Treachery in Death (In Death 32)
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; “Oberman rides a desk,” Eve corrected, then shrugged. “Did Garnet ever brag about how he used to bang the boss?”
His eyes stayed cold, nearly blank, but his hands fisted on the table between them. “You deserve more than the couple slaps Garnet gave you.”
“Want to try your hand at it? He embarrassed her, he demeaned her, he ignored her directives and put her in the position of defending herself, her command. He jeopardized your squad, Bix. What do you do when your unit’s in jeopardy?” She bit off the words, spat them out. “What do you do when your lieutenant is under fire? What do you do?”
“What needs to be done.”
“Where were you at oh one hundred, when Garnet went down?”
“Home.”
“Where were you the night Keener was murdered?”
“Home.”
“What is your response when and if your lieutenant orders you to eliminate a threat?”
“Yes, ma’am.” His voice snapped like a salute. “When and how?”
“And if that order includes murder, do you question it? Do you hesitate?”
“I do not.”
“What did Keener have, what did he know, what had he done to make him a liability? Why did he have to be eliminated?”
Bix opened his mouth, closed it again. He squared his shoulders. “I have nothing more to say to you. If you want to question me further, it’ll be in the presence of my department rep.”
“That’s your right. Let it be noted that not once during this interview did Detective Bix address me as sir or by my rank. This disrespect will be included in his file. Just a little icing on the cake I’m baking,” she told Bix, then rose. “Interview end.”
20
HER LIEUTENANT AND BIX HAD BEEN GONE about ten minutes when Lilah saw her window. Four of the squad were in the field, Brinker off on one of his many lengthy trips to Vending or the bathroom. Sloan and Asserton sat at their desks plugging away at paperwork. Freeman and Marcell had just gone into the break room.
Lilah picked up a report from her desk, walked briskly to Renee’s door, shoved the master she’d palmed in and out of the slot. And walked inside. The minute she had the door closed, she stuck the report in her back pocket.
Five minutes, she told herself. Tops. Freeman and Marcell were bound to bullshit in the break room that long.
She hit the desk first, crouching down to the locked bottom drawer. And using the skill she’d learned from her doomed brother, picked the lock.
It shouldn’t have surprised her to find so many personal items the rest of the squad was denied. High-end—way high-end—face enhancements, a top-of-the-line VR unit with a collection of relaxation and sex programs.
She’d already judged Renee as useless and vain.
She ran her fingers under drawers, along their sides, checked for false bottoms. She found a little cash, but nothing over the line.
She closed the drawer, secured it again. Careful not to disturb Renee’s pristine organization, she riffled through others. Flipped through file discs, opened and scanned a memo book, an appointment book before moving on to the furniture, the counters, the windows.
She knew Renee had a hide in there. Knew it hid more than expensive lip dye and eye shadow, more than fancy imported perfume that sold for a paycheck an ounce.
Her gut told her she’d hit the time to bail—sweat had begun to trickle down the center of her back.
One minute more, she told herself, easing the seascape off the wall to check behind it, to examine its back, its frame.
The minute she replaced it, carefully adjusting it so it hung perfectly true, it struck her.
“You idiot,” she muttered. “You wasted those psych courses.”
She looked at the portrait of Commander Marcus Oberman, in full dress blues.