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The In Death Collection, Books 6-10

Page 57

by J. D. Robb


  “Charlotte,” Mira murmured. “I wasn’t sure you knew my first name.”

  “I guess I heard it somewhere.”

  Mira blinked at sentimental tears. “It’s wonderfully thoughtful.” She set the bottle down and turned to draw Eve into a hug. “Thank you.”

  Swamped with warmth, and embarrassment, Eve let herself be held. “I’m glad you like it. I’m pretty new at this kind of thing.”

  “You did very well.” She drew back, but caught Eve’s face in her hands. “I’m so fond of you. Now I need the powder room because another of my Christmas traditions is to weep a little over my gifts. I know where it is,” she added, patting Eve’s cheeks lightly. “You go dance with your husband and drink a little too much champagne. The world outside will still be there tomorrow.”

  “I need to stop him.”

  “And you will. But tonight, you need your life. Go find Roarke and take it.”

  chapter seventeen

  Eve did what the doctor ordered. It wasn’t such a bad deal, she decided, getting a little light-headed, swaying in Roarke’s arms to some sort of dreamy music in a room filled with color and scent and light.

  “I can live with it,” she murmured.

  “Hmm?”

  She smiled as his lips skimmed her ear. “I can live with it,” she repeated, drawing back enough to look at his face. “All the Roarke stuff.”

  “Well.” His hands stroked up her back, then down again. “That’s good to know.”

  “You got a whole bunch of stuff, Roarke.”

  “I do, indeed, have a whole bunch of stuff.” And a wife, he thought with an amused glint in his eyes, who was heading toward drunk.

  “Sometimes it’s spooky. But not now. Now it’s pretty nice.” Sighing, she rubbed her cheek against his. “What kind of music is this?”

  “Do you like it?”

  “Yeah, it’s sexy.”

  “Twentieth century, primarily the nineteen forties. It was called Big Band. That’s a hologram of Tommy Dorsey’s band doing this little number. ‘Moonlight Serenade.”’

  “That’s a million years ago.”

  “Almost.”

  “How do you know all that stuff anyway?”

  “Maybe I was born out of my time.”

  She sighed in his arms as the music swelled. “No, you hit your time just right.” She tilted her head on his shoulder so she could watch the room. “Everybody looks happy. Feeney’s dancing with his wife. Mavis is sitting on Leonardo’s lap in the corner over there with Mira and her husband. They’re all laughing. McNab’s hitting on every woman in the room, and giving Peabody the hairy eyeball while he sucks down your Scotch.”

  Idly, Roarke glanced over, lifted a brow. “Trina’s got him now. Jesus, she’ll eat that boy alive.”

  “He doesn’t look worried about it.” She leaned back again. “It’s a nice party.”

  The music changed, a quick beat bouncing out. Eve’s mouth dropped open. “Holy shit, look at Dickhead. What’s he doing?”

  Grinning, Roarke slipped a hand around Eve’s waist, turning so they were hip to hip. “I believe it’s called jitterbug.”

  Stunned, she watched the lab chief tug and pull Nadine Furst around the room, spinning her out, whipping her back. “Yeah, I can see why. I can never get him to move that fast in the lab. Whoa!” Her eyes widened as Dickie shoveled Nadine through his legs. Nadine let out a burst of laughter as her feet hit the floor again, and the crowd roared with approval.

  Eve found herself grinning, leaning companionably against Roarke. “Looks like fun.”

  “Want to try it?”

  “Oh no.” But she laughed and began to tap her foot. “Watching’s just fine.”

  “Is that mag or what?” Mavis bounced over, pulling Leonardo after her. “Who’da thought Nadine could move like that? Frigid party, Roarke. It’s iced.”

  “Thanks. You’re looking festive, Mavis.”

  “Yeah. We call it my gay apparel.” She laughed and did a quick twirl to show off the multicolored panels that fluttered from breast to ankle. The movement parted them, revealing flashes of skin that had been dusted with gold and matched her hair, which fountained out from a wild topknot.

  “Leonardo thought yours should be more refined,” she told Eve.

  “No one shows off my designs as well as you and Mavis.” Towering over them, Leonardo smiled his gorgeous smile. “Merry Christmas, Dallas.” He bent down to kiss her cheek. “We have something for you, both of you. Just a token.”

