Trouble in Mind: The Collected Stories, Volume 3

Home > Mystery > Trouble in Mind: The Collected Stories, Volume 3 > Page 16
Trouble in Mind: The Collected Stories, Volume 3 Page 16

by Jeffery Deaver


  “Ah.” He wasn’t pleased.

  Sachs asked Sellitto, “What’d you and the canvassing teams find out about the vic?”

  “Okay,” the detective said, pulling out his notebook, “her name was Jane Levine, thirty-one. Assistant marketing manager for a brokerage firm downtown. No criminal history. She’d been going out with her boyfriend for seven, eight months. He was the guy who reported her missing then found the body. I talked to him for a while but then he lost it. I mean, totally.”

  Rhyme noticed Sachs’s abundant lips tighten at this news and he guessed her reaction was how not only the loss but witnessing the horror would affect the man for the rest of his life: that last searing image of his lover dying under such unthinkable circumstances. Rhyme knew that Sachs struggled with the human side of crime—not, as one would think, pushing it away. Rather, she embraced the horror and wanted to keep it raw. She believed it made her a more empathetic and, therefore, a better cop.

  Though he took the opposite approach—remaining aloof—this was one of the things he loved her for.

  He turned his attention back to Sellitto, who was continuing his discussion. “Now, I checked. He’s alibi’d out, the boyfriend.” Family and acquaintances are the number-one suspects—and the number-one guilty perps—in homicides. Sellitto continued, “He was in Connecticut with his parents last night. He got back in the city about eight this morning and went to her apartment. We data mined him. Wits, tickets and security cams confirm he was there when she died. GPS, too. He’s clean.”

  That young Crime Scene guy asked, “Rape, Detective?”

  “Nothing sexual, no. No robbery. She still had her keys, wallet, purse, jewelry.”

  Sachs asked, “Any former boyfriends, stalkers?”

  “According to the boyfriend and her sister, over the last couple years she went out with one guy from work, one guy from her health club, one guy from church. Real casual. The sister said they all ended okay and there were no hard feelings. Anyway the last one she broke up with was about six months ago just before she met the current guy.”

  The detective continued, “No organized crime connection, not surprising, and she wasn’t a whistleblower or witness. I can’t find a motive at all.”

  Rhyme didn’t much care for motive. His theory was that why people killed was largely irrelevant. A paranoid schizophrenic could kill someone because he believed that person was part of the advance guard from a planet in Alpha Centauri bent on capturing the world. What got him convicted was his prints on the knife, not his mad thinking.

  “Well, that tells us something, right?” Rhyme asked, grimacing. “If there’s no boyfriend-done-it, rapist-done-it, mugger-done-it scenario, I’m thinking it’s a psycho.” He happened to be looking at the young Crime Scene officer. “Oh, I know they don’t use that word anymore. But it’s a lot more felicitous than ‘individual displaying antisocial personality disorder traits.’”

  Marko nodded, obviously having no idea what to think about that pronouncement.

  It was Sellitto who explained, “What Linc’s saying is that he could be a serial doer. Meaning he’s going to strike again.”

  “You think so, sir?” the young man asked.

  “If that’s the case it also means he’s picking victims at random. And somewhere in that morass”—a nod toward the mountains of evidence—“is the answer to who the next one’s going to be.”

  3

  MEL COOPER WAS WRONG.

  It took nearly seven more hours to finish just categorizing the evidence. At three fifteen in the morning they decided to knock off for the night.

  Sachs stayed with Rhyme, as she did three or four nights a week, and Cooper slept in the guest room. Sellitto returned to his house, where his partner, Rachel, whom he described as his “Better Other,” was waiting for him. Marko headed back to his home, wherever that might be.

  By nine the next morning the team, minus the young CS officer, was back.

  As in every case they worked, Rhyme asked for a whiteboard chart listing the evidence. Sachs did the honors. She moved stiffly to the board. Rhyme noted the hitch in her leg; she suffered from arthritis and the extended search in a damp, subterranean garage had taken its toll. Once or twice, reaching to the top to start a new entry, she winced.

  Finally she finished—all three boards in Rhyme’s parlor were required. And that was just to list what the teams had found. There was no analysis at all, much less insightful deductions that could be made about sources or inferences as to prospective victims.

  Everyone in the room fell silent and stared.

  UNSUB TWENTY-SIX HOMICIDE

  Location: 832 E. 26th Street

  Victim: Jane Levine, thirty-one

  COD: Internal injuries from weight of vehicle

  TOD: Approximately 4:00 a.m.

