the scene.” He was speaking softly in a voice that was almost cheerful. She knew he’d be imagining himself walking the grid—as he referred to the process of searching a crime scene—using her as his eyes and legs. As head of Investigation and Resources—the NYPD’s forensics and crime scene unit—Lincoln Rhyme had often worked homicide crime scenes himself, usually logging more hours on the job than even junior officers. She knew that walking the grid was what he missed most about his life before the accident.
“What’s the crime scene kit like?” Rhyme asked. Jesse Corn had dug one up from the Sheriff’s Department equipment room for her to use.
Sachs opened the dusty metal attaché case. It didn’tcontain a tenth of the equipment of her kit in New York but at least there were the basics: tweezers, a flashlight, probes, latex gloves and evidence bags. “Crime scene lite,” she said.
“We’re fish out of water on this one, Sachs.”
“I’m with you there, Rhyme.” She pulled on the gloves as she looked over the room. Garrett’s bedroom was what’s known as a secondary crime scene—not the place where the actual crime occurred but the location where it was planned, for instance, or to which the perps fled and hid out after a crime. Rhyme had long ago taught her that these were often more valuable than the primary scenes because perps tended to be more careless in places like this, shedding gloves and clothes and leaving behind weapons and other evidence.
She now started her search, walking a grid pattern—covering the floor in close parallel strips, the way you’d mow a lawn, foot by foot, then turning perpendicular and walking over the same territory again.
“Talk to me, Sachs, talk to me.”
“It’s a spooky place, Rhyme.”
“Spooky?” he groused. “What the hell is ‘spooky’?”
Lincoln Rhyme didn’t like soft observations. He liked hard—specific—adjectives: cold, muddy, blue, green, sharp. Rhyme even complained when she commented that something was “large” or “small.” (“Tell me inches or millimeters, Sachs, or don’t tell me at all.” Amelia Sachs searched crime scenes armed with a Glock 10, latex gloves and a Stanley contractor’s tape measure.)
She thought: Well, I feel damn spooked. Doesn’t that count for anything?
“He’s got these posters up. From the Alien movies. And Starship Troopers —these big bugs attacking people. He’s drawn some himself too. They’re violent. The place is filthy. Junk food, a lot of books, clothes, the bugs in the jars. Not much else.”
“The clothes are dirty?”
“Yep. Got a good one—a pair of pants, really stained. He’s worn them a lot; they must have a ton of trace in them. And they all have cuffs. Lucky for us—most kids his age’d wear only blue jeans.” She dropped them in a plastic evidence bag.
“Shirts?”
“T-shirts only,” she said. “Nothing with pockets.” Criminalists love cuffs and pockets; they trap all sorts of helpful clues. “I’ve got a couple of notebooks here, Rhyme. But Jim Bell and the other deputies must’ve looked through them.”
“Don’t make any assumptions about our colleagues’ crime scene work,” Rhyme said wryly.
“Got it.”
She began flipping through the pages. “There’re no diaries. No maps. Nothing about kidnapping. . . . There’re just drawings of insects . . . pictures of the ones he’s got here in the terrariums.”
“Any of girls, young women? Sado-sexual?”
“No.”
“Bring them along. How about the books?”
“Maybe a hundred or so. Schoolbooks, books about animals, insects . . . Hold on—got something here—a Tanner’s Corner High School yearbook. It’s six years old.”
Rhyme asked a question to someone in the room. He came back on the line. “Jim says Lydia’s twenty-six. She’d’ve been out of high school eight years. But check the McConnell girl’s page.”
Sachs thumbed through the M ’s.
“Yep. Mary
Owen Matthews
Jane Yolen
Moira Rogers
Ellery Queen
John Lawton
Bindi Irwin
Cynthia Eden
Francine Segan
Max Allan Collins
Brian Deleeuw