“I got time. We all got time.” He glanced around the room himself as if daring anyone to disagree.
“Good.” Eve slipped her hands in her pockets. “To give you an update on the investigation . . .” And here she had to step carefully. “Detective Kohli was bludgeoned to death while moonlighting in a high-class strip club called Purgatory. The club was closed, and it appears Kohli knew his attacker. I’m looking for someone he knew well enough to be alone with, to turn his back on.”
Someone, she thought, who was contacted by him or contacted him on his personal palm-link during his shift. That’s why the killer removed it from the scene.
“At this point, it doesn’t appear that Kohli was working on a sensitive case or pursuing information regarding one. But it’s possible the killer was a weasel or outside informant. Robbery isn’t a motive that holds. This was personal,” she added, watching faces. “A personal attack on the badge. The One twenty-eight thinks the investigation belongs with them. I say it stays here.”
“Damn right it stays here.” A detective named Carmichael lifted her coffee mug, scowled into it.
“The media’s leaving this alone so far,” Eve continued. “It’s not a hot story. A bartender doesn’t boost ratings, and the fact that he was a cop doesn’t make much of a ripple on-screen. He doesn’t matter to them.”
She waited, scanned faces. “But he matters here. Any of you who want in can let Peabody know how many witnesses you feel you can handle. She’ll assign. Copy all statements and reports to me.”
“Hey, Dallas, can I have the strippers?” Baxter teased. “Just the well-stacked ones?”
“Sure, Baxter. We all know the only way you’re going to see a woman naked is if she’s paid for it.” There was a chorus of snorts and whoops. “I’ll be in the field most of the day. Anyone pulls anything I need to know, tag me.”
As she headed toward her office, Peabody hurried after her. “You’re going in the field alone.”
“I need you here, coordinating the witness assignments.”
“Yeah, but—”
“Peabody, up until last year, I did most of my field work solo.” As she shoved back her desk chair to sit, she caught the gleam of hurt in Peabody’s eyes. Nearly rolled her own. “That doesn’t mean you haven’t aced the job, Peabody. Get a hold of yourself. I need you here right now, running this and scanning data. You’re better at the tech stuff than I am.”
That appeared to brighten Peabody again. “Yeah, I am. But I could hook up with you when I’m clear here.”
“I’ll let you know. Why don’t you get started while everyone’s in the mood to put in extra time?” In dismissal, Eve turned to her desk unit. “Let’s get moving.”
“Yes, sir.”
Eve waited until Peabody left, then got up to close the door. Back at her desk she called up all known data on Max Ricker.
She didn’t want any surprises.
She’d seen his picture before, but she studied it more carefully now. He had a powerful look, a strongly carved face with prominent planes that looked glass sharp. His mouth was hard, with the silver brush of a mustache doing nothing to soften it. His eyes were silver as well, opaque and unreadable.
The vanity Roarke had spoken of showed in the waving mane of dark hair tipped with silver wings, in the single diamond stud he wore in his right ear, and in the smooth polish of his white, white skin that showed neither line nor fold but looked as if it had been stretched taut as bleached silk over those ice-edged bones.
Subject Ricker, Max Edward. Height, six feet, one inch. Weight two hundred two pounds. Caucasian. DOB 3 February 2000. Born Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Parents Leon and Michelle Ricker, deceased. One sibling, deceased.
Educated University of Pennsylvania with degree in business.
No marriages or legal cohabitations. One son, Alex, DOB 26 June 2028. Mother listed as Morandi, Ellen Mary. Deceased.
Current residences include Hartford, Connecticut, Sarasota, Florida, Florence, Italy, London, England, Long Neck Estates on Yost Colony and Nile River Hotel on Vegas II.
Profession listed as entrepreneur with interests and holdings as follows . . .
Eve sat back now, closed her eyes, and listened to the rundown of Ricker’s businesses. There had been another time she’d done a run on a man who had extensive and varied interests, who’d owned strings of companies and organizations. Who’d looked, as Ricker did, dangerous.
That run had changed her life.
She intended for this one to change Ricker’s.
“Computer, list criminal record, all arrests and charges.”
Working . . .