carefully.
“What are you doing?” I asked.
Again, she said nothing. Once she had the door wide open, she looked down, next to the driver’s seat, and reached down. There were a couple of small levers there, one for the gas cap and one for the trunk. Next thing I knew, the trunk lid, right in front of me, clicked and popped open an inch.
Even though Jennings had said earlier that no one had been found in the car, the unlocked trunk provoked an overwhelming sense of dread.
“Don’t open it,” Jennings said. “Don’t touch anything.”
I didn’t have to be told.
She came around to the back of the car and slipped a gloved index finger under the far right lip of the lid, where someone would be unlikely to have touched it, and slowly lifted. There was nothing inside except for the first-aid roadside emergency kit I’d put in there myself when I got Syd the car. It didn’t appear to have been touched.
“Anything missing?” Detective Jennings asked.
“Not since the last time I looked in here,” I said.
She left the trunk open and returned to the open front door. She leaned in over the driver’s seat, still careful not to touch anything. Her short frame was twisted awkwardly, unable to touch any part of the car for balance as she looked around.
Then, suddenly, she jumped back. It was as though something in the car had sprung up and shoved her.
My heart thumped. “What?” I asked.
She spun her body around and let out an enormous sneeze over the Celica. “Sorry,” she said. “I felt this tickle coming, and I didn’t want to contaminate the car with my own DNA.”
Once I’d had a moment to recover, I said, “DNA?”
Jennings said, “I’m going to want the crime scene investigators to go over this car.”
“Why?” I asked. “Is that just routine? Is that something you always do?”
Jennings studied me for a moment, weighing something. Then, “Come here.”
Delicately, she moved the door back three-quarters closed, drew me closer, and pointed to the outside handle. “You see those smudges?”
I did. Smears of something dark. Reddish brown.
She pulled the door wide again and pointed to the steering wheel. “Don’t touch it,” she said again. But she pointed to the wheel. “You see that?”
More smears of what appeared to be on the door handle.
“I see it,” I said. “It’s blood, isn’t it?”
“That’d be my guess, yes,” Kip Jennings said.
SIX
“W E’RE GOING TO NEED TO GET A SAMPLE of your daughter’s DNA,” Jennings said during the drive back. “A hair from her brush would do the trick. And then we can compare that to the blood sample.”
“Yeah,” I said, but I was barely listening.
“Can you think of any reason why your daughter would be in Derby? Did she have friends there? A boyfriend, maybe?”
I shook my head.
“I’m having the car brought in, we’ll go over it thoroughly, and as soon as I know anything, I’ll pass that information on to you and your wife. Sorry, your ex-wife. And I’ll have someone come by your house later today, for something we can use to get a DNA sample.”
I nodded slowly. “You’re suddenly taking this seriously.”
“I’ve never not taken this seriously, Mr. Blake,” Kip Jennings said.
“I’m sorry,” I said.
“You okay?” she asked.
“I have to make a call,” I said.
“I have another question for you,” she said. “A favor for my counterparts over in Bridgeport. If you don’t mind.” I shook my head absently, neither refusing to answer nor agreeing. “I’m sure there’s no connection here, but there was an incident around the time that your daughter disappeared.”
“Someone else is missing?”
“Not exactly. You ever heard of someone by the name of Randall Tripe?”
“What was that again?”
“Tripe. Really. And he usually went by Randy instead of Randall.”
“Went by? Not anymore?”
“No. Do you recognize the name?”
“No. Should I?”
“Probably not,” she said.
“What
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