Time of Death

Time of Death by J. D. Robb Page B

Book: Time of Death by J. D. Robb Read Free Book Online
Authors: J. D. Robb
Ads: Link
behind her, Eve leaned back, managed to focus on Roarke’s eyes. “Feel better?”
    “Considerably, thanks.”
    “Anytime. You know what, I feel like a big, fat hunk of red meat. How about you?”
    He smiled, touched his lips to hers. “I could eat.”

CHAPTER SIX
    She had an enormous hamburger while she backtracked through Dorian Vadim’s criminal record. She burned up the ’link as she ate, as Dorian hadn’t just slithered through the system, but had wound his way around the country and in and out of Europe while he did so. She spoke to detectives and investigators in Chicago, Boston, Miami, New L.A., East Washington, and several European cities.
    She took copious notes, requested files, and made promises to keep other cops in other cities in the loop.
    At some point during the process, Roarke wandered out. She’d set up another murder board, typed up her notes, and was talking to the head of security at Tiara Kent’s building when Roarke wandered back in again.
    She held up a finger.
    “Go back as far as you can. If you see this guy on any of your discs, at any point, I want to know. Yeah, day or night. Thanks.”
    She disconnected. “Gist from the cops I’ve talked to across the frigging globe is Vadim is a smart grifter with the conscience and agility of a snake, an ego as big as . . . how big is Idaho?”
    “There are bigger,” Roarke considered, “but I’d say that’s big enough.”
    “Okay, we’ll go with Idaho, and an appetite for rich females and illegal substances. I’m damned if he’ll slip through my fingers. Going to wrap him up quick, going to wrap him up tight,” she told Roarke. “If we get him on any of the building’s security discs, it’s one more—ha-ha—nail in his coffin.”
    “Then you might be interested in what I ferreted out, regarding his financials.”
    Her expression went from intent to annoyed. “I don’t have authorization to ferret in his financials, as yet.”
    “Which is why I used the unregistered. I don’t like him,” Roarke said very clearly before Eve could complain.
    “Yeah, loud and clear on that. But I don’t need his financial data at this point, and I can’t use anything you found by illegal means, so—”
    “So don’t use it. And if you’re not as curious as I was, I’ll keep the information to myself.”
    He walked over, opened a wall panel, and got out the brandy. She lasted until he’d poured himself a snifter.
    “Damn it. What did you find?”
    “He’s not officially listed as the owner of the club, but he owns it—such as it is. He’s built several fronts, and is registered as its manager.”
    “Shady,” she commented, “but not strictly illegal.”
    “He’s also sunk quite a bit into the club—more, in my opinion, than makes good business sense on an underground establishment. I’d say Idaho might be lacking in square miles, after all. His overhead’s considerably more than his take, particularly considering his payroll.”
    “You hacked into his books for Bloodbath?”
    “It wasn’t any trouble.” He swirled, then sipped brandy. “Not much of a challenge. He’s losing money on it, every week. Yet his personal finances don’t reflect that. Instead there’s a nice steady build. Nothing that would wave flags, which tells me he’s very likely tucked away other accounts. I only scraped off a few layers on this run.”
    “What’s his other income?” Eve wondered, and Roarke smiled.
    “That’s a question.”
    “Illegals are likely one chute. Bilking, blackmail, extortion. Once a grifter . . . He could’ve been milking Kent, but if it was just about money, why kill the really rich cow before she runs dry? It’s not just about money,” she said before Roarke could. “That’s a shiny side benefit.”
    “Agreed. And I’m going to wager very shiny. I can take a hard look at Kent’s finances, but I suspect she was the type who flung money about like confetti on New Year’s Eve.”
    “Yeah, she had hundreds

Similar Books

Anita Blake 23 - Jason

Laurell K. Hamilton

The Balloonist

MacDonald Harris

The Night Angel

T. Davis Bunn