of that, yes, and to keep certain aspects discreet.â He waited to speak again until Falaâs eyes and attention fell squarely under his control. âYou know how it is with secrets in this town.â
Fala betrayed nothing, although her pulse quickened and her mind raced to figure out his game. Was he alluding to the fact she was a shape-shifter, or merely referring to the typical D.C. trash where truth was a dirty word?
When she didnât speak, he added, âWho knows what else will turn up? Everyone working this case will come under intense scrutiny.â
The way he looked at her when he uttered the final three words gave her a start. What was he implying? Did he know about her powers? âSo what are you, FBI, CIA?â she asked.
Winter merely nodded in a controlled and poised way, a smug expression guarding a myriad of secrets.
She picked up on his adversarial vibe. It was clear he enjoyed keeping others off balance and in the dark. Nothing felt right about this guy, now that she studied him. Usually she could see spiritual auras glowing around a person. Not with Winter. Stone-cold blank. Nothing close to the normal violet or indigo. Was he the undead? No, vamps and zombies gave off a sickly, reddish-black hue. Something was blocking his aura. Butwhat? And why had he called them into this case? Later, she promised herself sheâd find out.
She let it drop for the moment and turned to Bergman, who was nursing his coffee. âSo, Dr. B, what are we looking at?â
Bergman finished his coffee and stuck the cup in a brown satchel near his leg. He shoved up the black spectacles perched on the end of his nose, then bent and picked up a shredded sports bra. âIf you enjoy M. Night Shyamalan, this is all the entertainment youâll ever want.â He held the blood-covered top by the straps. Five jagged tears scored the center of the back.
At the sight of the destroyed material, Fala felt a sick sensation in the pit of her stomach. She could imagine what the body looked like.
Winter asked, âHave any theories on how the murder was committed?â
âAn animal, surely,â Bergman said.
âWith big claws or teeth,â Fala added.
âA zoo animal?â Winter asked.
Joe polished off his coffee and said, âWe got a guy checking to see if they have an escapee.â
Fala pointed at the three-foot patch of blood that had soaked the ground. âAll the vicâs blood?â
Bergman shoved his slipping glasses back up on his nose with the inside of his forearm. âIâve taken a sample to test against the stains on this bra. Iâll test it against a hair sample Mr. Winter retrieved from Miss Saneckiâs apartment, too.â
Winter eyed Bergman over the top of his coffee cup. âIâd be glad to run it through my own lab.â
âItâs on top of my list.â Bergman shot Winter anindignant glance for trying to step into his forensic domain.
âIâm sure Senator Kent will look favorably upon any priority you can give this case.â Winter worked a smile but it never quite touched his face. âJust give me a call when you get the results.â
Fala didnât like the superior expression Winter wore. She glanced over at the bagged shredded panties and shorts, or what was left of them. Beside them, she noted a pair of tennis shoes, torn and shredded as if something chewed on them then spit them out. Other than the bloodstain, that was all the evidence they had.
âHow much blood is that?â Fala asked.
âBest guess, about three pints,â Bergman said. âIf itâs our vicâs, then itâs safe to assume sheâs dead.â He dropped the tattered bra in an evidence bag.
She glanced toward the frantic dogs. They balked, shivered, and suffered fear fits as the uniforms and crime-scene techs combed the grids they had marked off. âNothing found in the woods yet?â she asked.
âNot