“I’m inclined to agree, but people die in prison, are killed or self-terminate. Or come out and do the same. Witnesses are murdered to prevent them from testifying, and the police work to convince them to testify. Victims are not always given justice.”
“Yeah, been there, too. How do we find this bastard’s loved one—who died, was killed, went in, got whacked—in the case files of a cop with more than twenty years on the job?”
“He’ll believe or have convinced himself that this person was or is innocent. As Deena was innocent. You might consider that this connection to the killer was abused, injured, raped, killed in or out of prison. Or one who self-terminated after release, or after an attack. I’d start looking for someone who was strangled or smothered. The method was another message. He could have beaten her to death, used a knife, given her an overdose. There are any number of ways to kill a helpless girl. He chose the method.”
“That’s right, that’s exactly right.” Eve narrowed her eyes as she turned it over. “Every detail was planned. Of course he planned the method. Not just because he wanted to see her when he killed her, not just because he wanted to use his hands. Because he had to, to make his point. It’s a good angle. We can narrow it down with that, push on that.”
She thought it through. “They’re having Deena’s memorial on Thursday.”
“There can’t be anything more painful. How is MacMasters holding up?”
“Barely. He’s ready to take the blame, even without knowing about the vid. The killer wasted time there. He asked me how he was supposed to stand it, and I didn’t have an answer. I don’t know what it’s like to have a kid, but I know when the vic’s a kid it’s harder. We all feel that. I don’t know how anyone stands it when it’s their kid.”
“Most rely on the natural order. Children bury their parents, not the other way around. Those of us who do what we do know murder, even death, has no respect for the natural order. This is a burden MacMasters and his wife will never lay down. In time, they’ll live, work, play, make love, laugh, but they won’t ever lay this down.”
“Yeah.” She thought of what Summerset had told her. “That’s what I hear. In any case, the memorial. I think he’ll find a way to be there. I think he’ll need to see the results of his work. He’ll need to see MacMasters grieve and suffer. He’d have to be absolutely sure, wouldn’t he, that he’d done the job? However focused he is, he’s still young. What’s the point of screwing with someone if you don’t see them squirm?”
“I agree. There’s a very high probability that he’ll find a way to attend, or at least find a way to observe MacMasters. The girl was the weapon. MacMasters was the goal.”
“That’s what I think. Thanks for meeting me.”
“I only regret I can’t find an excuse to work right here the rest of the day. It’s a lovely campus. I’ve given some lectures here, and attended a couple of performances, but—”
“Wait. Lectures. Performances—like theater?”
“Yes, they have an excellent theater.”
“And the public can attend this stuff?”
“Of course. They—”
“Wait.” She snapped it this time, and yanked out her ’link. “Dr. Lapkoff.”
“That was very quick.”
“I need a list of every performance, concert, lecture, vid, live, holo—open to the public from April to this past Saturday. Send it to this contact.” She read off the data for her unit at Central.
“I’ll arrange it.”
“Thanks.”
“You know Peach?” Mira asked when Eve clicked off and keyed in another code.
“Huh? Well, sort of. You know her?”
“Yes. Dennis and I are patrons of the university. He taught here for years.”
“He—really? Mr. Mira taught here?”
“You know he was a professor.”
Eve thought of Dennis Mira and his comfortable, misbuttoned cardigans, his kind eyes, charmingly vague demeanor. “Yeah, I guess I never . . .”
“He still gives the occasional course and often lectures. We’re very friendly with Peach and her family.”
“Small world. Jamie.” She turned back to the ’link. “Have you gone to any of the concerts, plays, lectures, whatever at Columbia since April?”
“What?” He had the glassy-eyed look of an e-geek deep in chips. “Yeah, I went to a lecture on e-crime.”
“No, not that. Something Deena would have been into.”
“You mean like singing and dancing and shit?” He gave her a look that could only come from the young and the pained. “Why would I?”
