“You go right on.” He stepped back and watched Roarke come in.
“My temporary aide,” Eve explained. “This is Sheriff Reese.”
“I know who you are,” Reese said. “Seen your face on-screen often enough. You own some property around here.”
“That’s right.”
“You keep it in good maintenance. We appreciate that around here. That your rig out front?”
“Yes.” Roarke smiled a little as Eve turned off the motor. “It’s a new line.”
“Slick.”
“I’ll give you a closer look before we go,” Roarke offered.
“I’d appreciate that.”
“Victim is male, Caucasian,” Eve began. “Identified as Bayliss, Captain Boyd, age forty-eight. Cause of death appears to be drowning. Single laceration in left wrist is potentially life-threatening.”
She fit on her microgoggles. “No visible hesitation marks,” she reported, then pushed them off again. “Victim is wearing a gold wedding ring and a gold wrist unit. A strong adhesive tape has been used to strap the victim to the tub at throat, left forearm, chest, torso, waist, hips, and on both thighs and ankles. No defensive wounds are evident.”
The water drained out, little sucking sounds, while she spoke. As the level lowered, Bayliss’s hair and genitals floated toward the surface.
“I need to get in to examine the body. Sheriff, will you record?” She slipped the recorder off her jacket, held it out.
“I like my job better than yours.” He fixed it to his shirt, moved closer.
She stepped onto the platform, swung a leg over the edge. Already in her mind, the scene played out. He’d have been unconscious, she was sure of that. It wouldn’t have been possible to get a healthy, well-built, adult male into the tub and restrained without signs of a struggle.
She planted her feet on either side of the body as she imagined the killer had done. Bending, she began to work at the tape. “Strong stuff. It looks like that tape used for packing cargo and heavy shipments. He used a smooth-bladed tool to cut it. No ragged edges. Probably shears or scissors. Neat, patient work. He took his time.”
The tape screeched a little as it pulled away from the smooth, damp surface of the tub. She took her time with it, carefully sliding the tape into evidence bags.
With his head free, Eve lifted it, turned it. And saw no signs of a blow.
Stunned him, she thought. Used a weapon. Probably a standard police issue. Damn.
She worked her way down the body, handing Roarke the bagged tape as she freed it.
Her movements were brisk and efficient, Roarke thought. Her eyes were flat. Distancing herself, as much as she was able, focusing her mind, her skill on the job.
She wouldn’t have called it courageous, but he did. To give herself over, to stand over death and work doggedly to balance the scales, even for a man he knew she had disliked.
“Microgoggles,” she ordered, and Roarke passed them back to her.
With them on, she crouched, examining the abraded skin where Bayliss had futilely fought against the tape. Yeah, she thought, wanted him alive and awake while the water churned up. Screaming, begging, sobbing.
Did he call you by name? I’d lay odds on it.
She turned him, her hands unconsciously gentle. On his back, his buttocks, she saw faint marks where his body had pressed and rubbed against the tub.
And on his hips was a small tattoo, gold and black, a replica of the shield that was now smeared with his blood.
“A cop through and through,” she commented. “At least that’s what he considered himself. He’d have hated dying like this. Naked, helpless, and undignified.”
She gathered the coins littering the bottom of the tub. “Thirty,” she said, jingling them in her palm before dropping them into the bag Roarke held out for her. “He deviates his method but not his symbolism. Bayliss hasn’t been dead long. We didn’t miss this one by much. The blood barely started to settle to its lowest level, and what’s been spilled out there’s still wet. I need the gauge to get time of death.”
“Lieutenant.” Roarke held out the gauge. “I believe your team’s here.”