it a gorgeous day? A day that just begs for heading down to the shore or strolling through the park. I hate to interrupt your Sunday, but you seem to enjoy your work so much---as I do mine-that I didn't then you'd mind. I'm a little disappointed in you, however, for a couple of reasons. First, tsk, tsk, on stonewalling the reports on me. I was really looking forward to the buzz. Then again, you're not going to be able to keep a lid on the banal too much longer. Second, I thought you d be giving me just a bit more of a challenge by this point. Hopefully, my latest offer will inspire you. Best of luck Al

  "Self-important bastard, aren't you?" she stated aloud, then sealed the note and-envelope before opening the field kit. -

  She'd completed the preliminary exam when Peabody came in. "Lieutenant, I'm sorry. We were in the Bronx."

  "What the hell were you..." She broke off. "What is that? What are you wearing?"

  "It's a, um, ah, it's a sundress." Flushing a little, Peabody brushed a hand over the poppy pink skirt. "It took us so long to get back,

  I thought I should come straight here instead of heading home to change into uniform."

  "Huh." The dress also had skinny little shoulder snaps and a very low bodice. It demonstrated what McNab was fond of saying: Peabody sure was built.

  Peabody's ruler-straight hair was covered by a widebrimmed straw hat, and she was wearing lip dye that matched the sundress. "How are you supposed to work in that getup?' "Well, I "

  "You said we? You brought McNab?"

  "Yeah. Yes, sir. We were at the zoo. In the Bronx." "That's something anyway. Tell him to go check the out side security, and the discs for the lobby level and elevators. This building should have them."

  "Yes, sir."

  She went out to relay the order as Eve walked into the adjoining bath,

  . He could've washed up after, she figured, but there was no sign of it. The bath was tidy, the towels looked fresh. Lois hadn't liked fuss, Eve mused, or clutter.

  Must have brought his own soap and towel, too, or took some away with him.

  "We'll want the sweepers to check the drains. Might get lucky," she said as Peabody came back in.

  "I don't get it. This isn't like Wooton. Nothing like Wooton. Different type of victim, different method. There was another note?"

  "Yeah. It's sealed."

  Peabody studied the scene, tried to commit it to memory as the recorder did. She noticed, as Eve had, the little vase of flowers on the nightstand, the square catchall box on the dresser that said I LOVE GRANDMA in pink swirly letters on the top, and the framed photos ' and bolos that stood on the dresser, the nightstand, the small desk by the window.

  It was sad, she thought. It was always sad to see those bits and pieces of a life when the life was over.

  But she tried to shake it off. Dallas would shake it off, she knew. Or bury it, or use it. But she wouldn't let herself be distracted by the pity.

  Peabody looked again, making the deliberate shift from woman to cop. "Do you think there's more than one killer? A team?"

  "No, there's only one." " Eve lifted one of the victim's hands. No polish, she noted. Short nails. No rings, but a faint pale circle where one had been, and habitually. Third, finger, left hand. "He's just showing us how versatile he is."

  "I don't understand."

  "I do. See if you can find where she kept her jewelry. I'm looking for a ring, band style."

  Peabody started on the dresser drawers. "Maybe you could explain what you understand, so I can."

  "Victim is an older woman. No sign of forced entry or struggle. She let him in because she thought he was okay. He was probably suited up as maintenance or repair.. She turns her back, and he hits her over the head. She's got a laceration on the back of the skull, and there's some blood on the living room rug."

  "Was she an LC?"

  "Doubtful."

  "Got her jewelry." Peabody lifted out a clear-sided box with insets of varying sizes. "She liked earrings. Got a few rings, too."

  She brought the case over, holding it while Eve poked through. Exposure to Roarke, and his propensity for dumping glitters on her had taught her to spot the real stuff from the costume. Lois's body adornments were mostly costume, but -there were a few good pieces as well.

  He hadn't bothered with those. Unlikely he'd even looked. "No, I don't think so. I think she was wearing a ring, a kind of wedding ring, and he took it off her finger. A symbol, a souvenir."

  "I thought she lived alone."

  "She did. Another reason he picked her." She turned away from the box of pretty stones and metal, looked back at Lois Gregg. "He carries her in here. He's got his equipment again, likely in a toolbox this time. Restraints for her hands and feet. Strips off her robe, ties her up. Finds what he wants to use to rape her. He's going to wake her up then. He didn't get to play with the other, but this one's different."

  "Why?" Peabody set the jewelry box back on the dresser. "Why is she different?'

  "Because that's what he's looking for. Variety. She screams when she comes around and realizes-when it comes into her like a flood what's happened, and what will happen. Even though part of her rejects it, refuses to believe, she screams and struggles, and begs. They like it when you beg. When he starts on her, when the pain spurts into her, hot, cold, impossible, she screams more. He'd get off on that."

