While the body was being removed, she ordered all incoming and outgoing transmissions for the previous twenty-four hours.
The first came in at just past eighteen hundred hours – a cheerful conversation between the victim and her mother. As Eve listened, studied the mother's laughing face, she thought of how that same face would look when she called and told the woman her daughter was dead.
The only other transmission was an outgoing. Good-looking guy, Eve mused as she studied the image on screen. Mid-thirties, quick smile, soulful brown eyes. Jerry, the victim called him. Or Jer. Lots of sexual by-play, teasing. A lover then. Maybe her true love.
Eve removed the disc, sealed it, and slipped it into her bag. She located Marianna's daybook, porta-'link, and address book in the desk under the window. A quick scroll through the entries netted her one Jeremy Vandoren.
Alone now, Eve turned back to the bed. Stained sheets were tangled at the foot. The clothes that had been carefully cut off the victim and tossed to the floor were bagged for evidence. The apartment was silent.
She let him in, Eve mused. Opened the door to him. Did she come in here with him voluntarily, or did he subdue her first? The tox report would tell her if there were any illegals in the bloodstream.
Once he had her in the bedroom, he tied her. Hands and feet, likely hooking the restraints' around the short stump of post at each of the four corners, spreading her out like a banquet.
Then he'd cut off her clothes. Carefully, no hurry. It hadn't been rage or fury or even a desperate kind of need. Calculated, planned, ordered. Then he'd raped her, sodomized her, because he could. He had the power.
She'd struggled, cried out, probably begged. He'd enjoyed that, fed on that. Rapists did, she thought, and took several deep, steadying breaths because her mind wanted to veer toward her father.
When he was done, he'd strangled her, watching, watching while her eyes bulged. Then he'd brushed her hair, painted her face, draped her in festive silver garland. Had he brought the hairpin with him, or had it belonged to her? Had she amused herself with the tattoo, or had he decorated her body himself?
She moved into the neighboring bathroom. White tile sparkled like ice, and there was a faint under-scent of disinfectant.
He cleaned up here when he was finished, Eve decided. Washing himself, even grooming, then wiping down and spraying the room to remove any evidence.
Well, she'd put the sweepers on it in any case. One lousy pubic hair could hang him.
She'd had a mother who loved her, Eve thought. One who'd laughed with her, making holiday plans, talking about sugar cookies.
"Sir? Lieutenant?"
Eve glanced over her shoulder, saw Peabody in the center of the hallway. "What?"
"I have the security discs. Two uniforms are initiating door-to-doors."
"Okay." Eve rubbed her hands over her face. "Let's seal the place up, take everything to Central. I have to inform the next of kin." She shouldered her bag, picked up her field kit. "You're right, Peabody. It's a heck of a way to start the day."
CHAPTER TWO
"Did you run the 'link number on the boyfriend?"
"Yes, sir. Jeremy Vandoren, lives on Second Avenue, he's an account exec for Foster, Bride and Rumsey on Wall Street." Peabody glanced at her notebook as she relayed the rest. "Divorced, currently single, thirty-six. And a very attractive specimen of the male species. Sir."
"Hmm." Eve slipped the security disc into her desk unit. "Let's see if the very attractive specimen paid a call on his girlfriend last night."
"Can I get you some coffee, Lieutenant?"
"What?"
"Can I get you some coffee?"
Eve's eyes narrowed as she scanned the video. "If you want coffee, Peabody, just say so."
Behind Eve's back, Peabody rolled her eyes. "I want coffee."
"Then get some – and get some for me while you're at it. Victim arriving home at sixteen forty-five. Pause disc," Eve ordered and took a good look at Marianna Hawley.
Trim, pretty, young, her shining brown hair covered with a bright red beret that matched the long swirl of her coat and the slick shine of her boots.
"She'd been shopping," Peabody commented as she set the mug of coffee at Eve's elbow.
"Yeah. Bloomingdale's. Continue scan," Eve said and watched as Marianna shifted her bags, dug out her key card. Her mouth was moving, Eve noted. Talking to herself. No, she realized, Marianna was singing. Then the woman shook back her hair, shifted her bags once again, stepped inside the apartment, and shut the door.
The red lock light blinked on.
As the disc continued, Eve saw other tenants coming and going, alone, in couples. Ordinary lives, moving forward.
"She stayed in for dinner," Eve stated, looking now with her mind's eye, through the door, inside the apartment.
She could see Marianna moving around the rooms, wearing the simple navy slacks and white sweater that would later be cut from her body.
Turn the viewing screen on for company. Hang up the bright red coat in the front closet, put the hat on the shelf, the boots on the floor. Tuck away the shopping bags.
She was a tidy woman who liked pretty things, preparing for a quiet evening at home.
"Fixed herself some soup at about seven, according to her AutoChef." Eve drummed short, unpainted nails on the desk as she continued the scan. "Her mother called, then she called the boyfriend."
While she clicked off the time frame in her mind, she saw the elevator doors open. Her brows winged up, disappearing under the fringe of bangs on her forehead. "Well, ho ho ho, what have we here?"
"Santa Claus." Grinning, Peabody leaned over Eve's shoulder. "Bearing gifts."
The man in the red suit and snowy white beard carried a large box wrapped in silver paper and trimmed with an elaborate bow of gold and green.
"Hold it. Pause. Enlarge sector ten through fifty, thirty percent."
The screen shifted, the section Eve designated separating, then popping out. Nestled in the center of the fancy bow was a silver tree with a plump gilded bird.
"Son of a bitch. Son of a bitch, that's the thing that was in her hair."
"But… that's Santa Claus."
"Get a grip on yourself, Peabody. Continue scan. He's going to her door," Eve muttered, watching as the cheerful figure carried his glossy burden to Marianna's apartment. He pressed her buzzer with a gloved finger, waited a beat, then threw back his head and laughed. Almost instantly, Marianna opened the door, her face glowing, her eyes sparkling with delight.
She scooped back her hair with one hand, then opened the door wider in invitation.
Santa tossed one quick glance over his shoulder, looked directly at the camera. Smiled, winked.
"Freeze video. The bastard. Cocky bastard. Print hard copy of image on screen," she ordered while studying the round, ruddy-cheeked face and sparkling blue eyes. "He knew we'd view the discs, see him. He's enjoying it."
"He dressed up as Santa." Peabody continued to gape at the screen. "That's disgusting. That's just… wrong."
"What? If he'd dressed up as Satan it would have been more appropriate?"
"Yes – no." Peabody moved her shoulders, shuffled her feet. "It's just… well, it's really sick."
"It's also really smart." Eyes flat, Eve waited while the image printed out. "Who's going to shut the door in Santa's face? Continue scan."
The door closed behind them, and the hallway remained empty.
The timer running along the bottom of the screen marked at twenty-one thirty-three.
So, he took his time, Eve mused, nearly two and a half hours. The rope he'd used to tie her, and anything else he might have needed, would have been in that big shiny box.