"What do you see, Sachs? Tell me!"
She waved the PoliLight wand over the places where the Dancer would logically have gripped with his hands and stepped with his feet. "Whoa, Rhyme."
"What?"
"Fingerprints. Fresh latents . . . Wait. But here're the glove prints too. In blood. From holding the rag. I don't get it. It's like a cave . . . Maybe he took the gloves off for some reason. Maybe he thought he was safe in the tunnel."
Then she looked down and shone the eerie glow of yellow-green light at her feet. "Oh."
"What?"
"They're not his prints. He's with somebody else."
"Somebody else? How do you know?"
"There's another set of footprints too. They're both fresh. One bigger than the other. They go off in the same direction, running. Jesus, Rhyme."
"What's the matter?"
"It means he's got a partner."
"Come on, Sachs. The glass is half full." Rhyme added cheerfully, "It means we'll have twice as much evidence to help us track him down."
"I was thinking," she said darkly, "that it meant he'd be twice as dangerous."
"What've you got?" Lincoln Rhyme asked.
Sachs had returned to his town house and she and Mel Cooper were looking over the evidence collected at the scene. Sachs and SWAT had followed the footsteps into a Con Ed access tunnel, where they lost track of both the Dancer and his companion. It looked as if the men had climbed to the street and escaped through a manhole.
She gave Cooper the print she'd found in the entrance to the tunnel. He scanned it into the computer and sent it off to the feds for an AFIS search.
Then she held up two electrostatic prints for Rhyme to examine. "These're the footprints in the tunnel. This one's the Dancer's." She lifted one of the prints--transparent, like an X ray. "It matches a print in the shrink's office he broke into on the first floor."
"Wearing average ordinary factory shoes," Rhyme said.
"You'd think he'd be in combat boots," Sellitto muttered.
"No, those'd be too obvious. Work shoes have rubber soles for gripping and steel caps in the toes. They're as good as boots if you don't need ankle support. Hold the other one closer, Sachs."
The smaller shoes were very worn at the heel and the ball of the foot. There was a large hole in the right shoe and through it you could see a lattice of skin wrinkles.
"No socks. Could be his friend's homeless."
"Why's he got somebody with him?" Cooper asked.
"Don't know," Sellitto said. "Word is he always works alone. He uses people but he doesn't trust them."
Just what I've been accused of, Rhyme thought. He said, "And leaving fingerprints at the scene? This guy's no pro. He must have something the Dancer needs."
"A way out of the building, for one thing," Sachs suggested.
"That could be i
t."
"And's probably dead now," she suggested.
Probably, Rhyme agreed silently.