that, Sachs?”
“I’m thanking God there’re no reporters.”
“A fine prayer. But tell me what you’re doing.”
“Still securing the scene.”
“Look for the—”
“Entrance and exit,” she said.
Step three, determine the perpetrator’s entrance and exit routes—they will be secondary crime scenes.
But she didn’t have a clue as to where they might be. He could’ve come from anywhere. Snuck around the corners, driven here in a luggage cart, a gas truck . . .
Sachs donned goggles and began sweeping the PoliLightwand over the taxiway. It didn’t work as well outside as in a dark room, but with the heavy overcast she could see flecks and streaks glowing under the eerie green-yellow light. There were, however, no footprints.
“Sprayed her down last night,” the voice called behind her.
Sachs spun around, hand on her Glock, a half draw from the holster.
I’m never this edgy, Rhyme. It’s all your fault.
Several men in coveralls were standing at the yellow tape. She walked up to them cautiously and checked their picture IDs. They matched the men’s faces. Her hand slipped off the gun.
“They hose the place down every night. If you’re looking for something. Thought you were.”
“High-pressure hose,” another one added.
Great. Every bit of trace, every footprint, every fiber sloughed off the Dancer was gone.
“You see anybody here last night?”
“This have to do with the bomb?”
“Around seven-fifteen?” she persisted.
“Nope. Nobody comes up here. These hangars’re deserted. Probably gonna tear ’em down someday.”
“What’re you doing here now?”
“Saw a cop. You are a cop, right? And just thought we’d have a look-see. This is about that bomb, right? Who did it? Arabs? Or them militia shits?”
She shooed them off. Into the microphone she said, “They cleaned the taxiway last night, Rhyme. High-pressure water, looks like.”
“Oh, no.”
“They—”
“Hey there.”
She sighed, turning again, expecting to find the workmen back. But the new visitor was a cocky county trooper, wearing a blocked Smokey the Bear hat and razor-creased gray slacks. He ducked under the tape.
“Excuse me,” she protested. “This is a secure area.”
He slowed but didn’t stop. She checked his ID. It matched. The picture showed him looking off slightly, a cover boy on a men’s fashion magazine.
“You’re that officer from New York, right?” He laughed generously. “Nice uniforms they have down there.” Eyeing her tight jeans.
“This area’s sealed off.”
“I can help. I took the forensics course. Mostly I’m highway detail but I’ve got major crimes experience. You have some hair. Bet you’ve heard that before.”
“I really will have to ask you—”
“Jim Everts.”
Don’t go into first-name territory; it sticks like flypaper. “I’m Officer Sachs.”
“Big hubbub, this. A bomb. Messy.”
“See, Jim, this tape here’s to keep people out of the scene. Now, you gonna be helpful and step back behind it?”
“Wait. You mean officers too?”
“That I do, yes.”
“You mean me too?”
“Exactly.”
There were five classic crime scene contaminators: weather, relatives of the victim, suspects, souvenircollectors, and—the all-time worst—fellow cops.
“I won’t touch a thing. Cross my heart. Just be a pleasure to watch you work, honey.”
“Sachs,” Rhyme whispered, “tell him to get the fuck out of your crime scene.”
“Jim, get the fuck out of my crime scene.”
“Or you’ll report him.”
“Or I’ll report you.”
“Oooo, gonna be that way, is it?” He held his hands up in surrender. The last of the flirt drained from his slick grin.
“Get going , Sachs.”
The trooper ambled away slowly enough to drag some of his pride with him. He looked back once but a scathing retort eluded him.
Amelia Sachs began to walk the grid.
There were several different ways to search crime scenes. A strip search—walking in a serpentine
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