Peabody got into the back of the car before Roarke could.
โI can use the room,โ she told him. โIโm getting a couple offspring suicides.โ
โHanging only. Mirror details.โ โOkay, that changes that.โ
โItโs a connection.โ Eve hit the lights, the siren and streaked out of the garage. โTo Noy, or someone like him, and Greenleaf. Someone who came to the memorial, and went to the house after. Someone whoโs inserted themselves into the Greenleaf family. Had to know them, had to have been in the apartment before, in the daughterโs house before. Had to know the layout to make this work.โ
She sped through a red light, and swung hard around an all-terrain that didnโt take the siren seriously.
โWhy donโt I let Feeney know this last development,โ Roarke suggested. โHe can add it to his search.โ
โDo that. Cops right on scene,โ she muttered. โWebster and Angelo for sure, and likely others. Itโs fucking ballsy.โ
โAdd cruel with it, trying to kill, and perhaps succeeding, the son on the day his fatherโs memorialized.โ
Eve spared Roarke a look. โThe crueltyโs part of the point.โ
She braked in front of the townhome, double-parked beside a cruiser. A beat droid stood at the door.
She engaged her recorder.
โLieutenant. Sir, Detective Webster is inside, and the scene is secure. I have the door. My counterpart has the rear. Two uniform officers are assisting the detective.โ
โStay on the door.โ
Sheโd expected to find more people inside. About a dozen sat or wandered the living areaโincluding a couple of cops sheโd seen at the memorial service.
The uniform on watch turned to her. โSir.โ โWebster.โ
โIn the back, Lieutenant. My partner is upstairs, holding the crime scene secure.โ
Roarke handed Eve a field kit.
โPeabody, start taking statements. Iโll start on the scene. Roarke, do me a solid and tell Webster weโre here.โ
She went upstairs and found a uniform standing at a doorway. โReport.โ
โSir. The nine-one-one came in at sixteen-forty-eight, for the MTs and a police response. My partner and I arrived along with the MTs at sixteen- forty-two. The beat droids responded. They were just down the block. Detective Webster ordered them to take the front and rear doors. The victim, IDโd as Benjamin Greenleaf, the brother of the owner of the residence, was unconscious on the floor inside this room. Detective Webster told the MTs heโd performed CPR, successfully, as the victim wasnโt breathing when he found him, and with the assistance of a Chief Angelo, cut him down. The MTs transported him to Saint Anneโs. He was still out, LT.โ
He gestured behind him. โThe noose is there, the overturned chair.โ
She glanced back when Webster came up the stairs, Darcia and Roarke behind him.
โIโve got this, Officer. Weโll keep the droids on the doors. You and your partner head to Saint Anneโs and keep the victim secure.โ
โYes, sir.โ
โShit. Roarke, Iโve got these officers blocked in.โ
โIโll take care of it.โ He laid a hand on Websterโs shoulder before he started back down.
