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Pulaski joined him. Mychal Poitier did too.

"Notice anything odd about this scene?"

"One hell of a shot. That's an awfully long way away. And look at that pollution he had to fire through."

"It's the same shooting scenario we saw yesterday from the other side of the water," he grumbled. "Nothing's changed about it. Obviously I'm not talking about that. I'm saying: Don't you see something strange about the horticulture?"

The young officer examined the scene for a moment. "The shooter had help. The branches."

"That's right." Rhyme explained to Poitier, "Somebody cut those lower branches so the sniper would have a clear shot. We should search the garden."

But the corporal shook his head. "It is a good theory, Captain. But no. That tree? It's a poisonwood. Are you familiar with it?"

"No."

"It's just like the name suggests, like poison oak or sumac. If you burn it, for instance, the smoke will be like tear gas. If you touch the leaves you can end up in the hospital from the irritation. They are flowering trees and very pretty so the resorts here don't cut them down but they do trim all but the highest branches so people don't touch them."

"Ah, well, nice try," Rhyme muttered. He absolutely hated it when a solid theory crashed. And, with it, any hope of a proper crime scene to search.

He told Pulaski, "Get some pictures, take samples of the carpet right outside the door, soil samples from the beds around the front sidewalk, dust the knobs here for prints. Probably useless but as long as we're here..."

Rhyme watched the young man collect the evidence and slip it into pl

astic bags, documenting where it had been found. Pulaski then took perhaps a hundred pictures of the scene. He lifted three latent prints. He finished and deposited what he'd collected in a large paper bag. "Anything else, Lincoln?"

"No," the criminalist grumbled.

The search of the Kill Room and the inn was perhaps the fastest in the history of forensic analysis.

Someone appeared in the doorway, another uniformed officer, skin very dark, face circular. He glanced at Rhyme with what seemed like admiration. Perhaps Mychal Poitier's copy of Rhyme's crime scene manual had recently made the rounds of the Royal Bahamas Police. Or maybe he was simply impressed to be in the same room as the odd cop from America who had in a series of simple deductions transformed the case of the missing student into a murder investigation.

"Corporal," said the young officer to Poitier, with a deferential nod. He carried a thick folder and a large shopping bag. "From Assistant Commissioner McPherson: a full copy of the crime scene report and autopsy photos. And the autopsy reports themselves."

Poitier took the folder from the man and thanked him. He nodded at the bag. "The victims' clothing?"

"Yes, and shoes. Evidence that was collected here just after the shooting too. But I have to tell you, much has gone missing, the morgue administrator told me. He doesn't know how."

"Doesn't know how," Poitier scoffed.

Rhyme recalled that the watches and other valuables had vanished between here and the morgue, as had Eduardo de la Rua's camera and tape recorder.

"I'm sorry, Corporal."

Poitier added, "Any word on the shell casings?" He cast a glance through the window at the spit of land across the bay. The divers and officers with metal detectors had been at work for the past hour or so.

"I'm afraid not. It seems the sniper took the brass with him and we still can't find where the nest was."

A shrug from Poitier. "And any hits on the name Barry Shales?"

As they'd driven here Poitier had had his intelligence operation see if Customs or Passport Control had a record of the sniper entering the country. Credit card information too.

"Nothing, sir. No."

"All right. Thank you, Constable."

The man saluted then gave a tentative nod to Rhyme, turned and, with impressive posture, marched from the room.

Rhyme asked Thom to push him closer to Poitier and he peered into the shopping bag, noting three plastic-wrapped bundles, all tightly sealed, attached to which were chain-of-custody cards, properly filled out. He clumsily reached in and extracted a small envelope on top. Inside was the bullet. Rhyme estimated it as a bit bigger than the most common sniper round, the .338 Lapua. This was probably a .416, a caliber growing in popularity. Rhyme studied the bit of deformed copper and lead. Like all rounds, even this large caliber, it seemed astonishingly small to have caused such horrific damage and stolen a human life in a fraction of a second.

Source: www.allfreenovel.com
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