In Death 25 - Creation in Death

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fill the hole. “Cop food’s what you get around here.” She ate, frowned. As oatmeal went, it wasn’t completely disgusting. “And this isn’t cop food.”
    “No. I got it from the deli around the corner.”
    For a moment, her face rivaled Peabody’s for full sulk. “They have bagels there, and danishes.”
    “So they do.” He smiled at her. “You’ll do better with the oatmeal.”
    Maybe, she thought, but she wouldn’t be as happy about it. “I want to say something before this really gets started. If you feel, at any time, you want to step out, you step out.”
    “I won’t, but understood.”
    She took another spoonful of oatmeal, then swiveled in her chair so they were face-to-face. “Understand, too, that if I feel your involvement is doing more harm—on a personal level—than it’s adding to the investigation, I’ll have to cut you loose.”
    “Personally or professionally?”
    “Roarke.”
    He set his bowl aside to get up and program coffee for himself. She could attempt to cut him loose, he thought, but they both knew she wouldn’t shake him off the line. And that, he acknowledged, would be a problem indeed.
    “Our personal life has, and will, weather the bumps and bruises it takes when we work together, or more accurately, when I contribute to your work.”
    “This one’s different.”
    “Yes, I understand that as well.” He turned with his coffee, met her eyes. “You couldn’t stop him once before.”
    “Didn’t stop him,” Eve corrected.
    “You’d think that, and so it’s personal. However much you try to keep it otherwise, it’s personal. It’s harder for you, and it may be harder for us. But things have changed in nine years, a great many things.”
    “I didn’t have anybody pushing oatmeal on me nine years ago.”
    “There.” His lips curved. “That’s one.”
    “It’s unlikely we’ll save the second one, Roarke. Barring a miracle, we won’t save her.”
    “And so, you’re already afraid you won’t save the next. I know how that weighs on you, and eats at you, and pushes you. You have someone who understands you, who loves you, and who has considerable resources.”
    He crossed over, just to touch a hand to her face. “ His pattern may have changed little in all this time, Eve. But yours has. And I believe, completely, that it will stop here. You’ll stop it.”
    “I need to believe that, too. Okay, then.” She took one more spoonful of oatmeal. “Peabody’s crib time’s up. I need to finish this report, have copies made for the team. I’ve ordered copies of the old reports, and put in requests for files from other murders attributed to him. Find Peabody, tell her I need her to pick up the cold files, and then the two of you can start setting up. I need another ten minutes here.”
    “All right. But unless you have something other than the usual drudge around here in that conference room, I’m taking coffee with me.”
    True to her word, Eve walked into the conference room ten minutes later. Behind her, a pair of uniforms hauled in a second board. She carted a boxful of file copies.
    “I want the current case up first,” she told Peabody. “Then we’ll have our history lesson.” She pulled the files out, set them on the conference table. “I generated stills of the scene and the body. Use the second board for those.”
    “On it.”
    She walked over to a white data board on the wall and began to print.
    Her printing always surprised Roarke. It was so precise, so perfect, while her handwriting tended toward scrawl. He saw she was printing out the victim’s name, and the timeline from the moment she’d been reported leaving the club, through her death, and the discovery of her body.
    After drawing a line down the center of the wide board, she began printing out the others, beginning with Corrine Dagby.
    Not just data, Roarke thought. A kind of memorial to the dead. They were not to be forgotten. More, he thought, she wrote them out for herself

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