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Infliction
Chapter Eight – Investigation
“Oh Sara, it’s so good to hear
your voice.”
Sara fought off the lump that
was forming in the back of her throat, choking her. She was glad they were on
the phone and not face to face, so that her mother couldn’t see the tears that
were starting to flow silently down her cheeks.
“Sara? Are you still there?”
Swallowing hard, she took a
deep, steadying breath. “I’m still here, Mom.”
“I wish you had talked to me
earlier in the week. I saw the newspapers.”
It took a moment for Sara to
figure out what she was talking about. Then the horrible, shameful feeling in
the pit of her stomach returned. “You did?”
“I should have tried harder to
warn you. Something could have been done…”
“Warn me? What are you…?”
Sara’s confusion was rapidly making way to anger. “Did you know?”
Her mother’s voice was clearly
upset when she spoke. “Not exactly. I didn’t think
they’d actually publish anything. Not
without some kind of interview with me…”
Things still weren’t making
much sense. “Mom. Start at the beginning. What exactly
happened?”
Laura Sidle took a deep breath
and began. “Just before I called you last week, a journalist came to see me at
the house. Said he was doing a piece on the local area – sort of a tourist
piece on
“He picked up a picture of you
off the mantelpiece and asked me if it was my daughter. I said yes, and he
asked me where you were. I told him – I didn’t see the harm – I told him that
you worked in Law Enforcement in Vegas.” Sara could hear the tremor in her
mother’s voice now, as she too choked back the tears. “He said ‘You must be
very proud of her.’ And I told him that I was.”
She was sobbing now, quiet
sobs carrying down the line to Sara who matched them with tears of her own.
Wiping them away impatiently, she pressed her mother onwards. “What happened
then?”
It took a moment for Laura to
compose herself, and when she started to speak again, Sara detected not only
sorrow in her tone, but shame.
“He asked if you had chosen
that life for yourself as a result of what you went through as a child. I knew
something wasn’t right then. He started asking questions about… about your
father and… what happened. Asked if it had affected you…
mentally. Questions… so many horrible questions.”
Sara shut her eyes, imaging
the sorts of things he had asked. “What did you do?”
“I threw him out,” her mother
replied angrily. “I threw the son of a bitch out. Told him I wasn’t going to
talk about any of that with him or anyone. He told me, one way or another, the
story would run… I just slammed the door on him.”
“Have you seen him again?”
“No,” she replied. “But I was
worried. I knew how upset you’d be if the story was printed. So, I called you…”
And I
didn’t pick up or call you back, Sara inwardly berated
herself. Something could have been done. An injunction of
some kind. Or, at the very least, she could have been prepared for what
was to come, not ambushed by it in Ecklie’s office.
“I’m so sorry, honey,” her mom
told her.
“I know,” Sara whispered.
“It’s not your fault.”
---
Resentment was bubbling under
her cool façade as Catherine sat opposite Sofia Curtis in the layout room.
Without looking up,
Catherine was damned if she
was going to be helpful. “You have all that information in front of you.”
“I’m interested in your
perspective.”
Narrowing her eyes briefly at
the blonde, she shook off her annoyance and tried to be professional. “Grissom
and I were called to a 419 in a warehouse downtown. Caucasian male, later
identified as Hank Pettigrew, cause of death single gunshot with high
performance ammo. Body mutilated post-mortem – acid was poured over his face to
conceal identity.”
“Says
here there was a lot of insect activity on the body.”
Catherine nodded. “There was.
However, the Doc put time of death at only a few hours before the body was
found. The bugs were planted, just like Sara’s hair and the beer bottle with
her fingerprint on it.”
“On
the victim.”
“Only
one?”
“Yeah.”
“Prints on the bottle, but no
DNA inside, right?”
“That’s right. Only it was
print, not prints. A single thumb print, the rest of the bottle was clean. Clearly planted evidence.”
“We logged the evidence and
had it processed immediately. Got a hit of the bottle and the
hair immediately. Obviously, Sara’s prints and DNA are in the system –
just like everyone in the department. Grissom went straight to her apartment.”
Again,
Catherine shook her head. “No.
Brass went with him.”
“Grissom drew her blood?”
“Yeah.”
“He shouldn’t have.”
Catherine let out a frustrated
breath. “He and Sara weren’t involved at the time. There was no conflict…”
“There was still a history
there.”
“There’s a history between all
of us. We’ve worked together for a long time.”
“Who ran the tox screen on
Sara’s blood?”
“Greg.”
“Why?”
Catherine sat back in her seat
and glared. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
“At that point, Greg was a
trainee CSI, right?”
“Still is.”
“So, why was he in the lab?”
Catherine gritted her teeth. “
“Catherine. I’m not asking
these questions for the hell of it. These are things that the Defense is going
to question. And we’d damn well better have answers for them, otherwise our
suspect is going to walk. Now, why Greg?”
Catherine cleared her throat
and answered the question as if she were on the stand. “Greg was still floating
between the DNA lab and the field until the tech we hired to replace him had
fully settled in. Greg wanted to make sure the job was given a high priority,
wanted it done right. So he ran the blood himself. Mia was with him the entire
time, assisting and running other evidence.”
“So Greg wasn’t alone at any
point when running the blood?”
“Not to my knowledge.”
“And his tests proved
conclusively that Sara couldn’t have
been conscious during the time when the murder was committed?”
“That’s correct.”
Her answers seemed to please
That earned her another glare.