  General notes:

  Robbery not motive

  No sexual assault

  Victim was not a known witness, no one appeared to be delivering “messages”

  No drug or other illegal or organized crime connection

  No known enemies

  Present boyfriend has alibi

  Dated casually men met through work, health club, church—no bad breakups or stalkers

  Appears to be a random crime, likely a serial perpetrator

  Evidence:

  Approximately 82 pounds of household trash, covering auto ramp to garage and floor of garage, probably from Dumpster in apartment building

  Duct tape used to subdue victim

  four nearly empty rolls located, probably taken from trash to be determined if one was the source of the tape used on victim

  Hair, some naturally detached from follicles, some cut approximately 930 separate samples

  human, animal? To be determined

  Shattered cinderblock one piece used to strike victim from behind

  all the pieces were spray painted, obscuring evidence (see paint below)

  Newspapers, magazines, direct mail pieces, apparently from trash and recycling bins; used, many items handled; therefore containing friction ridge prints

  Plastic spoons, forks, knives, food containers, beverage cups, coffee cartons, all used 185 samples

  DNA, to be determined

  Swabs of human and/or animal organic materials, revealed by alternative light source saliva, semen, plasma, sweat, vaginal fluids?

  possibly delivered to the scene via strewing trash and medical waste

  742 swabs taken from different locations

  DNA, to be determined

  Fibers, cloth 439 samples

  Fibers, nylon 230 samples

  Fibers, metal 25 samples

  Paint used throughout the site, presumably to obscure actual evidence

  oil-based spray

  cans located, nearly empty, suggesting they were found in trash, rather than purchased

  eight to ten friction ridge prints on each can

  Latex gloves, used 48 separate L/R hand gloves

  DNA, to be determined

  Friction ridge prints, to be determined

  Dirt, dust approximately two pounds in total

  indeterminate number of sources

  at least 12 main variations in composition

  Food crumbs 34 samples

  Leaves 249 collected

  from approximately 27 known trees/bushes

  73 unidentified

  Grass, lawn 376 samples

  Grass, decorative 64 samples

  Excrement human/animal, to be determined

  DNA, to be determined

  Light bulbs from parking garage

  removed, then shattered

  Powdered substances 214 samples

  non-narcotic

  possibly over-the-counter medicine, pulverized

  laundry detergent eight different brands

  Liquid substances still liquid or dried residue bleach

  ammonia

  dish soap

  alcohol

  water

 
soft drinks

  coffee

  gasoline

  milk

  Organic tissue 346 samples

  human/animal, to be determined

  DNA, to be determined

  could be food

  Fingernail clippings

  Bones 42 samples

  human/animal, to be determined (apparently animal)

  DNA, to be determined

  could be food

  some definitely fish bones, chicken or other fowl

  Footprints 23, male and female, 18 different sizes, five associated with the victim’s shoes

  prints of feet in crime scene, surgical booties

  Vapors in crime scene small fire set in corner, newspapers, possibly to obscure smell of the unsub’s aftershave or other odor

  spray paint fumes

  Disposable cigarette lighters 18 separate lighters found

  probably taken from trash—most empty of butane

  64 friction ridge prints

  Rhyme barked, “The chart reads like the table of contents in my goddamn book.”

  Several years ago Rhyme had written a textbook, A Comprehensive Guide to Evidence Collection and Analysis, which was a best-seller, at least in the law enforcement community if not in the Times.

  Sachs: “I don’t know where to start, Rhyme.”

  Well, guess what? Rhyme thought. I don’t either. He was recalling another passage in the book.

  While every scene will contain at least some transferred evidence from the perpetrator, it may never be discovered, as a practical matter, because of budget and time constraints. Similarly, there may be too much evidence obscuring the relevant clues, which will similarly render effective analysis impossible.

  “It’s even more brilliant than I thought,” the criminalist mused. “Getting most of what he used in the crime from the trash—covered with other people’s prints. And contaminating the scene with, literally, pounds of trace and other garbage. For things he couldn’t obscure—he could hardly bring a dozen shoes with him or somebody else’s fingers—he wore booties and gloves.”

  Sachs said, “But those can’t be his gloves, all the latex ones. He wouldn’t leave them behind.”

  “Probably not. But we can’t afford not to analyze them, can we? And he knows it.”

  “I suppose not,” said Mel Cooper, as discouraged as the rest of them. Rhyme believed the tech had had a ballroom dancing date with his girlfriend of many years last night. They were competitors and apparently quite accomplished. Lincoln Rhyme did not follow dancing.

  “And he…” Rhyme’s voice faded as several thoughts came to him.

  “Linc—”

  Rhyme lifted his right arm and waved Sellitto silent as he continued to stare.

  Finally the criminalist said excitedly, “Think about this. This person knows evidence. And that means he knows there’s a good chance he’s got some trace or other clue on him that could lead us to his identity or to the next victim he’s got in mind.”

  “Right,” Lon Sellitto said. “And?”

  Rhyme was peering at the charts. “So what did he use the most of to contaminate the scene?”

  Sachs said, “Trash—”

  “No, that was a general smokescreen. It just happened to be there. Something specific, I’m looking for.”

  Cooper shoved his Harry Potter glasses higher on his nose as he read the charts. He offered, “Fibers, hair, general trace—”

  “Yes, but those are givens at every crime scene. I want to know what’s special?”

  “What’s the most unique, you mean?” Sellitto offered.

  “No, I don’t mean that, Lon,” Rhyme said sourly. “Because something is either unique or not. You don’t have varying degrees of oneness.”

