Beyond Limits (Tracers #8)(81)



Fiona Glass had a stellar reputation in law-enforcement circles, and Elizabeth had felt a wave of relief upon hearing she was on the case. Her relief disappeared, though, when the artist announced that she didn’t want any investigators sitting in on the session. The witness’s comfort was of paramount importance, especially when that witness had been the victim of a violent crime.

So Elizabeth spent the better part of the morning pacing between the waiting room and Lauren’s hospital room, where her family was gathered around waiting for her to emerge from the fog of pain meds.

Elizabeth had just poured her third cup of too-weak coffee when the sound of heels on linoleum had her turning around.

“You’re finished?” She hurried up to the artist.

“We are.”

Elizabeth had expected Fiona Glass to be an artsy, earth-mother type, but instead, she looked more like an attorney. She pulled a legal-size file folder from her leather attaché case and handed over a drawing.

Elizabeth took one look at the color portrait, and her breath caught. “It’s Rasheed.”

“You know him?”

She looked up, then down at the drawing again. Done in colored pastel on buff-colored paper, the picture was a nearly photographic likeness of Omar Rasheed, right down to the dark mole on his nose that Elizabeth hadn’t even realized she’d noticed before.

She studied the flinty look in his eye, and her stomach tightened. She remembered the same defiant expression when they’d faced off on that rooftop.

Elizabeth cleared her throat. “This is—it’s incredible. I can’t believe you got this much detail with the witness as injured as she is. And medicated, too. Didn’t she have trouble communicating?”

“Communication barriers of one form or another are the rule, not the exception,” she said. “Try interviewing a traumatized three-year-old whose first language isn’t English.”

Elizabeth nodded, still taken aback.

“As witnesses go, she was slow to respond and definitely tired but very clear about what she saw.”

“It’s an impressive drawing,” Elizabeth said, “but it doesn’t help us much from an investigative perspective. We already have this subject ID’d. And unfortunately, he’s dead.”

The artist tipped her head to the side. “Jamie tells me there was another man she remembers entering the motel room, but she only saw him from the back, so I wasn’t able to get a sketch. I got the other subject, though.” She slipped the first drawing back into her folder and tugged out another. The sharp scent of fixative wafted up as she handed it over. “This one we just completed.”

Elizabeth’s pulse jumped. “You got the woman.” She studied the drawing. Auburn hair, as she’d suspected. Dark eyes, olive skin, strong cheekbones. She was beautiful, and it was no surprise she’d managed to seduce Matt Palicek into helping her.

If, in fact, she had.

“This person’s new,” Elizabeth said. “So this is definitely a lead.”

“But . . . what? You seem unsure.”

“Not about the drawing. It’s just—we’ve put together a list of potential subjects. Females. And unfortunately, the only photos we have of them are from childhood.”

She nodded. “Well, obviously, recent is better, but we get IDs based on age-progression drawings all the time. A huge part of what I do involves missing children. In many cases, I’ve been able to age the picture ten, twenty, even thirty years and get something that bears an uncanny resemblance to the adult.”

“Really?”

“Certain features of the human face remain the same from infancy all the way into adulthood. You’d be surprised.”

“I am.” And Elizabeth knew she sounded skeptical, but she wanted to be convinced.

“Take the shape of the nostrils, for instance, and the shape of the eyes. The eyebrows, too—although some women alter that cosmetically.” She stepped closer and pointed at the portrait. “Look at the contour of the mouth here. See the seam where the lips meet? Very hard to change that. Also, the way the tops of the ears line up with the eyes and where the earlobes line up with the nose. Even with orthodontics or plastic surgery, those features are nearly impossible to alter.”

“You make it sound like an exact science.”

“Well, I don’t want to oversell it,” she said. “We are dealing with a drawing based on someone’s recollection. If we were comparing two photographs, it would be exact. However, I should point out that you have something going for you in this case.”

Elizabeth stared at the picture, trying to guess.

“The hair,” the artist said. “Cowlicks, widow’s peaks, those features don’t change over someone’s lifetime and are easy to notice.” She traced her finger over the woman’s hairline. “See? She has a widow’s peak. It was one of the first things Jamie mentioned.”

Elizabeth studied the drawing, fascinated. Her pulse was racing now, and she wanted to rush back to the office and look at the photos they’d compiled of the female relatives of the terrorists.

A shadow fell over the paper, and she glanced up to see Potter.

“That’s her?” he asked, frowning.

“What do you think?”

“I think we need a name to go with the face.” He looked at her. “Where’s Gordon?”

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