And hell, since he was there, maybe just one quick match of water polo.
But it wasn’t the time for indulgence. She dove in, surfaced, then pushed off in a full-out freestyle. The dullness in her brain and body began to fade with the effort, the cool water, the simple repetition.
After ten minutes, she felt loose again, reasonably alert. She might have thought wistfully about lounging for just a couple of minutes in the hot, jetting water of the hot tub, but acknowledged the comfort of it might put her back to sleep.
Instead, she pulled on a robe. “Do you want to go downtown with me, or work from here?”
He considered as he scooped back his dripping hair. “I think I’ll stick with the unregistered, at least for the time being. If I manage to finish or find anything, I’ll contact you or just come down on my own.”
“Works.” She crossed to the elevator with him. “Any progress?”
“Considerable, but as of four a.m., nothing really useful.”
“Is that when we finished up?”
“A bit later, actually. And darling Eve, you haven’t had enough rest.” He touched her cheek. “You get so pale.”
“I’m okay.”
“And did you find anything useful?”
“I’m not sure yet.”
She told him about Summerset’s observation while they readied for the day.
“So you think it’s possible he was in one of the medical centers, in some capacity, during the Urbans.”
“It’s a thought. I did some research,” she added as she strapped on her weapon harness. “Not a whole lot of detail about it, that I’ve found so far anyway. But there were other facilities that used that same basic method. A handful here in New York.”
“Where he started this.”
“I’m thinking,” she agreed with a nod. “Something here in particular that matters. He starts here, he comes back here. There’s a wide, wide world out there and he’s used some of it. But now he repeats location.”
“Not just location. You and Feeney. Morris, Whitney, Mira. There are others as well.”
“Yeah, and I’m mulling on that. More usually if a repeat killer has a thing about cops, he likes to thumb his nose at us. Send us messages, leave cryptic clues so he can feel superior. We’re not getting that. But I’m mulling it.”
She took one last, life-affirming glug of coffee. “I’ve got to get started, or I won’t have myself lined up for the briefing.”
“Oh, I’m to tell you Brian’s waiting for you with open arms when you’re done with me.”
“Huh? Brian? Irish Brian?”
“That would be the one. I contacted him, asked him to look for torturers. He has connections,” Roarke continued. “And knows how to ferret out information.”
“Huh.” It struck her she’d married a man with a lot of unusual associates. Came in handy now and then. “Okay. I’ll see you later.”
He moved to her, ran a hand over her hair again. “Take care of my cop.”
“That’s the plan.” She met his lips with hers, stepped back. “I’ll be in touch.”
In briefing the team, Eve had everyone give their own orals on progress or lack of same. She listened to theories, arguments for or against, ideas for approaching different angles, or for pursuing old ones from a new perspective.
“If the Urbans are an angle,” Baxter put in, “and we look at it like this fucker was a medical, or he got his torture training back then, we could be looking for a guy pushing eighty, or better. That gives him a half-century or more on his vics. How’s a guy starting to creak pull this off?”
“Horny Dog’s missing the fact that a lot of guys past middle age keep up.” Jenkinson pointed a finger at Baxter. “Eighty’s the new sixty.”
“Sick Bastard has a point,” Baxter acknowledged. “And