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"I don't know." She dug a thumbnail into her finger. Her mouth tight, she shook her head, staring at the evidence chart. Loose ends. "There's not enough evidence."

"There's never enough evidence," Rhyme reminded. "But that's not an excuse. That's what we're here for, Sachs. We're the ones who examine a few dirty bricks and figure out what the entire castle looked like."

"I don't know."

"I can't help you, Sachs. You've got to figure this one out on your own. Think about what you've got. Somebody with a connection to Maryland . . . somebody following you in a Mercedes . . . saltwater and seaweed . . . cash, a lot of cash. Crooked cops."

"I don't know," she repeated stridently.

But he wasn't giving an inch. "That's not an option. You have to know."

She glared at him--and at the hard message beneath the words, which was: You can walk out that door tomorrow and throw away your career if you want. But for now you're still a cop with a job to do.

Her fingernails worried her scalp.

"There's something more, something you're missing," Rhyme muttered as he too gazed at the evidence charts.

"So, you're saying we have to think outside the box," said Ron Pulaski.

"Ah, cliches," Rhyme snapped. "Well, okay, if you're in a box, maybe you're there for a reason. I say don't think outside it; I say look more closely at what's inside with you. . . . So, Sachs, what do you see in there?"

She stared at the charts for some moments.

Then she smiled and whispered, "Maryland."

BENJAM

IN CREELEY HOMICIDE

* * *

* 56-year-old Creeley, apparently suicide by hanging. Clothesline. But had broken thumb, couldn't tie noose.

* Computer-written suicide note about depression. But appeared not to be suicidally depressed, no history of mental/emotional problems.

* Around Thanksgiving two men broke into his house and possibly burned evidence. White men, but faces not observed. One bigger than other. They were inside for about an hour.

* Evidence in Westchester house:

* Broke through lock; skillful job.

* Leather texture marks on fireplace tools and Creeley's desk.

* Soil in front of fireplace has higher acid content than soil around house and contains pollutants. From industrial site?

* Traces of burned cocaine in fireplace.

* Ash in fireplace.

* Financial records, spreadsheet, references to millions of dollars.

* Checking logo on documents, sending entries to forensic accountant.

* Diary re: getting oil changed, haircut appointment and going to St. James Tavern.

* Analysis of ash from Queens CS lab:

* Logo of software used in corporate accounting.

Source: www.allfreenovel.com