Company Man

Company Man by Joseph Finder Page B

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Authors: Joseph Finder
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“Wrapped up like a burrito in Hefty bags.”
    â€œHow long has it been there?”
    â€œNo idea. You better not go blow your cookies on me.”
    â€œI’ll do my best. Who found it, one of the homeless looking for food?”
    â€œTrash guy. You lose it like you did with that little black girl, you’ll get yanked off the case, I’ll see to it.”
    Little Tiffany Akins, seven years old, had died in her arms a few months earlier. They’d got her father cuffed, but her mother and her mother’s boyfriend had already died of their gunshot wounds by the time Major Cases showed up. Audrey could not keep herself from weeping. The beautiful little girl, wearing SpongeBob pajamas, could have been her own child if she’d been able to have kids. She didn’t understand what kind of father would be so blinded by rage and jealousy that he’d kill not only his estranged wife and her lover but his own daughter too.
    She recited to herself: Now the God of patience and consolation grant you to be likeminded one toward another…
    â€œI’ll do my best, Roy,” Audrey said.

16
    The crime scene was a small blacktopped parking lot behind a ratty little diner called Lucky’s. A yellow streamer of evidence tape secured the area, barricaded off a small gathering of the usuals. It was remarkable, Audrey thought, and not a little sad, that this unknown vagrant was getting in death the kind of attention that he surely never got when it could have made a difference. A man wanders through the streets alone and unnoticed and despairing. Now, with the life gone out of his body, a crowd gathers to pay him the respect he’d never received in life.
    No TV cameras here, though. No Newschannel Six truck. Maybe not even a reporter from the Fenwick Free Press . No one wanted to come down to the five hundred block of Hastings at six in the morning to report on the discovery of some vagrant’s body.
    Roy Bugbee parked the city car on the street between two patrol cars. They got out without exchanging another word. She noticed the white van belonging to the Identification Bureau Office, meaning that the crime-scene techs were already there. Not the Medical Examiner yet. The uniformed first officer, who’d notified Dispatch, was swanning around self-importantly, warding off neighborhood gawkers, clearly enjoying the biggest thing that had happened to him allweek. Maybe all month. He approached Audrey and Bugbee with a clipboard and demanded that they sign in.
    Her eye was caught by a flash of light, then another. The IBO evidence tech on the scene was Bert Koopmans. She liked Koopmans. He was smart and thorough, obsessive-compulsive like the best crime-scene techs, but without being arrogant or difficult. Her kind of cop. Something of a gun nut, maintained his own personal Web site on firearms and forensics. He was a lean man in his fifties with a receding hairline and thick Polar Gray spectacles. He was snapping pictures, switching between Polaroid and digital and 35mm and video like some crazed paparazzi.
    Her boss, Sergeant Jack Noyce, the head of the Major Case Team, was talking on his Nextel phone. He saw Audrey and Bugbee duck under the yellow tape, held up a finger to ask them to wait. Noyce was a round-faced, stout man with melancholy eyes, gentle and sweet natured. He’d been the one who’d talked her into putting in for Major Cases. He said he wanted a woman on the squad. Never had he admitted it might have been a mistake. He was her steadfast defender, and she did him the favor of never going to him with the petty insults of her colleagues. From time to time he’d hear about something and would take her aside, promise to talk to them. He never did, though. Noyce preferred to avoid confrontation, and who could blame him, really?
    He ended the call and said, “Unknown older white male, sixties maybe, gunshot wounds to the head and chest. Waste Management guy

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