For some, death wasn't the enemy. Life was a much less
merciful opponent. For the ghosts who drifted through the
nights like shadows, the funky-junkies with their pale
pink eyes, the chemi-heads with their jittery hands, life
was simply a mindless trip that circled from one fix to
the next with the arcs between a misery.
The trip itself was most often full of pain and
despair, and occasionally terror.
For the poor and displaced in the bowels of New York
City in the icy dawn of 2059, the pain, the despair, the
terror were constant companions. For the mental defectives
and physically flawed who slipped through society's
cracks, the city was simply another kind of prison.
There were social programs, of course. It was, after
all, an enlightened time. So the politicians claimed, with
the Liberal Party shouting for elaborate new shelters,
educational and medical facilities, training and
rehabilitation centers, without actually detailing a plan
for how such programs would be funded. The Conservative
Party gleefully cut the budgets of what programs were
already in place, then made staunch speeches on the
quality of life and family.
Still, shelters were available for those who qualified
and could stomach the thin and sticky hand of charity.
Training and assistance programs were offered for those
who could keep sane long enough to wind their way through
the endless tangled miles of bureaucratic red tape that
all too often strangled the intended recipients before
saving them.
And as always, children went hungry, womensold their
bodies, and men killed for a handful of credits.
However enlightened the times, human nature remained
as predictable as death.
For the sidewalk sleepers, January in New York brought
vicious nights with a cold that could rarely be fought
back with a bottle of brew or a few scavenged illegals.
Some gave in and shuffled into the shelters to snore on
lumpy cots under thin blankets or eat the watery soup and
tasteless soy loaves served by bright-eyed sociology
students. Others held out, too lost or too stubborn to
give up their square of turf.
And many slipped from life to death during those
bitter nights.
The city had killed them, but no one called it
homicide.
As Lieutenant Eve Dallas drove downtown in the shivering
dawn, she tapped her fingers restlessly on the wheel. The
routine death of a sidewalk sleeper in the Bowery
shouldn't have been her problem. It was a matter for what
the department often called Homicide-Lite—the stiff
scoopers who patrolled known areas of homeless villages to
separate living from dead and take the used-up bodies to
the morgue for examination, identification, and disposal.
It was a mundane and ugly little job most usually done
by those who either still had hopes of joining the more
elite Homicide unit or those who had given up on such a
miracle. Homicide was called to the scene only when the
death was clearly suspicious or violent.
And, Eve thought, if she hadn't been on top of the
rotation for such calls on this miserable morning, she'd
still be in her nice warm bed with her nice warm husband.
"Probably some jittery rookie hoping for a serial
killer," she muttered.
Beside her, Peabody yawned hugely. "I'm really just
extra weight here." From under her ruler-straight dark
bangs, she sent Eve a hopeful look. "You could just drop
me off at the closest transpo stop and I can be back home
and in bed in ten minutes."
"If I suffer, you suffer."
"That makes me feel so ... loved, Dallas."
Eve snorted and shot Peabody a grin. No one, she
thought, was sturdier, no one was more dependable, than
her aide. Even with the rudely early call, Peabody was
pressed and polished in her winter-weight uniform, the
buttons gleaming, the hard black cop shoes shined. In her
square face framed by her dark bowl-cut hair, her eyes
might have been a little sleepy, but they would see what
Eve needed her to see.
"Didn't you have some big deal last night?" Peabody
asked her.
"Yeah, in East Washington. Roarke had this dinner/
dance thing for some fancy charity. Save the moles or
something. Enough food to feed every sidewalk sleeper on
the Lower East Side for a year."
"Gee, that's tough on you. I bet you had to get all
dressed up in some beautiful gown, shuttle down on
Roarke's private transpo, and choke down champagne."
Eve only lifted a brow at Peabody's dust-dry
tone. "Yeah, that's about it." They both knew the
glamorous side of Eve's life since Roarke had come into it
was both a puzzlement and a frustration to her. "And then
I had to dance with Roarke. A lot."
"Was he wearing a tux?" Peabody had seen Roarke in a
tux. The image of it was etched in her mind like acid on
glass.
