inches when awomanâs voice said from behind her, âDonât even consider going after him.â
Lacey blinked up at Hannah Paisley, an agent whoâd started with the Unit some six months before. Sheâd been in the Bureau five years. She was very tall, beautifully shaped, and was very smart. Lacey had seen her do her dumb blonde act on a witness at the Academy, on video. Sheâd made the guy feel like the stud of the universe. Then heâd spilled his guts. She was very good, which was why she was loaned out on sting operations. She also seemed to have a sixth sense about killers, which was why sheâd joined this unit. Lacey envied her this ability.
Hannah wanted Dillon Savich? She was jealous because Savich thought Lacey was flabby? What was all this about? âI wasnât going after him, Hannah. Actually, I was just thinking that he was a jerk, criticizing my deltoids.â
âI know. I was joking. Are you doing work on the Radnich case?â
Lacey nodded. Was Hannah joking? She didnât think so. She didnât need this. Hannah gave her a small salute and went back to her desk and computer.
Lacey was working with Ollie Hamish on the Radnich case. It had flummoxed everyone, including Savich. It wasnât the âwhoâ of it that was driving everybody nuts; it was the âhow.â Lacey was feeding in more data theyâd just gotten from the various local police reports and the autopsies and the forensic evidence, and in the back of her mind, she was also trying to figure out how this weirdo guy could have gotten into four nursing homesâthe count as of todayâand strangled old women with no one seeing a single thing. The first nursing home was in Richmond, Virginia, eight months ago. Then four months ago, it happened again in northern Florida, home of the nonagenarian. Norma Radnich was the old woman strangled at the South Banyon Nursing Home in St. Petersburg, Florida. Theyâd been called in by the SPPD only after this last murder. To date there were no leads, no clues, no guesses that were helpful. The Profilers were working on it now as well. Ollie was committed to this one. He was the lead agent on it, and Lacey wanted it that way.
She wanted to go digging. Sheâd figured out how to accesseverything she needed. Perhaps tonight after Dillon let her leave the gym she would come back here and work. If he didnât kill all her body parts, if sheâd still be able to walk once he was through with her.
No one would know. Sheâd be very careful, do her work for the unit during the day and search at night. She felt her heart speed up at the thought. Sheâd get him. She had to get him. But heâd lain low for nearly seven years. It would be seven years in three days. An anniversary. Just as the past six years had each been an anniversary. Had he died? Had he simply stopped? She didnât think so. He was a classic psychopath. He would never stop until he was dead or locked away. Cycles, sheâd thought many times. He was into cycles and so far it hadnât triggered yet for whatever reason.
The weekly update meeting was at two oâclock. There were nine agents in the conference room: six men, including Savich; three women; one secretary, Claudia, a gum-chewing grandmother with bright red hair and a brain like a razor; and one clerk, Edgar, who would bet on just about anything and won the pool on the birth weight of Ellisâs baby.
Everyone presented what he was doing, the status, what he or she needed.
The status meeting went quickly, no wasted time. All the agents felt free to speak up when another agent wanted advice. Savich moderated.
When it was Ollieâs turn, he said, âIâm working the Radnich case with Sherlock. Sheâs up to speed on it now. We just got the last pile of stuff today from the Florida cops. Sherlock, you just finished inputting all the data just a while ago, didnât you?â