The day was crisp and cool for June. So cool in fact, Sara Sidle had to wear a sweater and wrap her scarf around her throat. She was supposed to be enjoying a day off, but here she was working a 4-19 beside the beautiful Lake Tahoe. She could see the crime scene just below, it was a steep drop from the road so Sara and Nick Stokes walked carefully. In her opinion, the heavy silver cases didn't make it any easier. The steep decline was muddy from the previous heavy rain, making footholds hard to find.

"What do we have?" Sara asked Captain Jim Brass.

"It's unbelievable, Sara," Brass replied. "It's like something out of a book or a movie. The victim is Shannon Andrews, age 33. She has a son at home and works part time at a used book store. She had been missing for a few weeks and her face has been all over the news."

Sara nodded. "It's horrible that a woman who works so hard has to meet a terrible fate," she said. "But can you give me a little more detail about the crime scene?"

"The body was found by a group of hikers that had stopped for a rest. It was wrapped in a black plastic garbage bag and was sealed with plastic ties. The most horrible part is that the victim had her face removed," Brass said as he gagged a little.

If there was one thing about this job, you never got used to the violence that people were capable of. In a way it was like a movie you hated. You can watch it over and over, and it would still effect you the same way. You would always hate it and you would always want to resist putting it in the DVD player. This Shannon Andrews was a mother. She was probably someone who put Bambi in her DVD player instead of Silence of the Lambs. Now here she laid, with her face removed like a victim of Hannibal the Cannibal.

"Since the body was in the lake, we don't know where the original crime took place," Sara pointed out.

She lifted her camera and snapped a few photos of the body and its position. It was a fact that one could never have enough photos.

Brass agreed. "Yes, but from the way she is dressed, you can tell she wasn't going camping," he said.

Sara looked at the faceless body. It had started to decompose and it was bloated from being in the water for so long. Before she died, Shannon Andrews had put on a pair of slacks and a button-up dress shirt. She wore no shoes and she had one earring missing.

"The only thing we can really do is get her back to the lab and process this garbage bag. I doubt there will be anything useful on it, but you can hope," Nick said.

Sara nodded. "With this job, you learn not to hope for much," she said as she carefully made her way back to the Explorer.

0~0

He watched them. From his place in the woods, in a tree so no one could see, he watched them work. He had been listening to his scanner when he had heard about the discovered body by the lake, and he knew it had been her. It had been fun hunting Shannon Andrews, but this was a close call. He attributed it to his own carelessness, and not some random act of God. Shannon had been a screamer and he needed to get rid of her before he was discovered. So after he had had his fun hunting her, he removed her face and showed it to her. Shannon hadn't been his first. He was always careful when he chose his victims. He always brought them in from out of town. They were always young and beautiful, but not so much as to have an active social life. Whenever he got the urge to hunt, he drove around. He resisted the urge until it became too powerful, and then he chose his victim. He had hunted in northern California and San Francisco and even New Mexico, but he always brought them back to the desert. In the desert, a human could scream and no one would be able to hear you. Carelessly, he had hunted Shannon near Lake Tahoe, and now he was realizing his mistake. He watched as the two investigators talked, a man and a woman. Hunting men wasn't his style and was unsatisfying, so the man didn't interest him. The woman, on the other hand, was tall and slender. Her dark hair blew in the wind and he could almost smell it. She looked mature, but not too old for his taste. Quickly, he dismissed all thought of her, for hunting law enforcement was not something he did.

0~0

"I remember seeing her face on television," Doc Robbins said. "It's a shame she was found like this."

Sara thought it was too, but she didn't say so. "Can you tell us anything?" she asked.

"No sign of sexual trauma," Doc Robbins said. "Ms. Andrews was shot twice, once in the right shoulder and once in the hip. The bullets penetrated through the back and went all the way through, so I don't have a bullet for you. What I can tell you is that I believe she was shot in the shoulder first."

"And why is that?" Sara asked.

"Because the second shot shattered her hip bone and it would-"

"It would have been impossible to walk," Sara finished.

"I found tiny scratches along her arms, legs, and face. They looked like needle marks at first glance, but I ran a TOX-screen and her blood came back negative for any controlled substances," Doc Robbins said.

Sara closed her eyes and thought about Shannon Andrews. "Our killer obviously didn't want her to walk away. I think she was running from him," she said.

As she spoke, the door to the autopsy room opened and Gil Grissom walked in. Sara focused her attention back to the body and did not look at him.

"What are you doing here?" she asked more rudely than she should have.

"I put Nick on an arson in the Henderson, you get me," Grissom said with pride.

Sara wasn't impressed, so she filled him in on her findings. "I believe she was running from someone and these scratches and scrapes are from trees and twigs," she explained.

"I can tell you that the cause of death was not these gunshots, but she bled out. Probably because her face was peeled off and with accurate precision," Doc Robbins said.

Sara bent closer to where the victims face should be. "I think she was alive to see her own face removed," she said.

Gil nodded. "Did you find any splinters?" he asked Doc Robbins.

"Yes I did," Doc Robbins said. "I found two in the calves and one in her arm."

He handed the bottle to Grissom and he shook them around. He cocked his head to the side and Sara thought he was doing an excellent impression of a turkey.

