In Death Collection: Books 16-20

In Death Collection: Books 16-20 by J.D. Robb Page A

Book: In Death Collection: Books 16-20 by J.D. Robb Read Free Book Online
Authors: J.D. Robb
Tags: Fiction, Suspense
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Peabody told her.
    “Fine. Contact Feeney and ask him to join us.”
     
    She had time to organize her own data, to run probabilities, to study both the lab and ME reports before updating her own. Then guilt had her contacting Nadine.
    “I wanted to bring you up to speed, but there isn’t a hell of a lot I can tell you.”
    “ Will tell me,” Nadine corrected.
    “Can or will. I’ve got angles I’m working, and a lead I’m about to look at more closely.”
    “What lead?”
    “If anything breaks out of it, I’ll tell you. You have my word. I’m not cutting you out, I just don’t have anything to give you.”
    “There’s always something. Give me something.”
    Eve hesitated, then blew out a breath. “You can say that a source at Cop Central confirmed that there was no sexual assault, and investigators believe that the victim knew her killer. The primary is unavailable for comment at this time.”
    “Slick. See, there’s always something. Has the body been released to the family?”
    “The Medical Examiner will release the body to the victim’s family tomorrow. I’ve got to go, Nadine. I’ve got a meeting.”
    “One more thing. Will you confirm that the primary, and the investigative team, believe Rachel Howard’s killer will kill again?”
    “No, I will not. Don’t play that card, Nadine. Don’t play that card until it falls.”
    She broke transmission, rubbed her hands over her face. Because, she thought, it was going to fall soon enough.
     
    She was the first to arrive in the conference room, so she settled down, took out her notebook, and began to write and review.
    Images, youth, pure, portrait, light.
    Her light was pure.
    Virginity?
    How the hell would the killer know her sexual status?
    Had the killer been a confidant? A potential lover? Counselor, authority figure?
    Who did Rachel trust? Eve wondered and brought the pretty, smiling face back into her mind.
    Every damn body.
    Had she herself ever trusted people so completely, so simply? Hardly, Eve thought. But then again, she hadn’t come from a nice, stable home, with nice, stable parents and a perky kid sister. Everything had been almost preternaturally normal in Rachel’s life. Up until the last hours of it. Family, friends, school, a shitty part-time job, a settled neighborhood.
    At Rachel’s age Eve had already graduated from the Academy, had already donned a cop’s uniform. Had already seen death. Had already caused it.
    And she hadn’t been a virgin, not since she’d been six. Seven? How old had she been the first time her father had raped her?
    What difference did it make? Her light had sure as hell never been pure.
    That’s what had drawn him to her. What he’d wanted from her. Her simplicity, her innocence. He’d killed her for them.
    She looked over as McNab came in, carting the bulky unit from the data club.
    She couldn’t stop herself from checking the rhythm of his walk. The previous month he’d taken a direct hit with a police issue, and it had taken several worry-filled days until the feeling had started to come back in his left side.
    He wasn’t quite back to prancing again, Eve noted. But there was no limp, no drag in the step. And the stringy muscles in both arms were bulging satisfactorily at the effort of carrying the unit.
    “Sorry, Lieutenant.” He puffed a bit, and his cheeks were already red from hauling the weight. “Just take me a minute to set up.”
    “You’re not late yet.” She watched him as he worked.
    He wore summer-weight pants in grass green with a skin top that had green-and-white stripes. The vest over it was hot pink, like his gel sandals.
    Rachel had been wearing jeans and a blue shirt. Slip-on canvas shoes. Two little pinprick studs, silver, in each ear.
    Victim and cop, she thought, might have come from different planets.
    So why did a conservative young girl frequent a data club? She wasn’t a geek or a freak, a nerd or a cruiser. What was the draw?
    “You hit the data clubs on

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