Eve Dallas was born to Richard Troy and Stella in the year 2028 (age 18 when she entered NYPSD Police Academy in 2046). [107]
She spent the first eight years of her life physically, mentally, and sexually abused by her father. At a hotel in Dallas, TX, Eve stopped the abuse by killing her father. She wandered out of the hotel for three miles before passing out. A police officer found her and took her to a hospital. With no records of her birth and her father’s death unknown, she became a ward of the state. They named her Eve Dallas.
She spent the next ten years bouncing from foster home to foster home before leaving the system at 18. She immediately travelled to New York to become a police officer.
She graduated from the NYPSD police academy at the top of her class. The next few years were spent in uniform. During her time in uniform, Lt. Ryan Feeney took notice of her and brought her into the Homicide Division. They worked and closed cases together before Feeney was promoted to Captain and transferred to the Electronic Detectives Division (EDD). Eve was promoted to Detective and ultimately to Lieutenant, in charge of a Homicide squad at NYPSD’s Cop Central.
Eve’s story initially starts in Naked in Death; reeling from a nightmare about subduing a suspect using lethal force, Eve is called in to investigate the murder of a high profile senator’s granddaughter, a licensed companion. Throughout the course of the investigation, Eve comes across a connection between the victim and Roarke, a very wealthy businessman and possible suspect. Eve did her best to ignore her attraction to him but her efforts were futile. In the end Roarke is ruled out as a suspect and the real killer is identified. At the end of the investigation, a relationship has formed between Roarke and Eve. A victim’s cat, Galahad, becomes a hero and Eve’s new pet.
Throughout the series, her memories return, mostly through a series of nightmares, revealing a history of incestual rape and patricide with her father, Richard Troy. It is revealed that he was raising her to prostitute her to child molesters. Her mother, Stella, was a prostitute, a drug addict and was occasionally beaten and raped by Troy but hated her daughter. Eve finds out more about Stella in the book New York to Dallas.
It was implied that since Eve had lost her memory, she had forgotten her name, as well, but it is eventually revealed in Reunion in Death that the reason Eve cannot remember her name is because her parents never gave her one. The fact that no one in Dallas could track down her ID indicates one of two things: that either Homeland Security interfered and deleted her data, or that her parents never had her registered in the first place. For all intents and purposes, Eve did not exist in any records before she was eight years old.
After her relationship and subsequent marriage to Roarke, Eve was a much happier and, to some extent, calmer person; she was more willing to work with and depend on other people. They celebrated their one-year anniversary in Reunion in Death, in July 2059. Eve’s relationship with Roarke was central to the series and her character.
Eve’s official residence was 222 Central Park West, New York, N.Y., with Roarke.
Description
- Eyes
- Face
- Eve’s chin
- Feeney was the first to note the “slight dent” in her chin.[1]
- Charles was second and commented on it - “this little dip right in your chin.”[12]
- Roarke was the third. He lifted a hand to her face, fingers just brushing her chin, his thumb skimming the slight dip.[13] She has a little dent in her chin that deepens, just a bit, when she smiles.[8] Other mentions.[14]
- Hair
- Her doe-brown hair was cropped short, for convenience rather than style;[1] her hair was thick as mink pelt, shades of aged brandy and old gold.[11]
- Short, tumbled hair;[2] short choppy brown hair;[15] poorly cut fawn-colored hair standing up in tufts and spikes.[16]
- She had a shaggy cap of deer-hide hair.[8]
- Body
- Eve was described as 5 feet, 10 inches[17] (Eve’s YANNIs), 120 pounds (54.43 kg), with a waist of 26.2 inches.[18]
- She was tall, rangy, with a tendency to look thin, but Feeney knew there were solid muscles beneath the leather jacket.[1]
- Roarke saw her as a tall, willowy brunette.[2]
- She had a tough, angular body and small, firm breasts,[19] smooth skin, slim bones, lean muscle,[11] she was tall, slim/lean, with a long, slender body,[20] and long legs.[21]
- She was long and lean.[8]
- Movement
- Eve walked with a ground-eating stride; long, quick, loose, busy, and strong.[23]
Personality
- From a conversation with Charlotte Mira:
- “The cops, we know that the victims, the ones who are broken or shattered or dead... or dead, they need somebody to stand up for them, to say, ‘GD it, it is your fault. You did this, and you have to pay for it, no matter if your mother beat you or your father... No matter what, you don’t have the right to damage the next guy.’”
- Mira gave Eve’s hand a squeeze. “And that’s why you are.”
