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“Where’d he see you, Elisa?” she asked aloud. “Where did you come into his radar? He saw you, and something about you clicked in that sick mind of his. So he watched you and studied you and laid in wait for you.”

A domestic. A single parent. Liked to make things with her hands. Divorced. Abusive husband.

She didn’t need the file to remember the details on Elisa Maplewood.

Early thirties, slightly-less-than-average height, average build. Light brown hair, long. Pretty face.

Standard education, lower-middle-class upbringing. Native New Yorker.

Liked nice clothes in simple styles. Nothing too trendy, nothing too provocative. No current personal partner or romantic entanglement. Minimal social life.

Where did he see you?

The park? Take the kids to the park. Walk the dog. The shops? Buy your craft supplies, window shop.

She grabbed the hard copy of the report McNab had left on her desk. ’Link transmissions to her parents, to Deann’s pocket unit, to Luther’s office, to the craft store on Third to check on an order. Incomings ran along the same lines.

Her web activity ran to parenting sites, craft sites, and chat rooms. Downloads of magazines showed crafts again, parenting again, and some home decorating stuff, some online shopping. Downloads of a couple books tagged as current bestsellers.

Nothing popped from the search of the Vanderleas’ equipment.

Chat room might be worth checking out, she thought, and made a note of it. But it was tough for her to see this big, muscular guy knitting . . . whatever people knit. More than that, Elisa struck her as being too sensible, too savvy, to give personal information to anyone in a chat room. He hadn’t tracked her through her discussions on making blankets or the like.

He’s done it before.

She thought of Celina’s words. And she agreed with them.

What he’d done to Elisa had been well planned and well executed under risky conditions. Quick and efficient, and to Eve that meant practice.

She hadn’t hit all the elements with her search for similar crimes. Maybe he’d added or adjusted. Maybe one or more of those hits had been his work.

Pride. Celina had spoken of his pride. She wasn’t sure she liked depending so heavily on the opinion of a psychic, but it was another point she agreed with. There’d been pride, arrogant pride, in the way he’d displayed his victim.

Look at what I’ve done, what I can do. In the city’s great park, so close to the home of the wealthy and privileged.

Yeah, he was proud of his work. And what did a man with pride in his work do when that work didn’t reach the standards he wanted?

He buried the mistakes.

Her blood began to hum. It was the right track. She knew it. And she swung back to her machine. She saved and filed the results of her initial search, then brought up Missing Persons.

She started with a twelve-month search, stuck with Manhattan, and keyed in Elisa’s basic description to narrow the parameters.

“Dallas—”

“Wait.” Attention focused on her screen, Eve shot up a hand to stop Peabody. “He had to practice. He had to. Guy builds his body up, stays strong and fit, it takes discipline. Takes practice. He lives and walks and exists day after day, holding in that kind of rage, it takes discipline, it takes willpower. But you have to let it out some time, you have to let go. You have to kill. So you practice until you get it just right.”

SEARCH COMPLETE. TWO RESULTS THAT MATCH PARAMETERS GIVEN. FIRST IMAGE ON-SCREEN.

“What is it?” Peabody demanded.

“Potentially? His practice sessions. Look at her. Same physical type as Maplewood. Same age group, same coloring, same basic build.”

Peabody came in, mirroring Eve’s earlier position by leaning over her shoulder. “No resemblance—beyond surface I mean—but yeah, same basic type.”

“Computer, split screen for second image, list date on each.”

WORKING . . . TASK COMPLETE.


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