by J. D. Robb
“Shit, I hate science.” With hope, Eve glanced over her shoulder. “You any good at it?”
“No, sir. I’m not even competent.”
Eve studied the mix of numbers, figures, and symbols and crossed her eyes. “My unit’s not programmed for this crap. It’ll have to go to the lab for analysis.” Impatient, she drummed her fingers on the desk. “My hunch would be it’s the formula for that powder we found, but how the hell would a second rater like Boomer get his hands on it? And who was his other trainer? You knew he was one of mine, Peabody. How?”
Struggling with embarrassment, Peabody stared over Eve’s shoulder at the figures on the screen. “You listed him in several intradepartmental reports on closed cases, Lieutenant.”
“You make a habit of reading intradepartmental reports, Officer?”
“Yours, sir.”
“Why?”
“Because, sir, you’re the best.”
“Are you sucking up, Peabody, or bucking for my job?”
“There’ll be room when you’re promoted to captain, sir.”
“What makes you think I want a captaincy?”
“You’d be stupid if you didn’t, and you’re not. Stupid, sir.”
“Okay, we’ll let that rest. Do you scan any other reports?”
“Now and then.”
“Do you have any clue as to who Boomer’s trainer would be in Illegals?”
“No, sir. I’ve never seen his name attached to any other cop. Most weasels only have one trainer.”
“Boomer liked to diversify. Let’s hit the streets. We’ll scope a few of his usual joints, see what we turn up. We’ve only got a couple of days on this, Peabody. If you’ve got anyone warming the home fires for you, let him know you’ll be busy.”
“I’m unattached, sir. I don’t have a problem with putting in extra time.”
“Good.” Eve rose. “Then saddle up. And Peabody, we’ve been naked together. Drop all the ‘sirs,’ will you? Make it Dallas.”
“Yes, sir, Lieutenant.”
It was after three A.M. when she stumbled through the front door, tripped over the cat who had decided to guard the entrance hall, swore, and turned blindly for the stairs.
In her mind were dozens of impressions: dim bars, strip clubs, the steamy streets where low-level licensed companions plied their trade. All of them ebbed and flowed together in the unappetizing stew that had been Boomer Johannsen’s life.
No one knew anything, of course. No one had seen anything. The single corroborative statement she’d gleaned from her crawl through the seamier side of the city was that no one had heard from or laid eyes on Boomer in over a week, possibly longer.
But someone had laid a great deal more than eyes on him. Her time was running low to find out who and why.
The bedroom lights were on dim. She’d already stripped off her shirt and tossed it aside when she noted the bed was empty. There was an instant flare of disappointment, a faint uncomfortable tug of panic.
He’d had to leave, she thought. He was right now heading toward any possible spot in the colonized universe. He could be gone for days.
Staring miserably at the bed, she toed off her shoes and tugged off her slacks. Groping in a drawer, she pulled out a cotton undershirt and yanked it over her head.
God, she was pitiful, mooning because Roarke had to take care of business. Because he wasn’t there for her to snuggle up against. Because he wasn’t there to ward off the nightmares that seemed to plague her with more intensity and frequency as her memories of the past grew to crowd her.
She was too tired to dream, she told herself. Too busy to brood. And strong enough not to remember anything she didn’t care to remember.
She turned, intending to go to her upstairs office to sleep when the door slid open. Relief flushed through her like shame.
“I thought you’d had to leave.”
“I was working.” Roarke crossed to her. In the dim light his black shirt was a stark contrast to the white of hers. He tipped up her chin and looked into her eyes. “Lieutenant, why do you always run until you fall down?”
“I have a deadline on this one.” Perhaps she was overtired, or perhaps love was beginning to be easier, but she lifted both hands to his face. “I’m awfully glad you’re here.” When he lifted her up and carried her toward the bed, she smiled. “That’s not what I meant.”
“I’m tucking you in, and you’re going to sleep.”
It was hard to argue when her eyes were already closing. “Did you get my message?”
“The elaborate one that said, ‘I’ll be late’? Yes.” He kissed her forehead. “Turn yourself off.”
