Cut and Run(50)
She extended her hand. “We worked together before, in a way. About two years ago. Remember the man who killed male prostitutes and buried them on his land?”
Pollard tugged his right ear and glowered. “I found them, and you identified them.”
“That’s exactly right,” she said.
Hayden remembered the case. There’d been fourteen victims, and Faith had yet to identify all of them. In her press briefings, she’d promised she would not quit until every last one of the victims had been identified.
Pollard tugged on latex gloves. “Do you have any idea how many victims we’re looking for today?”
“Judging by the terrain and those stones, I’d say there are three,” Hayden said.
“We’ll sweep the area in a grid pattern, starting by the house and working our way out,” Pollard explained. “As you remember, the equipment puts off an electromagnetic wave into the ground. The signal keeps traveling until it hits any dense object such as rock, bone, or buried debris. The material will reflect the signal, and its image will show up on my display.”
She folded her arms. “The medical examiner’s van is on standby.”
Pollard flipped the switch, and as it hummed to life, he studied the display console mounted at the top. Satisfied, he began to move in a straight line that ran parallel to the house.
“Hayden, do you know who owns the house?” she asked.
“We traced it back to a man by the name of Sam Delany. He’s currently serving a lifetime sentence for murder. However, the property taxes are not in arrears,” Hayden said.
“Who did Mr. Delany kill?”
“His girlfriend. They were fighting. He hit her. She stumbled, struck her head on a stone fireplace, and died.”
“Were you able to get a search warrant for the land and the house?” she asked.
“I did. Utilities were shut off to the house years ago, but there’s a generator there. It’s relatively new, but it’s almost bone-dry. We’re refueling the generator, and it should be up and running soon.”
Her gaze shifted to Pollard, and she carefully watched him complete his first row. “This could take a while.”
“Very easily.”
She shook her head. “What else have you found out about Sam Delany?”
“Not much yet. My partner is pulling his police record as well as financials.”
The generator motor started up, and the lights in the house behind them switched on. The forensic team started to assemble their gear and move toward the front door.
The sun cast a brilliant hue over Faith’s features, and Hayden found himself staring at the high slash of her cheekbones, the brilliant blue of her eyes, and the curve of her full lips. He’d always recognized that she was a stunning woman and, in the years after Sierra had died, acknowledged his strong sexual attraction to her. He’d thought that one evening in the hotel would have put to rest all the fantasies he’d had about her. But what he’d learned was that once was not nearly enough. In fact, he was finding it hard to envision a day when he didn’t want to be with her.
Faith nodded toward the house. “I’d like to see inside.”
“Sure. We’ll get booties and gloves and have a look.”
At the forensic van they slipped on booties and gloves, and he held back, allowing her to go first as they approached the officer positioned at the yellow crime scene tape perimeter.
They showed their identifications to the officer whose job it was to protect the integrity of the scene. He recorded both their names as part of what would be an ongoing log of anyone who visited the scene.
As soon as they crossed the narrow front porch and entered the front door, Hayden was struck by the musty, stale smell of the house’s interior.
“Unpleasant but manageable,” Faith said.
They both were acquainted with the sickly sweet smell of a rotting body that could permeate nostrils, clothes, and shoes. It was a scent never forgotten. However, as they moved closer to the kitchen, he detected the faint whiff of a cleaning agent.
“Do you smell that?” She threaded her long fingers together, working the gloves deep between her fingers.
“I do. Someone recently cleaned this room.”
“The house looks in too good a shape to have been closed up for the past thirty years.”
She stood back, studying the small living room with an oversize easy chair that had been patched in several places with duct tape. Beside the chair was an old end table with a large brass lamp.
On the end table was a picture of a woman standing beside a tall, lean man. Hayden didn’t recognize him but wondered if he was Delany. Judging by the clothes and hair, he guessed the photo was taken decades ago.
The woman in the photo had shoulder-length blond hair, pale skin, and blue eyes. Like Faith.
“Who is she?” Faith asked. Her expression was pensive, as if she were reading his thoughts.
“I don’t know.”
Faith cocked her head, her gaze roaming over the woman’s smiling face, which was vaguely familiar. “She’s not Josie.”
“No.”
“I find myself looking into the eyes of any woman who’s at least fifty and wondering if she’s the one.” Faith picked up the picture and turned it over. “I would like to talk to Garnet.”