"Oh yeah." Until, Eve mused, they'd gotten home and
she'd ripped it off of him. He looked every bit as good
out of a tux as in one.
"Man." Peabody closed her eyes, indulged herself with
a visualization technique she'd learned at her Free-Ager
parents' knees. "Man," she repeated.
"You know, a lot of women would get pissed off at
having their husband star in their aide's purient little
fantasies."
"But you're bigger than that, Lieutenant. I like that
about you."
Eve grunted, rolled her stiff shoulders. It was her
own fault that lust had gotten the better of her and she'd
only managed three hours of sleep. Duty was duty, and she
was on it.
Now she scanned the crumbling buildings, the littered
streets. The scars, the warts, the tumors that sliced or
bulged over concrete and steel.
Steam whooshed up from a grate, shot out from the busy
half-life of movement and commerce under the streets.
Driving through it was like slicing through fog on a dirty
river.
Her home, since Roarke, was a world apart from this.
She lived with polished wood, gleaming crystal, the scent
of candles and hothouse flowers. Of wealth.
But she knew what it was to come from such places as
this. Knew how much the same they were—city by city—in
smells, in routines, in hopelessness.
The streets were nearly empty. Few of the residents of
this nasty little sector ventured out early. The dealers
and street whores would have finished the night's
business, would have crawled back into their flops before
sunrise. Merchants brave enough to run the shops and
stores had yet to uncode their riot bars from the doors
and windows. Glide-cart vendors desperate enough to hawk
this turf would carry hand zappers and work in pairs.
She spotted the black and white patrol car, scowled at
the half-assed job the officers on scene had done with
securing the area.
"Why the hell didn't they finish running the sensors,
for Christ's sake? Get me out of bed at five in the damn
morning, and they don't even have the scene secured? No
wonder they're scoopers. Idiots."
Peabody said nothing as Eve braked hard behind the
black and white and slammed out of the vehicle. The
idiots, she thought with some sympathy, were in for an
expert dressing down.
By the time Peabody climbed out of the car, Eve had
already crossed the sidewalk, with long, purposeful
strides, heading for the two uniforms who huddled
miserably in the wind.
She watched the two officers' shoulders snap straight.
The lieutenant had that effect on other cops, Peabody
mused as she retrieved the field kit from the vehicle. She
brought you to attention.
It wasn't just the way she looked, Peabody decided,
with that long, rangy body, the simple and often
disordered cap of brown hair that showed hints of blonde,
hints of red, hints, Peabody thought, of everything. There
were the eyes, all cop, and the color of good Irish
whiskey, the little dent in the firm chin below a full
mouth that could go hard as stone.
Peabody found it a strong arid arresting face,
partially, she decided, because Eve had no vanity
whatsoever.
Although the way she looked might gain a uniform's
attention, it was what she so clearly was that had them
snapping straight.
She was the best damn cop Peabody had ever known. Pure
cop, the kind you'd go through a door with without
hesitation. The kind you knew would stand for the dead and
for the living.
And the kind, Peabody mused as she walked close enough
to hear the end of Eve's blistering lecture, who kicked
whatever ass needed kicking.
"Now to review," Eve said coolly. "You call in a
homicide, you drag my butt out of bed, you damn well have
the scene secured and have your report ready for me when I
get here. You don't stand here like a couple of morons
sucking your thumbs. You're cops, for God's sake. Act like
cops."
"Yes, sir, Lieutenant." This came in a wavery voice
from the youngest of the team. He was hardly more than a
boy, and the only reason Eve had pulled her verbal punch.
His partner, however, wasn't a rookie, and she earned one
of Eve's frigid stares.
"Yes, sir," she said between her teeth. And the lively
resentment in the tone had Eve angling her head.
"Do you have a problem, Officer ... Bowers?"
"No, sir."
Her face was the color of aged cherry wood, with her
eyes a striking contrast of pale, pale blue. She kept her
dark hair short under her regulation cap. There was a
button missing on her standard-issue coat and her shoes
were dull and scuffed. Eve could have poked her about it
but decided being stuck in a miserable job was some excuse
not to buff up for the day.
