from the sheriff’s office, principally to talk about the procedures and cautions taken at the crime scene. Then she called two forensic technicians to discuss how the evidence at the crime scene was collected, how it was handled, how it was preserved. She was careful at all points to establish the chain of custody for each bit of evidence, trying to leave Ben no opening for questioning the purity of the evidence on cross.
The only remotely interesting bit of testimony came late in the morning, when Granny called Deputy Goldsmith to the stand. Goldsmith had first reported to the crime scene, then was instructed by Sheriff Allen to join him on an expedition to the Green Rage camp.
“First I went back to town and woke up the judge,” Goldsmith said, glancing up at Pickens. “Then I got a search warrant. Then me and Sheriff Allen and two of the boys drove out to the Green Rage camp. Luckily, we’d had a report from some campers that gave us a good idea where the camp was that night. Even so, it took us a good half hour of driving around before we found it. When we finally did, we woke everybody up and started asking questions.”
“Did you learn anything of interest?” Granny asked.
“Not from them. They didn’t know anything about it. Or so they said.”
“Did you conduct a search?”
“Definitely. We went through all their tents, all their papers and equipment.”
“Did you find anything?”
“Yes, ma’am. The Bigfoot suit.”
Granny brought out the costume, wrapped in clear polyethylene, and went through the rigmarole necessary to have it admitted into evidence.
“Deputy Goldsmith,” Granny continued, “why was this Halloween costume of interest to you?”
“We’d been having a large number of Bigfoot sightings in the last few months prior to the murder. We always get some of that, but this was way above average. So we knew that either there really was a Bigfoot or someone was running around in a costume. And the latter seemed more likely.”
“Does this have anything to do with the murder of Dwayne Gardiner?” Granny asked innocently.
Ben frowned. As if she didn’t know.
“We thought so. See, the tough thing about that murder was trying to figure out who would be running around in the forest at that time of night. But we had three reports of Bigfoot sightings in the area that night, ranging from about a quarter after twelve until about one-thirty. Campers think they see things, then call us on their cellular phones. Anyway, those calls suggested that someone in the Bigfoot getup was awake and in the area-at exactly the time the murder took place.”
“So you thought whoever was wearing the costume would be a murder suspect.”
“Yeah. Particularly since the last report said that Bigfoot was running at full speed. Like maybe he was chasing someone.”
Chasing someone? Ben thought. He couldn’t chase Gardiner, not after the explosion. Was there a third person at the crime scene?
Come to think of it, Deputy Wagner had said the anonymous call about the murder had come from a woman.
Could it have been Tess? Could she have been there, at the crime scene? That would explain a great deal.
“I think we can all understand now why you were so interested in the suit, Deputy Goldsmith. Would you now please tell the jury where you found it?”
“Certainly. The suit was in the tent belonging to the defendant. George Zakin.”
There was an audible gasp in the courtroom. Ben didn’t know why-did they really think Granny would be bringing this up if the suit had been in someone else’s tent? Nonetheless, the jurors’ eyes all moved, if only briefly, toward Zak. And the expressions on their faces were not kind ones.
“Did he share the tent with anyone else?”
“Nope. It was his and his alone.”
“Thank you, deputy. No more questions.”
Ben didn’t even bother cross-examining. There was nothing to be gained. He didn’t believe Goldsmith was lying, and like it or not, the suit had been in Zak’s tent. That was just an unfortunate bit of evidence they were going to have to live with.
Next up, Granny called a fingerprint expert to the stand, a Michael Hightower. Hightower had found a latent thumbprint on a piece of metal plating, possibly part of the bomb casing. Evidently the metal had been thrown clear in the explosion and thus remained largely intact, preserving the print.
Which matched Zak’s right thumbprint. Perfectly. Unquestionably.
Granny finished the morning by calling her next forensic expert to the stand. Mark Austin specialized in footprints, and as the jury soon learned, he had taken several from the crime scene, particularly from the area surrounding the corpse. Many, he explained, could be dismissed as having come from members of the sheriff’s office or other investigators. But one set of prints could not. He had made plaster casts, which Granny had admitted into evidence and displayed to the jury.
Those prints were size elevens-the same size that George Zakin wore.
This time around, Ben definitely saw a reason to cross-examine.
“Mr. Austin, did you conduct an analysis of the tread left by these footprints?”
Austin, a short, prim man wearing a suit coat and bow tie, straightened. “Unfortunately, the ground was relatively dry the night of the murder. The print left did not have sufficient depth or distinction to identify the tread. So trying to trace the prints to a particular shoe was out of the question. What we could see was the broad outline of the print-that is, what size it was.”
“Mr. Austin, before this thing gets too far out of control, let’s be clear on just what exactly you’re saying. You’re not saying that George Zakin left those footprints, are you?”
“Well …”
“What you’re saying is that someone-you don’t know who-left those footprints.”
“And whoever it was wore a size eleven. As does George Zakin.”
“That’s correct. And there are a whole heck of a lot of people who wear a size eleven, aren’t there?”
“No doubt.” Austin adjusted his bow tie. “But only one of them is on trial for murder.”
“Mr. Austin, aren’t the police supposed to use evidence to find the culprit, instead of picking a culprit and then finding evidence that fits?”
“Objection,” Granny said. “Mr. Kincaid is way out of line. Again.”
Judge Pickens made an unhappy grunting noise. “Kincaid, you almost got to spend last night in jail. Let’s not go down that road again, all right?”
“Yes, your honor,” Ben said placidly.
“And you may consider that your absolutely last warning.”
Right, right. Bully. “Let me ask you a different question, Mr. Austin. How many people were at that crime scene?”
Austin shook his head. “Quite a few. Twenty or so, I would guess.”
“And every one of them left footprints, right?”
“No doubt.”
“Some of them, like Deputy Wagner, probably left a lot of footprints.”
“Yes.” Austin grinned. This was obviously a topic he had been prepared for. “But none of them wears a size eleven.”
“Oh? And how do you know that?”
“Because I checked every single one of them.”
Oh. Damn. “And none of them wore a size eleven?”
“None of them.”
“You checked everyone who was at the crime scene?”
“Every single one.”
His smug smile was almost more than Ben could bear. “And you’re sure no one wore a size eleven.”
“Right.”
“Not a single person at the crime scene.”