- “Yeah. That’s why I am.”[24]
- When asked why she was a cop, Eve replied, “It’s what I am. It’s not just that someone has to look, even though that’s just the way it is. It’s that I have to look.”[25]
- There was a part of her that warmed foolishly at the thought of having an avenger (Roarke).[26]
- When Eve was angry or frustrated, she often kicked a piece of furniture, like her desk.[27][28] When she was having nerves/emotion (stress, embarrassment, uncertainty, frustration, etc.) she sometimes tucked her hands in her pockets.[29]
- Eve hated being on camera; hated it a lot.[30]
- According to Roarke, “Death offends her. Each time. Every time she deals with it.”[32]
- Mira once said, “She was born for this. Not just for command, which fits her like skin, but for balancing the wrongs with the rights.”[33]
- She came to New York because she wanted to be alone: “You can step out on the street with thousands of other people and be completely alone. Besides being a cop, that’s what I thought I wanted most.” She also needed the anonymity of a big city: “I’d gone from being anonymous [until age eight] to being monitored constantly through the foster program and state schools. I wanted to be anonymous again, on my terms.”[34]
- Roarke said Eve is an arrogant woman.[35]
- She is very good at manipulation.[36]
- She has a “stony stare” that makes people shut up.[37]
- She modeled her stare after Feeney’s.[38]
- Eve has been referred to as “a prude.”[39]
- According to Feeney, she’s got a mind “like a fucking shark.”[40] Roarke thinks she has a “cool, calculating mind.”[41]
- Commander Whitney believes that Dallas is “the best of his best,” and Chief Tibble thinks she is “brilliant.”[42]
Epithets
- Bite me[43]
- Christ on airskates, kid[44]
- For sweet Christ’s sake[45]
- Holy dancing Jesus[46]
- Humping Jesus[47]
- Jesus bleeding Christ[48]
- Jesus Christ in spandex[49]
- Jesus on ‘roids[50]
- My sweet blushing Jesus[51]
- Oh, Christ on a plastic crutch[52]
- Oh Jesus Christ on stilts[53]
- Oh sweet, suffering Christ[54]
- Sweet color-blind Jesus after viewing Jenkinson’s tie and Reineke’s socks in Random in Death[55]
- Sweet, leap-frogging Christ[56]
- You sadistic, treacherous son of a bitch[57]
Relationships
- Eve had always thought cops should stay single,[58] unencumbered, and focused utterly on the job.[59]
- Buddy-to-buddy confidences were something Eve was never comfortable with.[60]
- Feeney stood as a surrogate father figure to Eve,[61] and Mira acted as a surrogate mother.[62]
- Spouse: Roarke (as of 2058)
- Best friend: Mavis Freestone outside the job
- Partner and friend[62]: Delia Peabody
- Former Trainer/Partner: Ryan Feeney
- Eve told Peabody that, when Feeney took her on as a trainee, he said Eve had potential - brains and guts.[63]
- According to Eve, she wouldn’t have been the same cop without Feeney.[64]
- Feeney told Dallas, “You never were a rookie. So I saw good, solid cop the minute I laid eyes on you. I gave you a hell of a foundation, kid, a lot of seasoning and pushed you hard because I knew you could take it. But I didn’t put you here, and saying that, well, that was stupid. You put yourself here. And I’m proud. So that’s it.”[65]
- There was nobody on the job, nobody with a badge Eve respected more than she respected Feeney. Feeney felt the same about her.[65]
- Eve was a detective, had just made second grade, by February 11, 2051; according to Feeney, though she needed seasoning, she was the best he’d ever worked with, even then.[66]
- Eve said Feeney saw something in her and lifted her out, made her more than she ever thought she could be. She said if he’d transferred to Bumfuck, Idaho she’d have gone with him.[67]
- Eve had known Whitney for a decade (as long as she’s been on the job)[68] and thinks of him as a friend.[69]
- Eve considers Morris a friend – a good one.[70]
- Eve struggles with what she calls “marriage rules”: warning Roarke that she will be late getting home, attending functions as his wife, and so on.
- She is also continually baffled by “friendship rules” that mean she has to socialize, buy gifts, host bridal parties, etc.
Justice and the job
Views
- According to Eve, if she wasn’t a good cop, she was nothing. She was as empty and as helpless as the child she had been, lying broken and traumatized in a dark alley in Dallas.[71]
- When going through doors, Eve preferred to go in low.[72]
- When they took her badge she’d felt empty, like nothing, like no one.[73]
- Roarke knew Eve’s career defined her.[74]
- Eve said she was personally offended by murder.[75]
- Eve: “Yes. It’s worth risking my life to find justice for three women who are already dead, and to try to prevent three more from dying... I’ll do whatever it takes to keep him from having the fourth.”[78]
- In Glory in Death, Nadine said, “I’ve worked with, around, and through cops for a long time now. You get instincts on who’s putting in time and who gives a damn. You know what worries me, Dallas? You give too much of a damn.”[79]
- Nadine told Eve, “You know, Dallas, you just don’t miss. ... You’ve got a knack for the dead and the innocent.”[80]
- Marco Angelini told Dallas that Whitney respects her and that Cicely Towers admired her tenacity and her thoroughness; Towers was impressed by Eve’s mind and called it “a clean cop’s mind.”[81]
- Eve: “No. You never solve anything, because someone’s dead who shouldn’t be. They can’t get up out of the grave, so it can’t be solved. All you can do is close the case, and trust the system for justice.”[82]
- “I live the job, Peabody. I breathe it and I eat it and I sleep with it. I don’t recommend it... Yeah, it works for me. There are reasons it works for me. My reasons. They’re not yours.” (She thought of herself as a child, bleeding and broken) “I can’t do this any other way. I won’t do this any other way. I need what this gives me. You don’t need the same thing. That doesn’t make you less of a cop.”[83]
- “Murder by definition – by its nature – is a heinous crime.”[84]
- “Murder kills more than the victim.”[85]
- Eve thought that there were always more victims than the dead.[86]
- Often, when looking at death, at the bodies of those who have been murdered, there is pity in Eve's eyes.[87]
- Regarding Eve Roarke said, “I’ve dealt with a lot of cops in my time. Evaded them, bribed them, outmaneuvered them, or simply outran them... The point is, I’ve dealt with a lot of cops over the years. You’re the best. ... You’ll stand, Eve, for the dead and the grieving.”[88]
- Her tireless and unwavering dedication to the dead – to the truth, to what was right – had, and always would, amaze Roarke.[89]
- Roarke said that murder infuriates Eve, insults her, and the victims haunt her.[90]
- Eve said, “Murder isn’t logical, it doesn’t follow nice clean lines. Those who set out to kill make their own rules.” She said Lino’s murder was logical.[91]
- Eve: “You cop to a crime, the person you cop to has a responsibility to report it to the authorities.” Roarke: “Black-and-white.” Eve: “What am I supposed to see? Purple?”[92]
- After Roarke told Eve it was a hard life she had chosen; a brutal road that brings her to that so often (the autopsy after Ava Marsterson’s murder), Eve replied, “It chose me.”[93]
History on the job
- Dallas entered the NYPSD Police Academy when she was 18. Her first year at the Academy was in 2046.[94]
- Eve said that before she got into the Academy, all she was was a victim, with other people pushing the buttons, making the decisions, pushing her one way, pulling her another.[95]
- Until she turned 18, she “kept a calendar – almost always, wherever I was – marking time till I could get out. For good. How many years, months, weeks, days, hours sometimes, before I could. How I was going to get out, go to New York. New York seemed so big and full, so I focused on New York pretty early. And the Academy. How I was going to be a cop because cops took care of themselves, and everyone else. Good cops, anyway, and I was going to be a good cop, and no one was ever going to tell me what and when to eat, what to wear —”[96]
- She graduated from the Academy at the top of her class.