“In a minute.” She fought back the edges of sleep. “I only had a couple minutes to contact Mavis. She wants to stay where she is for a couple days. She isn’t going in to the Blue Squirrel either. She called in and found out Leonardo’s been by there a half a dozen times looking for her.”
“The course of true love.”
“Mmm. I’m going to try to take an hour personal time tomorrow and swing by to see her, but I may not make it until the day after.”
“She’ll be all right. I can go by, if you like.”
“Thanks, but she wouldn’t talk to you about it. I’ll take care of it as soon as I figure out what Boomer was up to. I know damn well he couldn’t read that disc.”
“Of course not,” Roarke soothed, hoping to lull her to sleep.
“Not that he wasn’t good with figures. Money figures. But scientific formulas—” She bolted straight up, nearly bashing Roarke’s nose with her head. “Your unit’ll do it.”
“It will?”
“I got the runaround from the lab. They’re backed up, this is low priority. No priority,” she added, scrambling back out of bed. “I need an edge. You’ve got scientific analysis abilities on your unlicensed unit, right?”
“Of course.” He sighed and rose. “Now, I suppose?”
“We can access the data from my office unit.” Grabbing his hand, she tugged him toward the faux panel that concealed the elevator. “It won’t take us long.”
She filled him in on the basics as they traveled up. By the time he’d coded them in to the private room, she was wide awake and revved.
The equipment was elaborate, unlicensed, and of course, illegal. Like Roarke, she used the handplate for access, then moved behind the U-shaped console.
“You can pull the data faster than I can,” she told him. “It’s under Code Two, Yellow, Johannsen. My access number’s—”
“Please.” If he was going to play cop at three A.M., he wasn’t going to be insulted. Roarke sat at the controls and manipulated a few dials manually. “Into Cop Central,” he said and smiled when she frowned.
“So much for security.”
“Anything else you’d like before I focus on your unit?”
“No.” She said it firmly, moving behind him. Manipulating a keyboard with one hand, Roarke drew one of hers over his shoulder, to his lips, to nibble on her knuckles. “Show-off.”
“It would hardly be any fun if you just plugged me in with your code. In your unit,” he murmured, and switched to auto. “File Code Two, Yellow, Johannsen.” Across the room one of the wall screens flashed.
Waiting
“Evidence number 34-J, view and copy,” Eve requested. When the formula scrolled on, Eve shook her head. “See that? It might as well be ancient hieroglyphics.”
“Chemical formula,” Roarke mused.
“How do you know?”
“I manufacture a few—legal ones. This is some sort of analgesic, but not entirely. Hallucinogenic properties . . .” He clucked his tongue, shook his head. “I’ve never seen anything quite like it. Not a standard. Computer, analyze and identify.”
“You say it’s a drug,” Eve began and the computer went to work.
“Most certainly.”
“That fits with my theory. But what was Boomer doing with the formula, and why would someone kill him for it?”
>
“That would depend on how marketable it is, I’d think. How profitable.” He frowned up at the screen as the analysis began to form. The molecular reproduction circled on the screen in colorful dots and spirals. “Okay, you have an organic stimulant, a standard chemical hallucinogenic, both in fairly low and nearly legal amounts. Ah, there’s the properties for THR-50.”
“Street name Zeus. Nasty stuff.”
“Hmm. Still, it’s low wattage. But that’s an interesting mix. There’s mint, to make it more palatable. I’d say it could also be manufactured, with some alterations, in liquid form. Blend it with Brinock—that’s a sexual stimulant and enhancer. In the right measures, it can be used to cure impotency.”
“I know what it is. We had a guy who OD’d on it. Killed himself after what appeared to be the world’s record in masturbation. Jumped out of a window in sexual frustration. His dick was swollen like a pork sausage, about the same color, and still hard as iron.”
“Thank you for sharing that. What’s this?” Puzzled, Roarke went back to the keyboard. The computer merely continued to flash the same message.
Substance unknown. Probable cell regenerator. Unable to identify.
“How is that possible?” he mused. “I have an automatic update on this. There’s nothing out there it can’t identify.”
“An unknown substance. Well, well. That might be worth killing for. What will it give us without it?”
“Identify with known data,” Roarke ordered.
