Chain Reaction (2 page)

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Authors: Diane Fanning

BOOK: Chain Reaction
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‘There’s still an ambulance here. Do you want the paramedic to patch it up?’

‘No, no,’ Elsie said, shaking her head. ‘I just want to get home.’

‘Are you sure?’

‘Don’t worry; I’m a nurse. I know how to care for this. It’s nothing, really.’

‘OK, if you’re certain. Come on over to the car where your husband is. Officer Collins will give you a ride home. I’m sure I’ll need to talk to you later. And here’s my card if you think of anything that you don’t recall right now.’

As Elsie stepped out, she heard an alarmed yell from a distant entrance to the school. ‘Lieutenant! Lieutenant! We need you in here now!’ the voice shouted.

Elsie watched as the detective took long, rapid steps, almost running, across the grass. She marveled at Lucinda’s sense of balance and ability to move so quickly over rough terrain in a straight skirt and higher heels than Elsie ever felt comfortable wearing, even when she was standing still.

TWO

‘T
his way,’ a male forensic evidence tech said to Lucinda. ‘Ms Spellman needs you.’ He spun around and went back through the door.

Inside of the building, the dust was so thick that Lucinda coughed and choked on it as she followed the retreating back. As they neared the internal side of the entrance where the pillars had fallen and crushed the man eating his breakfast, the hallway obstructions multiplied. Lockers that used to be fastened to the inside wall were down, their contents sprawled across the floor. The concrete blocks of the exterior wall were pitted, stripped of paint, and here and there a combination lock had embedded into the hard surface from the force of the explosion.

The tech picked his way through rubble and into the remains of an office. Venetian blinds hung crooked and bent over busted windows facing an enclosed courtyard. An avalanche of papers had fallen like snow over every surface. Acting like shrapnel, pieces of metal from file cabinets stuck out of walls, furniture and demolished countertops. Most of the broken glass had been forced outward and now decorated the grass lawn like shiny slivers of ice.

Marguerite Spellman stood over a mutilated body in the middle of the space. The male corpse was missing the lower half of one leg as well as one arm. His neck twisted to the left, the right side of his head was cratered and the pieces of bloodied bone were unrecognizable as human. Virtually nothing remained of the facial features on his right profile.

Marguerite and Lucinda exchanged a glance. Lucinda asked, ‘Innocent victim or participant in the crime?’

Marguerite shrugged. ‘It’s hard to tell, Lieutenant. Maybe I’ll find a clue in this mess. Maybe there will be an indication in the post-mortem. At this point, it appears as if that might be a question you’ll have to answer on your own.’

Lucinda grunted in acceptance and said, ‘If we ever find an answer.’

Marguerite sniffed the air. ‘Do you smell that?’

The lieutenant drew a deep breath in through her nose, picking up the scent of dust and blood but nothing more. ‘What?’

‘Ammonia, I think.’

Lucinda inhaled again. ‘No, I don’t.’

‘Maybe it’s just my imagination; I thought I picked up a faint trace of that acrid odor but I can’t smell it now.’

‘If your first impression was right, what would that mean?’ Lucinda asked.

‘Perhaps an ammonium nitrate bomb – a fertilizer bomb – like the one that took down the federal building in Oklahoma.’

‘People can still get that stuff?’

‘It’s pretty common,’ Marguerite said. ‘But there are inert markers in most of the product sold since Oklahoma. If that’s what was used, we may be able to trace the source through that. Hopefully, gas chromatography will identify the fuel used to initiate the combustion as well.’

Doctor Sam grumbled as he stepped into the room, ‘Geez, Lieutenant, do you try to make things difficult for me? I’m past retirement age and way too old to be climbing over mountains of rubble like some young billy goat. Why can’t you be more considerate about where you leave your victims?’

‘Hey, Doc Sam, sorry. It is what it is,’ Lucinda said with a shrug.

‘You can do better than that, Pierce.’ He crouched down by the body. ‘You could have left me a little more to work with here. Identifying this body is going to be nigh near impossible unless you come up with a name that we can match with DNA.’

‘Give me something to work with, Doc.’

‘I’m not a miracle worker, Pierce.’

‘Yes you are, you old codger. Give me an age, a height, something to narrow the identification process.’

‘Has anyone ever told you that you are one demanding woman?’

‘Almost every day, Doc – what’s your point?’

‘You are exasperating,’ Doc said. He huffed and puffed his displeasure as he examined the body.

