Ceremony in Death - J. D. Robb [9]
She dug her hands into her pockets, willed herself not to pace. “Yeah, there are cops who use, and there are cops who figure their badges shield them from the law. But not Frank. No way was he dirty.”
“But the traces were there, Lieutenant. As well as traces of other chemicals, identified as designer clones. The combination of those chemicals resulted in cardiac arrest and death.”
“You suspect he OD’d, or self-terminated?” She shook her head. “That’s wrong.”
“I repeat, the traces were there.”
“Then there had to be a reason. Digitalis?” She frowned. “That’s heart medicine, isn’t it? You said he’d had a physical a couple of weeks ago. Why didn’t it show he had heart trouble?”
Whitney’s gaze remained level. “Frank’s closest friend on the force is the top E-detective in the city.”
“Feeney?” Eve took two strides forward before she could stop herself. “You think Feeney covered for him, doctored his records? Damn it, Commander.”
“It’s a possibility I can’t ignore,” Whitney said evenly. “Nor can you. Friendship can and does shadow judgment. I am trusting that your friendship with Feeney will not, in this case, shadow yours.”
He walked to the desk again, his position of authority. “These allegations and suspicions must be investigated and resolved.”
The hot licks in her stomach had grown and were burning like acid. “You want me to investigate fellow officers. One of which is dead, leaving a grieving family behind. The other of which was my trainer and is my friend.” She put her hands on the desk. “Is your friend.”
He’d expected the anger, accepted it. Just as he expected she would do the job. He wouldn’t accept less. “Would you prefer I gave this to someone who didn’t care?” His brow lifted on the question. “I want this done quietly, with each piece of evidence and all investigative records sealed for my eyes only. It may be necessary for you to speak with DS Wojinski’s family at some point. I trust you will do so discreetly and tactfully. There is no need to add to their grief.”
“And if I turn something up that smears a lifetime of public service?”
“That will be for me to deal with.”
She straightened. “It’s a hell of a thing you’re asking me to do.”
“Ordering you to do,” Whitney corrected. “That should make it easier, Lieutenant. On you.” He handed her two sealed discs. “View these on your home unit. Any and all transmissions on this matter are to be sent from your home unit to my home unit. Nothing is to go through Cop Central until I tell you differently. Dismissed.”
She turned on her heel, walked to the door. There she paused but didn’t look back. “I won’t roll over on Feeney. Damned if I will.”
Whitney watched her stride out, then closed his eyes. She would do what needed to be done, he knew. He only hoped it wasn’t more than she could live with.
Her temper was bubbling by the time she got back to her own office. Peabody sat in front of the monitor, smirking.
“Just about got it knocked. Your unit’s a real whiner, Dallas, but I’ve been slapping it into shape.”
“Disengage,” Eve snapped and grabbed up her jacket and bag. “Get your gear, Peabody.”
“We’ve got a case?” Revving up, Peabody jumped out of the chair and hustled after Eve. “What kind of case? Where are we going?” She broke into a trot to keep up. “Dallas? Lieutenant?”
Eve slapped the control on the elevator, and the single furious look she shot at Peabody was enough to stifle any further questions. Eve stepped into the elevator, shuffled into position with several noisy cops, and stood in stony silence.
“Hey, Dallas, how’s the newlywed? Why don’t you get your rich husband to buy the Eatery and stock some real food.”
She flicked a steely glare over her shoulder, stared into a face of a grinning cop. “Bite me, Carter.”
“Hey, I gave that a shot three years ago, and you nearly broke all my teeth. Holding out for a civilian,” he said when laughter erupted.
“Holding out for somebody who isn’t the major asshole of Robbery,” someone else put in.
“Better than being the minor one, Forenski. Hey, Peabody,” Carter continued. “Want me