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Authors: J. D. Robb

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Mystery & Detective, #Women detectives, #New York (N.Y.), #Women Sleuths, #Detective and mystery stories, #New York, #New York (State), #Romantic Suspense, #Police, #Romantic suspense fiction, #Suspense, #Mystery, #Police Procedural, #Political, #Policewomen, #American Mystery & Suspense Fiction, #Detective, #Mystery & Detective - Women Sleuths, #Fiction - Mystery, #Mystery & Detective - Police Procedural, #Terrorism, #Crime & mystery, #Terrorists, #Eve (Fictitious character), #Dallas, #Dallas; Eve (Fictitious Character)

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BOOK: Loyalty in Death
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She found Roarke in her office, having a cozy chat with Nadine Furst from Channel 75.

“Scram, Nadine.”

“Come on, Dallas, a cop nearly gets blown up when her husband’s building is destroyed by person or persons unknown, it’s news.” She offered Eve one of her pretty cat smiles, but there was concern in her eyes. “You okay?”

“I’m fine, and I wasn’t nearly blown up. I was yards away from the building at the time of the explosion. I’ve got nothing official to give you at this time.”

Nadine merely re-crossed her legs. “What were you doing at the building?”

“Maybe I was scoping out my husband’s property.”

Nadine snorted and managed to make the sound ladylike. “Yeah, and maybe you’ve decided to retire and raise puppies. Give a little, Dallas.”

“The building was abandoned. I’m homicide. There was no homicide. I suggest you stroll on up to Explosives and Bombs.”

Nadine’s eyes slitted. “It’s not your case?”

“Why would it be? Nobody died. But if you don’t get out of my chair, somebody might.”

“All right, all right.” With a shrug, Nadine rose. “I’ll go charm the boys in E and B. Hey, I caught Mavis’s video yesterday. She looked fantastic. When’s she due back?”

“Next week.”

“We’ll have a welcome home party for her,” Roarke put in. “I’ll let you know the details.”

“Thanks. You’re so much nicer than Dallas.” With a cocky grin, Nadine strolled out.

“I’m going to remember that crack the next time she wants a one-on-one,” Eve muttered and closed her door.

“What didn’t you tell her?” Roarke asked.

Eve dropped into her chair. “It’s going to take time for E and B to scan and sweep the site. At this point, they have some pieces and suspect there were at least six explosive devices, likely on timers. It’ll be a couple of days before I have a cohesive report.”

“But it’s your case.”

“At this point, it appears the explosion is linked to a homicide I’m investigating.” Fixer was hers now. She’d arranged it. “The people responsible for both contacted me. I have a meeting with Whitney shortly, but yeah, until he says differently, it’s mine. Did you ever have any dealings with Fixer?”

Roarke stretched out his legs. “Is that an official question?”

“Shit.” She closed her eyes. “That means you did.”

“He had magic hands,” Roarke said, examining his own.

“I’m getting really tired of hearing that from people who should know better. Give.”

“Five, maybe six years ago. He worked on a little device for me. Security probe, a very cleverly designed code breaker.”

“Which I suppose you designed.”

“For the most part, though Fixer had some interesting input. He was brilliant with electronics, but not completely trustworthy.” Roarke plucked a stray speck of lint from his smoke gray slacks. “I decided it was unwise to use his services again.”

“So nothing recent.”

“No, nothing, and we parted ways amicably enough. I’ve no links to him, Eve, that should worry you or would complicate your investigation.”

“What about this warehouse? How long have you owned it?”

“About three months. I’ll get you the exact date of purchase and the details. It was intended for renovation. As the permits just came through, work was to begin next week.”

“Renovating it into what?”

“Housing units. I also own the buildings on either side, and I have a bid on another in the area. They’re to be rehabbed as well. Markets, shops, cafes. Some offices.”

“Will that sector support that kind of thing?”

“I believe it will.”

She shook her head, thinking of the income level and street crime. “You’d know more about that sort of thing, I guess. The building was insured.”

“Yes, for little more than the purchase price at this point. The project’s worth a great deal more to me.” Taking the neglected, the disdained and giving it value meant a very great deal to him. “The building was old, but it was sound. The problem with progress is that it often sweeps aside, destroying rather than respecting what others have built before us.”

