“I know the drill, Lieutenant.”
“Right. You need to talk to me, contact through my home or my personal ’link. Ready?” She reeled off the numbers. “Don’t take any chances, don’t be a hero. And don’t trust anybody.”
“I don’t. Not even you.”
“Fine,” Eve murmured when the transmission ended. “Just so you keep breathing.”
She turned away from the ’link. She scanned through Peabody’s current runs and results and found an additional three potentials in the One twenty-eighth. Wanting a visual impression, she called up ID photos, stopped, smiled a little, and focused on one.
“Well, well, if it isn’t our oinking detective. Vernon, Jeremy K. I don’t like your face, Jerry. Let’s have a closer look at you, and the hell with the flags.”
She dug through his financials and saw nothing to ring alarms. She did a search and scan on connecting accounts, keying in variations of his name, trying for the numbers by using date of birth, address, his precinct, his badge number.
She was well into it when Peabody strolled back in. “Did you know you have paella? With honest-to-God shellfish? I’ve never had paella for lunch.”
“Yum yum.” Eve didn’t bother to look up. “Use the other unit and copy the data on Detective Jeremy Vernon.”
“You got something?”
“Yeah, I got me a nibble here. How many cops have numbered bank accounts in another city?” Now she did glance up, giving Peabody a speculative look.
“Not me. By the time I pay the first of the months, factor in transpo costs and food allowance, I’m lucky to have enough left over for new underwear, which I’m in desperate need of at the moment. Having a sex life is great, and a nice change, but you have to have decent drawers.”
“Detectives make more than uniforms,” Eve speculated, “but unless the pay scale’s gone up since my day, this guy shouldn’t be able to tuck away three hundred grand and change. But it’s not enough. Dead relatives,” she murmured. “Mills used dead relatives. Where the hell’s McNab?”
“He was still stuffing his face. You also have strawberry shortcake. Don’t make me go get him. I’m weak, and it looked really mag.”
Eve turned to her ’link. She’d never used the house intercom, but now seemed like a good time to start. She flipped it to full open. “McNab! Get your bony ass up here. Now.”
“It’s not bony so much as tight,” Peabody offered and earned a killing look from Eve.
“I’ve told you about that.”
“Just saying,” Peabody muttered. “Do you want me to start a search for ancestors?”
“Let McNab do it. He’s faster than both of us.”
And delegating, she thought, would give her time to balance those scales. She rose.
“I want him to do the run, then the two of you split the names. Look for current accounts. If the names crap out, go for numbers. DOBs, DODs, IDs, driver’s license, and anything else that comes to you. All combinations. I’m taking an hour personal time.”
She headed out as McNab rushed in. “Man, Dallas, it was like hearing the voice of God. You nearly scared me to death.”
“You’ve got strawberry gunk on your lip. Clean up and get to work.”
“Where’s she going?” McNab demanded when Eve breezed out.
“An hour personal time.”
“Dallas? Personal time? Maybe it was the voice of God and this is the end of the world.”
That got a smirk out of Peabody, but she told herself she’d been too nice to him lately and refused to let the laugh loose. “She’s entitled to a life like everybody else. And if you don’t get that bony ass in gear, she’s going to kick it to New Jersey when she gets back.”
“I didn’t get my coffee.” But he wandered to the desk on his way to the kitchen
. “What’s she running?”
“This guy. She wants a financial search.”