with a nightmare that would end not with waking, but rather with going to sleep.
Forever.
And as the colored lights subsided and blackness fell across, Marvin Sandred saw Annie in his mind, smiling sadly, shaking her head, saying, as she had when she left, âDonât you know, Marvin? One personâs dream is anotherâs nightmare?â
ONE
T he North Las Vegas neighborhood was slowly making the transition from cozy to shabby. A 420 on the radio, this homicide callâwhich on the Strip would be treated like a presidential assassination, every squad car rolling in with lights strobing and siren blaringâhad generated only one North Las Vegas PD squad, which sat parked out front of the house as quietly as if this was the officerâs home â¦
⦠and not a crime scene.
Which was what brought LVPD Crime Scene Investigation supervisor Gil Grissom to this declining residential area, and not for the first timeâwasnât a habit yet, but calls in these environs were definitely on the upswing.
Seasoned veteran Grissom descended on this troubled neighborhood like the angel of death, albeit a casually attired one, such a study in black was he: sunglasses, Polo shirt, slacks, shoes. Gray was invading the dark curly hair, however, intruding as well into a beard heâd grown to save himself time, only to find trimming the thing was its own burden. Heâd thought of shaving the damn thing off, at least twenty times, but that much of an expenditure of time he wasnât ready to invest.
Gil Grissomâs life was his work, and his work was death.
Nick Stokes, behind the wheel, parked the black CSI Tahoe behind the NLVPD cruiser; after him, Warrick Brown pulled in a second Tahoe. Grissom and Stokes had ridden in the lead vehicle while Warrick shared his with fellow CSIs, Catherine Willows and Sara Sidle.
Muscular, former college jock Nick had dark hair cut close and an easy smile that belied how seriously he took his job. The heroic-jawed CSI wore jeans and a T-shirt with the LVPD badge embroidered over the left breast.
Green-eyed, African-American Warrick was tall and slender, and his expression seemed serious most of the time, though wry twists of humor did come through. In his untucked brown T-shirt and khaki slacks, the loose-limbed Warrick seemed more relaxed than Nick, but Grissom knew both young men were tightly wired, in a good way, excellent analysts and dedicated hard workers.
Even more intense than her two male teammates, Sara Sidle wore her dark hair to her shoulders and preferred comfortable clothes like todayâs tan T-shirt and brown slacks. Still, she was as striking in her way as Catherine Willows, a redhead with the chiseled features of a model and the slenderly curvaceous body of a dancer. Wearing an aqua tank top and navy slacks, Catherine still more closely resembled the exotic performer she had been to the crack scientist sheâd become.
Though they worked the graveyard shift, Grissomâs teamâthanks to manpower shortages this weekâwas currently working overtime to help cover dayshift court appearances and vacations. Normally, these CSIs would have showed up at a crime scene in the middle of the night, but with the OT, they found themselves arriving at this one with the summer sun already high in a cloudless blue sky, the heat dry but not oppressive, tourist friendly.
Pulling off his sunglasses, Grissom studied the bungalow: tiny and, particularly for this neighborhood, still in decent repair. The dirt yard was small and bisected by a crumbling sidewalk that passed a steel flagpole on its way to the open front door. Two flags hung limp on the windless day, an American flag at the top and a Green Bay Packers one beneath it, while a short gravel driveway ran up the far side of the house, a dark blue early nineties Chevy parked in the middle.
Even though homes surrounded the bungalow all along the block, to Grissom, the house looked lonely, somehow.