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   Boldt studied a large dust ring on the dresser. A television had been removed. A small, gray electronics device bearing a set of wireless headphones lay in a heap to the side of the same dresser. He picked the headphones up in his gloved hands.

   Gaynes said, "You use 'em so the spouse can sleep while you watch the tube."

   "She was single," Boldt reminded.

   "A visitor maybe," Gaynes said. "Date rape," she repeated with more certainty. "Guy ties her up and gets too aggressive. Accidentally snaps her spine and takes off."

   "The television?" he asked his former prote´ge´.

   "Stole it to cover up it was him. Make it look like

someone broke in. The papers have been filled with stories about all the break-ins since the Flu hit."

   Studying the headphones, Boldt said, "Maybe she just appreciated music or maybe she subscribed to the cable music channels." He pointed to the stack of recent best sellers on Sanchez's bedside end table.

   Boldt walked around the bed with a sick feeling in the pit of his stomach. He and Gaynes traded places. Police ballet. Since the advent of the Flu, reports of robberies and burglaries were up exponentially. "We'll want to check our sheets," he suggested. "See if this fits any patterns."

   "Got it," she replied. She lifted the top book off the end table, an Amy Tan novel. "Bookmarked with a receipt dated two days ago. And she's . . . a hundred and seventy pages into it—"

   "And we're in the midst of a Flu," Boldt pointed out. "Not like she has a lot of fun time."

   "Maybe six, seven hours a night at home, max."

   "So she didn't watch much television," Boldt concluded.

   "Which means you're probably right about the cable music. A hundred and seventy pages in two nights? You think she's been entertaining a lover?" she asked rhetorically. "Sounds more like insomnia."

   "Ask around the house about current boyfriends."

   "I'm telling you, a rapist wouldn't undress her like this, L.T. He tears her clothes off. It's rage, not courtship. And if he goes to the trouble to tie her up, he rapes her hard or fires juice all over the place. We're not seeing real good evidence here." She hollered to the SID tech, "What's that bathroom like?"

   "It's light," the tech fired back. "My guess? The guy wasn't in here at all."

   Boldt migrated over to check the windows—all locked—so he didn't have to look at the bed while Gaynes talked so calmly about raping and beating and masturbating. Sex Crimes—Special Assaults—conditioned a detective in ways even a homicide investigator had a difficult time understanding. He looked out the window to where light from the house played on the small patch of backyard and the separate garage.

   "Her underwear's clean," Gaynes reported. "So's the bra. This looks like someone she knew. And using shoe laces to tie her? A necktie maybe. A belt. Something handy and fast. What's the guy do: ask her to lie still while he unlaces her Hush Puppies and ties her wrists?"

   "Maybe her neck was already broken," Boldt suggested. "Maybe she wasn't going anywhere."

   "Then why tie her up at all?" Gaynes asked, confusing the issue.

   An uneasy silence settled between them. Not a black hole, he pleaded.

   Gaynes continued cautiously, "And that's another thing. . . . The trauma supposedly occurred after she was tied to the bed? Is that the general consensus? Is that what we're thinking here? That's what's logical, right? He ties her up to keep her still. Goes for oral sex or something. Yanks her head a little too hard and snaps her neck in the process? Something like that? But he doesn't tie her ankles?" she said skeptically.

   Boldt's only mental image was of the other case— little Leanne Carmichael, thirteen years old, the crotch of her pants cut away, her legs tied open. A dark basement. "I worked a rape-kidnapping earlier in the week. He tied up the girl with shoelaces."

   "Carmichael," she said. The case remained open; continued to make a lot of noise.

   "We'll want the SID lab to make comparisons. The same knots? Anything connecting the two crimes?"

   "The lab, sure," she agreed, "but not the media. So make the request that they do it quietly."

   He said, "True enough."

   Someone must have finally been moving the SID van, for headlights spread across the wet backyard. Boldt didn't like what he saw there.

   "I'm going outside to look around," Boldt said.

   "It's nasty out there," the SID tech cautioned from the bathroom.

   "Check her boots and meet me outside," he told Gaynes. She cupped her hands to the window, peering into the backyard. She knew Boldt well.

   "Now," he reminded, his voice urgent.

   "Got it," she said.

* * *

"Nasty." Gaynes tugged the GORE-TEX hood over her head. Boldt made a similar move with the collar of his green oilskin. He switched on a flashlight borrowed from a patrolman—one of the ones with six D-cell batteries inside—enough weight to club a skull to pulp, the flashlight's second function. Hunched over, he and Gaynes approached a disturbed area of mud in the backyard. They walked single file, electing to avoid the well-worn route leading from the separate garage to the house's back door.

   "This is where he intercepted her?" Gaynes suggested, dropping to one knee.

   "Looks like a possibility," Boldt said. "But there's no sign of dragging."

   "Her shoes show mud. The tech bagged them. Black leather jacket, presumably hers, had a partial shoe print on the chest. A set of keys and a garage clicker in the pockets." She added, "And yes, I'll have the shoe print typed, if possible," anticipating the request.

   Gaynes poked a raised rib of mud and grass with her gloved finger. "It's recent enough."

   Boldt kneeled beside her, the flashlight illuminating the disturbance. The grass looked like a rug scrunched up on a hardwood floor. Boldt tore some grass loose and sealed it into an evidence bag for lab comparison. He lived for such work—his lifeblood. He heard more chaos around in front of the house. More press. More pressure.

   Gaynes said, "I can see Sanchez stumbling upon him unexpectedly, surprising him, a struggle and she goes down."

   From behind them, Daphne spoke. "At first it's a matter of survival for him: get her to shut up and get the hell out of here. But then there's a change. Something primitive takes over. Primal. It's about dominance now, about her struggling and him overpowering her. He finds he gets off on it. He wants more than to simply subdue her. He has to possess her."

   "You're buying the burglary?" Boldt asked, peering up at her into the rain, the flashlight following. Even in the rain, Daphne Matthews looked good.

   "Help me out," Daphne said.

   "Shoelaces on both wrists. Same as Carmichael, my thirteen-year-old rape victim."