She knew of his affection for old things but wasn’t sure there was a point here. She’d seen little more than a pile of bricks, and that was before it had been blown up.

His money, she thought with a shrug. His time.

“Do you know anyone name Cassandra?”

Now he smiled. “I’m sure I do. But I sincerely doubt this is a former lover’s jealous snit.”

“They had to get the name from somewhere.”

He moved his shoulders. “Maybe from the Greeks.”

“Greek Town isn’t anywhere near that sector.”

For a moment he just stared at her; then he laughed. “The ancient Greeks, Lieutenant. In mythology, Cassandra could foretell the future, but no one believed her. She warned of death and destruction and was dismissed. Her predictions always came true.”

“How do you know all this shit?” She waved the question away before he could answer. “So what’s this Cassandra predicting?”

“According to my disc, the uprising of the masses, the toppling of corrupt governments — which is one of those annoying redundancies — and the overthrow of the greedy upper class. Of which I am a proud member.”

“Revolution? Killing an old man and blowing up an empty warehouse is a pretty petty way to revolt.” But she wouldn’t dismiss the possibility of political terrorists. “Feeney’s working on Fixer’s office unit. It had a fail-safe feature, but he’ll get by it.”

“Why didn’t they?”

“If they’d had anyone good enough to break into that fortress of his, they wouldn’t have needed him in the first place.”

Roarke considered, nodded. “Good point. Do you need me for anything else?”

“Not now. I’ll keep you updated on the investigation. If you do a press release, keep it minimal.”

“All right. Did you have your leg looked at?”

“I took care of it.”

He raised his brow. “Let me see.”

Instinctively, she tucked her legs under the desk.“No.”

He only rose and stepped over to bend down and tug her leg up. At her sputtering protest, he tightened his grip and rolled up her trousers.

“Are you crazy? Stop that.” Mortified, she reached out to slam the door shut. “Somebody could come in.”

“Then stop squirming,” he suggested, and gently peeled back the bandage. He nodded in approval. “You did a decent job.” Even as she hissed at him, he lowered his head and touched his lips to the cut. “All better,” he said with a grin just as the door opened.

Peabody gaped, flushed, then stammered out, “Excuse me.”

“Just leaving,” Roarke said, patting the bandage back in place while Eve ground her teeth. “How did you come through this morning’s excitement, Peabody?”

“Okay, it was… well, actually.” She cleared her throat and shot him a hopeful glance. “I got this little nick right here.” She rubbed her finger at her jawline, heart fluttering pleasantly when he smiled at her.

“So you do.” He stepped to her, angled his head, and touched his lips to the tiny cut. “Take care of yourself.”

“Man, man, oh man,” was the best she could manage when he’d left. “He’s got such a great mouth. How do you stop yourself from just biting it?”

“Wipe the drool off your chin, for Christ’s sake. And sit down. We’ve got a report to write for the commander.”

“I almost got blown up and got kissed by Roarke all in the same morning. I’m writing it on my calendar.”

“Settle down.”

“Yes, sir.” She took out her log and got to work. But with a smile on her face.

Commander Whitney was an imposing figure behind his desk. He was a big man with beefy shoulders and a wide face. There were lines scored in his forehead his wife fussed at him to have smoothed away. But he knew that when furrowed, that brow symbolized authority and power to his officers. He’d sacrifice vanity for results every time.

He’d called in the top people in the required units. Lieutenant Anne Malloy from E and B, Feeney from EDD, and Eve. He listened to the reports, dissected, calculated.

“Even using three shifts,” Anne continued, “I’m projecting at least thirty-six hours before we’ve swept the site. The fragments coming in indicate multiple devices, using plaston explosives and intricate timers. This tells me the work was both expensive and sophisticated. We’re not dealing with vandals or a scatter group. More likely we have an organized, well-funded operation.”

“And the likelihood you’ll be able to trace any of the fragments?”

She hesitated. Anne Malloy was a small woman with a pretty, caramel-colored face and wide eyes of quiet green. She wore her blond hair in a bouncy ponytail and had a reputation for being both cheerful and fearless.

