“Hey! Hey! Are you in charge? Who’s in fucking charge?”
She glanced over, locking eyes with a red-faced man of about forty who was wearing a thick white sweater and black skin pants.
“I’m in charge.”
“You have no right to hold me! I have an appointment.”
“Mister . . .”
“Granger. Wayne Granger, and I know my rights!”
“Mr. Granger, do you see the three people lying on the rink?”
“Of course I see them.”
“Their rights trump yours.”
He shouted after her as she worked her way across the ice to the female victim, something about police states and lawsuits. Looking down at the girl in red—couldn’t have been more than twenty years old—Eve didn’t give him another thought.
Blood pooled under her, spreading more red on the ice. She lay on her side, and Eve could clearly see bloody marks where other skaters, and the medicals, had gone through.
Her eyes, a bright, summer blue already glazed with death, stared, and one hand lay, palm up, in her own blood.
No, Eve didn’t give Granger and his appointment another thought.
She crouched down, opening her field kit, and did her job.
She didn’t rise or turn when Peabody came out.
“Vic is Ellissa Wyman, age nineteen. Still lives with her parents and younger sister, Upper West. TOD, fifteen-fifteen. ME will determine COD, but I agree with Fericke. It looks like a laser strike.”
“The doctors—both of them—agree. And the vet? He was an Army corpsman, so he’s seen laser strikes. They didn’t do more than look at her—she was obviously gone. One tried working on the gut shot, and the other examined the head shot—but they were all gone. So they focused on the injured.”
Eve rose with a nod. “Security discs.”
“Right here.”
Eve plugged one of the discs into her own PPC, cued it to fifteen-fourteen, and focused first on the girl in red.
“She’s good,” Peabody commented. “Her form, I mean. She’s building up some speed there, and—”
She broke off when the girl shot through the air, form gone, and collided with the young family.
Eve rewound it, backed up another minute, and now scanned the other skaters, the onlookers.
“People are giving her room,” Eve murmured, “some are watching her. I don’t see any weapons.”
She let it play through, watched the second victim jerk back, eyes widening, knees buckling.
Ran it back, noted the time. Ran it forward.
“Less than six seconds between strikes.”
People skated to the first vic and the family. Security came rushing out. And the couple skating—poorly—along the rail—slowed. The man glanced back. And the strike.
“Just over six seconds for the third. Three shots in roughly twelve seconds, three dead—center back, gut, forehead. That’s not luck. And none of those strikes came from the rink or around it. Tell Fericke, when he’s got all names and contacts, that anyone who has given a statement can go. Except for the medicals and the third vic’s wife.
“Get a full statement from all three of them, and contact whoever the vic’s wife wants. The female’s cleared for bagging, tagging, and transpo to the morgue. And we need park security feeds.”