CONKLIN AND I had scrubbed at our faces with damp paper towels, but the stench of fire and death clung to us. Jacobi stood upwind and said, “You two smell like you’ve been wading1 through a sewer2.”
I thanked him, but my mind was churning.
Two blocks away, a raging fire was burning the Vetter house to the ground. There might have been evidence inside that house, something that would have tied Hans Vetter and Brett Atkinson to the arson3 murders.
Now all of that was gone.
We stood in front of the house where the dead boy, Brett Atkinson, had lived with his parents. It was a soaring contemporary with cantilevered decks and hundred-mile views. Very, very wealthy people lived here.
Hawk’s parents, the Atkinsons, hadn’t answered repeated knocks by patrolmen, never returned our calls, and their son’s body was still lying unclaimed in the morgue. A canvass4 of the neighborhood had confirmed their absence. No one had seen or heard from the Atkinsons in days, and they hadn’t told anyone they were leaving home.
The engines on the Atkinsons’ cars were cold. There was mail in the mailbox a couple of days old, and the fellow who’d stopped mowing5 the lawn when we arrived said he hadn’t seen Perry or Moira Atkinson all week.
While Vetter’s house was a total loss, I still had hope that the Atkinsons’ house might hold evidence of the horrific killings6 the boys had done. Thirty-five minutes had passed since Jacobi phoned Tracchio for a search warrant.
Meanwhile, Cindy had called me, saying that she and a handful of TV news vans were parked behind the barricade7 at the top of the street. Conklin pushed a bloody8 clump9 of his hair away from his eyes, said to Jacobi, “If this isn’t ‘exigent circumstances,’ I don’t know what is.”
Jacobi growled10, “Cool it, Conklin. Understand? If we blow this, we’re freakin’ buried. I’ll be retired11, and you two will be working for Brink’s Security. If you’re lucky.”
Fifteen more minutes crawled by.
I was about to lie and say I smelled decomp when an intern12 from the district attorney’s office arrived in a Chevy junker. She sprinted13 up the front walk a half second before Conklin caved in the front window of the Atkinson house with a tire iron.
1 wading | |
(从水、泥等)蹚,走过,跋( wade的现在分词 ) | |
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2 sewer | |
n.排水沟,下水道 | |
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3 arson | |
n.纵火,放火 | |
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4 canvass | |
v.招徕顾客,兜售;游说;详细检查,讨论 | |
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5 mowing | |
n.割草,一次收割量,牧草地v.刈,割( mow的现在分词 ) | |
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6 killings | |
谋杀( killing的名词复数 ); 突然发大财,暴发 | |
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7 barricade | |
n.路障,栅栏,障碍;vt.设路障挡住 | |
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8 bloody | |
adj.非常的的;流血的;残忍的;adv.很;vt.血染 | |
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9 clump | |
n.树丛,草丛;vi.用沉重的脚步行走 | |
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10 growled | |
v.(动物)发狺狺声, (雷)作隆隆声( growl的过去式和过去分词 );低声咆哮着说 | |
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11 retired | |
adj.隐退的,退休的,退役的 | |
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12 intern | |
v.拘禁,软禁;n.实习生 | |
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13 sprinted | |
v.短距离疾跑( sprint的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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