pondering about the old nun who had screened Anne, wondering if she was still alive and considering ways to locate her.
“Where’s Denise? Is she done with the room yet? I’d like to lay down for a bit and I’ve got another job for her.”
Upstairs, Sister Denise was alone again and almost finished cleaning Sister Anne’s apartment.
Upon making a final inspection, she noticed that some blood had spilled into the hall closet next to the bathroom. A slender thread had meandered along the floor, like a tributary on a map, pointing to a secret destination. Denise freshened her bucket with cold water and ammonia, then used a soft-headed tooth-brush to scrub dried blood from the seams between the floor boards.
That’s strange.
The gap between two boards—as thin as the edge of a credit card—had widened ever so slightly. A loose board. It appeared that with the proper manipulation, the board could be completely lifted from the row covering the closet floor.
Curious, Denise found a pair of manicure scissors in the bathroom, opened them, and used a blade to pry the loose board out. Two adjacent boards were also loose. Denise pried them out as well.
Something was under the floor.
Something rectangular.
Denise opened the closet door wider to allow more light on the hole before she reached in to get the mysterious object hidden under the floor.
It was a cardboard box.
Chapter Seventeen
I n the twilight hour before dawn, Grace Garner sat alone in the empty homicide squad room, feeling the crushing weight of the case on her shoulders.
It increased with every word of the morning’s headlines.
The Seattle Times had NUN’S MURDER CONCERNS VATICAN — HOLY SEE ASKS CHIEF FOR UPDATE . While the Post-Intelligencer had SISTERS PLAN SHELTER SERVICE FOR SLAIN ‘ ANGEL OF MERCY ,’ and the Seattle Mirror had lined POLICE FOCUS ON WEAPON — A KNIFE FROM NUN’S SHELTER on page one above the fold.
Each of the headlines hit Grace like a blow to her stomach. After digesting every article, she set the papers aside to work. As she reached for a re-canvass report, her cell phone rang. It was her sergeant.
“It’s Stan, you see today’s papers yet?”
“Yes.”
“The heat’s on us to clear this one fast, Grace. My predawn wake-up call came from the chief. He said the commissioner, the mayor, even the governor, have ‘expressed deep interest’ in Sister Anne’s case.”
“I’m writing that down.”
“Grace.”
“And what’s their interest in the murder of a seventeen-year-old hooker? Or, a homeless down-and-out loser—”
“Grace.”
“This kind of political crap sickens me. We go flat out, Stan. We don’t need to be told the obvious.”
“It’s in my job description to tell you the obvious. By the way, we’re bringing in detectives from Robbery to help. Case status meeting’s at 7:30 A.M. ”
After the call, Grace noticed a message that had come last night from Cynthia Fairchild, with the King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office, requesting an update. Came in about midnight. They were leaning on Cindy, too.
The pressure was coming from all fronts.
Grace had a stack of messages and shuffled them into priority. First things first. She brewed herself some fresh coffee, then began working on her candidates for suspects, so far.
The full autopsy report and observations by the King County Medical Examiner’s Office on the angle and force of the wound suggested that Sister Anne’s killer was strong, likely over six feet tall and weighing more than two hundred pounds. Reviews of the shelter’s staff and client lists had, so far, yielded the following subjects who fell into that category:
Haines Stenten Smith, Caucasian male, age 37, weight 235 pounds, height six feet, six inches. Recently released from Washington Corrections Center after serving time for choking a woman in a Tacoma park. Witnesses said he held a knife to the face of a volunteer at the shelter five months ago but was intoxicated
Guy Gavriel Kay
Brian McGilloway
Jodi Thomas
S. L. Farrell
Ali Vali
Dana Stabenow
Disney Book Group
Karice Bolton
Anya Seton
RS McCoy