Broadswords, stunners, thin silver foils, muskets, revolvers, maces, blasters, machine guns, combat knives.
The glass display cases held centuries of death.
She gave Lowenbaum a minute to wander and gawk.
âYou and Roarke can play with all the shoot-it, stab-it, stun-it, and blow-the crap-out-of-it toys later. Right now . . .â
She gestured toward the display of laser weapons.
Obliging her, Roarke deactivated the locks, opened the glass, took out the Peregrine.
Sheâd never seen it, or its like before. And admitted, to herself, sheâd like to test it out. But she said nothing as Roarke took it from its place, offered it to Lowenbaum.
âIs it charged?â
âItâs not, no. That would be . . . breaking the rules.â And Roarke smiled.
With a half laugh, Lowenbaum lifted the weaponâblack as death, sleek as a snakeâto his shoulder. âLightweight. Our tacticals weigh in at five-point-three pounds. Add another eight ounces if youâre carrying the optimum scope. Spare battâs another three ounces. This is what, three pounds and change?â
âThree and two. Itâll sync with a PPC, or you can use its infrared.â Now Roarke opened the door, took out a palm-sized handheld. âThis will read up to fifteen miles. Battery life is seventy-two hours, full use, though Iâm warned it will start to heat up at about forty-eight if not rested. Recharges in under two minutes.â
Lowenbaum lowered it, turned it over it his hands. âYou try it out?â
âI did. Packs a recoil, but Iâm told theyâre working on that.â
âHit anything?â
âSimulation only. Rang the bell for me at a mile and a quarter.â
With obvious regret, Lowenbaum handed it back to Roarke. âSheâsa beaut. But hereâs your more likely.â He gestured at the bulkier weapon on display. âA military- or police-issue tactical. They havenât changed much in the last five or six years. Iâm going to say, high probability, he owns his weapon. Itâs not something you take home after your tour like your service weapon. These are checked in and out, every incident. Most likely, again, for three strikes in that time frame, he had it on a bi- or tripod. Moving targets, and the first strike? She was moving at a good clip. Strike from one of these from a distance ofâsay a mile? It takes two and a half seconds to go from weapon to target. Thereâs wind speed to consider, but thatâs about what youâve got.â
âYou have to build that into the shot. Distance, wind speed, angleâspeed of movement of the target.â Eve nodded. It told her the shooter had watched his targets for a while, judged their relative speed on the ice.
âI never used a bipodâor not since weapons training. How much weight there, how big?â
âA couple pounds, and you can scope them down to under a foot.â
âThe rifle breaks down, right?â
âSure.â He glanced at Roarke. âI can show you.â
Roarke took it down, offered it to him.
Lowenbaum checked the charge gauge, noted it was empty, but flicked the down switch anyway. âSafety first,â he said. Then he turned a small lever, separated the barrel, the charger, the scope, and had the weapon in four compact pieces in about ten seconds.
âYou could fit it into a standard briefcase broken down,â Eve observed.
âCorrect, but if you have any respect for your weapon, you have a case with molded slots for the parts.â
âIt wouldnât get through security in a government building, a museum, that kind of public building.â
âNot a chance,â Lowenbaum said.
âOkay, so most likely an apartment building, a hotel, a retail or rental space of some kind.â
She wandered, thinking, as Lowenbaum competently reassembled the weapon.
âWhoâs best at this sort of reconstruction