"I'm not dendrologist, but I know one," Grissom said with satisfaction.

Sara took off her rubber glove and let it snap. "Of course you do," she said.

On her way out she tossed them in the trash. She walked down the hall, hands in pockets, until she reached the restroom. She braced her hands on the porcelain sink and looked at her own face, glad that it was still attached. She took off the blue scrubs and tossed them in the trash. The scrubs nowadays were paper and were annoying. On her way out she bumped into Grissom, who was standing just outside the door.

"Sorry," she said as she tried to step around him.

Grissom put his hands on her shoulders and looked into her eyes. His cool blue ones always had a way of making her feel small.

"What did I do now?" he asked, using his annoyed voice.

Sara shrugged him off. "This isn't the place for this. I'll see you back at the lab," she said as she walked towards the exit.

0~0

Back in the car, Sara was able to think privately. She thought that it was always easier to think when you were alone and not have people looking at you. She thought about the family Shannon Andrews left behind, and she thought about her last moments. If she had been running from some unknown assailant, like Sara thought, then her last moments were horrifying. Sara knew all too well how it felt to be hunted, not in a deadly sense, but violent nonetheless. Her own father had gone on so many drunken rages, that Sara knew how to hide. She could recall the moments when he was inches from her hiding spot.

Her ringing cell phone pulled her from her thoughts. She groped for it and flipped it open. "Sidle," she said.

"Sara, Gil just told me you aren't coming in," Catherine said.

Sara wrinkled her forehead and pulled her head back. "I'm on my way now," she said.

Sara looked in her rearview mirror and caught a glimpse of a black Sedan. It had extra antenna, like a patrol car, and the windows were tinted.

"He just called and said you need a personal day," Catherine explained. "Look, I don't know what's going on between you two, but it doesn't look right if your supervisor calls in a day off for you. Besides, you already had the day off,"

Sara laughed a little laugh. "Thanks," she said.

"Are you coming in?" Catherine asked.

"I'm on my way," Sara replied.

After Sara had hung up, she saw Grissom's car driving past. She clenched her teeth and stepped on the accelerator, roaring past him. She pulled into a parking lot and he followed. She thought he had a lot of nerve calling a day off in for her after he was the one who asked her to come in.

Grissom was out of his car first. "Road rage is a killer," he said.

"Why are you doing this to me? Are you trying to confuse me?" she asked.

Grissom scratched his beard. "I just thought you needed a break," he said.

The breeze blew Sara's hair in front of her eyes and she pushed it back. "I don't need one. I would appreciate it if you didn't do that again," she said.

Grissom nodded. "Fine. You just look tired and I brought you in on a day off and now you don't want it," he said.

Sara let her head thump on the steering wheel and the horn beeped. Grissom squatted down until he was level with her.

"Look, I'm trying," he said. "I'm not good at this. Just want you to tell me what's wrong and let me fix it."

"I don't know," Sara said honestly. "I am annoyed at everything. I guess I just…"

In all honesty, Sara didn't exactly know what she was annoyed at. She wanted to pin it on Mother Nature and the curse of womanhood, but that would be an easy way out. Grissom was a good man and was very good to her.

"I know it isn't fair to do this, but I just want to be left alone. I was alright with Nick working with me, but with you it's like I have to behave. That gets to me sometimes," she said.

Grissom nodded. "So you don't want your supervisor breathing down your neck," he said.

Sara tried to come up with a better excuse, but what he said summed it up. "Sorry," she offered.

"It's fine," he said. "I think the rest of the team feels the same sometimes. I just thought you were different."

"Gil," she said. "I am different. We have something the others don't have. Well, something I hope you and the others don't have. Everyone needs some breathing room. Don't you want to be able to hear your own thoughts sometimes?"

"Well, I am always alone in my office. I guess you never really have alone time," he said.

Sara shook her head. "I guess not," she said.

"Then go take your day off. I'll come by later, but if you want to be alone then just call me. You have changed a lot since we started going together and I don't want to see you have a breakdown," he said.

Sara leaned over and kissed him. It wasn't as passionate as they usually were, but enough so to let him know she cared about him. She always relished the feel of his beard on her face and the way he smelled.

"Okay," she agreed.

Now that she had her day off back, Sara stopped by the deli to get her favorite supper. The owner knew her by name and she always asked for the usual: veggie burger and potato soup. She never stayed to eat at the deli, but brought her food back home so she could eat in the peace and quiet of her living room. On the drive back she glanced in her rear view mirror to the see the familiar Sedan following, it's headlights off.

0~0

On an impulse, he had followed the woman investigator. He saw that she liked to eat healthy, which was a plus for hunting. He had his laptop in the car with him and when the woman stopped for a light, he ran her license plate through the police database. Of course the software wasn't legal, but who would know?

"Sara Sidle," he said as he read.

The brunette's name was Sara Sidle and from her birth date, he calculated that she was thirty-something. She lived nearby in a secluded apartment complex that was usually reserved for people who made a handsome paycheck. It said that she had near misses with a DUI, but that wasn't an issue. He followed her a little more and watched as she turned into the parking lot of her apartment. He pulled along the shoulder and watched as she made her way back to the last row of apartments. It was good that she lived in the back, just in case he wanted to surprise her.