


What they know is this: their intruder is small in stature, agile and manically patient, as he invaded Margot's life for weeks or months without her ever knowing. Langston convinces them that their lack of evidence is evidence. In the lab, Catherine tells the team that she found no trace of any kind from the intruder. Their intruder has actually been lying under the bed. Catherine spots a mark under the bed when she and Nick lift it, they find a dust void in the shape of a person. Nick tells Catherine that the intruder has also been reading Margot's mail, as her envelopes have been steamed open.
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The bottom drawer of a nearby dresser is full of orange peels the intruder has been living in the attic. Up there, Greg finds a hole in the floor along with a lipstick camera. Since they know the attacker was in the house several times, Greg figures that the attic could have been his hiding spot. Greg tells her that during his search of the perimeter, he noticed that the house has an attic. She tells Langston that she started her work in philanthropy to have Robbie's spirit live on.īack in Margot's house, Catherine dusts the bedroom for prints but is unable to recover a single one. Her son, Robbie, was sick and died at a young age. Margot identifies the boy in the wheelchair as her son from her first marriage. She also says that the attacker and black eyes and might have been wearing braces. He was slippery, and she believes that he was wearing gloves.

In the hospital, Margot tells Langston that she believes her attacker was black. The team's one main piece of evidence is what the attacker left behind - Margot Wilton. Nick fills Langston in on his findings, and Langston responds with a question - is Margot lucky to be alive or is she still alive by design? The evidence from the torn-up photos and upside-down Key to the City leads Langston to believe that the attack was personal and that the attacker didn't approve of Margot's accolades. The window is a small fit, and Greg and Nick wonder if their intruder is of small stature. Outside, Greg finds evidence that someone recently crawled through a window several times, indicating that they had been in the house before the night Margot was attacked. A trail of bloody handprints and footprints leads to the balcony doors, but something is odd - their suspect got off the bed one hand and one foot at a time. They spot the point of attack and notice two voids in the sheets, concluding that the intruder was kneeling over Margot when he attacked her. While Nick finds the intruder's point of entry downstairs, Catherine and Langston check out Margot's bedroom. Catherine sees that Margot's Key to the City award has been flipped upside-down, with evidence indicating that this was also done recently. Langston notices that the two photos of Margot's son have been shredded, meaning that the intruder had to have taken the photos out of their frames, slashed them and reassembled them. Inside the house, Catherine and Langston make their way upstairs. The CSI team arrives and Nick recognizes one of the paramedics as Ryan Fink, who recently became a hero after saving a bunch of kids from a burning building. The following morning, Margot (who is still alive), is transported into an ambulance. The figure then enters Margot's room, slinks onto her bed and attacks her with a straight-edge razor. Also shown is a Key to the City Margot recently received.

The figure passes several photos of Margot, some of which include her wheelchair-bound son. In the luxurious home of Margot Wilton, a dark figure breaks in through a back door and awkwardly slinks up the stairs. On the case: Catherine Willows, Greg Sanders, Nick Stokes, Raymond Langston, Jim Brass A well-known Las Vegas philanthropist is brutally slashed in her bed, and the team soon discovers that they are dealing with a killer who knows the secrets of some of the city's most prominent citizens.