"Good." Eve merely nodded, but the warning in her eyes
was clear. She shifted her gaze to the partner and felt a
little stir of sympathy. He was pale as a sheet, shaky,
and so fresh from the academy she could all but smell it
on him.
"Officer Trueheart, my aide will show you the proper
way to secure a scene. See that you pay attention."
"Yes, sir."
"Peabody." At the single word, her field kit was in
her hand. "Show me what we've got here, Bowers."
"Indigent. Male Caucasian. Goes by the name of Snooks.
This is his crib."
She gestured to a rather cleverly rigged shelter
comprised of a packing crate cheerfully painted with stars
and flowers and topped by the dented lid of an old
recycling bin. There was a moth-eaten blanket across the
entrance and a hand-drawn sign that simply said Snooks
strung over it.
"He inside?"
"Yeah, part of the beat is to give a quick eye check
on the cribs looking for stiffs to scoop. Snooks is pretty
stiff," she said at what Eve realized after a moment was
an attempt at humor.
"I bet. My, what a pleasant aroma," she muttered as
she moved closer and the wind could no longer blow the
stench aside.
"That's what tipped me. It always stinks. All these
people smell like sweat and garbage and worse, but a stiff
has another layer."
Eve knew the layer all too well. Sweet, sickly. And
here, sneaking under the miasma of urine and sour flesh
was the smell of death, and she noted with a faint frown,
the bright metallic hint of blood.
"Somebody stick him?" She, nearly sighed as she opened
her kit to take out the can of Seal-It. "What the hell
for? These sleepers don't have anything worth stealing."
For the first time, Bowers allowed a thin smile to
curve her lips. But her eyes were cold and hard, with
bitterness riding in them. "Somebody stole something from
him, all right." Pleased with herself, she stepped back.
She hoped to God the tight-assed lieutenant got a nice
hard shock at what she'd see behind the tattered curtain.
"You call the ME?" Eve asked as she clear-coated her
hands and boots.
"First on scene's discretion," Bowers said primly,
with the malice still bright in her eyes. "I opted to
leave that decision to Homicide."
"For God's sake, is he dead or not?" Disgusted, Eve
moved forward, bending a bit to sweep back the curtain.
It was always a shock, not the hard one Bowers had
hoped for. Eve had seen too much too often for that. But
what one human could do to another was never routine for
her. And the pity that stirred underneath and through the
cop was something the woman beside her would never feel
and never understand.
"Poor bastard," she said quietly and crouched to do a
visual exam.
Bowers had been right about one thing. Snooks was
very, very dead. He was hardly more than a sack of bones
and wild, straggly hair. Both his eyes and his mouth
gaped, and she could see he hadn't kept more than half of
his teeth. His type rarely took advantage of the health
and dental programs.
His eyes had already filmed over and were a dull mud
brown. She judged him to be somewhere around the century
mark, and even without murder, he'd never have attained
the average twenty more years decent nutrition and medical
science could have given him.
She noted, too, that his boots, while cracked and
scarred, had plenty of wear left in them, as did the
blanket that had been tossed to the side of the box. He
had some trinkets as well. A wide-eyed doll's head, a
penlight in the shape of a frog, a broken cup he'd filled
with carefully made paper flowers. And the walls were
covered with more paper shapes. Trees, dogs, angels, and
his favored stars and flowers.
She could see no signs of struggle, no fresh bruising
or superfluous cuts. Whoever had killed the old man had
done so efficiently.
No, she thought, studying the fist-sized hole in his
chest. Surgically. Whoever had taken Snook's heart had
very likely used a laser scalpel.
"You got your homicide, Bowers."
Eve eased back, let the curtain fall. She felt her
blood rise and her fist clench when she saw the self-
satisfied smirk on the uniform's face.
"Okay, Bowers, we don't like each other. Just one of
those things. But you'd be smart to remember I can make it
a hell of a lot harder on you than you can on me." She
took a step closer, bumping the toe of her boots to the
toe of Bowers's shoes. Just to be sure her point was
taken. "So be smart, Bowers, and wipe that fucking sneer
off your face and keep out of my way."