- She spends several years in uniform.
- Initially she worked out of “a little house” in Lower West Manhattan, which has since been absorbed by Central.[97]
- She first saw Lt. Ryan Feeney when he worked a mugging-turned-homicide, and decided that she wanted “to be that good.”[97]
- She was transferred to the Homicide Division at Central, after Feeney took notice of her abilities.[97]
- Her first major collar - while she was still in uniform, barely six weeks out of the Academy[98] - was serial kidnapper and murderer Isaac McQueen.[99]
- Peabody says she studied the McQueen case when she was at the Academy.[99]
- Eve worked the rape wards in Alphabet City for six months. (The rape wards are no longer there.)[100]
- She was aide to Feeney, and he trained her for Detective.
- She was promoted to Detective 3rd Grade at an unknown date.
- She made 2nd Grade shortly before February 11, 2051.[66]
- She made Detective Sergeant at an unknown date.
- She was promoted to Lieutenant at an unknown date and put in charge of a Homicide unit at Cop Central.
- Eve had been decorated multiple times by the NYPSD.[98]
Terminations (line of duty)
“We know about the choice. We know, whenever we take a life, whatever the circumstances, whatever the reasons, it’s still our choice. Right or wrong, we own it.”[101] Eve has terminated in the line of duty more than once though not all details are known. Included below are instances or mentions of terminations she has purposely or inadvertently caused.
- Naked in Death – Unknown termination mentioned. (1st termination)[102]
- In Fantasy in Death, Eve said she was 23 the next time she killed - fifteen years after she killed her father. She and Feeney went after a suspect who had beaten two people to death in front of witnesses; DNA and trace was left all over the scene. They found him at a sex club, where he ran, with his girlfriend to the roof. He held a ten-inch blade to her throat, cut her to show that he meant it when he said he’d kill her; Feeney didn’t have the angle to stun him but Eve did. When the man jabbed his girlfriend again, Feeney kept talking to him, and Eve stunned him. When the girlfriend pushed away to get clear, the man fell over the edge, as his body jerked. He hit the sidewalk, dead, eight stories down. She said she didn’t feel excited or guilty; just a little shaky. Eve said she didn’t even have to go through Testing.[103]
- Naked in Death – Eve killed the chemi-head, Mandy’s father on February 12, 2058 (2235 [10:35 p.m.]) (2nd termination)[104]
- Phantom termination – (3rd termination) (Eve’s YANNIs)
- Judgment in Death – Killed the man holding the boy hostage (4th termination).[105]
- Midnight in Death – Killed David Palmer when she discharged her weapon and he fell into the electrified cage (accidental 5th termination).[106]
- Survivor in Death – Jilly Isenberry broke her neck when, during her fight with Dallas, they both tumbled down the stairs (accidental 6th termination).[107]
- Origin in Death – Many clones (no body count given [more than a dozen attacked them]: 8+ terminations)[108]
Nicknames
- “Ace” by Feeney in Naked in Death: “What’s you have for breakfast, ace?” after Roarke had given her real coffee (“Nothing but coffee. Just coffee.”)[109]
- “Badge” or “Big Bad Badge” by Kiz in Salvation in Death[110]
- Baby by Roarke [239]
- “Boss Cop” by Harve Greenbaum in Random in Death[111]
- Brown-eyes by C. J. Morse in Glory in Death[112]
- “Champ” by Feeney in Naked in Death when he requested an ambulance: Eve: “I’m not going to any health center.” Feeney: “Not for you, champ. For him,” meaning Rockman, whom she took down[113]
- Darling Eve in many books[114]
- “Eve Dallas, AK (Ass-kicker)” by herself when Louise Dimatto and Cher Reo added the initials after their names when being introduced to each other (MD and APA).[117]
- “Eve Dallas, Vampire Slayer” by David Baxter in Eternity in Death[118]
“Good Witch Dallas” by Henry MacDermit in Taken in Death[119]
- Honey by Mavis in Naked in Death[120] Mavis has also called Eve “babe” and “pal.”[121]
- Honeypot by Crack in Glory in Death[122]
- Kid by Feeney in many books[123]
- Lieutenant[124]
- Lieutenant Brown Eyes[125]
- Lieutenant Darling[126]
- Lieutenant Kick-Ass[127]
- “Lieutenant Kick-Ass Dallas” by Jenkinson in Connections in Death after she brought in sticky buns and Danishes from Jacko’s and coffee from her supply for the pre-gang interrogation meeting. After everybody gave kudos to Roarke for the bounty, Eve corrected them one by one, “I got the damn buns. I got the damn coffee. I’m the man.” When Whitney said, “Are those Jacko’s? Roarke doesn’t miss a trick.” Jenkinson sucked up: “We owe the glory of the sticky buns and the real, Commander, to the generosity of Lieutenant Kick-Ass Dallas. She’s the man.”[128]
- “Lieutenant Locked Lips” by Nadine Furst in Seduction in Death when she (Eve) volunteered information to the media/Nadine in the hopes of making women more cautious of cyber dating[129]
- Lieutenant Meaniepants by Peabody in Strangers in Death[130]
- Lieutenant Spoilsport[131]
- Lieutenant Sugar by Charles Monroe in several books, beginning with Naked in Death[132]
- Master Manipulator [and Psychic Master Manipulator] by Peabody in Salvation in Death[133]
- “Patient Sexy” by Roarke in Strangers in Death - she called him “Nurse Studly” when he brought a first aid kit into her office to treat the nail scratches Ava Anders left on her face and he told her they would “play Nurse Studly and Patient Sexy later. Now sit so I can doctor those scratches. Nasty cats like that have nasty germs.”[134]
- Skinny white girl by Crack in Glory in Death and many other books[135]
- Sweet butt[136] and sweet face[137]
- White Girl by Crack in Glory in Death[122]
Ignorance of popular references