  He took a package from behind his back and put it in Eve’s hands. “Mavis and I are having our first Christmas together, thanks in a large part to you.” His gold eyes misted.

  Because she couldn’t think of what to say, Eve set the package on one of the banquet tables and began to unwrap it.

  Inside was a box of carved and polished wood, its brass hinges gleaming. “It’s beautiful.”

  “Open it up,” Mavis prompted, all but bouncing. “Tell them what it means, Leonardo.”

  “The wood’s for friendship, the metal for love.” He waited until Eve opened the lid to reveal the two silk-lined compartments within. “One part is for your memories, the other for your wishes.”

  “He thought of it.” Mavis squeezed Leonardo’s big hand. “Isn’t he mag?”

  “Yeah.” Eve managed to nod. “It’s great, really great.”

  Understanding his wife, Roarke touched a hand to her shoulder, then stepped forward to extend the other to Leonardo. “It’s a lovely gift. A perfect one. Thank you.” And with a smile he kissed Mavis. “Both of you.”

  “Now you can make a wish together on Christmas Eve.” Delighted, Mavis threw her arms around Eve, held hard, then swung back to Leonardo. “Let’s dance.”

  “I’m going to get sloppy,” Eve murmured when her friends moved off.

  “It’s the season for it.” He lifted her chin, smiled into her swimming eyes. “I love watching you feel.”

  Riding the emotion, she cupped a hand around the back of his neck and drew his mouth down to hers. A long, warm kiss that soothed rather than excited.

  She was smiling when she drew back. “That’s the first memory for our box.”

  “Lieutenant.”

  Eve turned, clearing her throat as she looked at Whitney. Embarrassment fluttered as she thought of him catching her with her eyes wet and her mouth still soft from Roarke’s. “Sir.”

  “I’m sorry to disrupt things.” He offered Roarke an apologetic glance. “I’ve just received word that Piper Hoffman has been attacked.”

  The cop snapped back into place. “Do you have her location?”

  “She’s on her way to Hayes Memorial Hospital. Her condition is unknown at this time. Is there a private place I can fill you and your team in on known details?”

  “My office.”

  “I’ll take the commander down,” Roarke said. “Get your people.”

  “She was attacked in the living quarters above Personally Yours,” Whitney began. Out of habit, he’d placed himself behind the desk, but he didn’t sit. “At this time, it’s believed she was alone. The responding uniform reports that it appears her brother walked in during the assault. The assailant fled.”

  “Was the witness able to ID?” Eve demanded.

  “Not as yet. He’s at the hospital with his sister. The scene has been secured. I’ve ordered the uniforms to leave it undisturbed and await your arrival.”

  “I’ll take Feeney. We’ll go to the hospital first.” She caught Peabody’s quick jolt of shock, but kept her eyes on Whitney. “I don’t want to break Peabody’s and McNab’s cover at this time. I prefer for them to remain here, in contact, until I move on the scene.”

  “It’s your call,” Whitney said simply, and it was one he agreed with.

  “We’ve got witnesses this time, and he’s on the run. He’s scared. He can’t be sure he wasn’t made. And, if Piper stays alive, this makes his third miss.” She turned to her team. “I’ve got to change out
of this thing. Feeney, I’ll be downstairs in five minutes. Peabody, contact the hospital and see what you can find out on the victim’s status. McNab, I’ll have a uniform bring you the security discs. I want them run before we get back.”

  “Dallas,” Whitney said as she strode to the elevator, “let’s cage this bastard in.”

  “One of these days,” Feeney said as they walked down the hospital corridor, “I’m going to leave one of your parties with my wife.”

  “Cheer up, Feeney. We might’ve just caught the break that will put this away and give you a nice cozy Christmas.”

  “Yeah, there’s that.” Someone moaned behind an opened door as they passed, and had Feeney hunching his shoulders. “Too many broken bodies around here to suit me. The way the roads are tonight, they’ve probably been hauling in traffic accidents all night.”

  “Cheerful thought. There’s Rudy. I’ll take him. See if you can find her attending and an update.”

