"Do you?"
"I want to be ready."
"Then study up, take the exam."
Her color was coming back, slowly. "You put my name up, cleared it with the commander."
"You work under me. You're assigned to me. It's up to me to put your name up if I think you do good work. You do good work."
"Thanks."
"Now keep doing good work and get me what I told you to get me. I've got to go drag Baxter and Trueheart into this."
Eve walked out. She didn't have to look back to know Peabody was grinning.
Chapter 14
Eve found Leeanne Browning at her apartment. The professor wore a long red shirt over a black skinsuit, and had her hair bundled back in a braid.
"Lieutenant Dallas. Officer. You just caught me. Angie and I were about to head out." She gestured them inside as she spoke. "We're going to spend a few hours working in Central Park. The heat brings out all sorts of interesting characters."
"Including us," Angie said, hauling a large toolbox into the room.
Leeanne laughed, low and lusty. "Oh, absolutely including us. What can we do for you?"
"I have some questions."
"All right. Let's sit down and try to answer them. Is this about poor Rachel? There's a memorial service for her tomorrow evening."
"Yes, I know. I'd like you to look at these. Do you recognize the subject?"
Leeanne took the image of Kenby, standing in front of Juilliard. "No." While Eve watched her face, Leeanne pursed her lips. "No," she said again. "I don't think he's one of mine. I'd remember this face. Striking face."
"Good form," Angie added, leaning over the back of the sofa. "Nice, graceful body type."
"An excellent study. Very well done. The same, isn't it?" Leeanne asked. "It's the same portrait artist. Is this handsome young man dead?"
"How about this one?" Eve offered the picture of the dance troupe.
"Ah, a dancer. Of course. He's built like one, isn't he?" She made a small sound, a little breath of distress. "No, he's not familiar to me. None of them are. But this isn't the same photographer, is it?"
"Why do you say that?"
"Different style, technique. Such drama, and a wonderful use of shadows here. Of course, you'd want drama in this study, but… It seems to me that whoever took this dance study is more experienced, more trained, or simply more talented. Both, by my critique. Actually, at a guess, I'd say this was a Hastings."
Intrigued, Eve sat back. "You can look at a photo and identify the photographer."
"Certainly, if the artist has a distinct style. Of course, a clever student or fan could copy it very well, digital manipulation and so on. But this first isn't what I'd call a stylistic homage."
Setting them side-by-side, she studied them again. "No. It's very distinct and different. Two artists, interested in the same subject, and seeing it through different perspectives."
"Do you know Hastings, personally?"
"Yes. Not well, I doubt anyone does. Such a temperamental soul. But I use his work quite often in class, and he's allowed me, with some considerable persuasion, to conduct some workshops for my students in his studio over the years."
"She had to pay him out of pocket," Angie chimed in. She was still leaning over the sofa, with her chin nearly resting on Leeanne's shoulder. "Hastings likes his money."
"That's true." Leeanne's tone was cheerful. "When it comes to his art, he doesn't compromise, but he's firm on making a profit. His store, his commercial work, his time."
Eve began to play another angle in her head. "Any of your students ever work for him as models or assistants?"
"Oh yeah," Leeanne answered with a chuckle. "And most had a maxibus full of complaints afterward. He's rude, impatient, cheap, violent. But they learned, I can promise you that."
"I'd like the names."
"My God, Lieutenant, I've been sending students to Hastings for more than five years."
"I'd like the names," Eve repeated. "All you have on record, or in your memory. What about this one?" She held out the death photo.
"Oh." Her hand lifted, linked with Angie's. "Macabre, horrible. Brilliant. He's getting better at his work."
"Why do you say that?"
"So stark. It's meant to be. Death Dances. That's what I'd call it. The use of shadow and light here. The fact that he chose black-and-white, the fluid pose of the body. He could have done more with the face-yes, untapped potential there-but overall it's brilliant. And terrible."
"You often choose black-and-white. Most of your book is dedicated to the art of black-and-white photography and imaging."
With a look of surprise, Leeanne glanced up again. "You've read my book?"
"I've looked it over. There's a great deal about light-the exploitation of it, the building or taking of it, the filtering of it. The absence of it."
"Without light, there is no image and the tone of the light determines the tone of the image. How it's used, how the artist manipulates it or sees it, will be a part of his skill. Wait just a moment."
She rose and hurried out of the room.
"You suspect her." Angie straightened, studying Eve. "How can you? Leeanne would never harm anyone, much less a child. She isn't capable of evil."
"Part of my job is asking questions."
Angie nodded, and coming around the sofa sat across from Eve. "Your job weighs on you. It puts pity in your eyes when you look at death." She turned the portrait of Kenby over. "It doesn't stay there, not in your eyes. But I think it stays inside you."
"He doesn't need my pity anymore."
"No, I suppose not," Angie replied as Leeanne came back in carrying a small box.
"Hey, it's a pinhole camera." Peabody blurted it out, then flushed a little at her own outburst. "My uncle had one, showed me how to make one when I was a kid."
Eve was studying the odd little box and said simply, "Free-Ager," by way of explanation.
"Ah, yes. This is a very old technique." Leeanne set the box on a table, removed a bit of tape, then aimed the tiny hole that had been shielded beneath it toward Eve. "A handmade box, the photographic paper inside, the light outside with the pinhole as the lens that captures that light, and the image. I'd like you to keep still," she told Eve.
"That box is taking my picture."
"Yes. It's the light, you see, that creates the miracle here. I ask each of my students to make a pinhole camera like this, and to experiment with it. Those that don't understand the miracle, well, they may go on to take good pictures, but they'll never create art. It isn't all technology and tools, you see. It isn't all equipment and manipulation. The core is the light, and what it sees. What we see through it."
"What we take out of it?" Eve asked, watching her. "What we absorb from it?"
"Perhaps. While some primitive cultures feared that the camera, by reproducing their image, stole their souls, others believed that it gave them a kind of immortality. We have, in many ways, blended those two beliefs. Certainly, we immortalize with imaging, we steal moments of time and hold them. And we take something from each subject, each time. That moment again, that thought, that mood, that light. It will never be exactly the same again. Not even a second afterward. It's gone-and it's preserved, forever, in the photograph. There's power in that."
"There's no thought, no mood, no light in a photograph of the dead."
"Ah, but there is. The artist's. Death, most certainly death, would be a defining moment. Here, let's see what we've got."
She covered the hole on the box again, then slid out a sheet of paper. On it, Eve's image was reproduced, almost like a pale pencil sketch.
"The light etches the image, burns it into the paper, and preserves it. The light," she said, handing the paper to Eve, "is the tool, the magic. The soul."
"She's really interesting," Peabody commented. "I bet she's a terrific teacher."
"And as someone who knows how to manipulate images, she had the skill to dick with the security discs on her building, shift the time stamp. Her alibi, therefore, has holes. So we give her, potentially, opportunity. Means-she clicks there. Method, another click. Give me motive."