  Eve lifted one of Lois's hands again, then moved down to her feet. "She bloodied her wrists and ankles trying to get free, straining and twisting against the restraints. She didn't give up. He'd have enjoyed that, too. It's exciting for them when you fight, makes their breath come fast in your face, makes them hard. It gives them power when you fight and can't win."

  "Dallas." Peabody kept her voice low, laid a hand on Eve's shoulder as her lieutenant had gone pale and clammy.

  Eve shrugged, carefully took a step back. She knew everything Lois Gregg had felt. But it wouldn't take her down, not now, into the memory, into the nightmare. The blood and the cold and the pain.

  Her voice was level and cool when she continued. "When he's done raping her, he takes the sash from her robe. She's incoherent now, from the pain and the shock. He gets on the bed, straddles her, looks into her eyes when he strangles her, listens to her fight to breathe, feels her body convulsing under his in that sick parody of sex. That's when he comes, when her body bucks under his and her eyes bulge. That's when he gets his release.

  "When he comes back to himself, he ties the sash into a bow, wedges the note between her toes. He takes the ring off her finger, amused by it. Such a female thing, to wear the symbol when there's no man to go with it. He slips the ring in his pocket, or puts it in his toolbox, then checks how it all looks, and he's pleased. Just as it's supposed- to. An excellent imitation."

  "Of what?"

  "Of who," Eve corrected. "Albert DeSalvo. The Boston Strangler."

  She stepped out into the hallway, where cops were milling around, doing what they could to keep people from the neighboring apartments inside.

  And there was Roarke, she thought. There was a man with more money than God sitting cross-legged on the hallway floor, his back supported by the wall as he worked with his PPC.

  And would probably be content to do so, for reasons she could never understand, for hours.

  She moved to him, squatted down so their eye
s were level. "I'm going to be here awhile. You ought to go on home. I can catch a ride into Central."

  "Bad, is it?"

  "Very. I've got to talk to the son, and he's...." She let out a long breath. "They tell me the MT gave him something, but he's still pretty messed up."

  "One is, when their mother's murdered."

  Despite the presence of other cops, she laid a hand over his. "Roarke-"

  "Demons don't die, Eve, we just learn to live with them. We've both known that all along. I'll deal with mine, in my.way."

  She started to speak again, then looked up when McNab came off the elevator.

  "Lieutenant, no disc run since eight this morning. Nothing from the outside unit, elevator, or the hall on this floor. Best I can tell, he jmmed it by remote from outside before entering the building. I could verify, but I don't have ny tools on me.",

  He held out his hands, a half-ass smile on his face, to indicate his baggy red shorts, blue cinch vest, and toeless airsneaks.

  "Then go get some," she began.

  "I happen to have a few things in the car that might help with that," Roarke interrupted.. "Why don't I give you a hand, Ian?'

  "That would be mag. It's pretty decent security, so I figure if he went remote, it had to be police-issue level or above. Can't tell unless I can get into the panel and check the board Eve straightened, then held out a hand. Roarke grasped her forearm, and she his, to help him to his feet. "Go ahead. Get me best guess on what he used."

  Oh eight hundred for entry, she thought. With the time of death she'd established, he'd spent no more than an hour on Lois Gregg. More time than Wooton, more time to play, but still fast.

  She went back in, walked to the kitchen.

  Jeffrey Gregg wasn't weeping now, but the tears already shed had wrecked his face. It was red and swollen, much like his mother's.

  He sat at a small laminated table, his hands cupped around a glass of water. His brown hair stood up in tufts from where she imagined he'd pulled at it, raked his fingers through it, in his grief.

  She judged him to be somewhere in his early thirties, and dressed in brown shorts and a white T-shirt for a casual summer Sunday.

  She sat across from him, waited until those damaged eyes lifted to hers.

  "Mr. Gregg, I'm Lieutenant Dallas. I need to talk to you."

  "They said I couldn't go in and see her. I should go in. When I-when I found her, I didn't go in. I just ran out again, and called the police. I should've gone in-something. Covered her up?"

  "No. You did exactly the right thing. You helped her more by doing just exactly what you did. I'm sorry, Mr. Gregg. I'm very sorry for your loss."

  Useless words, she knew. Goddamn useless words. She hated saying them. Hated not being able to count the number of times they'd forced themselves 'out of her mouth.

  "She never hurt anybody." He managed to lift the glass to his lips. "I think you should know that. She never hurt anybody in her life. I don't understand how somebody could do this to her."

  "What time did you come here today?" She knew already, but would take him through the details, the repetition.

  "I, ah, came over about three, I think. Maybe closer to four. No, nearer to three. I'm so mixed up. We were supposed to have this afternoon cookout at my sister's in Ridgewood. My mother was supposed to come by our place. We're over on 39th. We were all going to take the train over to New Jersey. She was supposed to be at our. place by one."