The sneer dropped away, but Bowers's eyes shot out
little bullet points of animosity. "It's against
departmental code for a superior officer to use offensive
language to a uniform."
"No kidding? Well, you be sure to put that in your
report, Bowers. And you have that report done, in
triplicate, and on my desk by oh ten hundred. Stand back,"
she added, very quietly now.
It took ten humming seconds with their eyes warring
before Bowers dropped her gaze and shifted aside.
Dismissing her, Eve turned her back and pulled out her
communicator. "Dallas, Lieutenant Eve. I've got a
homicide."
Now why, Eve wondered, as she hunkered inside the crate to
examine the body, would someone steal a so obviously used-
up heart? She remembered that for a period after the Urban
Wars, stolen organs had been a prize commodity on the
black market. Very often, dealers hadn't been patient
enough to wait until a donor was actually dead to make the
transfer, but that had been decades ago, before man-made
organs had been fully perfected.
Organ donating and brokering were still popular. And
she thought there was something about organ building as
well, though she paid little attention to medical news and
reports.
She distrusted doctors.
Some of the very rich didn't care for the idea of a
manufactured implant, she assumed. A human heart or kidney
from a young accident victim could command top prices, but
it had to be in prime condition. Nothing about Snooks was
prime.
She wrinkled her nose against the stench, but leaned
closer. When a woman detested hospitals and health centers
as much as she did, the faintly sick smell of antiseptic
sent the nostrils quivering.
She caught it here, just a trace, then frowning, sat
back on her heels.
Her prelim exam told her the victim had died at
0:2:10, given the outside temperature through the night.
She'd need the blood work and tox reports to know if
there'd been drugs in his system, but she could already
see that he'd been a brew guzzler.
The typical brown refillable bottle used to transport
home brew was tucked in the corner, nearly empty. She
found a small, almost pitiful stash of illegals. One thin,
hand-rolled joint of Zoner, a couple of pink capsules that
were probably Jags, and a small, filthy bag of white
powder she assumed after a sniff was Grin laced with a
whiff of Zeus.
There were telltale spiderwebs of broken blood vessels
over his dented face, obvious signs of malnutrition, and
the scabs of what was likely some unattractive skin
disease. The man had been a guzzler, smoked, ate garbage,
and had been nearly ready to die in his sleep.
Why kill him?
"Sir?" Eve didn't glance back as Peabody drew back the
curtain. "ME's on scene."
"Why take his heart?" Eve muttered. "Why surgically
remove it? If it was a straight murder, wouldn't they have
roughed him up, kicked him around? If they were into
mutilation, why didn't they mutilate? This is textbook
work."
Peabody scanned the body, grimaced. "I haven't seen
any heart ops, but I'll take your word on that."
"Look at the wound," Eve said impatiently. "He should
have bled out, shouldn't he? A fist-sized hole in the
chest, for Christ's sake. But they—whatever it is—clamped,
closed off, the bleeders, just like they would in surgery.
This one didn't want the mess, didn't see the point in it.
No, he's proud of his work," she added, crab walking back
through the opening, then standing to take a deep gulp of
the much fresher air outside.
"He's skilled. Had to have had some training. And I
don't think one person could have managed this alone. You
send the scoopers out to canvass for witnesses?"
"Yeah." Peabody scanned the deserted street, the
broken windows, the huddle of boxes and crates deep in the
alleyway across the street. "Good luck to them."
"Lieutenant."
"Morris." Eve lifted a brow as she noted she'd hooked
the top medical examiner for an on-scene. "I didn't expect
to get the cream on a sidewalk sleeper."
Pleased, he smiled, and his lively eyes danced. He
wore his hair slicked back and braided with a siren red
ski cap snugged over it. His long, matching coat flapped
madly in the breeze. Morris, Eve knew, was quite the
snazzy dresser.
"I was available, and your sleeper sounded quite
interesting. No heart?"
"Well, I didn't find one."
He chuckled and approached the crate. "Let's have a
look-see."
She shivered, envying him his long, obviously warm
coat. She had one—Roarke had given her a beauty for
Christmas—but she resisted wearing it on the job. No way
in hell was she going to get blood and assorted body
fluids all over that fabulous bronze-colored cashmere.
