In Death 08 - Conspiracy in Death
He danced his fingers over the keyboard. The machine hummed cooperatively, lights blinking. When a husky female computer-animated voice announced, "Transfer complete," Eve raised her eyebrows.
"What happened to the default voice on this?"
"If I'm going to be working on this unit, I get to pick who talks to me."
"You're awfully simple at times, Roarke. Now, get out of my chair. I've got work to do before they get here."
"You're welcome," he said just a bit testily, but before he could rise, she grabbed his shirt, yanked, and crushed her mouth to his in a long, hard kiss.
"Thanks."
"You're very welcome." He patted her butt as they shifted positions. "Coffee, Lieutenant?"
"A couple of gallons would be a good start." She managed a smile. "Computer, print out stills of all crime scene photos, all pertaining files. On-screen, autopsy results on Bowers, Officer Ellen."
Working...
"Yeah," Eve said under her breath. "We're working."
Within thirty minutes, she had hard copies of specific data tucked in a drawer and had scanned reports to bring herself up to date. She was ready when Feeney arrived with Peabody and McNab.
"I've got one thing to say," Feeney began before Eve could speak. "We're not letting it go down this way. I've said my piece to Whitney, official and personal."
"Feeney -- "
"Just shut up." His usually rumpled face was tight with anger, his voice clipped. When he jabbed his finger at a chair, Eve sat automatically without even the thought of protesting. "I trained you, goddamn it, and I got a right to say what I've got to say about one of mine. You let them kick you around this way, I'll fucking kick you harder. You got a raw deal, no question. Now it's time to get your own back. If you haven't filed legal protest papers, I want to know why the hell not."
Her brow knit. "I didn't think of it."
"What? Your brain go on holiday?" He stabbed a finger at Roarke. "What the hell's the matter with you, with all your fancy lawyers and your pile of credits? You gone soft in the head, too?"
"The papers have been drawn up and are waiting for her signature, now that she's finished..." He shot Eve a bland smile. "Whining."
"Bite me," she suggested, "both of you."
"I told you to shut up," Feeney reminded her. "Get them in before the end of the day," he told Roarke. "Some wheels run slow. I've got my written statement, as former trainer, former partner, to add to it. Nadine's multipart feature's going to generate a lot of nice heat on top of it."
"What feature?" Eve demanded and earned a scowl from Feeney.
"Been too busy whining to watch any screen? She's put together interviews with survivors of victims from cases you closed. It's powerful stuff. One of the strongest came from Jamie Lingstrom. He talks about how his grandfather called you a right cop, one of the best, and how you put your life on the line to bring down the bastard who killed his sister. Kid was on my doorstep last night giving me grief for letting them take your badge."
Stunned, baffled, she only stared. "There was nothing you could do."
"Try telling that to a young boy who wants to be a cop, who believes the system should work. Maybe you'd like to tell him why you're sitting on your butt in this fortress doing nothing about it."
"Jesus, Captain." McNab mumbled it and fought back a wince when Feeney pinned him with a look.
"I didn't ask for comments, Detective. Didn't I teach you anything?" he demanded of Eve.
"You taught me everything." She got to her feet. "You're not usually so good at the bad cop routine, Feeney. You must've saved it up, because it's damn effective. But you wasted it. I'd already decided to stop doing nothing."
"About damn time." He pulled a bag of nuts out of his pockets, dug in. "So, what angle are you playing?"
"All of them. You need to know I intend to pursue the investigation, both on the case that was turned over to you, and the Bowers homicide. It's not a reflection on any of you, or on Baxter, but I can't sit on my hands anymore."
"About damn time," he said again. "Let me bring you up to date."
"No." She said it sharply, moving forward. "I'm not having that, Feeney. I'm not putting your badge at risk."
"It's my badge."
"I didn't ask Peabody to get all of you here so you could leak data on the investigation. I asked you to come so I could let you know what I'm doing. That's bad enough. Until the department is satisfied, I'm a murder suspect. I believe the Bowers case is connected to the one you're
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