โDonโt say I have to stay out of it. I know it. I found him. Beth saw him go upstairs, said he looked upset. She asked me to go up, maybe talk to him. It took me a few minutes.โ
He dragged his hands over his face. โGoddamn few minutes, just like with Martin.โ
โDon.โ Darcia took his hand. โYou know better.โ
โI came up. I didnโt know exactly where heโd gone. I called him. He didnโt answer. I almost went back downstairs. Jesus, I almost went back down. Let him have a few minutes to himself, I thought, some privacy. But all the doors were open up here, except this one. So I opened it, and saw him.โ
โWhat did you see?โ
โOkay.โ He breathed in, breathed out. โI saw Ben hanging from a ropeโ that rope. I saw the overturned chair. I shouted, rushed in, grabbed his legs, shoved him up. Darcia came in.โ
โI was at the base of the stairs,โ she said. โIโd just come in from the small parlor where Iโd gathered up some dishes. I heard Don shout, set them down, and ran up.โ
โShe cut the rope. I had a penknife in my pocket. She got it out. The rope was secured to the hook near the windowโyou can see the swing chair they took down from it. She got up on a chair, cut the rope.โ
โThe overturned chair?โ
โNo.โ Darcia shook her head. โThe one by the little desk. I didnโt want to disturb the scene more than necessary.โ
โI got the rope from around his neck, started CPR because he wasnโt breathing. Darcia.โ
โSome of the family started up, I held them off, then took over CPR so Don could call it in.โ
โWe got him breathing,โ Webster continued. โThe MTs, the uniforms and droids got here fast. The MTs stabilized Ben, got him transported. I ordered the beat droids to take the exterior doors and the uniforms to stand on the scene here, and on the wits downstairs. I let the family go, Dallas. Luke and Shawn took the younger kids to their place. And the rest are at the hospital.โ
โAll right.โ
โBen would never do this. Never. And here? Look around. This is the kidsโ playroom, their game room. Their room. Heโd neverโโ
โI know it, Webster. Not attempted suicide, attempted murder. Where are all the people who came to the wake?โ
โMost everybody had left. Darcia and I were cleaning up the debris, hoping the rest would take the hint. Beth was exhausted. Carlie was in the kitchen, ah, Mina, too. I took dishes in before I went up to check on Ben.โ
โWhose blood?โ Eve gestured to drops on the floor, smears on the rug.โ โHis. Blow to the back of the head.โ
โI need you to put together a list of who you know was here.โ โOkay.โ
โGo be with your family. Thereโs nothing else you can do here.โ
โSomeone hit him from behind. Blood on the back of his head. They hit him from behind, then lifted him up high enough to put that noose around his neck. There had to be two of them. Heโs not a heavyweight, but it would take two. Haul him up, hold him up, secure the noose. Thatโs more than one person.โ
He scrubbed at his face again. โAnd Iโm not telling you anything you donโt know.โ
โTry this. Why would he come in here?โ
โI donโt know.โ Webster dropped his hands. โI just donโt know. Beth said he looked upset. She thought maybe he got a text or call that upset him because he was putting his โlink back in his pocket as he went upstairs.โ
โIโve got the scene, Webster. Weโll come in, take statements at the hospital when weโre done.โ
โCome now.โ Darcia took Websterโs hand. โThe family needs you there.
We go where weโre needed.โ
As Darcia led him away, Eve pulled Seal-It from her field kit. When Roarke started back up the stairs, she tossed it to him. โMight as well seal up, too. He came upstairs, to this room. Kidsโ playroom. Potentially got a call or text, and thatโs what lured him here. Had to have it set up, because Webster was only a few minutes behind him.โ
From where she stood, she scanned the scene again.
โVictim is identified as Greenleaf, Benjamin, older brother of the owner of this residence, and currently being treated at Saint Anneโs Hospital.โ
She stepped into the room, gestured again to the blood trail. โThe victim entered the room. Blood spatter indicates he was struck. Blow from behind. Hit him as soon as he came into the room.โ
โThat makes it hard to fake a suicide,โ Roarke pointed out.
โThey werenโt worried about that this time. The suicide didnโt stick with the captain, so thatโs blown. The point here? Kill the son, murder by hanging, and that mirrors Noy. Maybe others, weโll see, but Noy.โ
She took samples of the blood for her kit, marked it before she crossed over to the window.
โAccording to Detective Websterโs statement, corroborated by Chief Angelo, he discovered the victim hanging no more than ten minutes after the victim came upstairs and entered.โ
She crouched to examine the rope, and where Darcia had cut it.