“I don’t want to make promises I can’t keep, Commander. But if there’s anything to trace, we’ll trace it. First we’ve got to put the pieces together.”

“Captain?” Whitney shifted his attention to Feeney.

“I’m down to the last couple of layers in Fixer’s unit. I should have it bypassed by the end of the day. He put in a maze, but we’re working through it, and we’ll have whatever data there is. I’ve got some of my best going through his equipment at his shop now. If, as we believe, he was connected with this morning’s explosion, we’ll find the link.”

“Lieutenant Dallas, according to your report, the subject was never connected with any political group or involved in any terrorist activity.”

“No, sir. He was a loner. Most of his suspected criminal activity was in the area of robbery, security bypass, small explosives used in those fields. After the Urban Wars, he retired from the army. He was reputed to have become disenchanted with the military, the government, and people in general. He established himself as a freelance electronics artist, with his repair shop as a front. In my opinion, it was for those very reasons that once he discovered he hadn’t been hired to take out a bank but to be a part in something much larger, he panicked, attempted to go under, and was killed.”

“That leaves us with a dead electronics man who may or may not have recorded data on his activities, a previously unknown group with as yet undetermined purposes, and a privately owned building that’s been destroyed with enough overkill to spew debris over a two-block area.”

He leaned back, folded his hands. “Each of you will work on your particular angle, but I want all efforts coordinated. Data is to be shared. We were told this morning was a demonstration. They may not choose an uninhabited building in a scantily populated area the next time. I want this shut down before we’re picking fragments of civilians as well as explosives out of the rubble. I want progress reports by end of shift.”

“Sir.” Eve stepped forward. “I’d like to take copies of both discs and each report to Dr. Mira for analysis. We could use a more detailed profile on the kind of people we’re dealing with.”

“Granted. The media will be given only the information that this explosion was a deliberate act and is under investigation. I want no leaks regarding the discs or the possible connection to a homicide. Work fast,” he ordered and dismissed them.

“Normally,” Anne said when the three of them moved down the corridor together, “I’d arm wrestle you for primary on this little project, Dallas.”

Eve slid her eyes over, sized up Anne’s tiny frame, and snorted. “I’d hurt you, Malloy.”

“Hey, I’m little, but I’m tough.” She bent her arm, flexing her biceps. “In this case, however, the ball bounced to you first, and these jerks contacted you personally. I’ll give way here.” As if to symbolize it, she gestured Eve onto the glide ahead of her, then winked at Feeney and hopped on.

“I’ve got some of my top people on site,” she continued. “I juggled the budget to work them round the clock, but it won’t shake loose for that kind of OT in the lab. IDing and tracing these parts and pieces after a major explosion takes time. It takes manpower. It takes some hot fucking luck.”

“We coordinate what you find with what my team comes up with at Fixer’s, we might find some of that luck,” Feeney said. “We could get even luckier, and I’ll find names, dates, and addresses on his hard drive.”

“I’ll take luck, but I’m not going to count on it.” Eve tucked her hands in her pockets. “If this is a well-funded, organized group, Fixer wouldn’t have joined, but he wouldn’t have run, either. Not as long as they were paying. He ran because he was scared. I’m going to tag Ratso again, see if he left anything out. What does Arlington mean to you, Feeney?”

He started to shrug, but Anne shot her hand between them, grabbed Eve’s arm. “Arlington? Where does that play?”

“Fixer told my weasel he was afraid of another Arlington.” She stared into Anne’s troubled eyes. “Mean something to you?”

“Yeah, Christ, yeah. And to any E and B man. September 25, 2023. The Urban Wars were basically over. There was a radical group, terrorists — assassinations, sabotage, explosives. They’d kill anyone for a price and justified it as revolution. They called themselves Apollo.”

“Oh shit,” Feeney breathed when the name hit home. “Holy Mother of God.”

“What?” Frustrated, Eve gave Anne a quick shake. “History’s not my strong suit. Give me a lesson here.”

“They’re the ones who took responsibility for blowing up the Pentagon. Arlington, Virginia. They used what was then a new material known as plaston. They used it in such amounts and in such areas that the building was essentially vaporized.

“Eight thousand people, military and civilian personnel, including children in the care center. There were no survivors.”