And she thought as she crouched down yet again, she
was pretty sure her new gloves were cozily tucked in the
pockets of that terrific coat. Which was why her hands
were currently freezing.
She stuffed them in the pockets of her leather jacket,
hunched her shoulders against the bite of the wind, and
watched Morris do his job.
"Beautiful work," Morris breathed. "Absolutely
beautiful."
"He had training, right?"
"Oh yes." Affixing microgoggles over his eyes, Morris
peered into the open chest. "Yes indeed, he did. This is
hardly his first surgery. Top of the line tools as well.
No homemade scalpel, no clumsy rib spreaders. Our killer
is one mag surgeon. Damn if I don't envy his hands."
"Some cults like to use body parts in their
ceremonies," Eve said half to herself. "But they generally
hack and mutilate when they kill. And they like rituals,
ambiance. We've got none of that here."
"Doesn't look like a religious thing. It looks like a
medical one."
"Yeah." That corroborated her thoughts. "One person
pull this off?"
"Doubt it." Morris pulled out his bottom lip, let it
snap back. "To perform a procedure this slick under these
difficult conditions he'd need a very skilled assistant."
"Any idea why they'd take his heart if it wasn't to
worship the demon of the week?"
"Not a clue," Morris said cheerfully and gestured for
her to back up. When they were outside again, he blew out
a breath. "I'm surprised the old man didn't die of
asphyxiation in all that stink. But from a visual exam, my
guess would be that heart would have very few miles left
on it. Got your prints and DNA sample for IDing?"
"Already sealed and ready for the lab."
"Then we'll bag him, take him in."
Eve nodded. "You curious enough to bump him up to the
top of your stack of bodies?"
"As a matter of fact, I am." He smiled, gestured to
his team. "You should wear a hat, Dallas. It's fucking
freezing out here."
She sneered, but she'd have given a month's pay for a
hot cup of coffee. Leaving Morris to his work, she turned
to meet Bowers and Trueheart.
Bowers clenched her teeth. She was cold, hungry, and
she bitterly resented the chummy consult she'd witnessed
between Eve and the chief medical examiner.
Probably fucking him, Bowers thought. She knew Eve
Dallas, knew her type. Damn right she did. A woman like
her only moved up the ranks because she spread her legs
while she made the climb. The only reason Bowers hadn't
moved up herself was because she refused to do it on her
back.
That's the way the game's played, that's how. And her
heart began to pound in her chest, the blood to thunder in
her head. But she'd get her own, one day.
Whore, bitch. The words echoed in her brain, nearly
trembled off her tongue. But she sucked them in. She was,
she reminded herself, still in control.
The hate Eve read in Bowers's pale eyes was a puzzle.
It was much too vicious, she decided, to be the result of
a simple and deserved dressing down by a superior officer.
It gave her an odd urge to brace for attack, to slide a
hand down to her weapon. Instead, she lifted her eyebrows,
waited a beat. "Your report, Officer?"
"Nobody saw anything, nobody knows anything," Bowers
snapped. "That's the way it is with these people. They
stay in their holes."
Though Eve had her eyes on Bowers, she caught the
slight movement from the rookie. Following instinct, she
dug in her pocket and pulled out some loose credits. "Get
me some coffee, Officer Bowers."
Disdain turned so quickly to insulted shock, Eve had
to work hard to hold off a grin. "Get you coffee?"
"That's right. I want coffee." She grabbed Bowers's
hand, dumped the credits into it. "So does my aide. You
know the neighborhood. Run over to the nearest 24/7 and
get me some coffee."
"Trueheart's lowest rank."
"Was I talking to Trueheart, Peabody?" Eve said
pleasantly.
"No, Lieutenant. I believe you were addressing Officer
Bowers." As Peabody didn't like the woman's looks, either,
she smiled. "I take cream and sugar. The lieutenant goes
for black. I believe there's a 24/7 one block over.
Shouldn't take you long."
Bowers stood another moment, then turned on her heel
and stalked off. Her muttered "Bitch" came clearly on the
cold wind.