Pulling over another chair, she examined the short length of rope still secured to the hook. โStrong knot. Two fresh cuts. One cut from Websterโs penknife to get the victim down. It looks like the other end was cut from a longer length of rope. The lab will confirm, if so. Itโs a sloppy nooseโ effective, but sloppy. Strong cord, and the length used? You could easily hide this in one of those elephant-sized handbags, a good-sized briefcase, messenger bag. Hookโs handy,โ she continued. โBut you had to know it was here.โ
โA room set up for kids to enjoy.โ Roarke scanned it. โGaming station, the chairs, sofa that would take a beating. Colorful walls, a crafts table and supplies, so on.โ
He looked down at Eve. โOf all the rooms up here, they chose this. A destruction of innocence, another emotional blow to the family. How could the children ever play in here again?โ
โExactly. A deliberate choice. And one theyโd cased before today. Websterโs right. Itโs all but impossible for one person to do this. The rope, secured only to that hookโstrong hook, designed to hold some solid weight. But the slack wasnโt long enough so someone could put the noose around his neck while heโs prone, then use the length to pull him up, secure the slack elsewhere.โ
She rose. โAngelo kept her head, didnโt move that chair. Iโm going to bet we find a mirror in the filesโhow itโs placed, even the type of rope used. Maybe down to the sloppy noose.โ
She walked over to a pair of shelves, took down a Little League trophy. โKid got MVP last seasonโgood for her.โ
โChrist Jesus, theyโd use a childโs trophy for this?โ
โAnd didnโt bother to wipe the blood off it.โ She bagged it, sealed it, labeled it. โDidnโt have time, or didnโt care. Probably both. Had to move fastโso much risk. Do they get off on the risk? But youโve got to get out and away before anyone wanders upstairs.โ
She moved back to the door, studied it. โNo inside lock. Couldnโt lock the door from in here. Gotta get back downstairs, orโฆโ
She took out her communicator as she walked out, contacted the sweepers. And went room by room. Found it.
โHereโs the way.โ She walked to the French doors in the main bedroom. โThe smart way if you know the house. โSmall terrace, steps going down to the not-much-bigger patio area. Go out, down.โ
She did just that.
โThereโs a gateโlocks and security on it, but a way out.โ
โThe security feed might tell the tale if they were sloppy there as well.โ โIโm not counting on that, but we need to check. How about you find the
security hub? I want another pass upstairs.โ
She went up, timing how long it took at a fast walk to reach the door of the crime scene. Eighty-six seconds. Even at a cautious slink, under two minutes. At a jog or run, a lot less.
Say your goodbyes, she thought. If youโre close enough to the family to know the house, youโd have to say your goodbyes, make it look like youโre leaving.
Youโd want people to notice youโre leaving. Then slip upstairs.
Or โฆ
Youโve already unlocked the gate, the French doorsโif they were locked. Double back that way, go up, into the playroom and shut the door.
Pull out the rope, secure it to the hook.
Text the target. Text is smarter than a callโno conversation. Wait. One of you behind the door with the trophy. He comes in, strike.
You need him unconsciousโno struggle, no noise, no wasted time.
Shut the door, drag him over. One holds him up, the other gets on the chair, secures the noose. Turn the chair overโthat mirrorโslip out, down to the master bedroom.
Out, gone while the victim strangles to death.
Somebodyโll come up eventually, she thought, as she started downstairs.
But how long does it take for a man to strangle?
Sloppy noose gave him half a chance, but even with that, ten minutes? A lot less for brain cells to start dying.
You have to feel pretty confident the jobโs done.
But a grieving woman worries about her son, and a friend goes to check on him.
You lose.
โI just finished getting statements,โ Peabody told her. โMost of the ones still here were Mrs. Greenleafโs friends, the ones weโve already talked toโ except for Arnezโand the one who came down from Maine. Their spouses, a couple of the daughterโs friends and theirs who helped with the food, and a couple of IAB cops.โ
โUpshot?โ
โSome were in the kitchen area, dealing with dishes, putting food away, the rest were in the living area. I have all the names and locations. The two cops were on the point of leaving when they ran upstairs, heard the commotion and ran up. Ah, Darlie Tanaka noticed the victim go upstairs, but didnโt think anything about it. Just that he needed some quiet time.
โNo one noticed anyone going up before he did,โ Peabody continued. โAnja Abbott was sitting next to Mrs. Greenleaf, and heard her ask Webster to check on her son. She did see Webster go up, and thinks it was maybe five minutes later. She canโt be sure, but about five minutes. Everyone still hereโs accounted for, Dallas. No one was alone during the time frame.โ
Roarke walked in. โThe security system, cameras, alarms, were shut down.โ
โShut down?โ
โManually, at fifteen-forty-five.โ
โI want to see the feed, what we have before shutdown.โ
โI thought you might. I sent a copy to your PPC. Or we can look on the monitor in the security room.โ
โLetโs take the room.โ
โThe hubโs in the basement.โ
โPeabody, the sweepers should be here any minute. Get them started.
