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ffutures ([personal profile] ffutures) wrote2010-09-18 06:54 pm

Fanfic: NCIS / Dexter/ mMultiple crossovers: Give The Boys A Great Big Hand - III

Here's the third part of my NCIS / Dexter / multiple crossover.

Previous parts are here. This chapter won't make much sense if you haven't read them!

No special warnings, apart from BIG spoilers for Dexter Seasons 2, 3 and 4, and more fandoms added to the mix.



This is a multiple crossover, beginning with NCIS and Dexter and eventually taking in several other fandoms. Some sections include passages with a first person viewpoint, reflecting the narrative style used in (for example) the Dexter TV show and books. I will always try to make the identity of the viewpoint characters clear.

Major spoilers for Dexter S2, S3 and S4.

See the first chapter for disclaimers etc.

Give the Boys a Great Big Hand

By Marcus L. Rowland

III


Interlude: Wolfram, Hart, and Donowitz, Washington DC

"People are getting anxious," said M. Alison Hart. "We're within days of completion of the Miami project, and NCIS should never have been in the picture. One ridiculous accident and years of work are jeopardised. What can you tell me?" She handed the hooded figure a copy of that morning's Miami Herald, flown in at considerable expense. Of course the on-line edition wasn't suitable, that would have been too cheap and convenient.

The Seer opened the paper to the comics and games, ran his hands over the Sudoku puzzle, then dipped his right hand into a leather pouch and pulled out an ivory tile. "Seven... so, a seven." He dipped a quill into dark brown ink and marked a neat seven on the puzzle. For the next ten minutes he repeated the process, a tile at a time, until there were only eight spaces left, two blocks of four. "Most curious..."

"What is?" asked Alison.

"There is an error in the puzzle. These last spaces... Here, to the left, an eight and a four above, a three and a six below. There, three and six above, eight and four below."

"What's the problem?"

"There is still a solution if the positions are vertically reversed, with three and six above on the left, eight and four below, and the right side eight and four above, three and six below. There is nothing to contradict either choice."

"So what?"

"Two outcomes," said the Seer, "two possibilities, both equally probable. One is success, the other failure. Tick and Tock, Yin and Yang. A delicate balance, do you see?"

"Not really."

"Even without this flaw in the puzzle, the sequence of tiles told me that events are balanced on a delicate cusp. Any choice that you make may bring you closer to the outcome you prefer, or rob you of it forever. The error makes this utterly certain."

"So there's nothing we can do?"

"Anything you do is likely to reduce the likelihood that things will go as you desire."

"Crap." Alison thought for a moment, then said "Okay, let me have that in writing. I'll inform the Senior Partners; they can decide what to do."

Miami-Dade Crime Laboratory

Horatio Caine removed his sunglasses and peered at Gibbs again, tilting his head slightly. Pretending to take notes, Tony added another line to a row, realised it made five, and crossed through them, deciding that it must be some sort of nervous tic, like the bad joke when he'd heard of Marten's death.

"So you had no particular reason to believe that Marten was actively involved?" asked Gibbs.

"Several of his former associates were implicated," said Caine, "and the data stored with some of the recent images on their computers showed that a Canon Eos 1D SLR with a four hundred millimetre lens had been used. That was Marten's favourite camera at the time he was arrested. These days you can pick up the camera bodies for four or five hundred dollars if you shop around, that lens would add at least six or seven hundred more, if you could find one second hand. But Marten was a professional photographer before his arrest, it's possible that he managed to hold on to a lens when the rest of his equipment was confiscated."

"I remember the 1D," said Gibbs. "Good professional camera for the time, but heavy."

McGee began to tap a search into the web browser on his PDA, Gibbs ignored it.

Caine said "They can shoot twenty-one frames at eight frames a second, which makes them a good choice for someone who wants to take a lot of pictures and get out in a hurry."

"So you thought it would be worth checking on him?"

"He was a convicted sex offender," said Caine, "and his MO fitted the evidence; we got a warrant and raided his house at the same time as the others."

"Why didn't Miami Metro handle the raid?" asked Gibbs.

"The judge issued the warrants to us," said Caine. "If we'd involved Metro there would have been another judge, another set of warrants, and an increased chance of word getting out before the raid. Nobody wanted that to happen."

"I see," said Gibbs. "And what did you find?"

