“So’s mine.” She rose on her toes, kissed him hard before she broke away to stride to the door. “By the way, ace, you owe me a new lamp.”
She was revved and ready to do battle when she entered The Tower. Chief Tibble ruled here, with a steady, if an occasionally ruthless hand.
A great many cops feared him. Eve respected him.
“Lieutenant Dallas.” He wasn’t behind his desk but stood in front of it. The style, the positioning, made her think of Roarke. Standing put him in control of the people who sat in the room and of the situation that brought them there.
At his signal, she took a seat between Whitney and Captain Bayliss from IAB. Captain Roth sat rigidly on the other side of Bayliss. Feeney lounged, or appeared to lounge, on Roth’s far side.
“We’ll begin with information that has come to my attention regarding an internal investigation, centering most specifically on the Illegals Division of the One hundred and twenty-eighth Precinct.”
“Chief Tibble, I wish to state my objection that such an investigation was initiated and proceeded without my knowledge.”
“So noted,” he said, nodding at Roth. “However, it is within the authority of the IAB to conduct such an investigation without informing the squad captain. However,” he continued, shifting his hard gaze to Bayliss, “neglecting to inform the commander and myself of the operation exceeds that authority.”
“Sir.” Bayliss started to get to his feet, but Tibble gestured him down.
Good move, Eve mused. Keep the little rodent in his place.
Bayliss kept his seat, but a faint wash of color stained his cheeks. “The Internal Affairs Bureau is allowed some leeway on technical procedure when it deems an investigation warrants secrecy. After consideration of the information, the suspicion of certain leaks and confirmation of others, it was agreed that this operation be held within the confines of IAB and its chosen officers.”
“I see.” Tibble leaned back against his desk in a way that forced Eve to bite back a small, satisfied smile. “And may I ask, Captain, who made this agreement?”
“It was discussed between myself and several high-ranking members of my division.”
“I see. You decided among yourselves to disregard the chain of command.”
“Yes, sir.” He said it stiffly, stubbornly. “We had reason to believe that the leaks reached up that chain. By informing other departments, we would compromise that investigation before it began.”
“Then am I given to understand that Commander Whitney is under suspicion in your division?”
“No, sir.”
“Perhaps I am part of your internal investigation.”
Bayliss opened his mouth, wisely closed it again to give his brain time to engage. “Sir, you are under no suspicion.”
“Any longer?” Tibble finished silkily. “That’s a comfort, Captain. And having established that neither myself nor the commander were suspected of infractions or crimes that warrant IAB action, you still neglected to inform either of us of this investigation.”
“Witch hunt,” Roth said under her breath and earned a glare from Bayliss.
“It seemed unnecessary to do so, sir, until the operation was satisfactorily completed.”
“Shall I explain to you, Captain, why you are mistaken?”
Bayliss bore up under the penetrating stare. “No, sir. I regret the oversight. And as ordered, Chief Tibble, all records, all documents, all notes on said operation are now in your possession.”
“Including, I presume, all data pertaining to the homicide investigations currently under the hand of Lieutenant Dallas?”
Stubbornness set like concrete on Bayliss’s face. “It is my opinion that the two matters do not connect.”
“Really? Do you have an opinion on that, Lieutenant, Dallas?”
“Yes, sir. My opinion is that Captain Bayliss has made another error in judgment. Two police officers, both from the One two-eight, have been murdered in under a week by the same hand. I believe that one, Lieutenant Mills, was under IAB investigation and will prove to be guilty of accepting bribes, tampering with evidence, and conspiring to undermine a criminal case. Detective Kohli, an IAB plant, agreed to pose as an NYPSD officer who was also taking. While this portion of the operation is acceptable, the investigation into his death was compromised and tampered with by the withholding of Kohli’s status. There is no precedent that I’m aware of that gives IAB the authority to compromise a homicide investigation in order to protect one of its own operations.”
“I am also unaware of such a precedent. Captain?”
“Our operation was at a delicate point.” He was beginning to ruffle, badly, and swerved in his chair to scowl at Eve. “Look, Kohli went into this eyes open. Nobody pressured him. He wanted the extra duty and the extra pay. We had no reason to believe his life was in danger and every reason to believe that he would, in his position at Purgatory, connect with Ricker.”