Loud voices drew her attention. A man in a dress shirt and tie was trying to argue his way past a patrolman.

“Look, I gotta get to a sales conference, okay? I’m an hour late as it is. But you’ve got your goddamn police tape wrapped around my car, and now you’re saying I can’t drive it? It’s my own friggin‘ car!”

“It’s a crime scene, sir.”

“It’s an accident!”

“We haven’t determined that yet.”

“Does it take you guys all day to figure it out? Why don’t you listen to us? The whole neighborhood heard it happen!”

Rizzoli approached the man, whose face was glazed with sweat. It was eleven-thirty and the sun, near its zenith, shone down like a glaring eye.

“What, exactly, did you hear, sir?” she asked.

He snorted. “Same thing everyone else did.”

“A loud bang.”

“Yeah. Around seven-thirty. I was just getting outta the shower. Looked out my window, and there he was, lying on the sidewalk. You can see it’s a bad corner. Asshole drivers come flying around it like bats outta hell. Must’ve been a truck hit him.”

“Did you see a truck?”

“Naw.”

“Hear a truck?”

“Naw.”

“And you didn’t see a car, either?”

“Car, truck.” He shrugged. “It’s still a hit-and-run.”

It was the same story, repeated half a dozen times by the man’s neighbors. Sometime between seven-fifteen and seven-thirty A.M., there’d been a loud bang in the street. No one actually saw the event. They had simply heard the noise and found the man’s body. Rizzoli had already considered, and rejected, the possibility that he was a jumper. This was a neighborhood of two-story buildings, nothing tall enough to explain such catastrophic damage to a jumper’s body. Nor did she see any evidence of an explosion as the cause of this much anatomical disintegration.

“Hey, can I get my car out now?” the man said. “It’s that green Ford.”



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