"Marten had been gone for at least a couple of weeks. The food in the refrigerator was rotten, and there was mould growing in a coffee cup on his desk. His computer was wiped clean, and there were no cameras in the house, although we did find a wide-angle lens with the Eos fitting. We couldn't find any evidence of foul play, so we assumed he'd run."

"Wiped clean?" said McGee. "You couldn't recover files?"

"The hard disk of his desktop computer was completely overwritten with ones and zeros, our tech people said there was nothing left to recover. We found a receipt for a laptop, but it was missing. About all that we know for sure is that he uploaded some of the files, the IP records make that clear."

"Do you still have the computer?" asked Gibbs

"We didn't have any reason to keep it," said Caine. "His landlord might know what happened to it."

* * * * *


"What did you make of him?" Gibbs asked as they drove towards Marten's home.

"Glory hound," said Tony; "wants to bring down the bad guys single-handed. A mass raid like that, you need all the help you can get. He went out of his way to keep complete control of the case."

Gibbs grunted something that might have been agreement, and Tony belatedly thought of Gibbs' reluctance to give up on the Marten case.

"It's possible I can get something off the computer," said McGee, "if it was never reused, of course, but what are the odds of that?"

"Poor," said Ziva.

"One thing, boss," said McGee. "You remember the objects that fell out of the bag in the ROV's recording, the ones that sank quickly and we couldn't identify?"

"Way ahead of you, McGeek," said Tony. "A camera body and a lens?"

"Could be," said Gibbs. "Those were heavy cameras; that would be enough weight to keep a body submerged."

"One of the objects was a light-coloured cylinder with a couple of dark bands," said McGee. "I didn't think of a lens because they're usually black, but some Canon lenses have white outer casings. The other could certainly be a camera; we just saw it from the wrong angle to identify it."

"The poor light and the blood in the water did not help," said Ziva.

"Not much chance of recovering them," said Gibbs, "and even if there was, the memory card was probably pulled before the body was dumped. Whoever we're after knew what they were doing."

Dexter Morgan

"Dexter, would you come into my office for a moment?" Lieutenant LaGuerta didn't wait for a reply. I closed a couple of files, more of my Trinity research, and followed her.

"Shut the door and take a seat."

"Okay. What's this about, Lieutenant?"

"You weren't in here when Agent Gibbs explained how the hand was found," said LaGuerta. "It reminded me a lot of another case."

"Another case?" I played dumb.

"The Bay Harbor Butcher."

"I'm not sure I follow," I lied.

"The body was dumped in the sea in a trash bag wrapped with duct tape. Gibbs wouldn't tell me how the hand was found, but that sounds a lot like the same MO."

"That case had huge publicity; it could just be a copy-cat."

"It could be," said LaGuerta, "but what if James was framed and murdered, and the butcher just kept a low profile for a while."

"The evidence was overwhelming," I said, "and you know how unstable he was."

"You can be unstable without being a killer."

"What do you want to do about it?" I asked. And thought Yes, please tell me how you're going to catch me.

"Officially the case is closed," said LaGuerta, "but I think I know someone unofficial who might be able to help. I'm hoping to see him this evening, I'd like you to come along with me, and answer any technical questions that come up."

"Okay," I said uneasily. "I hope you know what you're doing."

"We'll find out," said LaGuerta, picking up her cell and hitting speed dial. "Mister Axe? This is Maria LaGuerta again. I'd like to confirm tonight's meeting. I'll be bringing along the colleague I mentioned..." She listened for a moment, then said "Thank you, I'll look forward to meeting you and mister Westen this evening..."

TBC

Crossovers this chapter Angel, CSI: Miami, Burn Notice. I've previously used the idea for Sudoku as a fortune telling technique in the RPG supplement Elvis: The Legendary Tours, part of my Diana: Warrior Princess RPG.



Comments please before I post to archives.
ext_1880: (what if life were fair)

[identity profile] lillian13.livejournal.com 2010-09-18 06:05 pm (UTC)(link)
One edit: 1D should be ID. :-)

[identity profile] ffutures.livejournal.com 2010-09-18 06:15 pm (UTC)(link)
Not according to Wikipedia and my memory. There were several 1D models then the 5D and so on.
ext_1880: (Default)

[identity profile] lillian13.livejournal.com 2010-09-18 09:56 pm (UTC)(link)
My bad. I thought he was asking about an ID, not a camera.

