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In Death 11 - Judgment in Death

In Death 11 - Judgment in Death

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back to McNab's, then all of us coming here this morning."
    "Roarke said?"
    "Well, yeah." She settled into the passenger's seat, strapped in. "He rode along with us to pick up the discs, then he'd called for a car, so we drove back here with him and got to work."
    "Who got to work?"
    Peabody's brain had engaged enough now to catch the edginess in Eve's tone. She'd have squirmed if it hadn't been so undignified. "Well, me and McNab... and Roarke. He's done some tech consults with us before, so I didn't think anything of it. Are we in trouble?"
    "No. What would be the point?"
    There was a weariness in the answer Peabody didn't like. "We broke off about three." She infused her voice with cheer as they headed down the drive. "I never slept in a gel bed before. It's like sleeping on a cloud, except I guess you'd fall through a cloud. McNab was snoring like a cargo tram, but I fell out about two seconds after I hit the bed anyway. Are you mad at Roarke?" she blurted out.
    "No." But he's mad at me. Still. "Did you spot Mills's vehicle on the disc?"
    "Oh, man, I can't believe I didn't tell you. Yeah, we got it. Passed the toll through the e-pass at twenty-eighteen. You'd swear he was just sleeping until you enhance and see the blood."
    "The driver, Peabody?"
    "That's the not-so-good news. There was no driver. McNab said you'd need to go over the in-dash computer, but it looks like it was on auto."
    "He programmed it." She hadn't thought of that. Very slick, very confident. Took Mills out somewhere else, then programmed the auto. If it ran into a snag and there was nobody in the vehicle to correct, what did he care?
    "Yeah, that's what we came to. McNab started calling it the Meteor of Death. You know, it was a Meteor model," Peabody said lamely. "Gets to be that late, you start making stupid jokes, I guess."
    "You need a code to program a police unit. You need a code, or you need clearance. It'll have security override to keep it from being boosted, even by electronic-savvy car-jackers."
    "Yeah, Roarke said." Peabody yawned comfortably. "But if you know what you're doing, it can be finessed."
    He'd know, Eve thought sourly. "If it was finessed, it'll show." She snagged her 'link, called Feeney, and asked him to go down to vehicle impound and run the test personally.
    "If it doesn't show," she said, thinking out loud as she swung into Central's garage, "he had the code or clearance."
    "He couldn't have had clearance, Dallas, that would make him..."
    "Another cop. That's right."
    Peabody goggled at her. "You don't really think -- "
    "Listen to me. Murder investigation doesn't just start with a body. It starts with a list, with potentials, with angles. You close the case by cutting down that list, narrowing the potentials, working the angles. You take that, the evidence, the story, the scene, the victim, and the killer. And you put it together as many different ways as you have to, until it fits.
    "You keep this to yourself," Eve added. "You don't say anything. But if we put it together and it fits a cop, then we deal with it."
    "Yeah, okay. A lot of this one's making me kind of sick."
    "I know it." Eve pushed out of the car. "Call in, have Lewis brought up to interview."
    She fueled herself with coffee, took her life in her hands and bought what was reputed to be a cherry danish from vending on the Interview level. It tasted more like cherry-flavored glue over sawdust, but it was something in her stomach. She strolled into Interview, carrying an oversized mug of her own -- or Roarke's own -- coffee because she knew the smell of it could make a grown man beg. She settled down, all smiles, while Peabody took up her post by the door and glowered. She set the recorder, read in the current data.
    "Morning, Lewis. Beautiful day out there."
    "I heard it's raining."
    "Hey, don't you know the rain's good for the flowers? So how'd you sleep?"
    "I slept just fine."
    She smiled again, sipped from her mug. He had circles layering the circles under his eyes. She doubted he'd gotten much more sleep than she had. "Well, as we were saying when last we met -- "
    "I don't have to say dick to you without my lawyer."
    "Did I ask you to say dick? Peabody, replay the record and verify that I at no time requested that the subject say dick."
    "That shit don't work on me. I got nothing to say. I'm sticking with silence. It's one of my civil rights."
    "You hold onto those civil rights, Lewis, while you can. They don't count for a whole hell of a lot on

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