  “Haven’t had a grammar lesson from you lately, Lincoln. I was wondering if you’d quit the schoolmarm union.”

  Drawing a smile from Thom, who was delivering coffee and pastries.

  Sachs was studying the chart. She said, “Dirt and…vegetation.”

  Rhyme squinted. “Yes, good. That could be it. He knew he picked up some trace either where the perp lives or works, or where he’s been scoping out another victim, and he had to cover that up.”

  “Which means,” Sachs said, “a garden, park or yard?”

  “I’d say yes. Soil and the greenery. That could hold the clue. It cuts the search down a bit…We should start there. Then anything else?” Rhyme reviewed the chart again. “The detergent and cleansers—why’d he sprinkle or pour so many of those in the scene? We need to start working our way through those, too.” Rhyme looked around. “That kid, Marko? Why isn’t he here?”

  Sachs said, “He called. He had something he had to do back in Queens, HQ. But he’d still like to help us out if we need him. You want me to call him?”

  “I do, Sachs. Fast!”

  * * *

  AN EXHAUSTING TIME.

  A business trip with her boss to California and back in under twenty-four hours.

  Productive, necessary, but stressful.

  They were now cabbing it into the city from JFK, where their flight had landed at 6 p.m. She was exhausted, a bit tipsy from the two glasses of wine and mildly resenting the three hours that you lost flying east.

  Her boss, late forties, tanned and trim, now slipped his iPhone away—he’d been making a date for tomorrow—and then turned to her with a laugh. “Did you hear them? They really used the word ‘unpack.’”

  As in “unpack it for us,” meaning presumably explain to the network the story they’d come to pitch.

  “Since when did ‘explain’ fall off the A-list of words?”

  Simone smiled. “And the net executive? She said the concept was definitely ‘seismic.’ You know, you need a translator app in Hollywood.”

  Her boss laughed and Simone eyed him obliquely. A great guy. Funny, smart, in great shape thanks to a health club regimen that bordered on the religious. He was also extremely talented, which meant extremely successful.

  Oh, and single, too.

  He sure was a big helping of temptation, you bet, but Simone, despite being in her mid-thirties and sans boyfriend at the moment, had successfully corralled the baby and the lonely hormones; she could look at her boss objectively. The man’s obsessive craving for detail and perfection, his intensity would drive her crazy if they were partners. Work was everything. He lived his life as if he were planning out a production. That was it: life as storyboard, preproduction, production and post. This was undoubtedly a reason his marriage hadn’t worked out and why he tended to go out with somebody for only a month or two at the most.

  Good luck, James, she thought. I wish you the best.

  Not that he’d ever actually asked you out, Simone reflected wryly.

  The cab now approached her neighborhood—Greenwich Village. For Simone, there was no other place to live in New York City. It was, truly, a village. A neighborhood.

  The cab dropped her at Tenth Street. “Hm,” her boss said, looking out the window at two men, constructed like bodybuilders, kissing passionately as they stood on the steps of the building next to hers.

  He said, “Not that there’s anything wrong with that.” The famous line from Seinfeld.

  Simone smiled, then looked at the main kisser. What a waste.

  Then she said good night to her boss and stepped out of the cab, grabbed her suitcase from the trunk. She paused to let a stocky homeless woman wheel her packed grocery cart past—filled with everything but groceries, of course. Simone thought about giving her some change. But then she reflected, Why do I think the woman’s homeless? Maybe she’s an eccentric millionaire.

  She climbed the stairs to her apartment, smelling that odd aroma of the building, which defied description, as did many of the buildings here. What on earth was it?

  Eau de Old New York Apartment.

  Insecticide, takeout Chinese, takeout curry, ancient wood, Lysol, damp brick, cooked onions.

  Her cat more or less forgav
e her, though he didn’t have much to complain about. The kibble dish, tended to by her neighbor, was filled with manna from heaven. The water, too, was full and the radio was playing NPR, which was Ruffles’s favorite. He seemed to enjoy the pledge drives as much as This American Life.

  Simone checked messages—nothing urgent there, though she noted no caller-ID-blocked numbers. She’d had a lot of those recently. Telemarketers, of course.

  She then unpacked and assembled a laundry pile. Simone had never returned from a trip without doing her laundry the night she was back.

  Clothes cooties, she called it.

  Thanks, Mom.

  Simone pulled her sweats on, gathered up the clothes and a cheerful orange bottle of Tide. She took the back stairway, which led to the basement laundry and storage rooms. Simone descended from the second floor to the first and then started down the steps that would take her to the basement. This stairwell was dark, though there was some illumination from downstairs, the laundry room presumably, or maybe the storeroom. She flicked the switch several times. Then squinted and noted that the bulb was missing and not just—it had fallen to the stairs and shattered.

  It was at this point that Simone started feeling uneasy.

  But she continued, walking carefully to avoid as much of the broken glass as she could in her Crocs. On the basement level, another bulb was broken, too.

  Creeping me out.

  Okay, that’s it. Hell with OCD issues. I’ll do the laundry tomorrow.

 

‹ Prev