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Nine

W alt’s office door swung open, followed by a strong wind that turned out to be his sister-in-law, Myra. She, of the nervous constitution and skeletal frame.

Her voice could crack glass. “What if you showed Kevin one of those horrible shots of a car all smashed up by a drunken teenager? Maybe that would shock him into thinking straight. Maybe he’d forget about those canyon parties. Or maybe you could lock him up for an afternoon, you know, right here in your jail, and show him what that’s like if you’re busted for drugs. He’s your nephew after all.”

“I’ll take care of it, Myra, I’ll speak to him,” Walt said without turning from his computer. “You can go now.”

“Am I interrupting?”

He knew that voice. He angled to see Fiona just behind Myra, who blocked the door. Fiona wore the small tight T-shirt and hiking shorts he’d seen her in earlier, though her hair looked worse for wear and her face was shiny with sunscreen.

“I called you,” Walt reminded. “How could you be interrupting? Myra? Anything else? Good. Then get out of the doorway and let her in.”

Myra was none too subtle about looking Fiona up and down and then glancing back to Walt judgmentally.

“ Myra!” Walt chastised.

But Myra couldn’t help herself. “I like what you’ve done with the uniforms,” she told him. Then she added, “You’d better call Kevin.”

“Out!”

She huffed off.

Fiona entered, slack-jawed.

“My brother’s widow,” Walt explained, “has installed me as a surrogate father-sometimes an awkward fit.”

“I had a stepmother I hated,” she said, sliding into a captain’s chair that faced his desk in the impossibly small office. She kept her legs extended. Long legs, made longer by the shorts, but cut off by the desk, which was something Walt regretted.

“Thanks for saving me,” he said.

“Anytime.”

“I called because-”

“You need help with some photos. You explained over the phone.”

“It’s been a long day.”

“Da

“You want to run that by me again?”

She explained her witnessing the attack from thirty yards downriver.

“We packed up and came back early, and Da

“That’s two attacks in ten days. The yellow Lab…”

“I shot the photos, remember? That was disgusting. You ought to do something about it.”

“The cougar? Not my department. Fish and Game. But you’re right: They should certainly hear about the attack on Da

“What do you think of him?”

“Da

“Not professionally. I know you busted him. I mean as a person.”

“Don’t really know him. Kind of difficult to separate the two.”

“But first impressions?” she asked.

“He asked you out,” Walt stated.

“Yeah. Is that bad?”

Walt knew Da

“We got some crime-scene photos from Salt Lake,” he told her. “Pretty gruesome stuff. But they’re lousy photos. I’d like to enlarge some, crop and zoom some others. Above my skill set.”

She looked out the top of her eyes at him and said disdainfully, “I see.”

“I need them pretty quickly.”

“It’s a date, is all.”





“A guy named Capshaw-TSA down in Salt Lake -thought it important enough to send these. I have a five o’clock with everyone who’s anyone co

“I’ll do them myself.” She sounded angry. “Just tell me what you want.”

The surprise in the photos, especially under enlargement, was the degree of the horrors. The victim’s fingers had been cut off with precision. Teeth had been pulled, shown in the photos with a latex-gloved thumb holding the dead man’s upper lip up over the gap. But worst of all: The face was disfigured and both eyes had been carved out of the sockets. Fiona battled her way through the work.

“None of my business,” she said, “but why do you even want these? You realize they’re far more disgusting as close-ups, right? But evidence is evidence. You can see everything in the originals, so I don’t get it.”

“Can you load them into PowerPoint and burn a disk for me?”

“Of course I can. But it won’t make them any easier to take.”

“What is it they say about first impressions?” Walt asked rhetorically.

“You’re a diseased individual,” she said.

“But you’d watch it?” he tested.

“Of course I would. But I’m sick that way. Like you.”

“This goes no further than this office.” He paused to make sure he had her attention. “There’s been a credible threat on Liz Shaler’s life.” He watched as the shock registered. “At first I wondered if this killing in Salt Lake might be related. Happened this morning-less than eight hours ago. But once I saw these, once I went through what you just went through, it was no longer if, but how.”

“Jesus. This guy’s here?”

He lowered his voice. “Now I need to get several others to make that same jump.”

Ten

C ristina’s lunch crowd had thi

“A cougar? Are you sure?” Patrick Cutter wore a pink golf shirt with the C3 logo embroidered on the breast. He focused intently across the table at his brother.

“Of course I’m sure. Give me a break!”

“Did you tell anyone?” Patrick asked.

“I got out of the shower about ten minutes ago. Besides, in case you’ve missed the news: I’m not overly eager to spend time with Walt Fleming.”

“Walt could have been a lot harder on you.”

“Yeah, yeah.”

“What about Liz? She’s all right?”

Da

Patrick pursed his lips.

“Fear not, Paddy: She’s all yours. She’s going to give her talk, a

Patrick shook his head but not a hair moved.

“That is what it’s all about, right?” Da

“If it was all about my vanity, would Bill Gates attend? Warren Buffett? Ian Cumming? The conference serves its purpose or I wouldn’t do it.”

“That money could be put to better use.”

“Says the man who can’t hold on to a dime. You’re hardly one to talk. You’re off fishing and chasing tail when you’re still ten short on your angel round.”

“It irks you, doesn’t it? My turning you down?” Da

“The offer still stands,” Patrick said.

“And it’s an incredibly generous one, but one I can’t accept.”

“It just seems to me-”

“Don’t start! Please.” Da

“Keeping it in the family-”

“And I wish I could, but I can’t.”

“Of course you can,” Patrick said. “You choose not to. There’s a big difference.”