The In Death Collection 06-10 (98 page)

BOOK: The In Death Collection 06-10
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“Did she help you kill him?”

“No, that I did unassisted. Friend had gotten wind of my interests, experiments. Didn’t care
for them. He intended to use his influence to cancel my funding—pitiful as it was—to research the regeneration of animal
organs. I canceled him and his little project first.”

“But then you had to go under,” she said easing forward with her eyes steady on his.
“You planned to move to human organs eventually, so you covered your tracks.”

“And covered them well. Enlisted some of the very best hands and minds in the medical field. And
all’s well that ends well. Watch your step.”

She stopped at the foot of the gurney, laid a hand casually on the guard. “You know they’ve
got Young. He’ll roll over on you.”

“He’d die first.” Waverly chuckled. “The man is obsessed with this project.
He sees his name shining in medical journals for the ages. He believes I’m a god. He would bite through the artery in his own
wrist before he’d betray me.”

“Maybe. I guess you couldn’t count on that kind of loyalty from Wo.”

“No. She was always a risk, always on the outskirts of the project. A skilled doctor but a fairly
unstable woman. She began to balk when she discovered our human samples had been . . . appropriated without
permission.”

“She didn’t expect you to kill people.”

“They’re hardly people.”

“And the others?”

“In this arena? Hans believes as I do. Colin?” He moved an elegant shoulder. “He
prefers to wear blinders, to pretend not to know the full extent of the project. There
are more, of course. An
undertaking of this magnitude requires a large if select team.”

“Did you send the droid after Jan?”

“You’ve found her already.” He shook his head in admiration, and his hair gleamed
like gold under the bright lab lights. “My, that was quick. Of course. She was one of those loose ends.”

“And what will Cagney say when you tell him Louise was another loose end?”

“He won’t know. It’s very simple, if you know how, to dispose of a body in a health
center. The crematorium is efficient and never closed. What happened to her will remain a mystery.”

In an absent gesture, Waverly stroked a hand over Louise’s hair. Eve wanted to taste his blood for
that alone.

“It will likely break him,” Waverly considered. “I’m sorry for it. Very sorry
to have to sacrifice two fine minds, two excellent doctors, but progress, great progress, requires heavy sacrifice.”

“He’ll know.”

“Oh, on some level, certainly. And he’ll deny. He does his best work in denial. But he will
consider himself responsible. Guilty, I suppose, by omission. He is certainly aware that experiments and research are being conducted
in this and other facilities, without official sanction. He tends to look the other way easily, to call out his loyalty to the club. One doctor
does not turn on another.”

“But you do.”

“My loyalty is to the project.”

“What do you hope to gain?”

“Is that the blank you can’t fill? My God, we have done it.” Now his eyes sparkled,
emerald green and full of power. “We can rejuvenate a human organ. Within one day, a dying heart can be treated and brought
back to health. Not just health, but strength, youth, vigor.” Excitement had his voice rising, deepening. “Better in some
cases than it was before it was damaged. It can be all but reanimated, and that, I believe, is possible with a bit more
study.”

“Bring the dead to life?”

“The stuff of fiction, you’re thinking. So were transplants once, cornea replacement, in vitro
repair. This can and will be done, and very soon. We’re nearly ready to go public with our discovery. A serum that, when
injected directly into the damaged organ through a simple surgical procedure, will regenerate the cells, will eradicate any disease. A
patient will be ambulatory within hours, and will walk out, cured, in under forty-eight. With his own heart or lungs or kidneys, not
some artificial mold.”

He leaned toward her, eyes gleaming. “You still don’t understand the scope. It can be done
over and over again, to every organ. And from there, it’s a small step to muscle, to bone, to tissue. With this beginning,
we’ll draw in more funding than we can possibly use to complete the work. Within two years, we will be able to remake a
human being, using his own body. Life expectancy can and will double. Perhaps more. Death will essentially become
obsolete.”

“It’s never obsolete, Waverly. Not as long as there are people like you. Who will you
choose to remake?” she demanded. “There’s not enough room, not enough resources for everybody to live
forever.” She watched his smile turn cagey. “It’ll come down to money then, and selection.”