  He gulped some water. "She runs late -a lot. We tease her about it, but when it got to be like two, I started calling to move her along. She didn't answer, so I figured she was on her way. But she didn't show. I called her pocket number, but that didn't answer either. My wife and kid were getting restless and annoyed. Me, too. I was getting pissed off."

  Remembering that, he began to cry. again. "I was really steamed that I had to come over here and get her. I wasn't worried so much, not really. I never thought anything had , happened to her, and all the time she was..."

  "When you got here," Eve prompted, "you let yourself in. You. have a key?".

  "Yeah, I got access to the outside door and her apartment. I was thinking, something wrong with her 'links, that's all. She forgets to bump them sometimes and they go out. Something's wrong with her 'links and she's lost track of time. That's what I was thinking when I let myself in. I called out to her, like: `Mom! Damn it, Mom, we were supposed to leave for Mizzy's two hours ago.' And when she didn't answer, I thought, Oh crap, she's on her way to my place and I'm over here, and this is so irritating. But I walked to the bedroom door anyway. I don't even know why. And she was God.' God. Mom."

  . He broke down again, and Eve shook her head at the MT before he could move in with a tranq.

  "Mr. Gregg. Jeff, you have to hold it together. You have to help me. Did you see anyone near-the apartment, anyone outside?"

  "I don't know." He mopped at his streaming face. "I was irritated and in a hung. I didn't see anything special."

  "Did your mother mention being uneasy about anything, noticing something, someone who worried her?"

  "No. She's lived here for a dozen years. It's a nice building. Secure." He took deep breaths to steady his voice. "She knows her neighbors. Leah and me, we're only ten blocks away. We see each other every week. She'd've told me if something was wrong."

  "How about your father?"

  "They' split, God, twenty-five years ago. He lives out in Boulder. They don't see each other much, but they get along okay. Jesus, Jesus, my father wouldn't have done this." The hitch came back in his voice, and he began to rock himself. "You'd have to be crazy to do this to somebody."

  "It's just routine. Was she involved with anyone?"

  "Nobody special now. She had Sam. They were together for about ten years. He was killed in a tram wreck about six years ago. He was the one for her, I guess. There hasn't been anybody else special since."

  "Did she wear a ring?"

  "A ring?" He looked at Eve blankly, as if the question had been posed in some strange foreign language. "Yeah. Sam gave her a ring when they moved in together. She always wore it."

  "Can you describe it for me?"

  "Um...At was gold, I think. Maybe with stones on it? God. I can't remember."

  "It's okay." He'd had enough, she judged. And this line was a dead end. "One of the officers is going to take you home now."

  "But..'. isn't there something? Shouldn't I do something?" He stared beseechingly at Eve. "Can you tell me what I'm supposed to do?"

  "Just go home to your family, Jeff. That's the best thing you can do for now. I'm going to take care of your mother."

  She walked out with him, turning him over to a uniform for escort home. '

  "Tell me something," she demanded of McNab.

  "Definitely a remote zap. Hq.. has to have a superior skill with electronics and security,, or enough money to buy a jammer, and we're talking mucho black-market buckaroos for a unit like this."

  "Why?" she wanted to know. "A building like this, security's good, but it's not top level."

  "Okay, it's not that it jammed security, it's how it jammed." He pulled a pack of gum from one of his many pockets, offered Eve some, then folded a cube into his mouth when she shook her head.

  "It shut everything down-security-wise-without messing with other ops. Lights, climate control, home and personal electronics weren't touched. Except-" Busily chewing, he pointed to the living room lamps. "In here. This apartment unit, and this specific room. Lights on," he ordered, and Eve nodded when the lamps stayed dark.

  "Yeah, that fits. 'Sorry to bother you, ma'am, but we've had reports of electronic malfunction in the building He's dressed like a workman. I'd make book he's got a toolbox. A big helpful smile. Maybe he even tells her to try the lights, and when they don't work, she opens the door."

  McNab blew an impressive purple bubble, snapped it. "Plays for me."

  "Check out the 'links, let's be thorough. You find anything, I'm at Central. Peabody!"

>   "With you, sir.

  "Not while you're wearing that stupid hat. Lose it," Eve ordered and strode out.

  "I like the hat." McNab kept his voice low. "Sexy."

  "McNab, you think brick's sexy," Peabody replied. But with a quick check to see if the coast was clear, she gave his ass a fast squeeze. "Maybe I'll wear it later. You know, just the hat."

  "She-Body, you're killing me."

  He took a quick peek, saw Eve was gone, then dragged Peabody close for a sloppy kiss.

  "Blueberry." Amused, she blew a purple bubble with the gum he'd passed to her. Then hurrying after Eve, she pulled the hat off her head.

 

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