Cross nodded and stooped down beside Jake and twirled the weed in his mouth.
“That I did,” Cross said. “And this one’s pretty near identical. She didn’t die here, that much is certain. She was abducted, bound up first with duct tape and then with barbed wire, and bled slowly to death. Either that or she suffocated first. Bound up tight like that, she’d hardly have been able to breathe at all. All that happened somewhere else—there’s no sign of bleeding here.”
Jake could see that the face and hands were almost as white as paper, and they glistened in the late morning sunlight like pieces of china. The woman simply didn’t look real to Jake, but more like some kind of sick, grotesque sculpture.
A few flies had gathered around the body. They kept landing, roaming around, then flying away again. They looked like they didn’t know what to do with this mysterious object.
Jake rose to his feet and asked Chief Messenger, “Who found the body?”
As if in reply, Jake heard a man’s voice calling out …
“What the hell’s going on here? How much longer is this going to take?”
Jake turned and saw a longhaired man with a scraggly beard coming toward them. He looked wild-eyed with anger, and his voice was shaking and shrill.
He yelled, “When the hell are you taking this—this thing away? This is a huge inconvenience. I’ve had to keep my cattle in an overgrazed pasture because of all this. I’ve got lots of work to do today. How much longer is this going to take?”
Jake turned to Hamish Cross and said quietly …
“You can take the body away any time now.”
Cross nodded and gave orders to his team. Then he led the angry man away and spoke to him quietly, apparently calming him down.
Chief Messenger explained to Jake …
“That’s Guy Dafoe, who owns this property. He’s an organic farmer—our local hippie, I guess you might say. He hasn’t been around for very long. It turns out this area is good for raising grass-fed organic beef. Organic farming’s been a real boost to the local economy.”
The chief’s cellphone rang and he took the call. He listened for a moment, then said to Jake …
“This is Dave Tallhamer, the sheriff over in Hyland. You may have heard there’s a suspect in custody for the first murder—Philip Cardin. He’s the victim’s ex-husband, and a bad sort who didn’t have an alibi at the time. Tallhamer thought he had him dead to rights. But I guess this new murder changes things, doesn’t it? Dave wants to know if he should let the guy go.”
Jake thought for a moment, then said …
“Not until I’ve had a chance to talk to him.”
Chief Messenger squinted curiously and said, “Uh, doesn’t being locked in a jail cell when this woman was killed pretty much let him off the hook?”
Jake suppressed a sigh of impatience.
He repeated simply, “I’ll want to talk to him.”
Messenger nodded and got back on the phone with the sheriff.
Jake didn’t want to go into any kind of explanation right now. The truth was, he knew nothing at all about the suspect currently in custody, or even why he was a suspect. For all Jake knew, Philip Cardin might have a partner who committed this new murder, or else …
God knows what might be going on.
At this point in an investigation, there were always thousands of questions and no answers. Jake hoped that would change before too long.
While Messenger kept talking on the phone, Jake walked over to the victim’s husband, who was leaning against a police car staring off into space.
Jake said, “Mr. Nelson, I’m very sorry for your loss. I’m Special Agent Jake Crivaro, and I’m here to help bring your wife’s killer to justice.”
Nelson nodded only slightly, as if he were barely aware that he’d been spoken to.
Jake said in a firm voice, “Mr. Nelson, do you have any idea who might have done this? Or why?”
Nelson looked at him with a dazed expression.
“What?” he said. Then he repeated, “No, no, no.”
Jake knew that there was no point in asking the man any more questions, at least not right now. He was clearly in a deep state of shock. That was hardly surprising. Not only was his wife dead, but the way she had died was especially grotesque.
Jake headed back over toward the crime scene, where his forensics team was already hard at work.
He looked all around, noting how isolated the place seemed to be. At least there wasn’t a crowd of gawkers hanging around …
And so far no sign of the media.
But right then he heard the sound of another helicopter. He looked around and saw that a TV news helicopter was descending toward the meadow.
Jake sighed deeply and thought …
This case is going to be tough.
CHAPTER SIX
Riley felt a sharp tingle of expectation when the speaker stepped in front of the 200 or so recruits. The man looked like he belonged to a different era, with his thin lapels and his skinny black tie and his buzz haircut. He reminded Riley of photos she’d seen of 1960s astronauts. As he shuffled through a few notecards, then looked out over his audience, she waited for his words of welcome and praise.
Academy Director Lane Swanson began much as she had expected …
“I know that you’ve all been working hard to prepare for this day.”
He added with a half-smile …
“Well, let me tell you right now—you’re not prepared. None of you.”
An audible sigh passed through the auditorium and Swanson paused to let his words sink in.
Then he continued, “That’s what this 20-week program is about—getting you as prepared as you can get for life in the Federal Bureau of Investigation. And part of that preparedness is learning the limits of preparedness, how to deal with the unexpected, learning to think on your feet. Always remember—the FBI Academy is called the ‘West Point for Law Enforcement’ with good reason. Our standards are high. Not all of you are going to get through this. But those of you who do will be as prepared as you can hope to be for the tasks that await you.”
Riley hung on his every word as Swanson spoke about the Academy’s standards of fostering safety, esprit de corps, uniformity, accountability, and discipline. Then he went on to talk about the rigorous curriculum—courses in everything from law and ethics to interrogation and evidence collection.
Riley felt more and more anxious at every word as the truth sank in …
I’m not a summer intern anymore.
The summer program seemed like some kind of teenage day camp in comparison to what she was now facing.