“Yeah, I bet that’s a comfort to her now.”
She retrieved her coat, scanning, thinking, assessing as she put it on. “It’s cold. Cold and precise. And cowardly. A stab in the back, in the dark. Didn’t need to see her face, to watch her die, so some emotional detachment.”
Eve took one last look at the body—objective, but not detached. Chanel Rylan was hers now, and that was as attached as it could get.
“Start with the big group,” she told Peabody as they walked out. “Hold on to anyone sitting in the vic’s section, or directly across the aisle. Anyone who touched the body.”
“The killer could be one of them. Could still be here.”
“Could be,” Eve agreed. “That would be ballsy. Stab in the back in the dark, not ballsy. But killing in public, even in the dark, takes some balls. We need a search for the weapon. All bins and recyclers, all areas. If the killer hung in, he had to ditch the weapon.”
Eve paused a moment in the wide, dimly lit corridor that led to the various theaters. “Me? I’d do the jab, stick the weapon back in my pocket, and slip out.”
Hands on hips, she studied the setup. “Who’s going to notice? Somebody needs a pit stop, wants more popcorn. He wouldn’t even have to leave the building. He could just walk into one of the other theaters down here, take a seat in the back.
“We need to check and see what time the other vids let out, which ones ended before the body was discovered. If any did, he could have just walked out like the rest.”
Eve signaled to a uniform. “Nobody touches or uses any trash bin or recycler. I want the sweepers to do a full search. That includes bathrooms. Which theater houses the audience from the crime scene?”
“That’s number one, Lieutenant. A Dog and His Day. Kid-friendly early show. It let out at eighteen-thirty-five, so it was between shows when first on scene arrived to secure the scene.”
“That answers that,” Eve murmured. “Peabody, start in theater one. Where’s the friend of the victim?”
“We’ve got her and three others in separate areas in number five. The three jumped in to try to assist, compromised the body and the scene. All three were seated in the proximity of the victim.”
“Okay. Peabody, go ahead and pull in McNab. We’re going to need more hands anyway, and he’s likely to get here and review the security feed before either of us finish with the wits.”
“Will do. Dallas, some of the wits are probably going to need to use the bathroom before we’re done.”
“Hell, you’re right. Officer, have a team clear the unisex facilities on the second level. Odds are slim the killer went up there to ditch the weapon, if he did ditch it. But clear it first—sealed up and on record. Anyone who needs to go needs to be accompanied by an officer. One at a time, and the facility is subsequently recleared before the next. Got that?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Do employees have facilities, a locker area, break room?”
“Ah …”
“Find out, have it closed off. Let’s get started, Peabody.”
Eve moved down the long, curving corridor to the double doors of theater five.
She saw the woman seated with a female uniform in the rear row of the far right section. A man and woman together, one man alone, all with two officers, spread out in the far left section.
Nobody looked very happy.
Eve went to the lone woman first, gave the uniform the nod to step out.
“I’m Lieutenant Dallas.”
“Chanel … I don’t understand.”
Eve sat. The chairs here were wider, deeper than those at the crime scene. “I’m sorry, Ms. …”
“Kawaski. Lola Kawaski.”
“I’m sorry, Ms. Kawaski. You and Ms. Rylan were friends.”
“Besties, roomies. I needed a roomie when I busted up with my boyfriend like, God, like, ten years ago. Chanel had just moved here, and she was one of the aps. We just hit it off straight-out. We’ve been there for each other through all the thin and thick. And now …”