"Golly, Peabody, Bowers just called you a bitch."
"I really think she meant you, sir."
"Yeah." Eve's grin was fierce. "You're probably right.
So, Trueheart, spill it."
"Sir?" His already pale face whitened even more at
being directly addressed.
"What do you think? What do you know?"
"I don't—"
When he glanced nervously at Bowers's stiff and
retreating back, Eve stepped into his line of vision. Her
eyes were cool and commanding. "Forget her. You're dealing
with me now. I want your report on the canvass."
"I ..." His Adam's apple bobbed. "No one in the
immediate area admits to having witnessed any disturbance
in the vicinity or any visitors to the victim's crib
during the time in question."
"And?"
"It's just that—I was going to tell Bowers," he
continued in a rush, "but she cut me off."
"Tell me," Eve suggested.
"It's about the Gimp? He had his crib on this side,
just down from Snooks, as long as I've had the beat. It's
only a couple of months, but—"
"You patrol this area yesterday?" Eve interrupted.
"Yes, sir."
"And there was a crib by Snooks's?"
"Yes, sir, like always. Now he's got it on the other
side of the street, way at the end of the alley."
"Did you question him?"
"No, sir. He's zoned. We couldn't roust him, and
Bowers said it wasn't worth the trouble, anyway, because
he's a stone drunk."
Eve studied him thoughtfully. His color was back,
pumped into his cheeks from nerves and the slap of the
wind. But he had good eyes, she decided. Clear and
sharp. "How long have you been out of the academy,
Trueheart?"
"Three months, sir."
"Then you can be forgiven for not being able to
recognize an asshole in uniform." She cocked her head when
a flash of humor trembled on his mouth. "But I have a
feeling you'll learn. Call for a wagon and have your pal
the Gimp taken down to the tank at Central. I want to talk
to him when he's sobered up. He knows you?"
"Yes, sir."
"Then you stay with him, and bring him up when he's
coherent. I want you to stand in on the interview."
"You want me to—" Trueheart's eyes went huge and
bright. "I'm assigned to Lite—Bowers is my trainer."
"Is that how you want it, Officer?"
He hesitated, blew out a quiet breath. "No, sir,
Lieutenant, it's not."
"Then why aren't you following my orders?" She turned
away to harass the crime scene team and left him grinning
after her.
"That was really sweet," Peabody said when they were
back in their vehicle with cups of hot, horrible coffee.
"Don't start, Peabody."
"Come on, Dallas. You gave the guy a nice break."
"He gave us a potential witness and it was another way
to burn that idiot Bowers's ass." She smiled thinly. "Next
chance you get, Peabody, do a run on her. I like to know
everything I can about people who want to rip the skin off
my face."
"I'll take care of it when we're back at Central. You
want hard copy?"
"Yeah. Run Trueheart, too, just for form."
"Wouldn't mind running him." Peabody wiggled her
eyebrows. "He's very cute."
Eve slanted her a look. "You're pathetic, and you're
too old for him."
"I can't have more than a couple, maybe three years on
him," Peabody said with a hint of insult. "And some guys
prefer a more experienced woman."
"I thought you were still tight with Charles."
"We date," Peabody lifted her shoulders, still
uncomfortable discussing this particular man with
Eve. "But we're not exclusive."
Tough to be exclusive with a licensed companion, Eve
thought but held her tongue. Snapping out her opinion of
Peabody developing a relationship with Charles Monroe had
come much too close to breaking the bond between them a
few weeks before.
"You're okay with that?" she said instead.
"That's the way we both want it. We like each other,
Dallas. We have a good time together. I wish you—" She
broke off, firmly shut her mouth.
"I didn't say anything."
"You're thinking pretty damn loud."
Eve set her teeth. They were not, she promised
herself, going back there. "What I'm thinking," she said
evenly, "is about getting some breakfast before we start
on the paperwork."
Deliberately, Peabody rolled the stiffness out of her
shoulders. "That works for me. Especially if you're
buying."
"I bought last time."
"I don't think so, but I can check my records." More
cheerful. Peabody pulled out her electronic memo book and
made Eve laugh.