- There was music piped in she didn’t recognize as Mozart. For Eve, music began sometime after her tenth birthday.[138]
- When Peabody referred to Rudy and Piper Hoffman as “Ken and Barbie on the town,” Eve gave her a blank stare. Peabody sighed and said “Man, you didn’t have a Barbie doll. What kind of kid were you?” (Eve: “I was never a kid.”)[139]
- Eve did not recognize Morris’s reference to fit as a fiddle and ready for love.[140]
- When Feeney said Bruce Springsteen was classic, “That’s The Boss.” Eve asked, “Boss of who?”[141]
- When Roarke and Eve were discussing how someone named Whistler just missed being murdered, Roarke suggested that was “Lucky for Whistler, and likely his mother?” Eve didn’t get the reference: “What? Why?”[142]
- A suspect had killed someone and eaten his liver. Roarke suggests, “With fava beans and a nice Chianti.” “What?” She [Eve] blinked for a beat. “What?”[143]
- Eve mangles common phrases and idioms. After one instance, Roarke asked her if she did it on purpose. Eve said, “Maybe. Sometimes.”[144]
- Eve described Penny as Lino's “athlete’s heel.”[144]
- “... And kills the fat cow anyway.”[145]
- “They’re going to fall like a house of dominoes.”[146]
- Eve said bringing the department in would be like all those cooks burning the pie or whatever it is. When Peabody corrected to “spoiling the broth,” Eve wanted to know who eats broth, then decided burning the pie made more sense as neither sick nor healthy people could eat it.[147]
- “...picking out the pin in a pretty massive haystack.”[148]
- “...the hair on the camel’s back—” With a smile Webster says, “Straw. It’s the straw that broke the camel’s back.” Eve waves that off with “What would a camel do with a straw? Whatever.”[149]
- While talking about motives for murder, Eve says “People get pissed when they get passed over, or somebody else gets the plum on top.” Roarke points out that the correct phrase is “Cherry. The cherry’s on top. The plum’s in the pie.” Eve replies, “Sometimes you want the plum, the cherry, and the whole damn pie.”[150]
- Eve says “Business is dog eat cat, right?” After some interplay to establish that the phrase is “dog eat dog,” Eve counters with “That’s just stupid. Dogs eat cats. Everybody knows that.”[142]
- The world is his clam. (oyster)[151]
Interesting facts
- Eve has, throughout the series, had difficulty with her vehicles (please see Eve's Vehicles).
- Eve has on-going difficulties with vending machines (which she called “her cold war”[152]), and has periods where she asks other people to make purchases in her stead.[153]
- Eve carried business cards.[154]
- Eve preferred very hot showers; 92 degrees (shared shower with Roarke)[155], 100 degrees[156], 101 degrees;[157] 102 degrees[158] and baths (101 degrees).[159]
- Eve was prone to hour-long showers at home.[160]
- Instead of a towel, she usually preferred the drying tube.[161]
- Eve was a slow starter in the morning.[162]
- Eve was prone to hour-long showers at home.[160]
- Eve tried to smoke one of Nadine’s cigarettes in Immortal in Death. She took two puffs but found it disgusting.[163]
- She had a habit of forgetting and/or losing her gloves.[164]
- In Glory in Death, Eve thought Mirina looked like a Roman goddess but her mythology was too sketchy to choose which one.[165]
- In Naked in Death, Eve asked Summerset what it was about her that rubbed him wrong. He said he didn’t know what she meant.[166] Later, he said that he was not comfortable with crude manners while, obviously, she was. He also said, “Roarke is a man of taste, of style, of influence. He has the ear of presidents and kings. He has escorted women of unimpeachable breeding and pedigree.” It struck her and she said that even a man like Roarke could find the occasional mongrel appealing.[167]
- Eve and Summerset eventually settle into détente, where they both enjoy trading insults.
- Eve cried in several books.[168]
- Eve said she hated science (in reference to chemistry).[169]
- Eve said she can’t stand health centers, clinics, hospitals, doctors, and MTs.[170]
- Eve disliked anything resembling drugs.[171]
- Eve giggled, a rare sound from her, when Roarke admitted to playing her transmissions over, just so he could look at her and hear her voice.[172]
- In Immortal in Death, Eve said she’d never been off-planet before.[173]
- The first time she went off-planet was in Rapture in Death, during their honeymoon.[174]
- Before Roarke, Eve had never seen an actual live play.[175]
- Eve relaxed at the beach the way she seemed to nowhere else.[176] The first time Eve saw the Pacific Ocean was on June 1, 2058, when Roarke took her to his Mexican Villa.[177]
- Eve was afraid of heights.[178]
- Eve occasionally played with a yo-yo in her office while thinking her thoughts.[179]
- Eve had taken to playing with the diamond when she was thinking.[180]
- While her handwriting tended toward scrawl, Eve’s printing was precise and perfect.[181]
- Eve wondered why crying babies sounded like invading aliens.[182]
- To Eve’s way of thinking, dolls were just creepy.[183]
- Eve engaged in staring contests with Galahad.[186]
- The design etched on Eve’s wedding ring was an ancient charm for protection.[187]
- Eve did not speak or understand Spanish. “Moments later there was a spate of Spanish. From the tone, she took it to be curses.”[188]
- Eve was Louise’s matron of honor.[189]
- Eve’s master code was 382T01A0, although when Lottie Roebuck used a blank in Obsession in Death, she programmed it as 080E53D9, which she then assigned to Eve.[190]
Skills
- She was skilled at hand-to-hand combat.[191] She frequently sparred with a droid or Roarke,[98] as exercise or to work off anger. As a gift, Roarke gave her lessons with martial artist Master Lu.