“What problem with him?”
Catherine shut her eyes,
inwardly kicking herself. She should have insisted on doing it. “Yes. He did.”
Reluctantly, Catherine nodded.
“Tell me about Jill
Davenport.”
Catherine took a moment to
settle the anger that had risen in her, just thinking about that woman. “I
interviewed her myself. She claimed to be genuinely surprised and upset by what
had happened. In her statement, she claimed that Sara had gone to the bar to
place their order, and that her drink had never left her sight – basically
telling us that Sara couldn’t have been drugged while she was with her. We now
know that she was lying. Sara remembers Jill going to the bar, not the other
way around, and the barman working that night has backed up Sara’s version of
events.
“What the evidence tells us is
that Jill slipped the drugs into Sara’s drink, waited until she started to get
groggy and suggested that she go home and get some rest. By the time Sara
reached her car, she was out cold. Jill loaded her in, drove her home, pulled a
hair from her head and planted her print on the bottle. She took Sara’s gun and
reloaded it with high performance ammo. She then dressed in Sara’s hat and coat
and drove Sara’s car to the warehouse to meet Hank. We recovered hairs that are
consistent with Jill’s from inside the hat, a couple of prints from the
steering wheel of the car and her prints on both the bullets loaded in Sara’s
weapon, as well as the unloaded bullets recovered from the apartment.”
“Brass recovered her gun from
the apartment. The car was processed by Warrick and Nick.”
“So that just leaves the
notes. Only one had prints, is that right?”
“Right. Just
one set of prints on the second note.”
“Grissom's?”
“Yes, but I was there when he
opened the envelope. He did his best to preserve the evidence once he realized
what it was.”
“Ate
him alive. About that… and everything
else.”
Catherine sat back in her
chair. “I’m sensing a ‘But’ in there somewhere.”
“The fact remains that, if the
jury buys for one second the Defense’s claims that this lab could fake evidence
to protect one of their own, if even one
juror decided that there’s a shred of reasonable doubt, then Jill could
walk.”
---
Sara walked into the lab that
night trying very hard to keep her head up, unashamed, but feeling like she was
failing miserably. The small, supportive smiles she received from Judy on the
front desk, and Bobby as she passed ballistics, did nothing to lift her
spirits. And she felt even worse when she spotted Sofia Curtis interrogating
Mia in the DNA lab. The ethics and professionalism of the entire lab were being
put under the microscope – because of her.
She felt sick to her stomach.
Things were not going the way they were supposed to. Jill should be safely
behind bars, where she belonged. The lab should be going about its business of
bringing justice and closure to those left behind. And she should be moving on
with her life, building her future with Grissom finally, after so many false
starts and heartaches.
She was so deep in thought
that she didn’t see the man in question until she almost collided with him.
“Hey,” he greeted her softly,
his voice hesitant.
“Hey.” She could barely look
at him. Of all people, she felt she had let him down the most.
Placing his hand on the small
of her back, he guided her to his office and shut the door.
“Did you get any sleep?”
He was worried about her. His
reputation was being put under the microscope because of her, and here he was,
making sure she was getting enough rest.
She shrugged. “Some.” Finally,
she met his eyes and the love and compassion she saw there nearly did her in.
“Grissom, I wanted to tell you how sorry I am…”
He shook his head. “There’s
really no need. You needed to get some rest. I understand. We don’t need to
live in each other’s pockets just yet…”
“No. That’s not what I meant,”
she told him. “I mean, I’m sorry for everything that’s happening. For the
investigation…”
He put his hands on her
shoulders to silence her. “Sara, how many times do I have to explain that none
of this is your fault? If either of us is to blame, it’s me. I should have
foreseen this. I shouldn’t have processed you myself… I just… I wasn’t thinking
straight and I wanted to be the one to look after you.”
He cupped her face with his
hand and made her look at him. “Things are a mess right now, but I have to
believe in the science. And the science tells us that Jill is guilty. I have to
trust that a jury will see that, no matter what antics her lawyer tries to
pull.”
Sara wished she had his faith,
and she wondered when her faith in science had waned. She had always believed
in the evidence, but now she couldn’t shake the notion that Jill was about to
get away with murder, no matter what they said or did.
She suddenly felt suffocated
and desperately needed to change the subject.
“I uh…” she began, clearing
her throat and switching into professional mode. “I went through those phone
records at home. Brass got them to me before the end of shift this morning.”
Grissom paused briefly, and
she wondered if he was going to chastise her for working when she should be
resting. Instead he nodded. “Anything probative?”
“A lot
of calls to bookies and escort agencies. A
couple of other calls. One that caught my eye was to a Jess Silverton. I
checked her address out, and she’s located five miles west of where the police
found Mikey.”
This caught his interest. “How many calls.”
“Only
one.”
Now he looked disappointed. “A
judge probably won’t give us a warrant based on a single call.”
“It’s the only address that
makes sense,” she insisted. “The rest were buddies of his, all within the city
limits. If he ditched Mikey out of the car on his way to his current location,
this Silverton woman is our best bet.”
He nodded again. “Okay, I’ll
have Brass check it out. Meanwhile…”
Anything he was about to say
was put on hold by the chirping of his cell phone. Glancing at it, he saw
Brass’s name and answered immediately. His conversation was brief and too the
point. When he hung up, he turned to Sara and she thought she saw a tiny
glimmer of relief in his eyes.
“The little boy’s awake.”
---
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