“What I thought.” She cut him off, tagged Peabody. “I want you to go to the scene, get any playbills, posters, souvenirs, whatever the hell pertaining to any concert, performance, lecture at Columbia from the time of the meet until the day of the murder. Bring them to Central. Toss in any of the same from anywhere during the same time frame.”
“Can do. On the shoes? I thought about what you said. Upper East wasn’t his spot. Probably Deena’s area isn’t either if he didn’t want any chance of getting spotted. So I’m focusing on downtown vendors. Just a hunch.”
“Not bad. We’ll work that first. Get the stuff, head to the house. I’ll be there inside an hour.”
Eve shoved the ’link away, rose. “Thanks. Good angle. I have to book.”
“If you’re heading back to Central, maybe I could catch a ride.”
“I have to go see a guy about his dead brother.”
Mira gathered up her big pink bag. “Won’t that be interesting? May I?”
“I guess. He’s a potential. Not high on the list, but . . . Well, if he gives us any trouble, you could hit him with that bag and do some damage.”
Mira stroked a loving hand over the pastel leather. “We all have our weapons.”
When they reached her vehicle, Eve did a run on Risso Banks, obtained his home and work addresses.
“White male, age twenty-four. He’s kept his nose clean since his brother’s bust and unfortunate demise, and has gainful employment. Which fits the profile. Unmarried, no cohab on record. Also fits. And it doesn’t. His brother goes down—literally, as in four stories to splat. MacMasters is the boss, but not the primary, and it’s a shared bust with SVU. Cecil, the brother, worked the illegals and pedophile trades.”
“A charmer.”
“Apparently. He wasn’t raped, kicked around, smothered, or strangled. He took a header out a window while trying to avoid arrest. Still, not far out of the way.”
“A lot of it’s eliminating, isn’t it? Legwork, ’link work, details.” Obviously content, Mira settled back. “What an interesting vehicle. It looks so ordinary from the outside, but it has more hardware than my office inside. And it’s very comfortable—smooth, too,” she added as Eve wove through traffic.
“It moves like a turbo, and verticals like a jet-copter. Armored and blast proof. It was . . . sort of a favor-slash-present from Roarke.”
“A present so you wouldn’t have to continually knock heads with Requisitions. I heard about the last wreck.”
Before she could stop herself, Eve hunched her shoulders. “It wasn’t my fault.”
“No, but . . . And the favor so you’d be able to accept it, and he’d be able to feel you were as safe as possible.”
“I guess bull’s-eyes like that are why you have all the initials after your name.”
“That, and I like to think knowing you and Roarke fairly well. It’s an excellent favor-slash-present. Tell me, since we have a little time, is everyone ready for the wedding? We’re looking forward to it.”
“I guess, probably.” The word wedding had a little ember of guilt and unease burning in Eve’s gut. “I’m supposed to tag Louise—people tell me—and offer to do matron-of-honor stuff. I don’t know what that is. We did the shower thing, and the dress I’m supposed to wear’s being delivered today. What else is there?”
“Is that a rhetorical question?”
&nb
sp; “Shit.”
“I’d advise to contact Louise when you have a few free moments, and ask her if she needs anything. Very likely she won’t need anything but to talk or vent for a bit. She’s an efficient sort who knows what she wants and has certainly arranged it. But there are invariably little glitches and headaches at the last minute. All you really need to do is listen.”
Eve cut her gaze, full of cautious hope, toward Mira. “Really?”
“I’d give that an eighty-eight-point-three probability.”
Eve mulled it, relieved. “That’s decent.”
“I went by their new home last week, to take a look at Charles’s office. He’s nervous and excited, and has set up a very good area there. Of course I got a tour of the whole house. It’s coming along beautifully, I think. Urban, classic, eclectic—very them. They’re going to make a nice life there.”
“It’s good. They’re good. It’s all good. I just want to get through this wedding thing.”
“Don’t tell me you’re nervous.”