- Eve swam regularly.[192] “An hour in the gym, some hard laps in the pool, would loosen her body and her mind.”[193] She swam “like a fish.”[194]
- She also ran and lifted weights, for exercise and to wear herself out.
- Eve had some basketball skill, demonstrating her hook shot and three-point range for some kids during a pick-up game.[195]
- She knew how to box (although she said her style was “fight”[196]), and was good at evaluating weaknesses of opponents in the ring.[197]
- In Ritual in Death, when Eve was in Suite 606, she sensed something; a “burning and a kind of... pulsing... Spent energy, the shadows of it still beating.”[198] Eve also demonstrated the ability to identify a sensitive, identify when they used their ability, and the strength/power of their abilities.[199] (Eve’s YANNIs)
- Eve was naturally observant (Mira said “often uncomfortably so”), and that trait was expanded by police training,[200]
- Eve ran track in state school, mentioned in Golden in Death, which was “a good outlet for her, as she could run and imagine herself going and going and going until she was free.”[201]
Food and drink
- Roarke and Summerset both thought her appetite was juvenile.[202][203]
- Eve preferred her popcorn drenched in butter and salt.[204]
- She fixed a baked potato so it was “drowned in butter” and “buried” in salt.[205]
- Pancakes were a weakness of Eve’s.[206] She poured immense amounts of syrup on her pancakes and waffles because she liked “the sugar rush.”[203] “She drowned her waffles in syrup.”[207]
- Eve was leery of vegetables.[208]
- When Eve didn’t eat, she was worried.[209]
- Eve had her first slice of New York pizza at Polumbi’s.[210]
- Eve drank black coffee and Pepsi, primarily. She also drank wine,[211] tea with a whiff of whiskey,[212] screamers,[213] Mexican beer,[214] Guinness, and Champagne.[215]
- Eve hated coconut.[216]
- She disliked brandy.[217]
YANNIs
Foster Care History
- According to Charlotte Mira, “For two years between the ages of eight and ten, you lived in a communal home while your parents were searched for.”[220] Later in the series it was stated that when Eve got out of the hospital in Dallas, she went into the system. She had no ID, no memory, trauma, sexual assault. They gave her to Trudy Lombard (before she was nine), when they couldn’t find Eve’s parents, hoping to mainstream her. Eve stayed with her for a five-and-a-half-month period in 2036.[221] (return to section)
Education
- When Eve first visited Roarke’s home, she thought of the entryway to his home that “there were paintings on the walls, the kind she’d once seen on a field trip to the Met.” Since she was schooled in Dallas and only came to New York to become a cop, she wouldn’t have gone to the Metropolitan Museum of Art on a field trip.[222] (return to section)
Height
- Height given of 5 feet, 9 inches[18] ... or ... 5 feet, 10 inches.[223] (return to section)
ID Number
- In Naked in Death, her identification number was given as 53478Q[224] ... or ... as 5347BQ[225] In Thankless in Death, it was 43578Q,
Sports Loyalty
- Eve was a Yankees fan in Remember When[226], but in Dark in Death, she told Detective Santiago, “we have standards in this division: Mets, Knicks, Giants, Rollers, Rangers.” When he asked, “What about the Yankees, the Jets?” Eve stared at him coldly, saying, “Don’t make me write you up.”[227]
Sensitive
- Oddity
- Though Eve had previously met with Isis Paige, Zeke Peabody, and Sam Peabody, each known sensitives, there was no indication that she could gauge the ability or potential each of these individuals possessed. She was unaware, until told, that Isis and Sam violated her privacy with their powers.[228] In Visions in Death, Celina Sanchez told Eve she was surprised that Eve was so resistant and suspicious of sensitives when she has a gift herself. Eve protested.[229]
- In Ritual in Death, Eve demonstrated the ability to identify a sensitive, identify when they used their ability, and the strength/power of their abilities.[199] When she stepped into the pentagram drawn at the crime scene where Ava Marsterson was murdered, she felt a “pull”; during Isis’s ritual, she “felt something cold, cold, brutally cold push against the air.”[230]
- That she demonstrated this ability for the first time, with seemingly no surprise (from herself or others), may be an inconsistency or, at least, an oddity.(return to section)
Terminations
- In Naked in Death, Mira said that the termination of the Chemi-head was Dallas’s second termination.[231] In Rapture in Death, when Dallas is questioned about the number of times she has used maximum force (to terminate) she answers, “Three times.” (no terminations occurred for period between statements)[232] (return to section)
Some take this to mean she counted terminating her father.
