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Eve flicked a glance around the room. There was no view screen in evidence.
"Do you keep up with the news, Ms. Rowan? Current events." "I mind my own business. I don't need to know what other people are up to."
"Then you might not be aware that yesterday a terrorist group calling themselves Ca.s.sandra bombed the Plaza Hotel in New York. Hundreds of people were killed. Among them, women and children."
The gray eyes flickered, then leveled again. "They should have been in their own homes where they belonged."
"It doesn't concern you that a group of terrorists is killing innocent people?
That it's believed this group is connected to your dead husband?" "No one's innocent." "Not even you, Mrs. Rowan?" Before she could answer, Eve moved on. "Has anyone from Ca.s.sandra contacted you?"
"I keep to myself. I don't know anything about your bombed hotel, but if you ask me, the country'd be better off if that whole city was blown to h.e.l.l. I've given you all the time I'm going to give. I want you out of my house, or I'm calling my public representative."
Eve gave it one more shot. "Your husband and his group never asked for money, Mrs. Rowan. Whatever they did, they did for their beliefs.
Ca.s.sandra is holding the city hostage for money. Would James Rowan have approved?"
"I don't know anything about it. I'm telling you to leave."
Eve took a memo card out of her pocket, set it on the table in front of a figure of a laughing woman. "If and when you remember or think of anything that might help, I'd appreciate it if you contacted me. Thanks for your time."
They headed out, with Monica d.o.g.g.i.ng their heels. Outside, Eve sucked in air.
"Let's get back to the wh.o.r.es and filth in the streets, Peabody." "Oh, you bet." She shuddered for effect. "I'd rather have been raised by rabid wolves than a woman like that."
Eve glanced back to see that dingy gray eye peering through the c.h.i.n.k in the drapes. "What's the difference?"
Monica watched them go, waited until the car had pulled away. She went back, picked up the memo card. Could be a bug, she thought. Jamie had taught her well. She hurried into the kitchen with it, dumped it in the recycler, and turned the whining machine on.
Satisfied, she went to the wall 'link. Could be bugged, could be bugged, too.
Everything could be. Dirty cops. Lips peeled back, she slipped a small jammer out of a drawer, slid it onto the 'link.
She'd done her duty, hadn't she? Done it without complaint. It was long past time for compensation. She programmed the number.
"I want my share," she said in a hiss when she heard the voice answer. "The police were just here, asking questions. I didn't tell them anything. But I might next time. I might just have a few things to say to Lieutenant Dallas of the NYPSD that would perk her ears up. I want my share, Ca.s.sandra," she repeated, attacking a faint smudge on the counter with a tattered disinfectant rag. "I earned it."
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
Dear Comrade,
We are Ca.s.sandra. We are loyal.
I trust you have received and are pleased with the latest progress reports transmitted to your location. The next steps of our plan are under way. Much like the chess games we used to play on those long, quiet nights, p.a.w.ns are sacrificed for the queen.
At this time there is a small matter I would ask you to take care of for us, as our time is limited and our concentration must remain focused on the events unfolding. Timing over the next few days is vital.
Attached is the data you will require to arrange an execution long overdue.
This is a matter we had hoped to handle ourselves at a future date, but circ.u.mstances require its implementation immediately.
There is no cause for concern.
We must keep this transmission brief. Remember us at tonight's rally. Speak our name. We are Ca.s.sandra. Zeke stayed in the apartment all day, afraid if he so much as stepped out to the corner deli for tofu, Clarissa would call, and berating himself for forgetting to give her the number of his pocket 'link.
He kept himself busy. There were a dozen minor ch.o.r.es and repairs around the apartment his sister had neglected. He cleared the kitchen drain, repaired the drip, sanded the bedroom door and window sashes so that they no longer stuck, dealt with the temperamental light switch in the bathroom.
If he'd thought of it, he would have bought a few kits and upgraded her lighting system. He made a note to do so before he returned to Arizona. If there was time. If he and Clarissa weren't on a transport west that night.
Why didn't she call?
When he caught himself staring at the 'link, he moved into the kitchen and concentrated on the recycler. He took it apart, cleaned it, put it back together again.