CHAPTER SEVEN

In Peabody’s apartment, Zeke cleaned and repaired the recycler and replayed the ‘link conversation with Clarissa Branson on the kitchen unit.

The first time he played it back, he told himself he was just making sure of the details, of what time he was to report to work, the address.

The second time he played it, he convinced himself he’d missed something vital in the instructions.

By the third time, the parts of the recycler lay neglected while he stared at the screen and let her soft voice wash over him.

I’m sure we have everything you need in the way of tools. She smiled a little as she spoke and made his heart beat just a little faster. But you’ve only to ask if there’s anything else you want.

It shamed him that what he wanted was her.

Before he could give in and replay the transmission one more time, he ordered the ‘link off. Color rose into his cheeks as he thought of his own foolishness, his own dishonor in coveting another man’s wife.

She’d hired him to do a job, he reminded himself. That was all there was between them. All there ever could be. She was a married woman, as removed from him as the moon, and had never done anything to encourage these yearnings in him.

But as he rebuilt the recycler with the energy of the guilty, he thought of her.

“How much more can you tell me?” Eve asked.

Rather than squeeze into her office, she’d set them up in a conference room. Already, she had Peabody setting up crime scene photos and available data on a board. Right now, the board was very thin.

“Arlington’s something anyone who wants into E and B studies.” Anne sipped the stale black coffee the room’s AutoChef offered. “The group had to have recruited inside people, probably both military and civilian. An instillation like the Pentagon just isn’t easily infiltrated, and during that period, security was very tight. The operation was very slick,” she continued. “The investigation indicated that a trio of explosive devices loaded with plaston were placed in all five sides, more in the underground facilities.”

Restless, she rose, glancing at the board as she paced. “At least one of the terrorists must have had high clearance in order to set the bombs underground. There was no warning, no contact demanding terms. The entire facility went up at eleven hundred hours, detonated by timers. Thousands of people were lost. It wasn’t possible to identify all the victims. There wasn’t enough left of them.”

“What do we know about Apollo?” Eve asked her.

“They took credit for the bombing. Boasted that they could do the same again, anywhere, at any time. And would unless the president resigned and their chosen representative was established as leader of what they called their new order.”

“James Rowan,” Feeney put in. “There’s a dossier on him, but I don’t think there’s much data. Paramilitary type, right, Malloy? Former CIA operative with ambitions toward politics and lots of bucks. They figured him for the head guy, and likely the inside man at the Pentagon. But somebody took him out before it was verified.”

“That’s right. It’s assumed he was head of the group; that he was pushing the buttons. After Arlington, he went public with video transmissions and on-air speeches. He was charismatic, as a lot of fanatics are. There was a lot of panic, pressure on the administration to cave rather than to risk another slaughter. Instead, they put a price on his head. Five million, dead or alive. No questions asked.”

“Who did him?”

Anne looked back at Eve. “Those files are sealed. That was part of the package. His headquarters — a house outside of Boston — was blown up with him in it. His body was ID’d, and the group scattered, fell apart. Splinter groups formed, managed to do some damage here and there. But the tide of the Wars had turned — at least here in the States. By the late twenties, the core of the original group was either dead or in cages. Over the next decade, others were tracked down and dealt with.”

“And how many slipped through?” Eve wondered.

“They never found his right hand. Guy named William Henson. He’d been Rowan’s campaign manager during his political runs.” Anne rubbed a hand over her slightly queasy stomach and set her coffee aside. “It was believed he was top level in Apollo. It was never proven, and he disappeared the same day Rowan went up. Some speculate he was inside when the bomb went, but that could be wishful thinking.”

“What about their holes, headquarters, arsenals?”

“Found, destroyed, confiscated. It’s assumed everything was found, but if you ask me, that’s a big assumption. A lot of the data’s sealed tight. Rumor is that a lot of the people taken in were killed without trial, tortured. Family members unlawfully imprisoned or executed.” Anne sat again. “It might be true. It couldn’t have been pretty, and there’s no way it was by the book.”

Eve rose, studied the photos on the board. “In your opinion, this deal is linked with what happened in Arlington?”

“I want to study the evidence more closely, pull the available data on Arlington, but it follows.” She hissed out a breath. “The names — both mythical types — the political crap, the material used for explosives. Still, there are variations. It wasn’t a military target, there was a warning, no lives were taken.”

