As she spoke, Roarke slammed the hammer again. Through the gap he created a skeletal hand reached out, palm up, as if in supplication.
“Careful now.” Morris laid a hand on Eve's shoulder. “We need to go carefully now. This is for my team and forensics.”
“Let me see your light.” Roarke took it from Eve, shone it in the gap. “Christ Jesus. He's stacked them, like berths in a bloody train.”
“And when bricks were too much trouble or he just ran out of them, he switched to boards. Can you see how many?” Eve asked him.
“Five, I think. I can't be sure.”
“Hold off now. It's enough.” She took out her communicator. “Peabody, we've got bodies. Eight, maybe more. I need a recovery team, the sweepers. Morris is calling his people in.”
“Acknowledged. Jesus, Dallas, eight?”
“Maybe more. They're found now. And Peabody, send down the priest.”
She clicked off, said nothing as Roarke picked up the bar and continued to carefully knock away loose bricks. Instead she reached in, laid a hand on the plastic covering the ruined shell of Vanessa Warwich.
You're found now, she thought. You're free now.
She stepped out of the room, just leaned against a wall as she struggled against waves of grief.
And the old woman stepped to her, spoke.
“You found our Beata.”
“I'd have found her my own way. I'd have stopped this my own way.”
“I think perhaps you would. But the child is so precious to me, how could I risk it? I was guided to you, or you to me, when I was between. Who can say?”
“I'd think you could at this point. Death ought to come with a few answers.”
Now Gizi smiled. “Perhaps it will. You didn't kill him.”
“It's not how I work.”
“I would have,” she said simply, “but your way will be enough. You are the warrior. I can leave the gift with you.”
“No. Seriously.”
“Then it goes with me. I had a good, long life, but he didn't have the right to end it. You'll see there is balance.”
“He'll pay, for all of it.” She hesitated, then asked what she had asked Lopez, asked herself. “Is it enough?”
“This time. For others?” Gizi lifted her shoulders, let them fall. “Who can say?”
“This time then. I have to finish. I have to finish my way.”
“Yes. As do I. You've freed them. Now I'll guide them to the other side where there will be light and peace. Until we're called again. Pa chiv tuka, Eve Dallas.”
“Ni eve tuka.” Eve shook her head. “You're welcome,” she corrected.
She saw the light again, not blinding now, but warm. She simply closed her eyes as the heat flowed through her, then out again. When she opened them, there was nothing but the dim corridor and the sound of approaching footsteps.
She pushed away from the wall, moved forward to direct cops and techs. To do her job. “They're in there,” she said to Lopez. “Maybe you can do . . . what you do.”
“Yes. The girl, Beata, she's waiting for you. She won't leave until she speaks to you.”
“I'll go up.”
“A very hard day,” he said. “And yet . . . ”
“Yeah.” She reached over as Roarke came out, brushed mortar and brick dust off his shirt. “Let's go up.”
“Tell me how you are.”
“I'll show you.” She stopped, yanked up her pants leg. Her clutch piece rode on her unmarked ankle. “No more tattoo. It's a lot less crowded in here.” She tapped her head. “Say something in Russian.”
“I only have a few phrases, but this one seems appropriate. Ya liubliu tebia.”
She grinned at him, felt a lightness she hadn't felt in hours. “I have no idea what you said. Thank God.”
He grabbed her, held tight. Then he drew her face up, crushed his mouth with hers.
“On an op,” she murmured but kissed him back before drawing away.
Linking hands, they continued down the corridor. “I said I love you — and it's true in every language.”
“Nice. Let's just keep it all in English for a while. God, I'm starving again.” She pressed her hand to her belly. “Anyway, thanks for the assist. In there and all around.”
“No problem. But next time we have a barbecue, Lieutenant, we both stay the bloody hell home.”
“That's a deal.”
Upstairs she paused, walked over to where Natalya and Alexi sat on the steps, nodded at the cop standing by them. Natalya looked up, eyes flooded with tears.
“They said — we heard — there are bodies.”
“Yes.”
“My brother.” Her voice broke as she pressed her face to her son's chest. “He was broken, but he took his medication. We went on — we both went on. What has he done? In the mercy of God, what has he done?”
“She didn't know.” Alexi held her close while she sobbed. “We didn't know, I swear it. My uncle, he's such a quiet man. Such a quiet man. Beata? She's all right?”
“She'll be all right. We're going to have to take you and your mother down to Central. We need to talk.”
He only nodded and stroked his mother's hair. “We didn't know.”
“I believe you.”
“A nightmare for them,” Roarke commented as they stepped outside into the warm night.
“One that won't end anytime soon.”
Gawkers pressed behind the barricades. Cops swarmed, lights flared, and the air was busy with voices and communicators. Reporters, alerted to the scene, shouted questions.
Eve ignored them all as Beata broke away from Mira and ran to her.
“They said Mamoka is dead. Sasha killed her — my great-grandmother.”
“Yes. I'm very sorry.”
The sound she made was deep, dark grief. “Mamoka. She came for me, to find me. And he killed her.”
“He'll pay for that, for all of it.” And this time, Eve reminded herself, it was enough. “She did find you, and that's what mattered most to her. She told me your name. She . . . showed me the way.”
“She spoke to you?”
“She did. And I know she's okay, because you are. You can see her tomorrow. I'll arrange it. But now, you need to go to the health center, get checked out. You need to listen to Dr. Mira. We'll talk again.”
“There were others.” Her face stark, Beata stared at the old building with its glittering windows. “I heard — ”
“We'll talk again,” Eve said.
Beata pressed her fingers to her eyes, nodded, then dropped them. “I'm sorry. I never asked your name.”
“I'm Dallas.” Through and through, she thought, in and out and all the way. “Lieutenant Eve Dallas.”
“Thank you, Lieutenant Dallas.” Beata held out a hand. “For every day of the rest of my life.”
“Make good use of them.” Eve shook her hand, then sent her back to Mira.
Eve took a breath, then tuned in to the lights, the noise, the movement. Her world, she thought, and walked back to Roarke.
“Things to wrap up,” she told him. “Reports to file, killers to question.”
“You look pretty pleased about it.”
“All in all, I am. But tomorrow? Why don't we stay home, watch old vids and eat junk food, maybe drink a whole bunch of wine and have half-drunk sex?”
“A master plan. I'm in.”
“Excellent. I have to go back down there. You could wait here or go on home.”
“Lieutenant.” He took her hand again. “I'm with you.”
“Well, you're handy,” she said, grinned again.
She walked back toward the building with him to do the job. She felt tired, violently hungry, and completely herself.