See also
Other pages about Eve Dallas:
- Creative Threats
- Eve’s Fashion and Eve’s Fashion - Work
- Eve’s History
- Eve’s Illegal Activities
- Eve’s Laws
- Eve’s Mixed Metaphors
- Eve’s Nightmares, Part 2, and Part 3
- Eve's Vehicles
- Eve and Summerset Insults
- Eve’s Relationship With Roarke
- Eve Dallas/Relationship With Roarke
- Gifts and Roarke's Gifts to Eve (from first few books only)
- Injuries in Death - list of injuries sustained by characters in the books
- Roarke/Relationship With Eve
- Roarke's Relationship With Eve
- Nora Quotes/Eve
- Nora Quotes/Eve And Roarke
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), p. 5
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), Chapter 3
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), pp. 8, 96; Immortal in Death (ISBN 0-425-15378-9), pp. 2-4; Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), pp. 12-13; Promises in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15548-2), p. 6
- ↑ Eternity in Death (ISBN 978-0-515-14367-6), Chapter 6
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 17
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Survivor in Death (ISBN 0-425-20418-9), p. 8
- ↑ Eternity in Death, Chapter 1
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 Kindred in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15595-6), p. 3
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), pp. 8, 96
- ↑ Promises in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15548-2), p. 6
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 11.2 Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), p. 220
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), p. 33
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), pp. 100, 149
- ↑ Immortal in Death (ISBN 0-425-15378-9), p. 3; Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 142; Vengeance in Death (ISBN 0-425-16039-4), p. 16; Promises in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15548-2), p. 6
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 7; Promises in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15548-2), p. 7; Survivor in Death (ISBN 0-425-20418-9), p. 8; Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), pp. 12-13
- ↑ 16.0 16.1 Immortal in Death (ISBN 0-425-15378-9), pp. 2-4
- ↑ Immortal in Death (ISBN 0-425-15378-9), p. 14; Origin in Death (ISBN 0-425-20426-X), p. 8
- ↑ 18.0 18.1 Immortal in Death (ISBN 0-425-15378-9), p. 14
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), p. 78
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), pp. 8, 96; Survivor in Death (ISBN 0-425-20418-9), p. 8
- ↑ Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), pp. 12-13; Promises in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15548-2), p. 6
- ↑ Promises in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15548-2), p. 92
- ↑ Creation in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22102-0), pp. 112, 236
- ↑ Remember When (ISBN 978-0-425-19547-5), p. 376
- ↑ Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), p. 40
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 246
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 128; Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), p. 100; Memory in Death, Chapter 5; Salvation in Death, Chapter 7; Creation in Death, Chapter 10
- ↑ “He [Roundtree] kicked his desk, a sentiment and gesture she [Eve] understood as she was prone to the same.” Celebrity in Death, Chapter 14
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), pp. 113, 216, 252; Immortal in Death (ISBN 0-425-15378-9), p. 3; Promises in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15548-2), p. 304; Kindred in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15595-6), p. 56
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 136
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 158
- ↑ Witness in Death (ISBN 0-425-17363-1), p. 117
- ↑ Witness in Death (ISBN 0-425-17363-1), p. 318
- ↑ Origin in Death, chapter 15
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 226
- ↑ Strangers in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15470-6), p. 322; Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), pp. 228-229; Celebrity in Death, Chapter 18
- ↑ Strangers in Death, Chapters 17 and 18; Kindred in Death, Chapter 20; Delusion in Death, Chapter 9
- ↑ Strangers in Death, Chapters 17 and 18; Kindred in Death, Chapter 20
- ↑ Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), p. 220; Promises in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15548-2), p. 261
- ↑ Immortal in Death (ISBN 0-425-15378-9), p. 283
- ↑ Creation in Death, Chapter 18
- ↑ Strangers in Death, Chapter 12
- ↑ Immortal in Death, Chapter 18; Ceremony in Death, Chapters 2 and 11; Vengeance in Death, Chapter 9; Holiday in Death, Chapters 2, 15, and 19; Conspiracy in Death, Chapters 7, 12, 16, and 18; Loyalty in Death, Chapter 6; Witness in Death, Chapter 19; Judgment in Death, Chapter 10; Seduction in Death, Chapter 19; Reunion in Death, Chapters 1 and 8; Purity in Death, Chapters 7 and 22; Portrait in Death, Chapters 3 and 20; Imitation in Death, Chapter 21; Divided in Death, Chapters 6 and 9; Visions in Death, Chapter 10; Survivor in Death, Chapters 4 and 16; Origin in Death, Chapters 9 and 16; Innocent in Death, Chapters 3 and 9; Creation in Death, Chapters 10 and 13; Strangers in Death, Chapter 9; Indulgence in Death, Chapter 16; Treachery in Death, Chapters 10 and 20; New York to Dallas, Chapter 1; Delusion in Death, Chapter 11; Concealed in Death, Chapter 20; Festive in Death, Chapter 12; Obsession in Death, Chapter 17; Devoted in Death, Chapters 14, 18, and 20; Brotherhood in Death, Chapters 4, 10, and 21; Dark in Death, Chapter 13; Leverage in Death, Chapter 17 and Epilogue; Vendetta in Death, Chapter 19; Golden in Death, Chapter 3; Desperation in Death, Chapters 8 and 18; Encore in Death, Chapter 4; Passions in Death, Chapters 1 and 8
- ↑ Survivor in Death (ISBN 978-0-20418-4), p. 304
- ↑ Immortal in Death (ISBN 0-425-15378-9), p. 2
- ↑ Innocent in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-21754-2), p. 344
- ↑ Brotherhood in Death, Chapter 2
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-15098-6), p. 63
- ↑ Big Jack (ISBN 978-0-425-23490-7), p. 48
- ↑ Bonded in Death, Chapter 6
- ↑ Promises in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22894-4), p. 287
- ↑ Born in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-21568-5), p. 121
- ↑ Imitation in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-19158-3), p. 256
- ↑ Strangers in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22289-8), p. 40
- ↑ Random in Death, Chapter 10
- ↑ Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), p. 131
