“Yeah. He’s starting to dip into his own stock a little too heavy. Slurping that drink of his, laced with illegals, every time you turn around. He’s a damn addict now, half gone to a funky-junky. I mean he’s slipping and sliding in a big way, making some bad moves. Then offing a cop. I mean, Jesus.”
Eve’s hand shot out, gripped his wrist. “Do you have knowledge that Max Ricker arranged for the murder of Taj Kohli?”
He wanted to say yes. Somehow, it had all taken on the shining sheen of bragging. But if he didn’t play it straight, she’d catch him up and find a way to hang him. “I can’t say as he ordered it, but I heard some talk.”
“Give me the talk, Vernon.”
“Now and again I’d maybe have a drink or share an LC with one of Ricker’s guys. Lemme tell you, I wasn’t the only one noticing he was losing his touch here and there. So this guy, Jake Evans, he was telling me about a month ago that Ricker was playing games with IAB, getting his jollies turning cops on cops. He knew IAB put a man into that club, looking for cops doing deals. Only there weren’t cops doing deals. Get me?”
“Yeah, I get you.”
“Right. Ricker’d put that out, playing his games. Ricker, Evans tells me, has this bug up his ass to cause trouble there, in that club, and that’s why he’s having some of his men channeling illegals through it. But seems he got a better idea, and he thinks he’s found a way to put a cop on a cop, all the way. Some psychological shit, Evans said. Ricker, he’s big on mind games. He’s feeding skewed data to this other cop on the first cop. The second cop . . . You following this?”
“Yes. Keep going.”
“Okay, the second cop’s got some problems. Personal problems or something, and Ricker’s chewing away on them, making them raw, giving this cop lots of little nudges so he’ll think the first cop, that’s Kohli, did something dirty. But it was more than that, like whatever the dirty was went back on the first cop. Evans said it was complicated and risky, and Ricker wasn’t saying much, but he, Evans, didn’t like it. Then Ricker’s man in IAB . . . he’s got one there, too. His man there was supposed to make sure all this shaded data sort of fell in the second cop’s lap. I guess it worked.”
Vernon had the good sense to take the excitement off his face. “I figured when Kohli got hit, and it came around he got hit by another cop, I figured Ricker’d worked it.”
“What’s the name in IAB?”
“I don’t know. Swear to God,” he said when her eyes narrowed. “We don’t all know each other. Mostly we found out, but not every one, every time. Probably Bayliss, right? Bayliss is dead. Come on, Dallas. I’ve given you close to twenty names. You put a fire under some of them, you’ll get more.”
“Yeah, I’ll get more.” She got to her feet. “But I can’t stomach any more from you. McNab, get this thing into a safe house. Two guards at all times, on eight-hour shifts. Feeney, can you hand-pick them.”
“Can do.”
“I gave you a hell of a lot, Dallas. You could go to bat for me on the new ID.”
She didn’t so much as look at him. “Peabody, with me.”
“Dallas, hey!”
“Count your blessings, jerk,” Feeney muttered as Eve walked out. “You only got your balls bruised. Another little while in here with you, if she didn’t cut them off, I would have.”
“I can’t even get mad.” Peabody stood in the hallway, turned away from Interview. “I’m too sick to my stomach to get mad. I love being a cop, and he’s made me ashamed of it.”
“That’s the wrong take. He’s beyond shame. You just do the job, day after day, and you’ve got nothing to be ashamed of. I need you to make a copy of that record and get it to Tibble. That’s going to be his problem, thank Christ. I’ve got another meet at noon. I’ll fill you in on it when I get back.”
“Yes, sir. What about Canarde?”
“We hold there. I’m saving him for later.”
“Do you want the results of the search and scan and probability you had me run?”
“Is it enough to pick him up?”
“Probability’s under seventy-six percent with known data. But—”
“But,” Eve repeated, “the computer doesn’t count grief or mind games. Or Ricker playing cop against cop. We’ll bring him in. We’ll do it quiet, when I get back.”
“He may try another hit.”
“No, he gave his word. He won’t break it.”
chapter twenty
Eve marched into the house, emitted a low, rumbling growl at a hovering Summerset, and headed straight up the stairs. She had a great deal to say and intended to get started immediately.