With a short laugh, Summerset shook his head. "I didn't have to. You already knew."
"I have to go back, myself, and find whatever it is she gave me. I have to know if I've made something of it, or have something yet to make. And I have to start now."
"It's difficult to argue with my own words."
"Still, I don't like leaving you before you're on your feet again."
Summerset made a dismissive sound. "I can handle this, and that irritating woman you've chained to me, on my own."
"You'll watch after my cop while I'm gone, won't you?"
"In my way."
"Well then." He got to his feet. "If you need me for anything… you'll be able to reach me."
Now Summerset smiled. "I've always been able to reach you."
Eve finished her oral report to Commander Whitney standing. She preferred that kind of formality in his office. She respected him for the kind of cop he was, and had been. Respected the lines of worry and authority that scored his wide, dark face.
Riding a desk hadn't made him soft, but had only toughened the muscles of command.
"There are some media concerns," he said when she'd finished. "Let's get them out of the way."
"Yes, sir."
"There have been some complaints that Channel 75, and Nadine Furst in particular, is receiving preferential treatment in this investigation."
"Channel 75 and Nadine Furstare receiving preferential treatment in this investigation due to the fact that we believe the killer has sent transmissions directly to Ms. Furst at 75. She, and the station, are cooperating fully with me and my team. As the transmissions were sent to her, I have no authority to stop her, or 75, from broadcasting any and all of the contents. However, they have agreed to filter those transmissions, and any other data received, through me. Asquid pro quo, I have agreed to filter back any information on the case I deem appropriate for broadcast to them first."
Whitney tipped his head in acknowledgment. "Then we're covered."
"Yes, sir, I believe so."
"We'll set up a media conference to keep the dogs at bay. When dealing with the media, it's best to CYA twice, whenever possible. I'll have our liaison go through your reports and cull out what we want to feed them."
Satisfied, he set the media aside, went back to the meat. "You need to work the connections, find the conduit between the victims."
"Yes, sir. I'd like to put a man, or better, a team on the club. Baxter and Trueheart. Trueheart's young enough to pass for a student. Baxter's training him, so I'd want him on board, to keep close. Trueheart hasn't had much undercover experience. McNab could cover some ground in the colleges, working the geek end of things. He's already been in the club with a badge, so I can't use him there."
"Set it up."
"Sir; my initial run of the list from Portography-Hastings's assistants. Some of the names are bogus. Some of these people just make them up, because they think they sound better. But the one who was on during the wedding where Howard was photographed rings false. I'm going to push on that. I'm also going to try some sources, see if I can narrow down the images the killer's produced to style and equipment. I've got a lot of lines to tug, which may keep my people scattered for a while, until I can pull them all in again."
"Do what's necessary to close this down. Keep me updated."
"Yes, sir." She started to step back, then stayed where she was. "Commander, there's one more thing. As I mentioned last month, I'd like to have Officer Peabody's name put in for the next detective's test."
"She's ready now?"
"She's had about eighteen months of homicide experience under me. She's worked, and closed, a cold case on her own. She's clocked more field time than some of the guys in the bull pen. She's a good cop, Commander, and deserves her shot at a gold shield."
"On your recommendation then, Lieutenant."
"Thank you."
"I'd tell her to start prepping. As I recall the exam isn't a walk on the beach."
"No, sir." This time Eve smiled. "More like a run through a war zone. She'll be prepped."
She went down to the conference room, taking the time before her team arrived to sit on the edge of the table and study the board.
The images looked back at her. She focused first on Rachel Howard. Smiling, sunny, cheerfully at work. Typical college-age job-clerking at a 24/7. Wanted to be a teacher. Studied hard, made friends, good solid family life. Middle class.
Subway shot-heading home to that solid family life, or maybe off to school. Confident, pretty. Vital.
Wedding shot. Dolled up for the event. Fussier hair, darker lips, longer eyelashes. Big, celebratory smile that just plain popped out from the rest. You noticed this girl. Couldn't help it.
Even in death, Eve thought. Sitting so neat, so pretty, with the light on her hair, her eyes staring out.
And Kenby Sulu, exotic, striking. Fairly typical job as well, particularly for the theater type. Ushering. Wanted to be a dancer, worked hard, made friends easily, good solid family life. Upper class.
Standing outside of Juilliard. Ready to go in, just coming out. Big smile for his friends.
Then the formal cast shot. Dark and intense, but still, oh yeah, still, you saw the light in him. Anticipation, health, energy.
The death shot mirrored it, she noted. The way he was posed in a dance, as if still on the move. And the light shimmering like a halo around him.
Healthy, she thought. Had to be healthy, had to be innocent, young, well-adjusted. Clean. There was something else the two victims had in common, she decided. They were clean. No history of illegals, no major illnesses on medical records. Good sharp brains, nice healthy young bodies.
She turned to the computer and started a run on any imaging business with Light in the name. She got four hits, noted them, then ran books on imaging with Light in the title. At some time, she was certain, her killer had been a student.
She hit several, and was about to print them out when one caught her eye.
Images of Light and Dark,by Dr. Leeanne Browning.
"Okay," Eve said aloud. "Time to go back to school, one more time."
When the conference door opened, she spoke without looking up. "Peabody, requisition and download a copy of a photographic text book titledImages of Light and Dark, by Leeanne Browning. Use the auxiliary computer. I'm not done here."
"Yes, sir. How did you know it was me?"
"You're the only one who walks like you. Find out if there's an actual book copy available while you're at it. It may be helpful."
"Okay, but what does that mean? How do I walk?"
"Quick march in cop shoes. Working here."
Eve didn't have to look up this time either to know Peabody was scowling at her shoes. She did a cross-check to locate and highlight any other book, paper, or published images by Browning, ran them through.
Sulu had gone to Juilliard, but lived only a few blocks away from the Browning/Brightstar apartment. Could be another connection, she mused.
"I can get it in both e and print versions, Lieutenant."
"Get both. While it's downloading, you might want to check the schedule for upcoming detective exams. You've been cleared to take the next one."
"I need to wait until the requisition clears, then…" Her voice trailed off.
"I said get both. Screw the requisition. Order them. I'll cover it until the red tape clears."
"The detective exam." Peabody's voice was a squeak. "I'm going to take the detective exam?"
Eve swiveled in her chair, kicked out her legs. Her aide had gone ice pale, right down to the lips. Good, Eve thought. It wasn't a step any good cop should take lightly. "You're cleared for it, but it's your call. You want to stay in uniform, you stay in uniform."
"I want to make detective."
"Okay. Take the exam."
"Do you think I'm ready?"