Whereโs the basement?โ
Roarke led the way. โItโs nicely finished,โ he commented. โA sort of media room. It looks to me as if the younger ones gathered down there. Another family area. Dishes still scattered about.โ
A casual family area, Eve noted, and yeah, dishes scattered, empty tubes that hadnโt made it into the recycler. Half-empty ones, a nearly empty bowl of chips.
Theyโd set up the security hub in a storage room where tubs, clearly labeled, held holiday decorations, off-season clothing, beach gear.
โIt was up and running.โ Roarke cued up the feed to seven hundred hours, set it on fast-forward, slowing when the victim and his family arrived that morning, then again when the younger brother and his arrived. Again with Webster and Angelo.
She watched Webster leaveโit matched the time heโd come to Central to speak with her. Watched him return, go inside.
Then the family left together.
No one entered until the family returned. Then others, in couples, in groups.
The first of those left about fourteen-thirty. Departures started out as a trickle, then a steadier stream until the feed cut off an hour later.
โThatโs it,โ Roarke said. โThe whole system was shut down.โ
โSmart,โ Eve mumbled. โYou can say youโre leavingโhug, hug, wipe a tear away, then either not or double back and no cam to catch the lie. Weโll have the sweepers down here, too. They wouldnโt be that sloppy, but weโll go over everything.
โI need to talk to the sweepers, then get to the hospital. I need to take statements from the family, and hopefully the victim.โ
โIโll stick with you.โ
As they walked upstairs, she glanced over at him. โIs it off that Arnez is the only one of the โletโs go out and drink wine and gabโ group who wasnโt there?โ
โWell, when I was a member of a โweโll have a pint or two and shoot the shiteโ group, it wasnโt unusual for one of us to call it earlier than the others.โ
โBut thatโs criminals, not upstanding citizens.โ
He gave her a quick pat on the butt. โEither way, someone has to be the first to leave.โ
โSweepers are upstairs,โ Peabody said. โDo you want to leave the droids on the doors?โ
โLetโs leave them in place until the family gets back.โ
She went up, spoke with the sweepers. When they went out, she gestured Roarke toward the wheel. โYou take it. Do you have to know a code to shut down the security system?โ
โNot that one. Itโs a simple switchโand clearly marked so you wouldnโt shut it down by accident.โ
โWhich makes it handy to do on purpose.โ She shifted around, asked Peabody the same question about Arnez leaving as sheโd asked Roarke.
โI donโt really think so. Sheโs younger than most of them, and doesnโt have the long history. They left around sixteen hundredโthatโs about,โ she added.
โYou asked?โ
โI knew youโd want to know. Itโs about then, according to Cassidy Bryer. I made it a casual question, like: I guess Ms. Arnez and Mr. Robards couldnโt make it to the wake. And she said, no, they were here. They left about four, maybe quarter after fourโshe guesses.โ
โFifteen to thirty after the systemโs shut down. And somewhere in the neighborhood of thirty to forty minutes after that, Ben Greenleafโs bashed in the head and hanging from a rope. Itโs just so fucking handy.โ
Annoyed, she contacted Feeney. โAny matches?โ
โNot down the line, no. Got some attempted suicidesโnone by hanging.
Got a couple who managed it, but not by hanging.โ โItโs going to be Noy.โ
โIs Greenleafโs kid still alive?โ
โWeโre heading to the hospital to find out.โ
โLet me know either way. My oarโs stuck deep in this one.โ
โIโll tag you. Thanks. Itโs going to be Noy,โ Eve said again when she pocketed her โlink. โItโs too good a fit not to be.โ
โIโll drop the two of you off, park, and find you.โ
Nodding absently at Roarke, Eve got out at the hospital entrance.
