In Death 24 - Innocent in Death

Read In Death 24 - Innocent in Death for Free Online Page A

Book: Read In Death 24 - Innocent in Death for Free Online
Authors: authors_sort
Tags: english eBooks
thought. And the only words. “Is there anyone you’d like us to contact for you?”
    “No. No. Oh, God, Craig’s parents. I have to tell them. How do I tell them?”
    “We can take care of that for you.”
    “No, I have to. I’m Craig’s wife. I have to do this.” She got shakily to her feet. “I have to see him. I don’t know where he is.”
    “He’s with the medical examiner now. I’ll contact you as soon as you’re cleared for that.
    Do you have someone who can go with you?”
    “I’ll go with her. No, Lissy, I’ll go with you,” Elizabeth insisted when Lissette teared up again and shook her head. “You just sit for a minute while I walk Lieutenant Dallas and Detective Peabody out. Sit right here, I’ll just be a minute.”
    29
     
    She moved quickly, and purposefully, not stopping until they’d reached an intersection in the maze. “How was Craig murdered?”
    “I didn’t say he was.”
    Elizabeth turned, looked dead into Eve’s eyes. “I know who you are. I keep up with who’s who in New York. Lieutenant Eve Dallas, Homicide.”
    “I don’t have any information to give you at this time. Mr. Foster’s death is under investigation.”
    “That’s bullshit. Just bullshit. That girl just lost the love of her life. Like that!” Elizabeth snapped her fingers. “She needs answers.”
    “She’ll have them, as soon as I do. How well did you know him?”
    “I met him a number of times. He’d come in every now and then, and Lissy would bring him to company parties and events. Sweet boy. Dopey in love. Bright. He struck me as bright, like Lissy is. Two bright young people getting started with their life, their careers.
    You’re bright, too, from everything I’ve read, heard, or seen of you. You get those answers for Lissy. You get her that much to hold on to.”
    “That’s the idea.”
     
    30

Chapter 3
    EVE LOOKED TO FIND THE FIRST OF THOSE ANSWERS at the morgue. The air always smelled just a little too sweet there, like a careless whore who’d used perfume instead of soap to disguise some unpleasant personal odor. Tiles-floor and walls-were an unrelieved white, pristine and sterile.
    There was a vending alcove where staff or visitors could order their choice of refreshment, though Eve imagined many who passed by would prefer something stronger than the muddy soy coffee or sparkling soft drinks.
    She strode down the white-tiled corridor where, behind thick doors, death lay in sealed drawers or on slabs waiting for the right questions to be asked.
    She pushed through the doors of an autopsy room to see Chief Medical Examiner Morris already at work to the wicked rhythm of what she thought might be Dixieland jazz. His sealed hands were bloody to the wrists as he lifted Craig Foster’s liver from his body to the scale.
    “Ah, why don’t I go score you a Pepsi.” Peabody was already taking a step back. “Thirsty work. Be right back.”
    Ignoring her, Eve continued into the room. Morris glanced up, his eyes behind his microgoggles canny and faintly amused. “She still queezes when I’m cutting.”
    “Some never get past it.” When had she? Eve wondered. Too long ago to remember.
    “You’re getting to him quickly. Appreciate it.”
    “I always enjoy working on your dead, and feel you enjoy me having my hands in them.
    What’s wrong with us?”
    “It’s a sick old world. How about the tox?”
    “Music off,” he ordered. “I assumed you’d want that straight away, and put a red flag on it. Still snowing?”
    “Yeah, it’s crap out there.”
    “Personally, I enjoy the snow.” He worked smoothly, weighing the liver, taking a small sample of it. He wore a sleek black suit under his protective smock, with a silver shirt that shimmered as he moved. His dark hair was in one tightly coiled braid, looped at the neck and twined with silver cord.
    Eve had often wondered how he managed it.
    31
     
    “Want a look?” He put the sample on a slide under his scope, gestured to the screen.

Similar Books

Climates

André Maurois

Angel Seduced

Jaime Rush

Red Love

David Evanier

The Art of Death

Margarite St. John

Overdrive

Dawn Ius

The Battle for Duncragglin

Andrew H. Vanderwal