“Yet,” Eve murmured. “Shoot me whatever data you spring on this, will you? Peabody, Fixer was army during the Urban Wars, let’s take a closer look at his service record. Feeney, we need everything he put on that office unit.”

“I’m on it.” He rose. “Let me put McNab on that service record. He’ll be able to melt through any seals quicker.”

Peabody opened her mouth, then shut it again in a thin line at one warning look from Eve.

“Tell him to send data to me as he gets it. Let’s ride, Peabody. I want to find Ratso.”

“I can access military data,” Peabody complained as they headed down to the garage. “It’s just a matter of going through channels.”

“McNab can swim the channels faster.”

“He’s a show-off,” she muttered and made Eve roll her eyes.

“I’ll take a show-off as long as he gets the job done fast. You don’t have to like everyone you work with, Peabody.”

“Good thing.”

“Shit, would you look at this?” Eve stopped to study her battered and abused car. Some joker had put a hand-lettered sign on the cracked rear window that read: Show mercy. Terminate me now.

“That’s Baxter’s warped sense of humor.” Eve ripped the sign away. “If I turn this sucker in to maintenance, they’ll just screw it up.” She got behind the wheel. “And they’ll take a month to do it. I’ll never get it back the way it was.”

“You’re going to have to have the windows replaced at least,” Peabody pointed out and tried to squint through the starburst of cracks on her side.

“Yeah.” She pulled out, wincing when the car shuddered. Glancing up, she saw the sky through the hole in the roof. “Let’s hope the temp controls still work.”

“I can put in a request for a replacement.”

“This is a replacement, remember?” Sulking, Eve headed south. “I’m going to take grief for this.”

“I can ask Zeke to take a look at it.”

“I thought he was a carpenter.”

“He’s good at everything. He can tinker with the innards, then you just get the glass replaced, the roof patched. It won’t be pretty, but you won’t have to turn the whole deal over to maintenance or enter the black hole of requisitions.”

Something inside the dash controls began to rattle ominously. “When could he do it?”

“Soon as you want.” She slid Eve a sidelong glance. “He’d really like to see your house. I told him about it, how you’ve got that mag old wood and furniture and stuff.”

Eve shifted in her seat. “I thought you were going to a play or something tonight.”

“I’ll tag him, tell him not to get the tickets.”

“I don’t know if Roarke has plans.”

“I’ll check with Summerset.”

“Shit. All right, okay.”

“That’s so gracious of you, sir.” Happily, Peabody took out her palm ‘link to call her brother.

They found Ratso at The Brew, contemplating a plate of what looked like undercooked brains. He blinked up as Eve slid into the booth across from him.

“These are supposed to be eggs. How come they ain’t yellow?”

“Must be from gray chickens.”

“Oh.” Apparently satisfied with that, he dug in. “So what’s up, Dallas? You got the guys who done Fixer?”

“I’ve got some lines to tug. What have you got?”

“Word is nobody sees Fixer that night. Don’t expect to, ‘cause he don’t come out at night usual. But Pokey — you know Pokey, Dallas, he deals some Zoner if he scores enough, and does some street work as an LC.”

“I don’t believe Pokey and I are acquainted.”

“Pokey’s all right. Mostly he minds his own, you know? He says how he was doing street work that night. Not much business ‘cause it’s too fucking cold to fuck, you know? But he was tapped out, so he’s out on the stroll, and he sees a van down from The Fixer’s place. Nice new one. Figures how somebody’s come around looking for some action, but there ain’t nobody in it he can see. Said he scoped it out awhile in case somebody comes back and wants a quick poke. That’s why they call him Pokey, he gives a real quick poke.”

“I’ll keep that in mind. What kind of van was it?”

Ratso toyed with his eggs and tried to look sly. “Well, see, I told Pokey you’d want to know stuff, and if it was solid data, you’d pay.”

“I don’t pay until I get the data. Did you tell him that?”

Ratso sighed. “Yeah, guess I did. Okay, okay, he says it was one of them fancy Airstreams, looked spanking, was black. Had zap security.” Ratso smiled a little. “He knows ‘cause he tried to get in and got the zap. So he’s dancing and blowing on his hand and he hears a kinda commotion down the street.”