- ↑ Holiday in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-16371-9), p. 211
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), p. 23
- ↑ Immortal in Death (ISBN 0-425-15378-9), p. 1
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 98
- ↑ Ceremony in Death, ISBN 978-0-425-15762-6, p. 195
- ↑ 62.0 62.1 New York to Dallas, Chapter 5
- ↑ Immortal in Death (ISBN 0-425-15378-9), p. 116
- ↑ Creation in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22102-0), p. 29
- ↑ 65.0 65.1 Creation in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22102-0), p. 200
- ↑ 66.0 66.1 Creation in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22102-0), pp. 17, 199
- ↑ Promises in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15548-2), p. 213
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 11
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 67
- ↑ Promises in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15548-2), p. 13
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 66
- ↑ Ritual in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22444-1), p. 15
- ↑ Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), p. 265
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 22
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), p. 114
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 1
- ↑ Kindred in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15595-6), p. 217
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), p. 227
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 140
- ↑ Immortal in Death (ISBN 0-425-15378-9), p. 211
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 206
- ↑ Portrait in Death (ISBN 0-425-18903-1), p. 275
- ↑ Remember When (ISBN 978-0-425-19547-5), pp. 356-357
- ↑ Innocent in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15401-0), p. 182
- ↑ Eternity in Death (ISBN 978-0-515-14367-6), p. 75
- ↑ Promises in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15548-2), p. 218
- ↑ Immortal in Death (ISBN 0-425-15378-9), p. 214; Vengeance in Death (ISBN 0-425-16039-4), p. 14; Portrait in Death (ISBN 0-425-18903-1), pp. 206-207; Creation in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22102-0), p. 34
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 126
- ↑ Strangers in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15470-6), p. 129
- ↑ Strangers in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15470-6), p. 277
- ↑ Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), p. 289
- ↑ Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), pp. 199-200
- ↑ Ritual in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22444-1), p. 34
- ↑ Conspiracy in Death (ISBN 0-425-16813-1), p. 19
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), p. 223
- ↑ Apprentice in Death (ISBN 978-1101987995), p. 134
- ↑ 97.0 97.1 97.2 New York to Dallas, Chapter 3
- ↑ 98.0 98.1 98.2 New York to Dallas, Chapter 2
- ↑ 99.0 99.1 New York to Dallas, Chapter 1
- ↑ Holiday in Death (ISBN 0-425-16371-7), pp. 277-278
- ↑ Creation in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22102-0), p. 126
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), pp. 1-2, 132
- ↑ Fantasy in Death (ISBN 978-0-7499-4078-2), pp. 188-189
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), pp. 1, 3, 18
- ↑ Judgment in Death (ISBN 0-425-17630-4), pp. 213, 207-220
- ↑ Midnight in Death (ISBN 0-425-20881-8), pp. 89-90
- ↑ Survivor in Death (ISBN 0-425-20418-9), pp. 351-352
- ↑ Origin in Death (ISBN 0-425-20426-X), pp. 327-329
- ↑ Naked in Death, Chapter 4
- ↑ Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), pp. 58-59
- ↑ Random in Death, Chapter 1
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 13
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), pp. 294-302, 304
- ↑ Ceremony in Death (ISBN 0-425-15762-8), p. 225; Strangers in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15470-6), p. 63
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), p. 146
- ↑ Promises in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15548-2), p. 186
- ↑ Origin in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-20426-9), p. 228
- ↑ Eternity in Death (ISBN 978-0-515-14367-6), p. 96
- ↑ Taken in Death, Chapter 10
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), p. 184
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 163
- ↑ 122.0 122.1 Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), pp. 37-38
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), pp. 77, 198, 244, 270; Immortal in Death (ISBN 0-425-15378-9), p. 68; Portrait in Death (ISBN 0-425-18903-1), p. 77; Divided in Death (ISBN 0-425-19795-6), p. 41; Creation in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22102-0), p. 200; Promises in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15548-2), pp. 324-325
- ↑ Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), p. 229
- ↑ Strangers in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15470-6), p. 161
- ↑ Vengeance in Death (ISBN 0-425-16039-4), p. 275; Portrait in Death (ISBN 0-425-18903-1), p. 215; Creation in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22102-0), p. 95; Golden in Death, Chapter 22
- ↑ Promises in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15548-2), p. 95
- ↑ Connections in Death, Chapter 19
- ↑ Seduction in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-18146-1), p. 89
- ↑ Strangers in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22289-8), p. 252
- ↑ Innocent in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15401-0), p. 155; Strangers in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15470-6), p. 235
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), pp. 232, 259, 264; Holiday in Death (ISBN 0-425-16371-7), p. 117; Strangers in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15470-6), p. 63
- ↑ Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), pp. 228-229
- ↑ Strangers in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15470-6), p. 355
- ↑ Glory in Death, Chapter 20; Visions in Death, Chapter 12; Origin in Death, Chapter 18; Promises in Death, Chapter 8; Apprentice in Death, Chapter 21; Connections in Death, Chapters 1, 3, 4, 20, and 21; Desperation in Death, Chapter 16; Passions in Death, Chapters 2 and 8
- ↑ Immortal in Death (ISBN 0-425-15378-9), p. 139
- ↑ Immortal in Death (ISBN 0-425-15378-9), p. 141
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), p. 88
- ↑ Holiday in Death, Chapter 3
- ↑ Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), p. 21
- ↑ Kindred in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15595-6), p. 340
- ↑ 142.0 142.1 Delusion in Death, Chapter 11
- ↑ Taken in Death, Chapter 9
- ↑ 144.0 144.1 Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), p. 302