Lucinda exchanged a glance with Marguerite over Doc Sam’s head, folded her arms across her chest and waited for a pronouncement from below. Marguerite stifled a laugh and walked off to check on the progress the techs were making with evidence collection.

With a loud grunt, Doc Sam pushed himself up off of the floor. ‘It’s a male. Might be high school age. Could be a bit past that but I’d guess we have a student here. Average height. The one eye that remains is blue; hair brown.’

‘Victim or bomber?’

Doc Sam spread his hands wide. ‘Why do you even ask a question like that? You think the answer is tattooed on his chest?’

‘No, sir, Doc. I was just hoping you’d seen something I’d missed.’

‘Of course I have. I always do. But, in answer to your question, no. I’ll look for it at autopsy but doubt I’ll find it. You’re gonna have to identify him first and figure it out from there.’ He turned away from Lucinda and shouted to the two white-coated men standing in the doorway. ‘Bag the body, load it up and get it to the morgue, post-haste.’ Turning back to Lucinda, he said, ‘Yes, Lieutenant, it’s a priority for me. I’d like to get the post-mortem done before the damn Feds barge in.’

‘The Feds?’ Lucinda asked.

‘C’mon, Pierce. An explosion? An act of terrorism? You think the Feebs are going to let you handle this?’

‘There’s no proof, at this time, that this is a terrorist act.’

‘Go ahead. Anchor your boat in the sea of denial. Isn’t going to change the situation one little bit,’ he said.

Lucinda knew he was right. The thought had already crossed her mind. But she didn’t want to accept it. If she called Special Agent in Charge Jake Lovett, maybe she could work out a compromise that would still keep her on the case. She knew he could call some of the shots with the FBI involved in the case, but would Jake be able to keep ATF and Homeland Security at bay? She punched in his cell number.

‘Lovett. Oh, is this you, Lucin— uh, Lieutenant Pierce?’

Obviously, he was not alone. ‘Yes, Special Agent Lovett. I have a situation here—’

‘Wish I could lend a hand, Lieutenant, but I’m on the way to a possible terrorist incident with an explosives expert from the ATF. And the State Secretary of Veteran Affairs and Homeland Security is sending someone over there to meet us at the scene.’

‘Are you going to Woodrow Wilson High School, Special Agent Lovett?’

‘Oh, you’ve heard about it?’ Jake asked.

‘You might say that,’ Lucinda answered.

‘Oh. Don’t tell me. You’re already there?’

‘Yes, Special Agent Lovett, this is my case. Is that understood?’

‘Uh, listen, Lucy … uh, Lieutenant Pierce. We’ll be there in ten minutes or less and we’ll talk then.’

Then a click, silence and a dial tone. He’d hung up on her. He’s going to pay for that one way or another, she vowed. And I will continue to work this case no matter what Mr Special Agent Lovett or the AFT goon or the Homeland Security bureaucrat thinks about that. She stomped outside to check the progress at the exterior of the blasted-out entrance.

THREE

L
ucinda was outside observing the techs as they worked around the collapsed entryway when Jake Lovett pulled up with a toot of his horn. Lucinda used her hand to shield her eyes from the sun and watched Jake stretch his long legs out of the car. She wanted to deny the flutter in her chest that his presence induced but it was a useless effort.

Another person emerged from the right side of the vehicle wearing an ATF ball cap and windbreaker. His face bore the indicators of a lifetime out in the sun: dark, leathery skin, deep creases from his cheekbones to his mouth, harsh, permanent furrows on his brow, and his eyes squeezed in a perpetual squint. He was a bit shorter than Jake but his stride was longer and more purposeful. She imagined that he always appeared as if he was in a rush to get somewhere.

Approaching her, Jake said, ‘Lieutenant Pierce, ATF Resident Agent in Charge Connelly.’

Lucinda stuck out a hand and shook Connelly’s firmly. ‘Agent Connelly,’ she acknowledged with a nod. Then she turned to Jake. ‘I thought you were bringing an explosives expert.’

Connelly wheezed out a laugh. ‘Don’t let my bureaucratic title throw you off, Lieutenant. I spent more than seventeen years in the field investigating bomb sites for the ATF before I got this desk job. And earlier on, I was army, detailed on an explosive ordinance disposal team.’

‘He knows his stuff, Pierce,’ Jake said.

Lucinda stared at Jake. ‘Pierce.’ He called me ‘Pierce’. Is he trying to out-macho the ATF man? We’re gonna have a lot to talk about when I get him alone. ‘Good, Lovett. Shall I show you gentlemen where it appears the explosive device detonated?’