Then he stared into s.p.a.ce, imagining what it would be like when he took Clarissa home.
There was no question his family would welcome her. Even if it hadn't been part of the Free-Age dogma to offer shelter and comfort to any in need, without questions or strings, he knew the hearts of those who had raised him.
They were open and generous.
Still, he knew his mother's eyes were sharp, and would see his feelings no matter what he did to hide them. And he knew she wouldn't approve of his romantic involvement with Clarissa.
He could hear his mother's counsel as if she were in the room with him now.
She has to heal, Zeke. She needs the time and s.p.a.ce to find what's inside her. No one can know their heart when it's so badly injured. Step aside and be her friend. You've no right to more than that. Neither does she.
He knew his mother would be right to say those things. Just as he knew no matter how hard he might try to follow her advice, he was already too deeply in love to turn around.
But he'd be careful with Clarissa, gentle, treat her the way she should be treated. He'd coax her into therapy so she could find her self-worth again, introduce her to his family so that she could see what family was meant to be.
He would be patient.
And when she was steady again, he would make love with her, sweetly, softly, so she would understand the beauty between a man and a woman and forget the pain and fear.
She was so full of fear. The bruises on the flesh would heal, but he knew those on the heart, on the soul, could spread and fester and ache. For that alone he wanted Branson to pay. It shamed him to crave retribution; it was against everything he'd come to believe. But even as he struggled to concentrate only on Clarissa, on how she would bloom away from the city -- like a desert flower -- his blood called out for justice.
He wanted to see Branson in a cage, alone, afraid. Wanted to hear him cry out for mercy as Clarissa had cried.
He told himself it was useless to wish it, that Branson's life would mean nothing to Clarissa's happiness and recovery once she was away from him.
His Free-Ager's belief that each should move toward their own destiny without interference, that man's insistence on judging and punishing his fellows only hampered their rise to the next plane, was sorely tested.
He knew he'd already judged B. Donald Branson, and that he wanted him punished. A part of himself Zeke hadn't known existed craved to mete out that punishment.
He fought to bury it, to erase it, but his hands were clenched into fists as he looked toward the 'link once again and willed Clarissa to call. When it beeped, he jolted, stared, then leaped on it. "Yes, h.e.l.lo."
"Zeke." Clarissa's face filled the screen. There were tears drying on her cheeks, but she curved her lips into a trembling smile. "Please come." His heart sprang to his throat, swelled. "I'm on my way."
Peabody itched for the final team meeting of the day to be over. The fact was, she admitted, she just itched. Period. McNab sat across the conference table, sending her an occasional wink and b.u.mping his foot against hers as if to remind her of what was going to happen if they could ever get the h.e.l.l out of Central.
As if she could forget.
She had a couple of bad moments, wondering if she'd lost her mind, if she should call it off. It was torture trying to concentrate on the work:
"If we're lucky," Eve was saying as she paced the room, "Lamont will make a move tonight, try for some contact. We have two tails on him. My impression of Monica Rowan is that she's a basic whack, but I instructed Peabody to put in the request to tap her home and porta-links. Ordinarily, I don't think we'd get it, but the governor's jumpy, and he'll put pressure on the judge."
She paused a moment, dipped her hands into her pockets. It always unnerved her to bring up Roarke's name in official business. "Added to that, I have some hope that Roarke will gather some evidence from inside Autotron, without putting Lamont any more on alert."
"If it's there," Feeney said with a nod, "he'll find it." "Yeah, well, I'll be checking in with him shortly. McNab?"
"What?" He was caught in the middle of another wink at Peabody, coughed wildly. "Ah, sorry. Yes, sir?" "You developing a tic or something?"
"Tic?" He looked anywhere but at Peabody, who was struggling to turn a laughing snort into a sneeze. "No, Lieutenant." "Then maybe you'd entertain us with your report."
"My report?" How the h.e.l.l was a guy supposed to think straight when the blood kept insisting on draining out of his head and into his lap? "After contacting Roarke with your request for a long-range scanner, I took Driscol from E and B to the lab at Trojan Securities. At that time we met with Roarke and his lab manager. They demonstrated a scanner currently in development. Man, oh man, it's a beauty, Lieutenant."