
"Grow up, Carl," I said to myself. But I casually reached down and unsnapped my holster, anyway. Feeling more confident, I tried to pick up where I'd left off.
"So," I said, "let's tell the court…" I do talk to myself occasionally, hopefully when I'm alone. Just to organize my thoughts. Somebody told me once that it was a trait of only children. At least it fit.
When I go through a possible crime scene, I try to imagine describing the evidence to the court. It helps me concentrate, and to evaluate what I've got. In this particular instance, I said to myself, "Your Honor, there was what could have been a tomato sauce stain on the carpet, and there was a lighter mark on the wall, so I assumed it was where blood spatters had been washed off around a nail hole…" "And how did you come to discover this evidence, Deputy?" "Uh, well, I was checking on the welfare of two burglars…" I smiled to myself. Sounded a little weak.
So, I needed more. Well, for the court, anyway.
The residue of the feeling of being watched lingered, just at the edge of my mind. My first instinct was to call for backup. I didn't, though, for several reasons. First, the only backup available was Mike, and he had to be with Fred. Second, what I had wasn't anything solid, and even if it had been, the evidence indicated the scene had been created a couple of days ago. Third, if we did have a scene of something more than a burglary, then the more people tromping about, the worse it would for a lab team.
I squatted down near the chairs, and looked back toward the kitchen, trying to get a better indication from a lower angle. I could just barely discern the parallel tracks from here, and they didn't head toward the kitchen so much as off to the right side of the archway. They looked suspiciously like drag marks, to me. There was a sliver of a door frame, just visible, through the arch. I got up, my left knee complaining, and crossed to the door. Descending stairs to the basement. Great. I hate going down stairs into basements, especially when you aren't sure who might be there. You expose 90 percent of your body on the way down the stairs before you can defend yourself.