‘Lead the way, ma’am,’ Connelly said.

Lucinda walked to the far entrance and guided the two men over the rubble. She wasn’t sure what to think of the ATF guy.
Was his use of ‘ma’am’ a sign of respect or a way to put me in my place because of my gender? Am I going to have to prove myself, yet again, to another backward male in authority?
She didn’t know what to think, but she knew one thing for sure: she didn’t like the effect his presence had on Jake.

Lucinda pointed out the blood-smeared spot on the floor where a young man had lost his life in the explosion. ‘We don’t know his identity yet but we do believe it is a male of high school age, possibly a student here.’

‘Or an embittered dropout seeking revenge. Someone angry enough to be used as a tool by terrorists?’ Connelly said.

‘Perhaps,’ Lucinda said, ‘but until we know that he was involved, we are treating him as a victim.’

Connelly grunted. ‘Might not be the most effective way to get information from family and friends.’

‘Maybe not, Agent, but it is clearly the most compassionate way,’ Lucinda snapped.

Jake raised his open palms up in the air. ‘We’ll just play it by ear. See where the evidence stands once he’s been identified. No need to make a decision now.’

Connelly shrugged. ‘Who’s in charge of the forensics here?’

‘That would be Marguerite Spellman. She’s in the Tyvek suit over by the bank of windows,’ Lucinda said, pointing in Marguerite’s direction.

‘Mind if I speak to her about protocol and what I need to analyze the device?’

Maybe Connelly’s not so bad. That certainly sounded like an acknowledgement of my authority. ‘I think you’ll find Ms Spellman is extremely competent and thorough,’ Lucinda said, still not convinced of his good intentions. ‘But sure, go ahead, knock yourself out.’

Jake jerked his head towards the doorway and walked out into the hall. As Lucinda joined him, he said, ‘What is your problem?’

‘My problem?’ Lucinda objected.

‘Yes, your problem. Your hostility to Connelly is pretty obvious.’

‘No, it’s not. You are seeing my hostility to you reflecting on the hapless ATF guy.’

‘Hostility? To me? I thought we had a great time yesterday. I had a lot of fun. I thought you did, too.’

‘Oh, really, you had a good time? Then why were you already gone when I woke up this morning?’

‘I told you I had to go into the office and take care of some paperwork. I thought I’d be back by now.’

‘And going into the office couldn’t wait until after we had breakfast?’

‘Ah, c’mon, Lucinda. I thought I could get back before you woke up. I didn’t expect this,’ he said, waving his arms around. ‘C’mon. There’s something else. What did I do?’

‘We need to get back to work,’ Lucinda said, turning around and returning to what was left of the office.

‘Lieutenant,’ Connelly said, ‘Ms Spellman here thinks this is the only administrative office in the high school. Is that correct?’

‘I think so, Agent, but the school principal is on her way here. She can provide us any details we need on the building. From our brief conversation on the phone, I think that office over there – the one with the door hanging half off its hinges – is hers.’

Connelly walked over to the gaping entrance and leaned inside. ‘It’s a mess, Lieutenant, but far less of one than this main office area. Couldn’t have gone off in there. Might be useful to bring her inside to walk us through what normal might have looked like.’

‘She should be here any minute. Sergeant Colter will call me when she arrives.’

‘Good,’ Connelly said. ‘And, ma’am, whatever I did to get off on the wrong foot with you, I’m truly sorry. I’m a strong believer in inter-agency cooperation. I believe it leads to quicker resolution when we aren’t squabbling with one another.’

‘I am sorry, Agent. My beef is with Agent Lovett. I’m afraid I allowed that to splash over on you.’

‘Hey, don’t give Lovett too hard of a time. For a Feeb,’ he said with a wink, ‘he ain’t half bad.’

Lucinda was saved from a response by a buzz on her cell. She looked down at the readout. ‘It’s Sergeant Colter. The principal is here. I’ll go bring her in.’ She walked out into the hall, brushing past Jake on the way. He called out to her but she didn’t glance in his direction.

FOUR

L
ucinda stepped outside and easily identified the principal who stood on the other side of the yellow tape, her mouth hanging open. The woman was nearly as tall as Lucinda, with a short, tight haircut, a sharp nose and café-au-lait skin. She wore a royal-blue suit with a skirt that ended just at her knee. Approaching her, Lucinda stuck out her hand and said, ‘Ma’am, I’m Lieutenant Pierce. We’re hoping you’ll be willing to come inside and help us understand our surroundings.’

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