The In Death Collection Books 21-25 - J. D. Robb [43]
“Triple chocolate.”
“Whore.” Lifting the box a fraction, Cher peeked, groaned. “Filthy whore. What do I have to do for them?”
“I’m still waiting for the warrant on Icove Jr.’s residence.”
“You’ll be lucky if you get it at all. You’re poking pointy sticks in the eye of a saint, Dallas.” Cher sat back, swiveled. Eve saw she had airskids on her feet. And dignified gray heels tucked into the corner of the room. “My boss doesn’t want to give you the go to jam it in. He’s going to want more.”
Eve leaned a hip on the edge of the desk. “Convince him otherwise. The surviving son knows something, Reo. While your boss is playing politics instead of throwing his weight with mine—and Mira’s—to a judge, data may very well be lost. Does the PA’s office want to hinder the investigation into the murder of a man of Icove’s stature?”
“Nope. And it sure doesn’t want to toss shit into his grave either.”
“Push for the warrant, Reo. If I get what I’m after, it’s going to be big. And I’ll remember who helped me get it.”
“If you turn up nothing? Nobody’s going to forget who helped you screw this up either.”
“I’ll turn up something.” She pushed off the desk. “If you can’t trust me, Reo, trust the brownies.”
Reo blew out a breath. “It’ll take a while. Even saying I can convince my boss—and that’s going to take some doing—we’ve got to convince a judge to sign off.”
“Then why don’t you get started?”
This time when she got home, Summerset was where she expected him to be. Lurking in the foyer like some prune-faced gargoyle. She decided to let him take the first shot. She preferred retaliation, because it usually gave her the last word.
She stripped off her coat while they eyed each other. And decided it made even more of a statement draped over the newel post than her usual jacket did.
“Lieutenant. I need a moment of your time.”
Her brow knit. He wasn’t supposed to say that, and in a polite, inoffensive tone. “What for?”
“It regards Wilfred Icove.”
“What about him?”
Summerset, a brittle stick of a man in a stiff black suit, kept his dark eyes on hers. His face, usually grim in Eve’s mind, seemed even more strained than usual. “I’d like to offer any assistance I can in the matter of your investigation.”
“Well, that’ll be the day,” she began, then narrowed her eyes. “You knew him. How’s that?”
“I knew him, slightly. I served as a medic—somewhat unofficially—during the Urban Wars.”
She glanced up as Roarke came down the steps. “Did you already know this?”
“Just shortly ago. Why don’t we go sit down?” Before she could protest, Roarke took her arm, led her into the parlor. “Summerset tells me he met Icove in London, and worked with him at one of the clinics there during the wars.”
“For him is more accurate,” Summerset corrected. “He came to London to help establish more clinics, and the mobile medical units that eventually transformed into Unilab. He had been a part of the team that had established them here in New York, where the outbreaks started before they bled into Europe. Some forty years ago now,” he added. “Before either of you were born. Before my daughter was born.”
“How long was he in London?” Eve asked.
“Two months. Perhaps three.” Summerset spread his bony hands. “It blurs. He saved countless lives during that period, worked tirelessly. Risked his own life more than once. He implemented some of his innovations in reconstructive surgery on that battlefield. That’s what the cities were then. Battlefields. You’ve seen images from that period, but it was nothing compared to being there, living through it. Victims who would have lost limbs, or gone through their lives scarred, were spared that due to his work.”
“Would you say he experimented?”
“He innovated. He created. The media reports that this might have been a professional assassination. I have contacts still, in certain circles.”
“If you want to use them, fine. Poke around. Carefully. How well did you know him, personally?”
“Not well. People who come together in war often bond quickly, even intimately. But when they have nothing else