an injured woman unnecessarily. We’ll be brief.”
I growled and said, “Fine. Come in.”
They did and asked to sit. Whatever. I didn’t sit down. I went and stood behind Karrin, leaning against the wall with my arms folded.
“Murphy,” Bradley said.
Karrin nodded at him warily. I knew her enough to recognize some respect in the gesture, if no affection. “Bradley. Out with it, Rudolph. What are you doing here?”
Rudolph opened the manila envelope and tugged out several pieces of paper with color prints of photos on them. He tossed them onto the coffee table. I picked them up and gave them to Karrin without taking my eyes off the cops.
She leafed through the pictures, and I felt her tension growing as she did. She passed me the pictures.
One of them was a still from a security take on a Chicago street. I didn’t recognize the location exactly, but I did recognize the blurred shot of Murphy, in her little SUV, speeding down the street in heavy winter conditions.
The others were shots from outside the bank, and from security cameras inside. There’d been enough bad weather and enough magic in the air that the shots were all blurry and distorted, but one of them was of a couple of guys coming out the bank door. One of them was average height, and the second was very tall.
It was a shot of me and a mercenary named Grey during our egress of the heist, taken from a distance. The veil we’d been under must have flickered, or else the shot was from before it solidified and hid us from everyone. As it was, there wasn’t much but outlines. Our faces couldn’t really be made out in the distorted images. Still, there aren’t a lot of NBA-sized guys robbing banks in Chicago. Or anywhere. All of the other images were just as vague, or worse, but had the recognizable silhouette of the same tall fellow, though none of them showed my face, except the last one. In that one, I was sprinting down a sidewalk, and anyone with eyes, which is to say most people who might wind up on a jury, could recognize the image as me.
“That shot of you,” Rudolph said to Karrin, “came from the same day you wound up with your injuries. Hell of a coincidence.”
“How?” she asked calmly. “Rudolph, everybody in Chicago gets on a security camera or three every day of their lives.”
“They aren’t all speeding in dangerous conditions,” Rudolph said.
“Does Chicago have IA doing traffic stops?” Karrin asked. “Now that you’ve cleaned up all the corruption in town?”
“Speeding down main streets during an ice storm,” Bradley said. “Near reports of gang violence at the same time.”
“I was trying to make it home in time for my shows,” she said, her tone dry.
“Car ended up wrecked, didn’t it?”
“The follies of youthful impatience,” Karrin said, and pointed at her casts. “Been pretty clear about that.”
Bradley nodded. “Talked to your doctor. Says he hasn’t ever seen injuries like yours from a wreck. Too precise. Says they’re clearly directed violence.”
“He’s wrong,” Karrin said. “And violating HIPAA.”
“And your known associate,” Bradley continued, as though she hadn’t spoken. “We got images of him, too.”
“Beautiful picture of you, Dresden,” Rudolph said. “On the sidewalk outside a building where we found a body the next day.” He consulted a little notebook in his pocket. “One Harvey Morrison, CPA.”
Karrin gave him her cop face, and I made do with my wizard face, but it was tough. My stomach had just dropped out. Harvey Morrison had died badly, despite my efforts to save his life. Cops get a little funny about the corpses of murdered men and women, particularly when they’re squares, unconnected to the world of crime.
Failing to save someone isn’t quite the same thing as murdering them—but from the outside, the two can look almost identical.
Bradley continued. “Morrison was a frequent customer at Verity Trust Bank. Which was robbed the next day. His specific vault was opened during the robbery. During which a number of explosions and a great deal of gunfire occurred.” He nodded at the pictures. “Those other images are of a suspect between six foot eight and six foot eleven, presumably one of the bank robbers.” He looked up at me blandly. “ Six … nine? Isn’t it, Dresden?”
“I ate all of my Wheaties every morning at breakfast,” I said.
“Wiseass,” Rudolph hissed. “Keep on cracking wise. I’ve got your ass now.”
“Cracking wise?” I asked him. I shook my head at Bradley and hooked