“She’ll find them, put them where they belong.”
“I’ve no doubt. It’s a cold night. There’s beef bourguignonne on the menu. Some red meat would do both of you more good than the pizza she’ll think of first.”
“I’ll see to it. Thanks.”
When he got to Eve’s office Roarke found she already had the reconstruction image on screen.
Younger, he thought. This girl seemed younger than the other two.
“I’m going to run her against the list I have from Higher Power. If she was registered there, it’ll be quicker than a broad Missing Persons search.”
“Go ahead. I can set up your board for you. I know how you prefer it,” he said before she could object.
“Okay, thanks. It’ll save time.”
He went to work as did she. Dinner, he thought, would wait a bit longer.
They’d put the little tree by her window, he noted. The one he’d ordered as it was simple and traditional, and his wife often thought herself both. Though she was far from either on most levels.
A simple, traditional woman wouldn’t spend her evening searching for the names of dead girls. She wouldn’t work herself to exhaustion—body, mind, heart—to find who’d killed them.
As difficult, as frustrating, as painful as it sometimes was, he thanked God he hadn’t fallen for a simple, traditional woman.
“I’ve got her.”
He stopped what he was doing to look at the wall screen. She’d split it, putting the images of the reconstruction and the ID photo of a minor female side by side.
“Yes, you found her. Only twelve years old?”
“That’s according to her ID. I’m checking background and Missing Persons.”
Lupa Dison, he read. It listed a New York address several blocks north of the building where she’d been found, and her guardian as her aunt, Rosetta Vega.
Tragic eyes, he thought. How did someone so young earn such tragic eyes?
“Missing Persons filed by the aunt. It’s looking like her parents were both killed in an accident, the mother’s sister—the only living relative in the States—named as guardian.
“A scatter of maternal relatives in Mexico.”
As she continued to scan data, Roarke went to the wall unit for a bottle of wine.
“Okay, okay, the aunt worked as a maid for the Faremont Hotel, West Side. She was mugged on the way home from work, badly beaten, sliced up some, too. Had to spend a few weeks in the hospital and in rehab. She requested the kid be registered at The Sanctuary; she knew someone who’d had a kid in there. Court granted the temporary stay. She goes in, comes out, goes back home. And three weeks later, goes missing. Missing on September seventeenth. Five days after Linh Penbroke.”
“Lured back.”
“Could be. She went missing fifteen days after The Sanctuary changed locations. The place was empty. She’d never been in any trouble, neither had the aunt. Running the aunt for current data now.”
“She wasn’t a runaway,” Roarke said. “Troubled, yes, but by the loss of her parents.” There, he thought, the reason for the tragic eyes.
“The aunt’s married. Ten years to a Juan Delagio. She’s now head housekeeper, day shift, at the Antoine Hotel, tony East
Side employment now. She’s on the East Side, too, not an especially tony area, but a decent one.”
“That’s one of mine—the hotel.”
“Well, we couldn’t get around that for long.” Eve glanced up. “Do you know her?”
“I don’t, but I can get a full employment record from the manager.”