FORMULA EQUALS STIMULANT WITH HALLUCINOGENIC PROPERTIES. ORGANIC BASE. WILL ENTER BLOODSTREAM QUICKLY TO AFFECT NERVOUS SYSTEM.
“Results?”
INCOMPLETE DATA.
“Hell. Probable results with known data.”
WILL CAUSE FEELINGS OF EUPHORIA, PARANOIA, SEXUAL APPETITE, DELUSIONS OF PHYSICAL AND MENTAL POWERS. DOSAGE OF 55 MG INTO AVERAGE HUMAN OF 130 POUNDS WILL LAST FOUR TO SIX HOURS. DOSAGE OF MORE THAN 100 MG WILL CAUSE DEATH IN 87.3 PERCENT OF USERS. SUBSTANCE SIMILAR TO THR-50, AKA ZEUS, WITH ADDITION OF STIMULANT TO ENHANCE SEXUAL ABILITY AND CELL REGENERATION.
“It’s not that different,” Eve murmured. “It’s not that important. We’ve already got chemi-heads mixing Zeus with Erotica. It’s a nasty combination, accounts for most of the rapes in the city, but it’s not secret or particularly profitable. Not when any average junkie can mix it up in a porta-lab.”
“Except for the unknown. Cell regeneration.” His brow quirked. “The fabled Fountain of Youth.”
“Anybody with enough credits can get youth treatments.”
“But they’re temporary,” Roarke pointed out. “You have to go back at regular intervals. Bio peels and antiaging injections are expensive, time-consuming, and often uncomfortable. And standard treatments don’t have all the extra punches of this.”
“Whatever the unknown is, it makes the whole works bigger, or deadlier. Or, as you said, more marketable.”
“You’ve got the powder,” Roarke pointed out.
“Yeah, and this might get the lab to shag their butts a bit. It’s still going to take more time than I have.”
“Can you get me a sample of it?” He swiveled in his chair and smiled up at her. “Not to denigrate your police labs, Lieutenant, but mine might prove a shade more sophisticated.”
“It’s evidence.”
His brow lifted.
“Roarke, do you know how far I’ve already crossed the line getting you to do this?” She blew out a breath, remembered Boomer’s face, his arm. “Hell with it. I’ll try.”
“Good. Disengage.” The computer shut down silently. “Now will you go to sleep?”
“For a couple hours.” She allowed the fatigue to seep back, linked her arms around his neck. “You going to tuck me in again?”
“All right.” He hitched up her hips so that her legs wrapped around him. “But this time you stay where I tuck you.”
“You know, Roarke, my heart just flutters when you get masterful.”
“Wait till I get you back in bed. It’s going to flutter plenty.”
She laughed, nuzzled her head on his shoulder, and was asleep before the elevator finished its descent.
chapter four
It was dead dark when the ’link beside Eve’s head beeped. The cop in her surfaced first, smacked the engage, and reared up.
“Dallas.”
“Dallas, oh God, Dallas. I need help.”
The woman in her caught up with the cop in a snap and stared at Mavis’s image on screen. “Lights,” she ordered, and the room brightened so that she could see clearly. The white face, a blackening bruise just under the eye, raw, bleeding scrapes on the cheek, wild disheveled hair.
“Mavis. What is it? Where are you?”
“You’ve got to come.” Her breath hitched and snarled. Her eyes were too glazed with shock to allow tears. “Hurry. Hurry, please. I think she’s dead and I don’t know what to do.”
Eve didn’t ask for location again, but punched in an order to trace transmission. Recognizing Leonardo’s address when it blipped on under Mavis’s face, she kept her voice calm and firm.
“Stay where you are. Don’t touch anything. You understand me? Don’t touch anything, and don’t let anyone in but me. Mavis?”
“Yes, yes. I will. I won’t. Hurry. It’s so awful.”
“I’m on my way.” When she turned, Roarke was already up and pulling on his trousers.
“I’ll go with you.”
She didn’t argue. In five minutes flat they were on the road and speeding through the deepest slice of night. Empty streets gave way to the constant swarm of tourists in midtown, the flash of video billboards offering every pleasure and purchase known to man, then to the trendy insomniacs of the Village who loitered over minuscule cups of flavored coffee and lofty disc ussions in outdoor cafés, and finally, to the sleepy habitats of the artists.