- ↑ Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), p. 195
- ↑ Promises in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15548-2), p. 326
- ↑ Kindred in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15595-6), p. 308
- ↑ Treachery in Death, Chapter 9
- ↑ Treachery in Death, Chapter 18
- ↑ Delusion in Death, Chapter 6
- ↑ Thankless in Death, Chapter 9
- ↑ Born in Death, chapter 9
- ↑ Promises in Death, Chapter 22; Concealed in Death, Chapter 6
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 39; Promises in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15548-2), p. 55; Kindred in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15595-6), pp. 37, 166, 285; Concealed in Death, Chapter 6
- ↑ Immortal in Death (ISBN 0-425-15378-9), p. 133
- ↑ Vengeance in Death, Chapter 13
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), p. 2; Loyalty in Death, Chapter 17; Seduction in Death, Chapter 1; Born in Death, Chapter 8; Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), p. 146; Ritual in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22444-1), p. 29
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 16; Witness in Death, Chapter 19; Judgment in Death, Chapter 6; Calculated in Death, Chapter 6; Obsession in Death, Chapter 11; Brotherhood in Death, Chapter 11
- ↑ Holiday in Death, Chapter 7
- ↑ Ritual in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22444-1), p. 29
- ↑ Ritual in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22444-1), p. 31
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 24
- ↑ Immortal in Death (ISBN 0-425-15378-9), pp. 145-146
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), pp. 21, 38, 228; Calculated in Death, Chapter 1; Taken in Death, Chapter 1; Festive in Death, Chapter 1
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 129
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), p. 234
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), p. 290-291
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), p. 25; Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 122; Immortal in Death (ISBN 0-425-15378-9), p. 88
- ↑ Immortal in Death (ISBN 0-425-15378-9), p. 34
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), p. 306; Ritual in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22444-1), p. 48
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 125
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 222
- ↑ Immortal in Death (ISBN 0-425-15378-9), p. 137
- ↑ Rapture in Death (ISBN 0-425-15518-8), p. 7
- ↑ Witness in Death (ISBN 0-425-17363-1), p. 7
- ↑ Conspiracy in Death (ISBN 0-425-16813-1), p. 57
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 221
- ↑ Betrayal in Death (ISBN 0-425-17857-9), p. 250; Seduction in Death (ISBN 0-425-18146-4), p. 54; Memory in Death (ISBN 0-425-21073-1), p. 105; Strangers in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15470-6), p. 79
- ↑ Origin in Death (ISBN 0-425-20426-X), p. 27
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 265
- ↑ Creation in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22102-0), p. 43
- ↑ Ritual in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22444-1), p. 47
- ↑ Creation in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22102-0), p. 166
- ↑ Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), p. 12
- ↑ Promises in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15548-2), p. 67
- ↑ Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), p. 48
- ↑ Promises in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15548-2), p. 73
- ↑ Portrait in Death (ISBN 0-425-18903), p. 69
- ↑ Kindred in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15595-6), p. 5
- ↑ Obsession in Death, Chapter 16
- ↑ New York to Dallas, Chapter 3; Salvation in Death, Chapter 22; Treachery in Death, Chapter 14
- ↑ Promises in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15548-2), p. 3; Kindred in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15595-6), p. 203
- ↑ Celebrity in Death, Chapter 16
- ↑ Rapture in Death (ISBN 0-425-15518-8), p. 244; Reunion in Death (ISBN 0-425-18397-1), p. 65
- ↑ Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), p. 58
- ↑ Festive in Death (ISBN 978-0-515-15415-1), p. 111.
- ↑ Salvation in Death, Chapter 17
- ↑ Ritual in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22444-1), pp. 16, 18
- ↑ 199.0 199.1 Ritual in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22444-1), pp. 56, 58
- ↑ New York to Dallas, Chapter 19
- ↑ Golden in Death, Chapter 15
- ↑ Born in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-21568-5), p. 219; Seduction in Death (ISBN 0-425-18146-4), p. 285
- ↑ 203.0 203.1 Born in Death, Chapter 15
- ↑ Creation in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22102-0), p. 5
- ↑ Indulgence in Death, Chapter 12
- ↑ Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), p. 57
- ↑ Celebrity in Death, Chapter 18
- ↑ Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), p. 301
- ↑ Immortal in Death (ISBN 0-425-15378-9), p. 135
- ↑ Kindred in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15595-6), p. 93
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), pp. 23, 53, 70, 101, 235, 292; Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 18; Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), pp. 99, 198; Promises in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15548-2), pp. 68, 145, 212, 295; Kindred in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15595-6), pp. 90, 200
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), p. 281
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), p. 137
- ↑ Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), p. 46
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), pp. 163, 223-224; Salvation in Death (ISBN 978-0-399-15522-2), p. 280
- ↑ Witness in Death (ISBN 0-425-17363-1), p. 273
- ↑ Survivor in Death (ISBN 0-425-20418-9), p. 306
- ↑ Glory in Death (ISBN 0-425-15098-4), p. 118
- ↑ Immortal in Death (ISBN 0-425-15378-9), p. 172
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), p. 133
- ↑ Memory in Death (ISBN 0-425-21073-1), pp. 28-29, 111
- ↑ Naked in Death, Chapter 5
- ↑ Origin in Death (ISBN 0-425-20426-X), p. 8
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), p. 48
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), pp. 197, 212
- ↑ Remember When (ISBN 978-0-425-19547-5), p. 370
- ↑ Dark in Death, Chapter 12
- ↑ Ceremony in Death (ISBN 0-425-15762-8), pp. 78, 247-248; Reunion in Death (ISBN 0-425-18397-1), pp. 128-129
- ↑ Visions in Death (ISBN 0-425-20300-X), p. 93
- ↑ Ritual in Death (ISBN 978-0-425-22444-1), pp. 62-63
- ↑ Naked in Death (ISBN 0-425-14829-7), p. 132
- ↑ Rapture in Death (ISBN 0-425-15518-8), p. 33