“No problem. Might’ve had a little one if you’d managed to get a confession on our dead guy.”
“That’s going to take a little more work. I just set up the play, passed you the ball. Could you close the door, Detective Delfino?”
After she had, Delfino leaned back against it. “Renee Oberman,” she said. “Commander Oberman’s baby girl.”
“Is that how you read it?”
“He’s the reader.” She jerked a thumb at her partner. “Me? I smell it, like shit and blood in the water.”
“She’s got a descriptive idiom,” Janburry commented. “I’m wondering if we can borrow your homework, Lieutenant, seeing as we missed a couple days of school on this.”
“I haven’t been given full authorization, but I can tell you we’re both looking in the same direction. I could give you this.” She took a disc out of her pocket. “It would save you some time. But before I do, let’s make a deal.”
“We’re listening,” Janburry told her.
“You can have Bix when it’s time to haul him out of the shit and blood in the water, but Renee’s mine. Not because she’s the bigger catch. You could just say it’s personal. The rest, well, share and share alike.”
“How much rest is there?”
“Still working on that. Do we have a deal?”
The partners exchanged a look. “Is there a secret handshake?” Janburry asked.
“We’ll settle for regular.” After they’d shaken on it, Eve offered the disc. “You’ll find multiple false IDs, multiple secret accounts, and considerable real property tracked back to Renee, Bix, Garnet, and others we’ve nailed down.”
“How involved is IAB?” Delfino wanted to know.
“Thoroughly. Lieutenant Webster is point man there, but his captain has been briefed, as have Commander Whitney and Chief Tibble. This is NTK. Nobody else needs to know until we take them down.”
“Blood and shit in the water,” Delfino repeated. “That’s what dirty cops smell like. Cops who kill cops? They have a special stench over that.”
“He’s going to come after you.” Janburry studied Eve. “You know that.”
“I’m counting on that.”
“You want cover?”
“I’ve got it, thanks. But I will contact you if and when. Whoever takes him down, he’s your collar. That’s the deal.”
When her office emptied out again, Eve flipped the lock. She deserved a little reward, a little boost before she got back down to business.
She took a tool from her desk and hunkered down beside her recycler. But when she removed the panel, no sealed evidence bag of chocolate waited for her.
“Damn it! This blows. This seriously blows.”
Sulking, mourning the loss, she stared at what she’d considered a brilliant hiding place. Her mistake, she admitted, had been leaving her stash in place while she’d gone on vacation.
She’d given the despicable Candy Thief too much time and opportunity to search and consume.
Now she not only wouldn’t get her reward, her boost, but she had to find another hide.
She replaced the panel, tossed her tool back in her desk drawer. She gave herself another thirty seconds to sulk before contacting Peabody.
“Status?”
“I’m a little more than halfway through. Devin had one hell of a collection. Maybe this is a dead end. If she kept documentation or notes, one of Renee’s crew probably found it and destroyed it.”
“Keep at it. Follow it through. If they didn’t find and destroy it, it’s because she hid it well.” Eve gave her recycler a dirty look. “I’ve got some things I need to finish up and tie up here, then I’ll be in. How about the e-team? Are they—Hold on,” she ordered when she heard the faint click at her door.