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"What about him?"

Summerset, a brittle stick of a man in a stiff black suit, kept his dark eyes on hers. His face, usually grim in Eve's mind, seemed even more strained than usual. "I'd like to offer any assistance I can in the matter of your investigation."

"Well, that'll be the day," she began, then narrowed her eyes. "You knew him. How's that?"

"I knew him, slightly. I served as a medic-somewhat unoffi­cially-during the Urban Wars."

She glanced up as Roarke came down the steps. "Did you already know this?"

"Just shortly ago. Why don't we go sit down?" Before she could protest, Roarke took her arm, led her into the parlor. "Summerset tells me he met Icove in London, and worked with him at one of the clinics there during the wars."

"For him is more accurate," Summerset corrected. "He came to London to help establish more clinics, and the mobile medical units that eventually transformed into Unilab. He had been a part of the

team that had established them here in New York, where the out-breaks started before they bled into Europe. Some forty years ago now," he added. "Before either of you were born. Before my daughter was born."

"How long was he in London?" Eve asked.

"Two months. Perhaps three." Summerset spread his bony hands. It blurs. He saved countless lives during that period, worked tirelessly. Risked his own life more than once. He implemented some of his innovations in reconstructive surge

ry on that battlefield. That's what the cities were then. Battlefields. You've seen images from that period, but it was nothing compared to being there, living through it. Victims who would have lost limbs, or gone through their lives scarred, were spared that due to his work."

"Would you say he experimented?"

"He innovated. He created. The media reports that this might have been a professional assassination. I have contacts still, in certain circles."

"If you want to use them, fine. Poke around. Carefully. How well did you know him, personally?"

"Not well. People who come together in war often bond quickly, even intimately. But when they have nothing else in common that bond fades. And he was .. . aloof."

"Superior."

Disapproval covered Summerset's face, but he nodded. "That term

wouldn't be inaccurate. We worked together, ate and drank together, but he maintained distance from those who worked under him."

"Give me a personality rundown, deleting the sainthood level."

"It's difficult to say with any accuracy. It was war. Personalities cope, or shine, or shatter during war."

"You had an opinion of him, as a man."

"He was brilliant." Summerset glanced over, with some surprise, as Roarke offered him a short glass of whiskey. "Thank you."

"Brilliant's on record," Eve said. "I'm not looking for brilliant."

"You want flaws." Summerset sipped the whiskey. "I don't consider them flaws when a young, brilliant doctor is impatient and frustrated with the circumstances, with the equipment and the poor facilities where we worked. He demanded a great deal, and because he gave a great deal, accomplished a great deal, he usually got it."

"You said aloof. Just to other doctors, medics, volunteers, or to pa­tients, too?"

"Initially, he made a point of learning the names of every patient he tended, and I would say he suffered at each loss. And losses were .. horrendous. He then implemented a system assigning numbers rather than names."

"Numbers," Eve murmured.

"Essential objectivity, I believe he called it. They were bodies that needed tending, or reconstruction. Bodies that needed to be kept breathing, or terminated. He was hard, but circumstances demanded it. Those who couldn't step back from the horror were useless to those who suffered from that horror."

"His wife was killed during that period."

"I was working in another part of the city at that time. As I remem­ber, he left London immediately upon being notified of her death, and went to his son, who was being kept safe in the country."


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