“No. Well, yeah.” Nervous about being nervous had Eve shifting in her seat. “What if the case is running hot, or I’m about to close it, or any of the shit that comes down on the job comes down on the day? What do you do? With Roarke, I don’t have to worry. He gets it. If I have to cancel something or I’m late, whatever, he gets it. He’s extremely frosty in that area. And I still feel guilty sometimes. But this is other. I get that this is, like, The Day. It’s major for Louise. I don’t want to screw it up.”
“You can only do what you can do, Eve. Louise understands emergencies, priorities, the demands of a vocation. She’s a doctor.”
Eve frowned over it a moment. “That’s right. She’s a doctor. If she’s got her hands in somebody’s body cavity, she’s not going to pull them out and walk off to put on a fancy dress. She’d finish first.”
“I certainly hope so.”
“Okay. That’s better. It’s okay.”
“What are you wearing?”
“A yellow thing.”
Mira smiled. “Eyes straight, don’t look at me, and tell me what I’m wearing.”
“Did you forget?”
“Indulge me.”
“A suit, knee-length skirt, three-button jacket—off-white. Kind of vanilla. Square, silver buttons, lacy top. Shoes, light pink, cut-out toes, ankle-breaker heels about the width of a needle. Multicolored stone earrings, dangle style, silver, and a silver three-strand neck chain with some little stones set at various points. Humongo pink handbag, and fairly iced pink-framed sunshades—both of which match the paint on your toenails. Wedding band, fancy silver wrist unit with sparkly bracelet.
“How do you remember to stick on all that,” Eve wondered, “the sparkly things?”
“It’s called vanity,” Mira told her. “I enjoy mine. And it’s so interesting you can only recall your dress for the wedding being a yellow thing, and can describe what I’m wearing down to the width of my heels. Which, yes, are miserably uncomfortable, but so pretty.”
Mira turned her ankles to admire them. “And now that I’ve seen your closet firsthand, I don’t know how you resist decking yourself out in all those beautiful clothes every day.”
“Maybe I’m like the vehicle,” Eve decided. “Keep it ordinary on the outside, so nobody notices all the hardware inside.”
“Very good.” Mira laughed. “Very good.”
“It’s what he does,” Eve murmured.
“And we’ve circled back.”
“Keep it ordinary, every day, unobtrusive on the outside. Nobody sees what’s inside. Nobody sees a monster. When he goes to get a slice or buy shoes, nobody notices him. Or, if he wants them to, they see a nice kid, good-looking young guy. Not spectacular, that they’d remember. Just good-looking, polite, barely stirs the air. We’ve got two wits who saw him with Deena, and that’s all they gave me, nearly all. We’ll do better because Yancy’s good at digging out the details, but they didn’t think about him, didn’t check him out especially. Wouldn’t have noted him at all, most likely, except he was with her. They knew her, so they noticed him.”
She snagged a second-level spot a half block from Risso’s work address, then glanced at Mira’s heels. “It’s a short hike. Can you handle that?”
“I’m a professional.”
Halfway down, Eve cursed, sighed, then vaulted over the safety rail to the sidewalk. “Be right back,” she called out as Mira gaped at her.
She’d seen the snatch, and really the mark deserved it. Bopping along, gawking at storefronts with his back pocket bulging. Or it had been until the street thief plucked out the wallet with the classic bump and grab.
The thief continued on, unhurried, with the wallet already inside the right front pocket of his pants, under the bulk of his baggy hoodie.
Eve sprinted a quarter block to close the distance, then dropped down to a brisk New Yorker’s pace. She tapped the thief on the shoulder. “Sorry, can you help me?”
He gave her a round-eyed innocent look, just another guy on the street. “What with?”
“Well, I’ve got other stuff to do, really pressed for time, so you could help me out and just hand me the wallet you just lifted. It’s in here.” She slapped her hand on his pocket. “Oh, and any other property you’ve lifted today, too. Then we can both be about our business.”
“Don’t know what you’re talking about. Piss it.” She felt him gather to run, grabbed his shoulder.
“You could really make this quick and simple for both of us. I don’t want to take time to—Hey!”