โWe go through Noyโs file again, every inch of it. Plenty of others went down when he did; maybe the connectionโs there. We talk to his daughter again, and his wife, the new husband. Their friends, their neighbors, their
friendโs neighbors. The sonโhis friends, people he went to school with, people he banged, people he didnโt bang.โ
She stopped at the main desk, flashed her badge. โBenjamin Greenleaf, admitted shortly after five, head wound, strangulation.โ
โOne moment.โ
Eve turned back to Peabody. โThe son went to private school, then NYU. We dig there.โ
โPatient Greenleaf is in critical care, eighth floor, east. Family only.โ Eve held up her badge again.
โAnd yes, of course. I do need to scan your identifications.โ Once scanned, Eve headed for the elevator bank.
โIf youโre really looking at Arnezโโ
โPublic school.โ Eve rolled heel-to-toe, toe-to-heel as she waited. โMost of her college by remoteโbut NYUโs business school. Worked through it. But they both grew up Lower West. Not the same neighborhood, but the general area.โ
โTheyโd have been about the same age.โ
โThatโs right.โ Eve held back as people filed off the elevator. She got on, called for eight east. Texted Roarke so he could skip the desk.
โMaybe they knew each other,โ Peabody conceded. โBut wouldnโt she, if they did, blame Noy for what the son did? If sheโs going to blame somebody, and blame them enough to wait nine years to cash in?โ
โLogically, sure. Murderers donโt always follow logic, do they? We find the connection. Whoever, whatever it is, we find it.โ
She got off the elevator, assumed sheโd go through the same routine at the desk there. But Webster paced in front of it.
She thought the shadows under his eyes had shadows. โDallas. Heโs going to make it.โ
โThatโs good news.โ
โItโs great news, Webster.โ Peabody laid a hand on his arm. โReally great news.โ
โHeโs been in and out a couple of times, but โฆ Theyโre worried he could have brain damage โฆ lack of oxygen. Theyโre doing some tests. Heโs concussed, and his throatโHeโs going to make it,โ Webster repeated. โWe just have to wait to see what heโs up against.โ
โHas he said anything?โ
โNo. No, but he squeezed Minaโs hand. She said when he came around for a minute, he squeezed her hand when she spoke to him. She let him know sheโweโeverybody was here.โ
He paused, pressed his fingers to his eyes. โDid you find anything?โ
โThe security system was shut down at fifteen-forty-five, manually, at the source.โ
โNobody in the family wouldโve done that.โ
โIt looks like some of the younger people hung out down there.โ
โSure. I was going to do a round down there, hauling up dishes and trash. None of them would touch the security, Dallas. It had to be whoever went after Ben. Jesus, look at the timing!โ
โI am. I have.โ
โSorry.โ He held up a hand. โSorry. A little wound up.โ โAm I going to be able to talk to him?โ
โI donโt know, honestly. They booted us while they run the tests.โ He glanced back. โThe familyโs in the waiting room. Luke and Shawn, too. Their nanny has the kidsโthe younger ones. Benโs kids are here, and Carlieโs two oldest.โ
โWeโll start with them.โ
Eve could think of little more depressing than a hospital waiting roomโ unless it was a hospital room.
Most huddled together. The brother-in-law paced, but stopped when Webster led Eve and Peabody inside.
Benโs wife, Mina, gripped the hands of the kids who flanked her. โIโm sorry to intrude at such a difficult time,โ Eve began.
