The In Death Collection Books 21-25 - J. D. Robb [480]
“That’s the plan. Oh, and break a leg.”
“What?”
“That’s what you say to somebody before a performance, which seems pretty damn stupid to me. Now. Nadine.”
“Christ,” was all she said, and stalked out.
She found Peabody at Vending just down from the bull pen. Peabody’s face was a study in concentration as she scanned the offerings. “Energy Bar or Goo-Goo bar. The Energy Bar is, of course, nutritionally balanced, but the Goo-Goo is delicious and will provide me with great joy until the guilt sets in. Which should it be?”
“You’re going to go for the fake chocolate and sugar. Why torture yourself over it?”
“Please, Lieutenant, this is a process. The torture is part of the process. Goo-Goo it is. You want?”
What she wanted was the candy bar she’d hidden in her office, but that was not to be. “Yeah, what the hell.”
While the machine chirped out the Goo-Goo jingle and the nutritional data until Eve wanted to smash it with a hammer, she and Peabody stood munching on candy. “I want Williams picked up, brought down for questioning. We’ll send a couple of big, stone-faced, intimidating uniforms to the school.”
“Nice touch. Scary, but it’s like you’re saying you don’t have time to go get him yourself.”
“We’ll book Interview Room B. Baxter and Trueheart are bringing in a suspect. We’ll leave A for them.”
“I know a couple of uniforms who’d be perfect for the pickup.”
“Get it done.” Eve frowned down at the candy. “These things make you feel a little nauseous?”
“Oh, yeah, that’s part of the thrill.”
Eve handed the last half of her Goo-Goo to Peabody. “Go wild. Meanwhile, I’m going to try to broker us another warrant to go through Williams’s residence, all his e-toys.”
Eve contacted APA Cher Reo, and learned the pretty blonde was already in the building. They met in Eve’s office where the coffee, at least, was prime.
“You know,” Reo began, “you’d think things would slow down in this kind of weather. But despite the cold, the ice, the wind, people are still raping and robbing and ripping at each other.” Reo took an appreciative sip of coffee. “Kind of makes me proud to be a New Yorker.”
“We don’t let winter get in the way of our mayhem. So, about my dead teacher.” Eve brought her up to date, made the pitch for a search warrant.
“Will Sanchez file a complaint?”
“Can’t say. Right now she’s worried if her husband clues in he’ll perform mayhem on Williams. But she came in, and she told it straight. This guy’s hunting on school grounds.”
“Do you suspect he’s hunting students?”
“I’ve got nothing that points that way, but it’s not out of the question. It looks to me like the vic had a come-to-Jesus talk with him. No reason for Williams to back off on Sanchez otherwise. Other statements indicate Craig saw him in a compromising position with someone he shouldn’t have been compromising with. The school’s not only a good gig—pays well, nice bennies, clean and shiny, but it’s an all-you-can-screw buffet for someone like Williams.”
“Gee.” Reo downed coffee. “Why can’t I ever get a nice guy like that?”
“Maybe you’ll prosecute and convict him, then you could be penpals.”
“Oh, if only.”
“So. If the vic threatened Williams’s standing, he may have decided to eliminate the threat.”
“No history of violence, no criminal record, no civil suits?”
“No, but you’ve got to start somewhere. It’s enough for a warrant, Reo.”
“Maybe. I can work it,” she decided. “But the fact that the guy’s a pig doesn’t make him a murdering pig. Find me something that says he is.”
As Reo headed out, she glanced back. “By the way, looking forward to seeing you and Nadine tonight.”
Eve only sighed and rested her head in her hands. Then she shook it, and contacted Feeney, her friend and the captain of the Electronic Detectives Division.
His face came on screen—comfortably lived in, baggy at the eyes, topped with wiry ginger and gray hair that went in any direction it chose.
“Yo,” he said.
“Need a man in the field. Since Peabody hasn’t irritated