[identity profile] dsample.livejournal.com 2010-09-18 08:21 pm (UTC)(link)
It should be "yin and yang," not "ying and yang."

Saying the paper was couriered in at "colosal" expense is going a bit far, especially if they're in the habit of getting it regularly. When you were asking about it before, I assumed you meant getting a one-off copy. Anyone wanting to pay for a subscription, would be able to get one. You can be pretty sure that copies get delivered to the offices of all of Florida's congress critters, every day.

Even a one-off copy wouldn't cost more than 10-20 bucks to have Fed-Exed.

[identity profile] ffutures.livejournal.com 2010-09-18 08:59 pm (UTC)(link)
OK - they wanted it early the day it was published, and they didn't have a regular subscription, but I see what you mean; I'll vague it up a little, and correct the ying thin...

[identity profile] sirernest.livejournal.com 2010-09-18 08:52 pm (UTC)(link)
I had a little laugh about how they danced around the fact that they kept dancing around the fact that the 1D was a professional level camera.

And I don't know about the lens. That price is far too low, especially on a telephoto lens of that wide aperture. Those things are way expensive, quite a bit more so than the body itself when it was new IIRC. And even second-hand they still go for thousands.

[identity profile] ffutures.livejournal.com 2010-09-18 09:04 pm (UTC)(link)
Not these days - it's a 4 megapixel camera, albeit a good one. If you look at the Dexter episode it's pretty obvious that that's what he's using; not 100% sure about the lens, except that it is one of the white ones so expensive. Maybe it dates back to before his arrest.

[identity profile] sirernest.livejournal.com 2010-09-18 11:20 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't mean it like that. I know it's outdated and all and can be get quite a bit cheaper now than when it was introduced. That wasn't my point.

It's an old camera for professional photographers. It's not something a normal hobbyist would pick up usually, even second hand. Newer semi-pro and upper-range hobbyist bodies generally outperform it in most common tasks and are cheaper to pick up second-hand.

So there must be a reason that he chose it instead of something cheaper and generally just as good. May it be he's a photography snob, a former professional photographer or somebody who wanted one of the uncommon features this camera sported - like its environmental sealing.

And it's the same with the lens. The f/2.8 is the top of the range. That is some serious hardware you don't pick up willy-nilly just because you need a good telephoto lens to catch your neighbourhood MILF sunbathing in the nip.

Well, I guess if you had loads of spare cash to burn you could pick that one up willy-nilly.

And that's the thing I was thinking about - there should be some more interest in it,than just "that was a good camera". Because it was a good camera only certain people would pick. Especially when adding the lens.

[identity profile] ffutures.livejournal.com 2010-09-19 06:27 am (UTC)(link)
Yes, I've edited it to say that he was a pro photographer before his original arrest.

[identity profile] undinae.livejournal.com 2010-09-19 12:38 am (UTC)(link)
Looking forward to more. Love the take on the CSI: Miami guys. The description of Horatio is spot on. Interesting to see what Axe and Weston make of this.
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[identity profile] wiredwizard.livejournal.com 2010-09-19 03:34 am (UTC)(link)
Sam's using his real name? Must be pretty important or he'd be usuing his standard alias of Chuck Finlay. This is going to be fun... =eg=

[identity profile] ffutures.livejournal.com 2010-09-19 06:29 am (UTC)(link)
He and Doakes had history, which is why LaGuerta knows to contact him.
ext_15915: (Default)

[identity profile] wiredwizard.livejournal.com 2010-09-19 06:49 am (UTC)(link)
=nods= Ok, that makes sense.

[identity profile] karohemd.livejournal.com 2010-09-19 09:38 am (UTC)(link)
That's some serious crossover. :D Let's see who's going to get in the way of whom next. ;)

Adding to the tech price quibble: While camera bodies lose value very quickly, lenses don't, unless it's manual focus or old mount, and they are updated are lot less frequently.
Even if it was the f5.6, they are still around 800 pounds while the f2.8 is going for over 5,000 on ebay.

[identity profile] ffutures.livejournal.com 2010-09-19 10:23 am (UTC)(link)
I've vagued it up some. I'm not sure why I said f2.8, it was silly.

[identity profile] paratti.livejournal.com 2010-09-19 10:08 am (UTC)(link)
Loving it.

[identity profile] ffutures.livejournal.com 2010-09-19 10:23 am (UTC)(link)
Thanks! Next episode begins with one of Michael's "When you're a spy" monologues...