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Nance Laurel scooted her chair forward and stared at the evidence board, her pose oddly parallel to Rhyme's when he parked his Storm Arrow in front of the charts.

"And nothing about Moreno's charitable work, anything that cast him in a favorable light?"

"The driver said he was a gentleman. And he tipped well."

This didn't seem to be exactly what Laurel was looking for. "I see." She glanced at her watch. The time was getting close to 11 p.m. She frowned as if she expected the time to be hours earlier. For a moment Sachs actually believed that the woman was considering camping out for the night. But she began to organize all the piles of papers on her table, saying, "I'm going home now." A glance at Sachs. "I know it's late but if you could just write up your notes and what Agent Dellray found, then send them--"

"To you, on the secure server."

"If you could."

*

WHEELING BACK AND FORTH in front of the sparse whiteboards and listening to the staccato, insistent typing of Amelia Sachs at the keyboard of her computer.

She didn't seem happy.

Lincoln Rhyme certainly wasn't. He scanned the boards again. The goddamn boards...

The case was nothing but hearsay, ambiguous and speculative.

Soft.

Not a single bit of evidence collected, evidence analyzed, evidence rendered into deduction. Rhyme sighed in frustration.

A hundred years ago the French criminalist Edmond Locard said that at every crime scene a transfer occurs between the perpetrator and the scene or the perp and the victim. It might be virtually impossible to see, but it was absolutely there to find...if you knew how to look and if you were patient and diligent.

Nowhere was Locard's Principle more true than in a homicide like Moreno's. A shooting always leaves a wealth of clues: slugs, spent cartridges, friction ridge prints, gunshot residue, footprints, trace materials at the sniper's nest...

He knew clues existed--but they remained out of reach. Infuriating. And with every passing day, hell, every hour, they grew less valuable as they degraded, were contaminated and possibly were stolen.

Rhyme had been looking forward to analyzing the recovered evidence himself with his own hand, probing, examining...touching. An intense pleasure that had been denied him for so many hard years.

But that possibility was looking more and more unlikely, as time passed with no word from the Bahamas.

An officer from Information Services called and reported that while there were many database hits for "Don Bruns" or "Donald Bruns," none was ranked as significant by IS's Obscure Relationship Algorithm system. ORA takes disparate information, like names, addresses, organizations and activities, and uses supercomputers to find connections that traditional investigation might not. Rhyme was only mildly disappointed with the negative results. He hadn't expected much; government agents at that level--especially snipers--surely would swap out their covers frequently, use cash for most purchases and stay off the grid as much as possible.

He now glanced toward Sachs, her eyes fixed on her notebook as she typed a memo for Laurel. She was fast and accurate. Whatever afflicted her hip and knee had spared her fingers. She never seemed to hit backspace for corrections. He recalled when he started in policing, years ago, women officers never admitted they could type, for fear of being marginalized and treated like administrative assistants. Now that had changed; those who keyboarded faster could get information faster and were therefore more efficient investigators.

Sachs's expression, however, suggested that of a put-upon secretary.

Thom's voice: "Can I get you--?"

"No," Rhyme snapped.

"Well, since the question was directed toward Amelia," the aide fired back, "why don't we let her answer? Can I get you anything to eat, drink?"

"No, thanks, Thom."

Which gave Rhyme a certain sense of petty satisfaction. He declined Thom's offer too. And he returned to brooding.

Sachs took a phone call. Rhyme heard music tinning from her phone and knew who the caller was. She hit speaker.

"What do you have for us, Rodney?" Rhyme called.

"Lincoln, hi. Moving slowly but I've traced the whistleblower's email from Romania to Sweden."

Rhyme looked at the time. The hour was early morning in Stockholm. He supposed the body clock of geeks operated on its own time.

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