Donn Cortez - The Killing Jar

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A teenager is found dead in his motel room, the cause of death: millipede poison…Now crime scene investigator Gil Grissom must aid CSI's Nick Stokes and Riley Adams against a serial killer whose knowledge of entomology rivals his own – a brutal murderer who is not only using insects as the tools of destruction, but actually modeling the attacks after their behavior… In the meantime, CSIs Catherine Willows and Greg Sanders must investigate a bizarre death, where the victim had gotten mixed up with two very different groups of people – one involved in using and dealing crystal meth, the other an avant-garde group of artists – a collision of subcultures where everyone is a suspect and nothing is as it seems…

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A mattress lay on the floor. It was the only thing in the room, other than a large, half-empty jug of water. The other rooms were exactly the same.

They continued on to the greenhouse. Plastic trays holding nothing but dirt lined tables down either side of the room, while in the center, four bodies were sprawled around a burned-out can of Sterno. A blackened, bent spoon and four syringes lay on a piece of newspaper next to it.

“Big Johnny, Paintcan, Zippo, and Buffet Bob,” said Riley. “Looks like they were having a little party.”

“Celebrating the harvest,” said Grissom. He walked over to the nearest tray. “Whatever was growing here was yanked out by the roots. And it appears they were growing a lot of it.”

Nick knelt by the bodies. “Four needles, no waiting. Looks like they just ODed.”

Riley stepped past the bodies, continuing on to the far end of the building. “I’ve got some kind of equipment. Looks like a distillery-piping, large drum, filters.”

“We’re too late,” said Grissom. “He harvested the crop, processed out the anisomorphal, then disposed of his workers.”

“How about the HBTX?” asked Nick. “That’s the real threat.”

Grissom joined Riley at the far end of the room. “This was probably his base of operations, but he would have needed different equipment to process the homobatrachotoxin-like a centrifuge. He may have taken it with him when he left.”

“I don’t know,” said Riley. “This whole agriculture angle doesn’t seem to fit the Bug Killer’s methodology. This could just be a grow op.”

“Actually,” said Grissom, “there are several kinds of insects that raise crops. Termites, ants, and bark beetles all cultivate fungus as a nutritional source-ants were the first animals on Earth to deliberately grow their own food.”

Nick was examining the bodies, one by one. “These guys are in pretty good shape for six weeks of captivity-no ligature marks or bruising.”

“He kept them well fed, too,” sai d Riley, peering into a large, open garbage container. “If your idea of well fed is canned chili and beef stew.”

“Of course he did,” said Grissom softly. “They weren’t prisoners, they were workers. He gave them food, shelter, and purpose, and they performed the duties he assigned them.”

“And none of them bolted?” asked Riley. “I mean, from what I understand these guys were pretty hard-core street veterans-wary about anything that might threaten their independence. Six weeks is a long time to work for a screwball for free stew and a mattress.”

Grissom shook his head. “Slave-raider ants will stage massive invasions of other nests in order to steal pupae. When the stolen young emerge from the pupal state, chemicals released by their captors imprint them as part of the new colony. They think they belong, so they do whatever work they were born to do.”

“Chemicals,” said Nick. “You think the Bug Killer kept them in line by feeding them drugs? Or by making them feel like they belonged here?”

“What’s the difference?” said Grissom. “Either way, he found a way to meet their needs.”

“Yeah,” said Riley. “Until he didn’t need them anymore.”

***

Grissom knew the anisomorphal was the key.

The walking stick insect u sed the chemical as a defense to ward off predators, but that didn’t make sense; the only workable defense for the Bug Killer was to not get caught.

Maybe it is a defense-a diversion to make us look one way instead of another. A type of cryptic camouflage, like the walking stick itself-appearing to be one thing while being something else.

That simply didn’t ring true. Too much time, too much sheer biological energy had been expended on this project. That wasn’t what insects did; they were models of efficiency. Whatever LW had planned, the anisomorphal was a necessary element.

Secondary influences. Everything he’s done has been in order to trigger a larger effect. Kill a quarterback to incite a riot; kill a helper to panic a queen. Threaten a lab to unnerve an opponent…

He’s like a kid playing with a magnifying glass. Seeing which way he can make the ants run, pulling the wings off flies. By turning people into insects, he turns himself into God.

“Hey, Grissom!” Brass’s voice on the walkie-talkie. “I said, one of your associates is here and asking for you. Can you hear me inside that hood, or should I get a bullhorn?”

Grissom grabbed the walkie and responded. “Sorry. Who is it?”

“Jake Soames.”

Grissom walked back outside, pulling off his hood as soon as he was outdoors. “Jake? What are you doing here?”

Jake Soames leaned against Brass’s car, a white cardboard box on the hood beside him. “Told your dispatcher I had something important to show you, convinced ’em to cough up your location. Not interrupting, am I?”

Grissom frowned. “We’re in the middle of processing a crime scene, Jake. You shouldn’t be here.”

“You haven’t seen what I’ve brought you yet. Look.” He picked up the box and held it out. The top was transparent, with a small intake vent on one side and what looked like a tiny fan to draw air into the box. Five wasps crawled around the interior.

“Braconids?” said Grissom.

“That’s right,” said Jake proudly. “They’re parasitic, lay their eggs in the living bodies of caterpillars. They use their sense of smell to find their prey. They’re sensitive to not only the chemicals emitted by the caterpillar but the volatiles released by the plant the caterpillar is feeding on. Like a rent-a-cop responding to an alarm going off, right? Attack the plant and get an armed response for your trouble.”

“These are the ones you mentioned in your research?”

“The very same. These wasps can be trained to associate particular odors with food in about an hour. The idea is to train ’em to replace bomb- or drug-sniffing dogs. Since you gave me a tin star and all, I thought I’d lend a hand in case the bad guys left you a nasty surprise.”

“These wasps can detect explosives?”

“They bloody well better, or my grant’ll disappear.” Jake grinned. “C ome on, Gil-chance to be in on the cutting edge of science, eh? Let me and my little mates have a gander at your crime scene. I promise I won’t touch anything-you can put me in one of those all-body condoms to make sure.”

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-

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