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The in Death Collection Books 11-15 - J. D. Robb [159]

By Root 3962 0
As he was considering retirement, quite seriously considering it, it was a delightful little cushion.

Over the years, those fees had allowed him to develop, and indulge, a refined and cultured taste. He could afford the best, so he had studied and experienced and discovered just what the best entailed.

Food, drink, art, music, fashion. He’d traveled all over the world, and off planet as well. At fifty-six he could speak three languages fluently, which was yet another sterling job tool, and could, when the mood struck, prepare a brilliant gourmet meal. What’s more, he could play the piano like an angel.

He hadn’t been born with a silver spoon in his mouth, but the silver wire had made up for it.

At twenty, he’d been the minor thug that Eve had seen beneath the polish. He’d killed because he could, and it paid.

Now he was a virtuoso of murder, a performer par excellence who had never disappointed his paying customers, and who left his own individual stamp on each target.

Pain—the beatings. Humiliation—the rape. The silver wire. Murder with class. For Sly, it was a tidy little three-act play, with only the set and the second lead as variables.

He was, always, the star of the show.

Sly enjoyed traveling, and had several scrapbooks filled with postcards he picked up as he did so. Occasionally he would page through them, sipping a drink, smiling over the reminders of places he’d been, and the trinkets he’d collected there.

The meal he had in Paris that summer after he’d dispatched the electronic’s manufacturer, the view from his hotel window on a rainy evening in Prague before he’d strangled the American envoy.

Good memories.

He was confident that, though his current employment would keep him in New York for the run of the show, it would provide many more of those good memories.

chapter three

In the morning, Eve sat at her desk in Cop Central and reviewed all the data Feeney had sent her the night before. With a few hours’ sleep, a fresh eye, and a third cup of coffee she let a picture form in her mind of one Sylvester Yost.

A career criminal. A stone killer, sired by a second-string gunrunner who’d disappeared, and was presumed dead, during the Urban Wars. Birthed by a diagnosed mental defective who’d had a penchant for boosting cars and slicing the unhappy owners with a switchblade. She’d died of a drug overdose in a recovery ward when her son had been thirteen.

Sly had apparently decided to carry on the family tradition, with his own style of mayhem.

She had his juvenile file now. He’d toyed with knives, cutting the ear off his caseworker two weeks after he’d been sucked into the system. He’d sampled rape, assaulting one of the girls in his group home and leaving her battered.

But he’d found his true calling with strangulation, and had apparently practiced on small dogs and big cats before graduating to the human species.

At fifteen, he’d escaped from the juvie facility. He was now fifty-six. In those forty-one years, he’d spent only one in a cage, and was suspected of forty-three murders.

The information on him was sketchy, despite files compiled by the FBI, Interpol, the IRCCA, and the Global Bureau for Interplanetary Crimes.

The subject was a suspected killer-for-hire who had no living family, no known friends or associates, no known address. His habitual weapon of choice was wire of sterling silver. But victims attributed to him had also been strangled manually, with silk scarves and with gold rope.

In the early days, Eve noted as she read. Before he settled on his signature style.

Victims were both male and female, of all ages, races and financial groups. Bodily violence, including torture and rape, were often employed.

“Good at your work, aren’t you, Sly? And I bet you don’t come cheap.” She sat back, studying the disc image of Yost at the check-in desk of The Roarke Palace Hotel. “Who the hell would hire you to kill a young maid who lived with her mother and sister in Hoboken?”

She rose, paced the crowded box of her office. There was a possibility he’d made a mistake, but that was slim.

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