Other than to find out their destination, Roarke didn’t ask questions, and she was grateful for it. She could see Mavis’s face in her mind, white and terrified. Worse, much worse, she saw Mavis’s hand, trembling. And the smear that had darkened it had been blood.
A high wind that hinted of a brewing storm whipped through the city canyons. It slapped at Eve as she leaped from Roarke’s car before he’d stopped completely at the curb. She took the thirty yards of sidewalk in a dead run, smacked the security camera.
“Mavis. It’s Dallas. Mavis, damn it.” Such was her state of mind that it took her ten frustrated seconds to realize the unit was smashed.
Roarke went through the unsecured door and into the elevator beside her.
When it opened, she knew it was as bad as she’d feared. On her earlier visit, Leonardo’s loft had been cheerfully cluttered, colorfully disorganized. Now it was viciously tumbled. Long trails of material shredded, tables overturned with their contents strewn and broken.
There was blood, a great deal of it, splattered on walls and silks like a bad-tempered child’s angry fingerpaints.
“Don’t touch anything,” she snapped at Roarke, out of reflex. “Mavis?” She took two steps forward, then stopped as one of the billowing curtains of shimmery cloth rippled. Mavis moved passed it, stood swaying.
“Dallas. Dallas. Thank God.”
“Okay. It’s okay.” The minute Eve caught her close, the relief poured. The blood wasn’t Mavis’s, though it was spotted on her clothes, on her hands. “You’re hurt. How bad?”
“I’m dizzy, sick. My head.”
“Let her sit down, Eve.” Taking Mavis’s arm, Roarke led her to a chair. “Come on, darling, sit down. That’s the way. She’s in shock, Eve. Get her a blanket. Put your head back, Mavis. That’s a girl. Close your eyes and just breathe for a while.”
“It’s cold.”
“I know.” He reached down, flipped up a ragged piece of glistening satin, and draped it over her. “Deep breaths, Mavis. Slow, deep breaths.” He flicked a glance up at Eve. “She needs attention.”
“I can’t call the MTs before I know w
hat the situation is. Do what you can for her.” All too aware of what she was likely to find, Eve moved past the curtain.
She’d died badly. It was the hair that confirmed to Eve who the woman had once been. The glorious curling flame of it. Her face, with its stunning, almost eerie perfection, was all but gone, mashed and mangled under cruel, repeated blows.
The weapon was still there, carelessly tossed aside. Eve supposed it was intended to be some sort of fancy cane or walking stick, a fashionable affectation. Under the blood and gore it was a glossy silver, perhaps an inch thick with an ornate handle in the shape of a grinning wolf.
She’d seen it, tipped into a corner of Leonardo’s work space, only two days before.
It was not necessary to check Pandora’s pulse, but Eve did so. Then she stepped back carefully so as not to contaminate the scene any further.
“Christ,” Roarke murmured from behind her, then laid both hands on her shoulders. “What are you going to do?”
“Whatever I have to. Mavis wouldn’t have done this.”
He turned her to face him. “You don’t have to tell me that. She needs you, Eve. She needs a friend, and she’s going to need a good cop.”
“I know.”
“It’s not going to be easy on you being both.”
“I’d better get started.” She walked back to where Mavis sat. Her face was like softened wax, the bruise and the scratches livid against the bone-white skin. Eve crouched down and took Mavis’s icy hands in hers. “I need you to tell me everything. Take your time, but tell it all.”
“She wasn’t moving. There was all the blood, and the way her face looked. And—and she wasn’t moving.”
“Mavis.” Eve gave the hands one quick, hard squeeze. “Look at me. Tell me exactly what happened from the time you got here.”
“I came . . . I wanted . . . I thought I should talk to Leonardo.” She shivered, plucked at the scrap of material covering her with hands still stained with blood. “He was upset when he went to the club the last time looking for me. He even threatened the bouncer, and that’s not like him. I didn’t want him to ruin his career, so I thought I could talk to him. I came, and someone had broken the security unit, so I just came on up. The door wasn’t locked. Sometimes he forgets,” she murmured and trailed off.