screen.
âJeez, sheâs touchy,â Gino grumbled. âLike talking to a porcupine.â Then both he and Magozzi stared at the digital image for a long moment.
âOh, man,â Gino said. âWe got another one.â
Magozzi leaned over and punched the speaker button on the Chiefâs phone. âSheriff Rikker? Sorry to keep you waiting. Detective Rolseth and I will be up there as soon as we can. You have any problem with BCA handling the scene?â
âThe BCA was my next call.â
âLet us do that. Iâd like the same guys who worked the park snowmen.â
âCertainly, sir.â
Magozzi raised his brows. First she was snippy, now she was calling him âsir,â and then she made nice by giving them detailed driving directions and closed with thanks to all of themâat least that was what Magozzi thought she was doing. All very polite and proper and way too long, mentioning them each by name as if reading from her notes, which she probably was. If she was a cop, Magozzi was a bowl of cornflakes.
âDoesnât sound like any cop I ever met,â Gino remarked after the Chief had closed the call.
âIn point of fact, she was an English teacher before she entered law enforcement,â Malcherson said.
âNo kidding? Well, that explains it. Only an English teacher would take five hundred words to say what she could have summed up in four. Iâd hate to get Mirandized by herâsheâs probably got her own ten-page version.â
Malcherson gave him a sour look. âI happen to find her linguistic precision refreshing. And Iâm certain I donât have to remind both of you to treat Sheriff Rikker with the same respect you would afford any other elected official and fellow law enforcement officer, elocution notwithstanding.â
âNo problem, Chief. She has my respect until she screws up, and so far, she seems to be handling things okay. I just wish sheâd get to the point a little faster. Most of the stuff we do on the job is time sensitive, you know?â
U P IN Dundas County, Iris Rikker hung up the phone, closed her eyes so she couldnât see the office she was sitting in, and replayed the conversation in her mind, trying to shake the feeling that the Minneapolis detective thought she was a total idiot.
A cursory rap on the doorframe interrupted her thoughts, and Lieutenant Sampson stomped in, throwing back the hood on his parka and scattering snow all over the place. âMPD coming?â
Iris mentally added a verb and prepositional phrase so that she could understand the question. âDetective Magozzi and Detective Rolseth are on their way. Theyâre also sending the same BCA team that processed the Minneapolis scene.â
Sampson flopped down in a big leather recliner and jerked up the foot rest. âGood deal.â
She got up and looked out the wall of windows over the lake, thinking how convenient it was to have a crime scene right outside the sheriffâs window. She couldnât see much through the thickening snowfall, and was glad of that. âWe need to put up some sort of plastic sheeting to preserve as much of the scene as possible. Do we have such things in the building?â
Sampson didnât say anything for a second, so she turned around and looked at him. She didnât like him lying back in the recliner as if he were in his own living room. It was disrespectful, wasnât it? And if she ever intended to take charge of this office and do the job well, it was important that she establish the ground rules of respect right at the beginning, and now was as good a time as ever to startâ¦.
âThat was good thinking about the plastic sheeting,â he said, messing up the mental speech she was planning about behavior modification, thoroughly confusing her because she thought he may have actually said something nice to her. âBut a little slow. I already had some boys pick
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