  One look at the man slumped in a chair with his head in his hands and Feeney couldn’t have been happier to be somewhere else. “He’s all yours, kid.”

  They parted ways, with Eve going straight ahead until she stopped in front of Rudy.

  He lowered his hands slowly, staring at her boots first, then gradually lifting a face dominated by devastated eyes. “He raped her. He raped her and he hurt her. He tied her up. I heard her crying. I heard her begging and crying.”

  Eve sat beside him. “Who was he?”

  “I don’t know. I didn’t see. I think—he must have heard me come in. He must have heard me. I ran into the bedroom, and I saw her. Oh God, oh God, oh God.”

  “Stop.” Snapping out the order, she took his wrists to drag his hands away from his face again. “That won’t help her. You came in and heard her. Where had you been?”

  “Shopping. Christmas shopping.” A single tear slid out of his eye and down his cheek. “She’d seen a sculpture, a fairy at a pond. She left hints around the apartment. A little sketch of it, the address of the gallery. Everything’s been so confused that I hadn’t had time to buy it until tonight. I never should have left her alone.”

  She could check on the gallery, the timing, and be certain, Eve thought. Be certain the man who’d put Piper in the hospital wasn’t sitting beside her. She knew, she knew better than to let anyone in. Why would she have let her attacker in?

  “Was the door secured when you got there?”

  “Yes. I coded in. Then I heard her crying, calling out. I ran in.” His breath hitched. He closed his eyes, fisted his hands. “I saw her on the bed. She was naked, her hands and feet tied. I think—I’m not sure—but I think I saw something out of the corner of my eye. A movement. Or maybe I just sensed it. Then someone shoved me, and I fell. My head.”

  Absently he lifted a hand to the side of his head. “I hit it on something, the footboard? I don’t know. I might have been out for a few seconds. It couldn’t have been long because I heard him running away. I didn’t go after him. I should have, but she was lying there, and I couldn’t think of anything but her. She wasn’t crying anymore. I thought . . . I thought she was dead.”

  “You called for MTs, an ambulance?”

  “I untied her first, covered her. I had to. I couldn’t stand . . . Then I called. I couldn’t wake her up. I couldn’t. She never woke up. And now they won’t let me see her.”

  This time when he covered his face with his hands, Eve let him weep. Spotting Feeney, she rose and met him halfway.

  “She’s in a coma,” he began. “Doctors figure it for extreme shock rather than physical. She was raped, sodomized. Wrists and ankles abraded. A couple of bruises. They did a tox. She was tranq’d—same over-the-counter shit. The tattoo’s on her right thigh.”

  “They got a prognosis?”

  “They say they can’t do anything. Lots of medical mumbo, but basically, the girl’s closed herself up. She’ll come back when and if she wants to.”

  “Okay, we’re useless here. Let’s put a uniform on her door, and another on the brother.”

  “You still looking at him, Dallas?”

  She glanced back, watching him sob. The stir of pity surprised her. “No, but we’ll put one on him anyway.”

  She took out her communicator, and sent out the orders as they headed toward the elevator.

  “Guy’s pretty busted up,” Feeney commented. “Wonder if he’s crying over his sister, or his lover.”

  “Yeah, it’s a puzzle all right.” She stepped into the elevator and requested the street level. “So, how did our man know she’d be alone tonight? He wouldn’t have tried her if he’d thought Rudy was with her. Not his style. He knew she was alone.”

  “Someone she knew. Could’ve been watching the place. Could’ve called and checked.”

  “Yeah, he knew her. Knows them both. And I don’t think she was one of his true loves.” She stepped out into the lobby, turned toward the doors. “She breaks pattern there. Piper isn’t on any of the match lists. He went for her to keep us focused on Rudy. Here’s how it plays for me.”

  She paused while they climbed into the car, Eve taking the wheel. “He knows we’ve had Rudy into Interview, that I like him for the murders. He’s got a couple to make up anyway, since he missed with Cissy and the ballet dancer. He’s smart enough to know if he gets Piper, we’re going to run Rudy again. It just follows. This wasn’t for love, it was for insurance.”

  Feeney leaned back, reaching into his pocket for his nut bag before remembering his wife hadn’t let him carry it to the party. He huffed once. “He knows her, she knows him. Maybe that’s how he got in.”