“Who needs more aging whores or sidewalk sleepers? We have Waylan in our pocket, and
he’ll push his influence in East Washington. The politicians will jump right on this. We’ve found a way to clean up the
streets over the next generation, to employ a kind of natural selection, survival of the fittest.”

“Of your selection, your choice.”

“And why not? Who better to decide than those who’ve held human hearts in their hands,
slid into the brain and gut? Who understands better?”

“That’s the mission,” she said quietly. “To create and mold and
select.”

“Admit it, Dallas, the world would be a better place without the dregs that weigh it
down.”

“You’re right. We just have a different definition of dregs.”

She shoved the gurney hard to the right and leaped over it.

 

Roarke crouched at the secured door. His entire world had become that single control panel. There was a raw
bruise on his cheekbone, a jagged gash in his shoulder.

The security droid was minus his left arm and head, but it had taken entirely too much time.

He forced his mind to stay focused, his vision to remain clear, and his hands steady. He never flinched when
he heard footsteps pounding down the corridor behind him. He could recognize the slap of cheap cop shoes a mile off.

“Jesus, Roarke, was that droid your work?”

“She’s in there.” He didn’t glance back at Feeney, but continued to search
for the next bypass. “I know it. Give me room, don’t get in my light.”

Peabody cleared her throat as the computer warning sounded again. “If you’re
wrong—”

“I’m not wrong.”

 

She rammed her fist into his face and relished the sting of knuckles meeting flesh. Something ripped as she
tackled him and sent them crashing onto the floor.

He wasn’t soft, and he was desperate. She tasted her own blood, felt her bones jar, saw one quick
burst of stars when her head cracked against the wheels of the gurney.

She didn’t use the pain, she didn’t need it. She used her rage. Half blind with it, she
straddled him, slamming her elbow into his windpipe. He gagged, strained for air. And she twisted the syringe he’d nearly
pumped into her side out of his hand.

Wheezing, eyes huge, he went still as she tipped it against his throat. “Scared, you bastard? Different
on the other end, isn’t it? Move the wrong way, and you’re dead. What did you say? Within three minutes? I’ll
just sit here
and watch you die, like you watched all those people die.”

“Don’t.” It was a rusty croak. “I’m choking. Can’t get
air.”

“I could put you out of your misery.” She smiled as his eyes wheeled in his head.
“But it’s just too damn easy. You want to live forever, Waverly? You can live forever in a fucking cage.”

She started to climb off him, sighed once. “I just have to,” she muttered, and rammed one
short-armed jab into his face.

She was just pulling herself to her feet when the doors swung open. “Well.” She swiped the
back of her hand across her swollen mouth. “The gang’s all here.” Cautiously, she turned the syringe upside
down. “You might want to seal this, Peabody, poison precautions, it’s lethal. Hey, Roarke, you’re
bleeding.”

He stepped to her, gently wiped her lip with his thumb. “You, too.”

“Good thing we’re in a health center, huh? Ruined that fancy coat.”

Now he grinned. “You, too.”

“Told ya. Feeney, you can interview me when you clean up this mess. Somebody ought to take a
look at Louise. He must have sedated her. She slept through this whole thing. And pick up Rosswell, would you? Waverly rolled over
on him.”

“It’ll be a pleasure. Anybody else?”

“Cagney and Vanderhaven, who happen to be in the city, according to Dr. Death here.
There’ll be more, here and there.” She glanced back where Waverly lay unconscious. “He’ll give it up.
He’s got no balls at all.” She picked up her clutch piece, stuck it in her back pocket. “We’re going
home.”

“Good work, Dallas.”

For a moment, her eyes were absolutely bleak, then she grinned, shrugged. “Yeah. What the
hell.” Sliding her arm around Roarke, she walked away.

“Peabody.”

“Captain?”

“Get Commander Whitney out of bed.”

“Sir?”

“Tell him Captain Feeney respectfully requests his administrative ass on-scene here as soon as
possible.”

Peabody cleared her throat. “Is it okay if I rephrase that slightly?”

“Just get him here.” With that, Feeney walked over to take a look at Dallas’s good
work.

 

She was dead asleep when the ’link beeped. For perhaps the first time in her life, she simply rolled
over and ignored it. When Roarke shook her shoulder, she just grunted and yanked the cover over her head.

“I’m sleeping here.”

