Grissom thought about it. “All right,” he said at last. “But stick close.”
“Like Vegemite on bread…”
Once he was suited up, Soames followed Grissom inside. “So this is like, what? One of those warehouses they grow marijuana in? Can’t smell a damn thing inside this suit except my own sweat…”
“Be grateful,” said Grissom. “Four corpses don’t exactly produce a pleasant bouquet.”
Grissom explained to Nick and Riley what Jake was doing there.
“You really think there might be a bomb here?” asked Nick.
“I doubt it,” said Grissom. “But there’s no harm in letting him look. Just keep an eye on him while he’s doing it.”
Jake had already begun, walking slowly around the perimeter of the room and stopping to take air samples every few feet.
Grissom joined him. “Anything?”
“Not so far. It’s a big room, though-give ’em a bit.”
As he followed Jake around the room, Grissom’s thoughts returned to Athena Jordanson. She was still important. The Bug Killer had made a queen run, but that wouldn’t be enough for him. What would? Killing her? He’d made that almost impossible by his own actions-security around her would be on high alert. The hive was buzzing with fear and anger, ready to attack anything that moved. All they needed to explode into fury was-
An irritant.
Abruptly, he knew what LW wanted the anisomorphal for.
Incentive.
“Well, that was a bust,” Jake Soames said cheerfully. “Either there’s no trinitrotoluene here, or my guys are asleep at the switch and you’re all going up in smoke.”
Nick glanced over at Grissom and raised his eyebrows.
“Jake,” said Grissom, “I appreciate you sharing your expertise, but we really have to process the crime scene now.”
“No worries. Give me a call later, Gilly-we’ll have a drink.” Grissom walked Jake and his wasps to the exit.
Riley shook her head. “I can’t believe Grissom actually let that guy into our crime scene. With a box of bugs, no less.”
“Give him a break,” said Nick. “We cleared him in the Harribold case, so he’s not a suspect. He was careful not to touch anything. And even though his methodology is a little out-there, it’s no stranger than some of the things I’ve seen Grissom do. Show the guy a little respect; he’s a scientist, no different than us.”
“Is there somet hing I’m missing here? That whole exercise seemed pretty pointless-”
Nick put up a hand. “There is something you’re missing. Not your fault; you don’t know Grissom like I do. But-you know how back in high school, there was always that one geeky kid who never had any friends? Sat by himself during lunch, usually reading a book? That’s Grissom in a nutshell. Not real good at socializing, would rather read a paper on the mating habits of the dung beetle than go to a party. It makes him real good at his job, but it’s a pretty lonely place to live.”
“How about his coworkers? You guys seem pretty close.”
“We are. Matter of fact, I’d say we’re a family. But there’s a world of difference between family and friends; family’s where you go when you need to feel safe, feel protected. Friends-well, friends are who you go to when you need to cut loose.”
“I have a hard time imagining Grissom cutting loose.”
“Maybe so, but it’s a basic human need. Hell, it’s the only reason Vegas exists in the first place. And Jake-I don’t know him that well, but he’s a bout the only person in the world I’ve ever seen convince Grissom to drink something stronger than beer.” Nick paused. “It’s been a hard year for him. For all of us. I think he needs all the friends he can get right now, and that includes loud, booze-guzzling Australians.”
Riley shrugged. “Okay, I get it. Anybody that tightly wrapped is probably in need of a little loosening. I just hope it doesn’t affect our investigation.”
“It won’t. If there’s one thing Grissom never loses sight of, it’s the case he’s working on.”
“I need to go back to the Embassy Gold,” said Grissom.
Conrad Ecklie stared at him, lines of frustration on his face. “Gil, we’ve been through this. Quadros is dead. It’s great that your people located that greenhouse, but four dead junkies and a bunch of dirt do not add up to an imminent terrorist attack.”
Grissom hadn’t bothered to take a seat when he entered Ecklie’s office, and now he tossed a photo down on the undersheriff’s desk. Ecklie picked it up with a frown. “What’s this?”
“That’s a picture from Togo. Four people killed at a soccer game when a power outage panicked the spectators and sent them racing for the exits.” Grissom tossed another photo down. “This one’s from Harare, Zimbabwe. Thirteen dead after police used tear gas on an unruly crowd.” He added a third. “ Kathmandu. Ni nety-three people killed in a stadium while trying to flee a hailstorm.” Another photo. “ Accra, Ghana. A hundred and twenty-three fatalities after police set off a stampede by firing tear gas when fans threw bottles and chairs onto the field.”
Ecklie stopped him with a raised hand before he could add a fifth. “What’s your point, Gil? If there’s a connection between soccer riots in Third World countries and a dead serial killer, I’m not seeing it.”
“Panic. In every case, LW has used bugs themselves to provoke specific reactions in the public at large. He believes that in large groups, people and insects basically react the same way. And so far, he’s been right.”
“Even if that were the case, it’s irrelevent. He’s dead-”
“That may not matter. All a bomb needs to go off is a timer.”
Ecklie paused. “A bomb?”
“Yes. And if I’m right about the effect he’s trying to cause, I know where it has to be. We don’t need to shut down the hotel for this; all I need is access.”
Ecklie looked skeptical. “To what?”
“The ventilation system.”
They started with the intake vents at ground level, massive chrome-louvered panels designed to suck in the dry Vegas air, figuring that they were the most accessible. When that proved fruitless, they moved to the roof and the huge air-cycling plant that pumped cool air into hundreds of hotel rooms as well as the restaurants, the bars, and the casino. After that, the only thing left to search would be the immense length of the duct system itself, literally miles of air-circulation piping that ran through the entire hotel like the capillary system of a living organism.
That turned out not to be necessary. They found what they were looking for on the roof.
The bomb disposal unit brought Grissom the parts when they were done. The BDU commander, Lieutenant Coombs, was a wiry, soft-spoken man with a bristly gray mustache. “It’s all yours, Grissom,” he said as his men carried the pieces into the lab. “Pretty simple mechanism, really. He just adapted an industrial-grade mister to aerosolize the liquid-probably got it from a greenhouse.”
“Thanks,” said Grissom. “We’ll take it from here.”
“Sure,” said Coombs, a chuckle in his voice. “Now that there’s no danger of anything blowing up, you show us the door.”
Grissom eyed the tank now sitting on a lab table. “Don’t go too far. Things aren’t quite stable yet…”
Hodges found Riley, Grissom, and Nick in the conference room, staring at the large monitor on the wall. “Got the results you were waiting on,” said Hodges. “Anisomorphal-highly concentrated , too. I also found traces of a second chemical, dimethyl sulfoxide.”
“DMSO?” said Nick. “That’s a topical solvent-absorbs right through the skin and into the bloodstream.”