“Suspect considers morality a personal rather than legislative area,” she continued, pacing still. "Sex, weapon restriction, drug, tobacco, and alcohol restrictions, and murder deal with morality that has been outlawed or regulated. The murder of a licensed companion, the only daughter of friends, the only granddaughter of one of the country’s most outspoken and conservative legislators, by a banned weapon. Was this an illustration of the flaws the suspect considers are inherent in the legal system?
“Motive,” she concluded, settling again. “Self-indulgence.” She took a deep, satisfied breath. “Compute probability.”
Her system whined, reminded her it was one more piece of hardware that needed replacement, then settled into a jerky hum.
Probability Roarke perpetrator given current data and supposition, eighty-two point six per cent.
Oh, it was possible, Eve thought, leaning back in her chair. There was a time, in the not so distant past, when a child could be gunned down by another child for the shoes on his feet.
What was that if not obscene self-indulgence?
He had the opportunity. He had the means. And if his own arrogance could be taken into account, he had the motive.
So why, Eve thought as she watched her own words blink on the monitor, as she studied her computer’s impersonal analysis, couldn’t she make it play in her own head?
She just couldn’t see it, she admitted. She just couldn’t visualize Roarke standing behind the camera, aiming the gun at the defenseless, naked, smiling woman, and pumping steel into her perhaps only moments after he’d pumped his seed into her.
Still, certain facts couldn’t be overlooked. If she could gather enough of them, she could issue a warrant for a psychiatric evaluation.
Wouldn’t that be interesting? she thought with a half smile. Traveling into Roarke’s head would be a fascinating journey.
She’d take the next step at seven the following evening.
The buzz at her door brought a frown of annoyance to her eyes. “Save and lock on voice print, Dallas. Code Five. Disengage.”
The monitor blipped off as she rose to see who was interrupting her. A glance at her security screen wiped the frown away.
“Hey, Mavis.”
“You forgot, didn’t you?” Mavis Freestone whirled in, a jangle of bracelets, a puff of scent. Her hair was a glittery silver tonight, a shade that would change with her next mood. She flipped it back where it sparkled like stars down to her impossibly tiny waist.
“No, I didn’t.” Eve shut the door, reengaged the locks. “Forgot what?”
“Dinner, dancing, debauchery.” With a heavy sigh, Mavis dropped her slinkily attired nighty-eight pounds onto the sofa where she could eye Eve’s simple gray suit with disdain. “You can’t be going out in that.”
Feeling drab, as she often did within twenty feet of Mavis’s outrageous color, Eve looked down at her suit. “No, I guess not.”
“So.” Mavis gestured with one emerald-tipped finger. “You forgot.”
She had, but she was remembering now. They had made plans to check out the new club Mavis had discovered at the space docks in Jersey. According to Mavis, the space jocks were perennially horny. Something to do with extended weightlessness.
“Sorry. You look great.”
It was true, inevitably. Eight years before, when Eve had busted Mavis for petty theft, she’d looked great. A silk swirling street urchin with quick fingers and a brilliant smile.
In the intervening years, they’d somehow become friends. For Eve, who could count on one hand the number of friends she had who weren’t cops, the relationship was precious.
“You look tired,” Mavis said, more in accusation than sympathy. “And you’re missing a button.”
Eve’s fingers went automatically to her jacket, felt the loose threads. “Shit. I knew it.” In disgust she shrugged out of the jacket, tossed it aside. “Look, I’m sorry. I did forget. I had a lot on my mind today.”
“Including the reason you needed my black coat?”
“Yeah, thanks. It came in handy.”
Mavis sat a minute, tapping those emerald-tipped nails on the arm of the couch. “Police business. Here I was hoping you had a date. You really need to start seeing men who aren’t criminals, Dallas.”
“I saw that image consultant you fixed me up with. He wasn’t a criminal. He was just an idiot.”