“You just had a call from Whitney. He wants you in his office at Central in an hour.”

“Shit. That can’t be good.” Resigned, she pushed the covers back, sat up.
“The test results and evaluation can’t be in yet. It’s too early. Goddamn it, Roarke. I’m
busted.”

“Let’s go in and find out.”

She shook her head, dragged herself out of bed. “This isn’t for you.”

“You aren’t going in alone. Pull yourself together, Eve.”

She bit down on the despair, rolled back her shoulders, and looked at him. He was already in a business
suit, his hair shining and sleek. The bruise on his cheekbone had nearly faded away with treatment, but the shadow of it added just a
hint of the dangerous.

“How come you already are?”

“Because staying in bed half the morning unless sex is involved is a waste of time. Since you
didn’t appear to be cooperative in that area, I started my day with coffee instead. Stop stalling and go take your
shower.”

“Okay, fine, great.” She stalked into the bathroom so they could worry in different
rooms.

She refused breakfast. He didn’t press. But as he drove
downtown, she
reached for his hand. He held it until he’d parked at Central and turned to her.

“Eve.” He cupped her face, relieved that though she was pale, she didn’t tremble.
“Remember who you are.”

“I’m working on it. I’ll be all right. You can wait here.”

“Not a chance.”

“Okay.” She took a bracing breath. “Let’s do it.”

They rode in silence. As cops piled off and on the elevator from floor to floor, gazes flickered toward her,
then away. There was nothing to be said, and no way to say it.

Her stomach rolled as she stepped off, but her legs were steady as she approached the outer office of the
commander.

The door was open. Whitney stood behind his desk and gestured her inside. His gaze shifted briefly to
Roarke.

“Sit down, Dallas.”

“I’ll stand, sir.”

They weren’t alone in the room. As before, Tibble stood at the window. Others sat silently: Feeney
with his morose face, Peabody with her lips clamped tight, Webster eyeing Roarke specutively. Before Whitney could speak again,
Mira hurried in.

“I’m terribly sorry to be late. I was with a patient.” She took a seat beside Peabody,
folded her hands.

Whitney nodded, then opened the center drawer of his desk. He took out her badge, her weapon, laid them
in the center. Her gaze lowered to them, lingered, then lifted without expression.

“Lieutenant Webster.”

“Sir.” He rose. “The Internal Affairs Bureau finds no cause for sanction or reprimand
or for further investigation into the conduct of Lieutenant Dallas.”

“Thank you, Lieutenant. Detective Baxter is in the field, but his investigative report on the homicide
of Officer Ellen Bowers has been written and filed. The case has been closed, and Lieutenant Dallas is cleared of any
suspicion or involvement in that matter. This confirms your evaluation, Dr. Mira.”

“Yes, it does. The test results and evaluation clear the lieutenant in all areas and confirm her aptitude
for her position. My reports have been entered into the subject’s file.”

“So noted,” Whitney said and turned back to Eve. She hadn’t moved,
hadn’t blinked. “The New York Police and Security Department offers its apologies to one of its finest for an injustice
done to her. I add my own personal apology to it. Procedure is necessary, but it is not always equitable.”

Tibble stepped forward. “The suspension is lifted and will be expunged from your record. You will
not be penalized in any way for the enforced time away from the job. The department will issue a statement to the media detailing what
facts are deemed pertinent and necessary. Commander?”

“Sir.” Whitney’s face remained passive as he picked up her badge, her weapon, held
them out. Emotion sparked in his eyes when she simply stared at them. “Lieutenant Dallas, this department and myself would
suffer a great loss if you refuse these.”

She remembered to breathe and lifted her gaze, met his, then reached out and took what was hers. Across
the room, Peabody sniffled audibly.

“Lieutenant.” Whitney offered his hand across the desk. A rare grin broke out on his face
when she clasped it. “You’re on duty.”

“Yes, sir.” She turned, looked straight at Roarke. “Just let me get rid of this
civilian.” Watching him, she tucked away her badge, shrugged into her harness. “Can I see you outside a
minute?”

“Absolutely.”

He sent the sniffling Peabody a wink and walked out after his wife. The minute they were out of view, he
spun her around, kissed her lavishly. “It’s nice to see you again, Lieutenant.”

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