  “She wouldn’t have opened the door to a stranger, and she sure as hell wouldn’t have opened it up to some guy in a Santa suit. We need McNab to run those discs.”

  “You know what I think, Dallas. I don’t think we’re going to find any discs.”

  Feeney was on the mark. The uniform on the scene reported that the security cameras had been shut off from the main control at nine fifty.

  “No sign of forced entry,” Eve said after an examination of the locks and palm plate. “She goes to the door, looks out, and sees a familiar face. Opens right up. We won’t find any internal security discs either.”

  She stepped into the apartment. A white tree festooned with crystal ropes and balls stood in front of the windows that faced Fifth. There were stacks of prettily wrapped gifts under it and a single white dove where traditionalists would have put a star or an angel.

  There were shopping bags scattered from just inside the doorway to the first arch off the main room’s right. She could see Rudy coming in, hearing his sister, dropping the bags on the run. Following the trail, she crossed the soft white carpet and moved through a second seating area set up for screen viewing.

  More white. Soft fabric chairs in ecru, tables with glossy surfaces in ivory tones. Clear bowls and urns were overflowing with white flowers.

  It was, Eve thought, like stepping into a cloud.

  Smothering.

  Beyond the sitting area was a fitness room, equipped with sunken spa, air weights, a mood tube, and a multi-setting treadmill.

  “Bedrooms are at the far end,” she pointed out. “Even at a run it would take Rudy several seconds to get in from the front door.”

  She turned into a large bedroom. The privacy screen was drawn over the window, letting the night in, and keeping prying eyes out.

  Along one wall was an enormous white counter where hundreds of colorful bottles and pots and tubes were arrayed. A queen of vanities, Eve mused, scanning the triple mirror and ring of lights. Two padded chairs, she noted, side by side.

  They even painted their faces together.

  The bed was heart shaped, which made her want to roll her eyes. Scrolling chrome tubes framed it like icing on the side of a cake. Roped restraints dangled from four points.

  “He didn’t take his toys away with him.” Eve crouched down to examine the opened silver box on the floor. “We’ve got all
kinds of goodies, Feeney. Here’s the pressure syringe.” She tapped it with a sealed finger. “The tattoo works, and this is pretty special.”

  There was a box inside the box. It was simulated wood, about two feet in length. When she opened the lid, three tiers shuffled out. It was neatly packed with Natural Perfection enhancements.

  “I don’t know much about this kind of shit, but this doesn’t look like civilian stuff. It looks like a pro’s.”

  “Ho, ho, ho.” Feeney bent down and picked up a snowy white beard. “Maybe he came dressed for the party after all.”

  “I say he got her down, then dressed himself up. Habit.” Eve leaned back on her heels. “He gets in, tranqs her. Once he’s got her in here, restrained, he takes the time to deck himself out. He does the tattoo, makes up her face the way he wants it, all the while neatly storing his tools away. No mess. When she comes around enough to know what’s going on. . .”

  Eyes narrowed, Eve stared at the bed, brought the scene into her mind. “She comes around. She’s disoriented, confused. She struggles. She knows who he is. It shocks her, scares her, because she knows what he’s going to do. Maybe he talks to her while he’s cutting off her clothes.”

  “Looks like this was a robe.” Feeney lifted neat strips of a filmy white material.

  “Yeah, she’s home, comfortable, in for the night. She’s probably excited knowing her brother’s out buying her presents. Now she’s naked, terrified, staring up at this face she knows. She doesn’t want to believe it’s happening. You never want to believe it.”

  But it happened, she thought as a clammy sweat sprung out on her skin. Couldn’t be stopped.

  “He takes off his clothes. My bet is he folds them neatly. He takes off the beard, too. No need for disguises with her.”

  So she would see his face, contorted, eyes burning.

  “He’s aroused now. It’s really getting him off that she knows who he is. He doesn’t need or want the disguise. Maybe he thinks he loves her after all by now. She belongs to him. She’s helpless. He’s got the power. More power because she calls him by name when she begs him to stop. But he doesn’t stop. He won’t stop. He just keeps ramming himself into her. Ripping her, ramming her.”

 

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