“What kind of commotion?”

“I dunno. Like noise and maybe somebody yelling, and people coming. So he ducks around the corner in case who owns the van maybe saw him trying to break in. What he sees is two guys and one of ‘em’s carrying this big bag over his shoulder. The other — get this — is holding what Pokey says looks like a gun — like he’s seen on-screen and on discs and shit. So they toss this bag in the back, and it makes a thump when it hits. Then they get in the front and drive away.”

He scooped up more eggs, washed them down with the pissy-looking liquid in his glass. “I’m just sitting here thinking on it and wondering if I should tag you and fill you in, then here you are.” He grinned at her. “Maybe it was Fixer in that bag. Maybe they took him off in it, and did him and tossed him in the river. Maybe.”

“Pokey get the vehicle ID?”

“Nah. Pokey, he’s not too smart, you know. And he said his hand was on fire and he didn’t think nothing of it until I come around asking about Fixer.”

“Black Airstream van?”

“Yeah, with the zapper. And oh yeah, he says how it had the full blast entertainment center in the dash. That’s how come he thought maybe to get in. Pokey, he sometimes trades off electronics.”

“Sounds like a real solid citizen.”

“Yeah, he votes and everything. So how about it, Dallas, that’s good data, right?”

She took out twenty. “If it leads anywhere, there’s twenty more. Now, how much do you know about Fixer’s military history?”

The twenty vanished inside one of the pockets in Ratso’s dirty coat. “History?”

“What he did in the army? He ever talk to you about it?”

“Not much. Couple times when we was drinking and he sucked down too many. He said he took out plenty of targets during the Wars. Said how the army called ‘em targets ‘cause they didn’t have the balls to call them people. He had a real hard-on for the army. Said how he gave them every fucking thing he had, and they took everything. Um, how they thought they could throw money at him to make it right. He took their money and screw ‘em. Screw the cops, too, and the CIA and the goddamn president of the U.S. of A., too. But that was only when he was sloppy. Otherwise, he never said nothing.”

“Have you ever heard anything about Apollo or Cassandra?”

Ratso swiped a hand under his nose. “Table dancer over at the Peek-A-Boo goes by Cassandra. She got tits like watermelons.”

Eve shook her head. “No, this is something else. You ask around, Ratso, but ask around real careful. And if you hear anything, don’t wonder if you should tag me. Just do it.”

“Okay, but I’m kinda low on operating expenses.”

She rose, then tossed another twenty on the table. “Don’t waste my money,” she warned. “Peabody.”

“I’ll start the run on Airstream vans,” Peabody said, “New York and New Jersey registrations.”

“Goddamn it!” Eve dashed toward her vehicle. “Look at this shit, would you?” she demanded, jerking a thumb toward the bright red frowny face someone had painted on her dented hood. “No respect. No respect whatsoever for city property.”

Peabody coughed, forced her face into stern, disapproving lines. “It’s a disgrace, sir. Absolutely.”

“Was that a smirk, Officer?”

“No sir, it certainly was not a smirk. It was a scowl. A righteous scowl. Should I canvas the area for spray cans, Lieutenant?”

“Kiss my ass.” Eve slammed into the car, giving Peabody just enough time to snort out the laugh that had been burning in her chest.

“I do,” she murmured. “Constantly.” She let out a long breath, shook off the grin, and climbed in the passenger seat.

“We’ll finish out the shift at my home office. I’ll be damned if I’m going to park this thing in the garage and have the precinct snickering.”

“That works for me. You’ve got better food.” And there’d be no chance of McNab swinging through to do one of his tap dances.

“Have you got Lisbeth Cooke’s address? We can swing by and see if we can catch her before we take the rest of this home.”

“Yes, sir, I believe it’s on the way.” Peabody called it up. “That’s just off Madison at Eighty-third. Should I call and set up an interview?”

“No, let’s surprise her.”

It was obvious they did, and that Lisbeth didn’t care for surprises. “I don’t have to speak to you,” she said when she opened the door. “Not without my attorney present.”

“Call him,” Eve suggested. “Since you’ve got something to hide.”

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