Detectives. Please have a seat.â
Even Gino, who rarely missed an opportunity to comment on the Chiefâs sartorial savvy, was subdued and respectful and got straight to the point. âMorning, Chief. You did an excellent job with the press conference last night. That couldnât have been easy, just standing there looking composed while all those reporters kept busting your balls.â
Malcherson ignored him. If he ever thought too hard about Detective Rolsethâs compliments, he would probably have to fire him.
âWe need to move very quickly on this case, Detectives. The press has its teeth in the serial-killer scenario, and we are going to have to address that, and hopefully eliminate it as a possibility. Unfortunately, I didnât find anything in your reports last night that would do that.â
âNeither did we, Chief,â Gino said. âBut it could have been the ex-con with a grudge, like you said, or some nut-bag out of the asylum or who knows what. Serial killers arenât the only sickos out there. The press just gloms onto them âcause theyâre ratings grabbers. And thatâs the difference between us and the press. They jump to conclusions; we have to wait for the facts.â
Malcherson nodded, closed the folder containing last nightâs reports, and filed it in a drawer. He never cluttered his pristine desk with anything he wasnât using at the moment, including photos of his family, which were neatly arranged in their own cubbyhole in a bookcase. âDo you have anything new for me this morning?â
Magozzi nodded and laid a fat manila folder on his desk, feeling almost guilty for messing it up. âCopies of the MEâs and the BCAâs preliminary reports.â
Malcherson looked wearily at the volume of paperwork. âCan you summarize the new information for me?â
Magozzi opened his own folder and started ticking off points. âAll the slugs from the scene were. 22s, and ballistics is working on them now. We should hear something by noon. Thereâs some trace, but both scenes were so contaminated, Jimmy Grimm isnât optimistic it will yield anything. Also, the BCA found a blood trail after we left the scene yesterday that matched Toby Myersonâs blood type, along with one of his gloves.â
âSo weâre thinking this is how it went down,â Gino continued. âTommy Deaton was ahead of Myerson on the trail, and the killer was waiting for him under the cover of trees and surprised him point-blank just as he was skiing out of the woods. Myerson sees his friend get shot, takes off a glove and goes for his gun. But the killer either gets lucky or is a dead-eye dick and hits him in his shooting arm, which explains the blood trail. Myerson skis all the way to the other side of the field, which is no mean feat, considering the arm shot shattered the ulna; then he caught one in the back of the neck, probably real close to where the snowman was built around him, because that slug most likely paralyzed him instantly.â
Malcherson took a moment to process the scene Gino had just laid out, his mask of Scandanavian ice still intact. âUnfortunately, what bothers me most about this scene does absolutely nothing to dispel the serial-killer notion. In fact, it may support it.â
Magozzi asked, âWhatâs that, Chief?â
âThe carrots.â
Magozzi smiled at him. Underneath the great suits and polished personna of the Chief, there was still an investigator, alive and well and still thinking like a cop. âGood call, sir. A lot of people carry rope in their cars for emergencies, but the carrotâs a dead giveaway. Whoever it was came prepared to build a snowman.â
Malchersonâs phone lit up. âPlease excuse me a moment, gentlemen.â
Magozzi smiled a little at the Chiefâs pervasive politeness, then watched Malcherson answer the phone and reach for a fresh tablet. For
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