Part 13 (1/2)
”I 'm having them a.n.a.lyzed. Sir.” He addressed Roarke now. ”My first thought is someone entered and toured while carrying a sophisticated jammer. A pinpoint device of considerable strength. In order to bypa.s.s the security walls, and only for moments at a time, it had to be extreme, and in my opinion, the user had to know the locations of the cameras and alarms. He had to know the system. The route, as far as we can tell from the first run, leads here, then out through Sector D, which would be the nearest exit. I 'm afraid whoever did this”-he glanced at the body-”periodically jammed our system so as to go undetected.”
”Did you kill her, Gumm?”
His head jerked on his bony shoulder as he gaped at Eve. ”No! No, of course not. I don't even know her. I 've never-”
”She's winding you up, Gumm,” Roarke said mildly, but Eve heard the anger under the surface.
”Finish the a.n.a.lysis, and get the lieutenant the discs,” he began when they heard footsteps coming down the pa.s.sage.
Peabody popped out seconds before the love of her life, EDD ace McNab.
”This place rocks even when it's turned off. McNab and I came in for the spooks a couple weeks ago. I t's total.”
”Glad you're enjoying yourself. Seal up,” Eve ordered. ”Not you,” she added pointing a finger at McNab. ”This is Gumm. Go with him and do e- c.r.a.p.”
”Sure.” McNab, skinny of build, bony of a.s.s, looked positively robust compared to Gumm. He offered a smile as sunny as the hair he'd pulled back into a long tail. ”Live to serve.”
Because he was amenable, and as good as they come, Eve ignored the fact he wore red maxi cargo with multicolored pockets and a shortsleeved yellow jacket over a tank that looked like he'd soaked it in a rainbow.
”Go live. TOD, twenty-three-fifty-two.” She looked at Roarke. ”There's your blip. Her heart stopped, and whatever he was jamming it with gave youthe blip instead of the alarm. He came prepared. Weapon, jammer, knew the route and the system if Gumm is to be believed.”
”He is. He's skilled and reliable.”
”I 'll want a list of people who know the system, anyone who's been fired or written up.”
”You'll have it.”
”Peabody, contact the usual, and let's get this place processed. Spookville's shut down for the foreseeable.”
”What kind of knife is that?” Peabody asked as she pulled out her 'link.
”Bayonet. Vic is a high-priced LC. From a visual exam on the clothes, the state of the body, it doesn't look like s.e.xual a.s.sault-and really what would be the point? She's got jewelry, cash, and credit still on her, so that ditches robbery-and again, why haul her in here, bringing a jammer and a freaking bayonet, if you just wanted s.e.x and glitters?
”Limo driver, crossbow, transpo station parking. Pricey LC, bayonet, amus.e.m.e.nt park. Luxury items, unusual weapons, semipublic places. He's got a system, and right now he's two for two.”
She stood up. ”Officer-”
”Milway.”
”Milway, see if you can find out how she got here. Personal transpo, private, public. Round up entrance security. Let's see if he jammed that, too.
Talk to park employees, find out if anyone saw her. She's a looker. I f they noticed her, they may have noticed who she was with.”
She waited until the uniform stepped out. ”How do you figure he got that through the scanners?” she asked, gesturing to the bayonet.
”The smartest way would be to have it on him, in a sheath or holder lined with magnetic fiber that would block the reading.”
Eve nodded, continued to study the body, the room. ”An LC of that level has to have solid experience as well as skill and a clean bill. Her hair's still perfect. Her dress, except for the blood, isn't messed up. No bruises, no sign she tried to evade or fight. She didn't see it coming. Didn't get any kind of buzz he was off.”
”Neither did Houston,” Roarke pointed out. ”A driver would be good at reading clients.”
”Should be. She comes in here with him. We'll get the route from the glitches, the blips, whatever Gumm wants to call them, and then she ends up here. Must be gruesome when it's running.”
”I t's meant to be.”
”People are f.u.c.ked up,” she said half to herself. ”Can you get them to turn on this sector? Just this sector. I want to see how it played.”
”Give me a moment.” He took out his 'link, stepped away.
”Sweepers dispatched, morgue team's heading in.”
Nodding at Peabody, Eve considered. ”She doesn't have a memo book on her, but you can bet someone at her level has perfect records. She'll have this guy listed. But he'd know that.”
”I f it's the same killer, you're thinking he faked his ID again.”
”I 'm thinking he'd cover himself, play the same pattern. I f so, it means she didn't know him. A first round. Wouldn't she run him? Make sure she's not dating a psycho-not that it did her any good. But wouldn't she? I want to talk to Charles about that,” she said referring to their mutual friend, a retired LC.
”Charles might've known her,” Peabody added. ”They would've run in the same circles, same social strata.”
She jumped as if her air skids were springs at the bloodcurdling scream.
”Nerves of steel,” Eve muttered while moans and stench and eerie light filled the chamber. She watched an anitron score another anitron's face with a glowing poker.
”The torture methods in play are historically accurate,” Roarke told her. ”The instruments are carefully crafted replicas of those used.”
”Yeah, seriously f.u.c.ked up. Is there another entrance?”
”T o the public, no. That one would channel the customers in here, through the maze of the place, then move them out again over there to the next sector.”
”Okay.” She moved to the entrance, ignoring cobwebs, skittering rats. ”Is the smell authentic, too?”
”Or a close approximation.”
”And people pay for this.” She shook her head. ”They come in here. Does it excite him, all the screams, the smell of blood and p.i.s.s, the realism? I bet it does. He didn't just decide to do it here, he planned it. Here in this replica of misery, cruelty, fear, despair. Maybe she's playing the part, s.h.i.+vering, cringing, holding on to him. Or she's going the other way, aroused, excited-whichever she thinks the client's after.
”But they moved around.” She began to walk through. ”Getting a closer look. Had to get to the kill zone. Shadows are deeper there. Maybe he maneuvers her, or she goes that way and plays into his hands. Up against the wall, braced against the wall, that's how he did her. She thinks he wants a little sample of what's coming, and he gets her against the wall so she doesn't fall on anything, knock anything. Jamming the cameras, the sensors, but if she falls and knocks anything over, that could get through. He wants a little time to get out, get away. He leaves, the jamming stops.
But she's on the floor, in the shadows, and the show goes on.”
She walked over to a doorway that resembled the mouth of a cave. ”Out here. Where does this go?”
”Here.” Roarke held out his PPC. ”That's the layout of this area. Depending on the route and timing of anyone ahead of you, the program would take you out into one of these three sectors. There are appropriately mocking signs here, here, here, for those who want to end their tour. This is where Gumm believes he exited.”
”Let's have a look. Peabody, stay with the body, set up the sweepers when they're on scene.”