He ducked, pivoted, squirmed like a snake shedding skin, and left her holding an empty hoodie.
He had a squat torso on squat legs. It really wasn’t even a challenge. Despite the fact she had to dodge pedestrians when the thief was content to shove, bull, and burst through them, she caught him before the end of the block.
“Help, help!” He barked it out when she pushed him face-first into the nearest building. “Police!”
“Come on, you moron, you know I’m the police.” She cuffed his hands behind his back, kneed his legs apart to make him spread them. “If you make me chase you again, you’re going to be eating sidewalk.”
She patted him down, found no weapons and six wallets.
“Any one of these yours, asshole?”
“I found those.” Darting eyes replaced wide eyes. “I was going to find a cop and turn them in. Sweartagod.”
“Uh-huh. I saw you find this one in that guy’s back pocket. I’m sure he’s going to be really grateful.”
“I called for uniforms.” Mira hurried up on her ice-pick heels.
“Good, saves me.” She tapped the thief on the back of the head. “See? See? You just couldn’t help me out. Now we’ve both got to go through the deal. You!” She pointed at the mark who was currently one of the lookie-loos staring at the scene.
“Me? Me? I didn’t do anything.”
“Got ID?”
“Yes. Sure. I got . . .” He reached for his back pocket. “My wallet! My wallet’s gone!”
“Isn’t that a coincidence? I’ve got it right here.” Keeping one elbow in the small of the thief’s back, she held up the wallet. “It’s like magic, isn’t it? To get it back you’ll need to wait here for the uniformed officers and file a report with them.”
“I was having a good day,” the thief muttered. “A really good day.”
“It’s in the toilet now.” She held up her badge to flash the two uniforms hustling their way.
It took time she didn’t want to spend, but in the end, she supposed, justice was served.
“You gave me such a start,” Mira said. “One second you’re there, the next you’re jumping over the rail and running.”
“Yet another reason not to wear fancy duds and ankle breakers.”
“You have a point.”
They backtracked to the store where Risso was employed.
A lot of gadgetry, she noted, all under the banner: 20% Off! This Week O
nly! that had probably been draped there for years.
She made Risso Banks from his ID shot, and saw him make her for a cop. He strolled over, with a redwood-sized chip on his shoulder.
“Saw you take down that mug. He didn’t have any speed.”
“He had six wallets that weren’t his.”
“Crime’s everywhere.”
He was a good-looking guy—a bit on the smirky side—with a short centurion cut that looked fresh. Dark hair, sulky brown eyes. The right height and build, but she didn’t get a buzz off him.
“Do you want to talk here, Risso, or somewhere more private?”
“If you’ve got something to say, say it. The boss knows I had some trouble a while back. I haven’t had any since. He knows that, too. I did the terms of my deal.”
“Your brother got a harder deal.”
He shrugged, then head jerked her toward the rear of the shop. “He screwed me up. Fed me illegals before I’m ten, got me hooked. I worked for him, sure. What else was there? And when it came down, he ran, and he left me for the cops. He ran, trying to save his own ass, and didn’t do anything to help me. So he got what was coming to him, as far as I can see. And I’m not shedding any tears over it. I got straight, I got work. Cops like to come around giving me the fish eye, fine. I’m clean.”
“If you give me the right answer to one question, I walk out. No harm, no foul.”
“Depends on the question.”
“You got attitude, Risso. I have to admire that. Saturday from six p.m. to Sunday, three a.m.”
“We close at six on Saturday. Me and the boss closed up, left about quarter after. You can ask him.”
“And after?”
He gave a jerky shrug that she interpreted as annoyance rather than nerves. “Went home, got cleaned up some. Eight o’clock me, the boss, and three other guys played cards like we do Saturday night, once a month. Game was at my place this round.” He grinned, with that hint of smirk. “Friendly stakes.”
“I’m not worried about the stakes. Is that your boss?” She gestured toward the potbellied man trying to sell a customer a new PPC.