โSomebody tried to kill my dad.โ The girl next to Mina snapped it out while her eyes welled. โThey already killed my grandpa. What are you doing about it?โ
โBaby.โ Mina pulled her close. โNo. Donโt now.โ
โIโm scared.โ She pressed her face to her motherโs shoulder. โIโm scared.โ
โIโd be scared, too.โ Peabody stepped forward, crouched down. โBut Webster told us the doctors said your dadโs going to be okay.โ
โThey donโt know for sure.โ
โAnd itโs scary. Weโre trying really hard to find out who did these awful things. Maybe you can help.โ
โHow?โ
โWe need to find out everything we can. I think maybe you were downstairs, in the family room, the basement?โ
โYeah.โ The girl sniffed, laid her head on her motherโs shoulder. โSo? A bunch of us were.โ
โMaybe some people came down to talk to you, or to say goodbye if they were leaving.โ
โI guess, yeah. Don did, and Darcia didโthey brought more chips down. Aunt Carlie, Uncle Lukeโthey were mostly checking on us so we didnโt trash the place.โ
She rolled her red-rimmed eyes. โAs if.โ โRight.โ
โCassidy came down for a few minutes.โ This from the teenage boy sitting beside his grandmother. โAnd Winโheโs the old guy who takes Grandpa sailing sometimes. We went with them a couple times.โ
โDetective Dickinsonโhe worked with Grandpa.โ One of the other kids piped up. โAnd another one like that, but he was really old.โ
โMy Little League coach,โ Carlieโs daughter remembered. That would be Olive Metcalf, Eve thought. The MVP.
โCoach Mike. He came down awhile.โ She knuckled a tear away. โHe really liked Grandpa. And the neighbor guyโahโโ
โDenzel,โ her brother said. โHe fixed Dadโs car once.โ
Though they reeled off a few more, Eve made a note of Denzel, mentally circled it.
โMs. Greenleaf,โ she began, and stepped toward Beth. Then everyone stood at once as a doctor came to the room.
โHeโs awake and responsive.โ He said it with a smile, and Eve felt the tension in the room drop out of the red zone.
But he held up both hands as everyone started forward. โHold on now. I canโt let you all go piling in. Weโre still waiting for test results, but he knew his name, his wife and kidsโ names, the date, his date of birth. Heโs disoriented and has a whale of a headache, his throatโs raw.
โBut heโs a tough guy.โ He winked at Benโs kids. โIโm going to let your mom go in and see him.โ
โPlease.โ Benโs daughter sent the doctor a pleading look. โIโll be quiet. I wonโt even talk to him. I just want to see him. I justโโ
โIt would help,โ Mina said. โIt would help him to see his children. I promise you. His heart and spirit. It would help.โ
โFive minutes.โ The doctor wagged a finger at the kids. โAnd no partying in there.โ
โThank you.โ Mina looked back at her mother-in-law. โIโโ
โNo.โ Beth shook her head. โYou go. You go now. We can all wait.โ
โThe nurse will take you in. Five minutes,โ he repeated, then turned to the rest.
โWeโll give them the five. Then weโll open the privacy screens. You can all see him through the glass. Weโll see how he does. If heโs not too tired, you can go in for a few minutes, Mom.โ
โThank you.โ
โDoctor. Lieutenant Dallas, NYPSD. Itโs important we speak to Mr.
Greenleaf as soon as possible.โ
He gestured her out to where Roarke stood waiting off to the side.
โI understand, Lieutenant. Trust me. You have your job to do, and whoever did this to my patient needs to be stopped. But heโs weak, still disoriented. And heโs damn lucky. Another few minutes, two, three, maybe four at most? Maybe we couldโve brought him back, but heโd have suffered severe brain damage. The shape heโs inโthe lucky shapeโit still exhausted him answering a few standard questions.โ
โI understand, Doctorโฆโ โRicardi.โ
โDr. Ricardi. I understand, trust me on that. But I do have a job to do.
Whoever did this to him killed his father only days ago.โ
โGive her my turn.โ Beth stood, then leaned against her daughter. โAny of our turns. Itโs more important. He knows weโre here. He knows weโll be here.โ
โThey did this while we were gathered in my home to mourn our father.โ Carlieโs voice snapped like ice. โLet her talk to Ben. Then you do your job, Lieutenant. You find the bastard.โ
โThatโs exactly what I intend to do.โ
โLetโs see how he does,โ Ricardi cautioned. โHe may need to rest after this quick visit with his wife and kids.โ
โWeโll wait,โ Eve said. โAs long as it takes. While we wait, Ms.
Greenleaf, you need to answer some questions.โ
โCome sit. Sheโs doing her job,โ Beth said to her daughter before Carlie could object.
โYouโre right. Come sit.โ