Part 26 (1/2)

He and the other uniform led the way through the a.s.sembled journalists, one on each side of Detective La.s.siter and Mr. Williamson.

Sergeant Payne brought up the rear, which gave him a chance to decide that Detective La.s.siter had a very nice muscular structure of the lower half of the rear of her body.

As he walked back to 600 Independence, ignoring questions from the press about the ident.i.ty of Mr. Williamson, he realized he didn't really have much of an idea of what he was supposed to do now.

He remembered something he had been taught at the Marine Base, Quantico, while in the platoon leaders program: reconnoiter the terrain. reconnoiter the terrain.

He spent perhaps ten minutes walking around the outside of the big old house, even going up the rear stairs, and then into the bas.e.m.e.nt. He saw nothing of particular interest.

[THREE].

When Matt returned to the front of the house, two uniforms were carrying a stretcher with Cheryl Williamson's body on it down the pathway to a Thirty-fifth District wagon.

Well, I won't have to look at the sightless eyes again-not that I'm liable to forget them.

When they had moved past him, Matt went up the stairs and into the Williamson apartment.

”What happened to that very pretty detective from Northwest?” Joe D'Amata greeted him.

”She went with the brother to tell the mother.”

”This is our job, Matt,” D'Amata said. There was a slight tone of reproof in his voice.

”She calmed the brother down. He liked her . . .”

”I can't imagine why,” D'Amata said.

”. . . and (a) I thought that would make things easier with the mother. The brother suggested his mother was going to blow her cork when she found out that there was a 'Disturbance, House' call here and the uniforms didn't take the door. And (b) somebody had to talk to the mother, and I think she can do that as well as we could, which means that we can be here.”

”Your call,” D'Amata said. ”Two things, Matt: You want a look at the rear door?”

”I saw the outside from the stairs,” Matt said, as he followed D'Amata into the kitchen and to the door. ”I didn't see any signs of forced entry. Did you?”

”Those scratches might be an indication that somebody pried it open,” Joe said, pointing. ”Operative word 'might.' The door was latched, locked, like that, but if you leave the lever in the up position like that, it locks automatically.”

”What do the crime lab guys say?”

”What I just told you. No signs at all on the front door. So we don't know if the doer broke in, or whether she let him in. Could be either way. If she knew the doer, let him in . . .”

Matt grunted. Most murders are committed by people known to the victim.

”You said two things,” Matt said.

”This is interesting,” D'Amata said, taking a plastic evidence bag from his pocket. It held a digital camera. is interesting,” D'Amata said, taking a plastic evidence bag from his pocket. It held a digital camera.

”It may be, of course-and probably is-hers. But it was under the bed, which is a strange place to store an expensive camera like this. Even stranger, there are no fingerprints on it. Not even a smudge.”

”Why don't we see what pictures are in it?”

”It doesn't work,” D'Amata said, his tone suggesting that Matt should have known he could come up with a brilliant idea like seeing what pictures were in the camera all by himself. ”Which might be because it got knocked off the bedside table when the doer jerked the telephone out of the wall and threw it at the mirror.”

”No prints on the phone, either?” Matt asked.

D'Amata held up his rubber-surgical-gloved hands.

”I'm getting the idea the doer is a very careful guy,” he said. ”Which also suggests he knows how to get through a door without making a mess, and which suggests that although they are lifting a lot of prints in here-so far, they've done both doors, the bedroom and her bathroom-I would be pleasantly surprised if they came up with something useful.”

”Yeah,” Matt agreed.

”So, I was just about to call you to ask if I should take the camera to the crime lab and see if there are any pictures in it.”

”As opposed to having a District car run it down there, which would put a uniform in the evidence chain?”

”That, too,” D'Amata said. ”I was thinking that if there are pictures in there, I could get a look at them a lot quicker if I was there when the lab took them out of the camera, then wait for the lab to print them.”

”The camera's been fingerprinted?”

”I told you, there's nothing on it. Not even a smudge.”

Matt set his briefcase on the kitchen table, opened it, rummaged around, and closed it again.

”We're in luck,” he said. ”I've got the gizmo.”

”What gizmo?”

Matt walked to the door leading from the kitchen to the living room and motioned to one of the uniforms in the living room.

”Don't let anybody come in here until I tell you, okay?”

The uniform nodded and stood in the center of the doorjamb. Matt closed the door.

”Who's in the bedroom?” he asked.

”Harry, making the sketch,” D'Amata said. ”A uniform's keeping people out of there, too. What are you doing?”

Matt went back to the kitchen table and took out his laptop, then a small plastic object with a connecting cord. He plugged it into the laptop, then turned it on.

”You can look at them here?” Joe asked.

”And store them in the laptop,” Matt said.

D'Amata handed him the evidence bag. Matt took the flash memory cartridge from it and saw that D'Amata had initialed it. If there were evidentiary photos in the camera, a defense attorney could not raise doubts in the jurors' minds that the pictures they were being shown had actually come from this camera.

He put the memory card into the transfer device, then copied the JPG images from it to the laptop's hard disk.

”There's eight images,” Matt said. ”Let's see what they are.”