The Coffin Dancer (Lincoln Rhyme 2)
Page 54
Speaking into his headset, Rhyme ordered his computer to scroll through the microscopic images of the fibers. "Looks like two different kinds. One's white or buff. The other's got a green tint."
"Green? Money?" Sellitto suggested.
"Possibly."
"You have enough to gas a few?" Rhyme asked. The chromatograph would destroy the fibers.
Cooper said they had and proceeded to test several of them.
He read the computer screen. "No cotton and no soda, sulfite, or sulfate."
These were chemicals added to the pulping process in making high-quality paper.
"It's cheap paper. And the dye's water soluble. There's no oil-based ink."
"So," Rhyme announced, "it's not money."
"Probably recycled," Cooper said.
Rhyme magnified the screen again. The matrix was large now and the detail lost. He was momentarily frustrated and wished that he was looking through a real compound 'scope eyepiece. There was nothing like the clarity of fine optics.
Then he saw something.
"Those yellow blotches, Mel? Glue?"
The tech looked through the microscope's eyepiece and announced, "Yes. Envelope glue, looks like."
So possibly the key had been delivered to the Dancer in an envelope. But what did the green paper signify? Rhyme had no idea.
Sellitto folded up his phone. "I talked to Ron Talbot at Hudson Air. He made a few calls. Guess who leases that hangar where the Dancer waited."
"Phillip Hansen," Rhyme said.
"Yep."
"We're making a good case," Sachs said.
True, Rhyme thought, though his goal was not to hand the Dancer over to the AG with a watertight case. No, he wanted the man's head on a pike.
"Anything else there?"
"Nothing."
"Okay, let's move on to the other scene. The sniper's nest. He was under a lot of pressure there. Maybe he got careless."
But, of course, he hadn't been careless.
There were no shell casings.
"Here's why," Cooper said, examining the trace through the 'scope. "Cotton fibers. He used a dish towel to catch the casings."
Rhyme nodded. "Footprints?"
"Nope." Sachs explained that the Dancer'd worked his way around the patches of exposed mud, staying on the grass even when he was racing to the catering van to escape.
"How many FRs you find?"
"None at the sniper's nest," she explained. "Close to two hundred in the two vans."