Predator ks-14

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Predator ks-14 Page 26

by Patricia Cornwell


  “Him and me played pool the night before it happened. He had on splints. They didn’t seem to bother him. He played pool just fine.”

  Marino watches Lucy without making it obvious. Tonight, she fits in. She could be any gay woman who hangs out around here, boyish but good-looking and sexy in expensive jeans, faded and full of holes, and beneath her soft, black leather jacket is a white undershirt that clings to her breasts, and he’s always liked her breasts, even if he isn’t supposed to notice them.

  “I saw him just the one time when he brought this girl in here,” the homeless man is saying, looking around as if something makes him edgy, turning his back to the bar. “Think she’s somebody you ought to find. That’s all I have to say.”

  “What girl and why should I give a shit?” Marino says, watching Lucy get closer, scanning the area, making sure nobody gets any ideas about her.

  “Pretty,” the man says. “The kind both men and women look at around here, dressed all sexy. Nobody wanted her around.”

  “Seems to me nobody wants you around, either. You just got your ass kicked out.”

  Lucy walks into Deuce without looking, as if Marino and the homeless man are invisible.

  “Only reason I didn’t get kicked out that night is because Johnny bought me a drink. We played pool while the girl sat by the jukebox, looking around as if she’d never been taken to such a slop hole in her life. Went in the ladies’ room a couple times and after that it smelled like weed.”

  “You make a habit of going into the ladies’ room?”

  “I heard a woman at the bar talking. This girl, she looked like trouble.”

  “You got any idea what her name is?”

  “Sure don’t.”

  Marino lights a cigarette. “What makes you think she has anything to do with what happened to Johnny?”

  “I didn’t like her. Nobody did. That’s all I know.”

  “You sure?”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “Don’t be telling nobody else about this, you got it?”

  “No point in it.”

  “Point or not, keep your mouth shut. And now you’re going to tell me how the hell you knew I was going to be in here tonight, and why the hell you thought you could talk to me.”

  “That’s quite a bike you got.” The homeless man looks across the street. “Kind of hard to miss. A lot of people around here know you used to be a homicide detective and now do private-investigation stuff at some police camp or something north of here.”

  “What? Am I the mayor?”

  “You’re a regular. I’ve seen you with some of the Harley guys, been watching for you for weeks, hoping for a chance to talk to you. I hang out in the area, do the best I can. Not exactly the high point of my life, but I keep hoping it will get better.”

  Marino pulls out his wallet and slips him a fifty-dollar bill.

  “You find out more about this girl you saw in here, I’ll make it worth your while,” he says. “Where can I reach you?”

  “Different place, different night. Like I said, I do the best I can.”

  Marino gives him his cell phone number.

  “Want another one?” Rosie asks as Marino returns to the bar.

  “Better give me an unleaded. You remember right before Thanksgiving, some good-looking blond doctor coming in here with a girl? He and that guy you just chased out play pool that night?”

  She looks thoughtful, wiping down the bar, shakes her head. “A lot of people come in here. That was a long time ago. How long before Thanksgiving?”

  Marino watches the door. It is a few minutes before ten. “Maybe the night before.”

  “No, not me. I know this is hard to believe,” she says, “but I got a life, don’t work here every damn night. I was out of here at Thanksgiving. InAtlantawith my son.”

  “Supposedly there was a girl in here who was trouble, was in here with the doctor I’ve told you about. Was with him the night before he died.”

  “Got no idea.”

  “Maybe she came in that night with the doctor when you was out of town?”

  Rosie keeps wiping down the bar. “I don’t want a problem in here.”

  Lucy sits by the window, near the jukebox, Marino at another table on the other side of the bar, his earpiece in and plugged into a receiver that looks like a cell phone. He drinks a nonalcoholic beer and smokes.

  The locals on the other side aren’t paying any attention. They never do. Every time Lucy has been in here with Marino, the same losers are sitting on the same stools, smoking menthol cigarettes and drinking lite beer. The only person they talk to outside their deadbeat little club is Rosie, who once told Lucy that the hugely fat woman and her scrawny boyfriend used to live in a nice Miami neighborhood with a guard gate and everything until he got sent to jail for selling crystal meth to an undercover cop. Now the fat lady has to support him on what she makes as a bank teller. The fat man with the goatee is a cook in a diner Lucy will never visit. He comes here every night, gets drunk and somehow manages to drive himself home.

  Lucy and Marino ignore each other. No matter how many times they’ve been through this routine during various operations, it always feels awkward and invasive. She doesn’t like being spied on, even if it’s her idea, and no matter the logic in him being here tonight, she resents his presence.

  She checks the wireless mic attached to the inside of her leather jacket. She bends over as if tying her shoes so no one in the bar can see her talking. “Nothing so far,” she transmits to Marino.

  It is three minutes past ten.

  She waits. She sips a nonalcoholic beer, her back to Marino, and she waits.

  She glances at her watch. It is eight minutes past ten.

  The door opens and two men walk in.

  Two more minutes pass and she transmits to Marino, “Something’s wrong. I’m going out to look. Stay here.”

  Lucy walks through the Art Deco district alongOcean Drive, looking for Stevie in the crowd.

  The later it gets, the louder and drunker the patrons ofSouthBeachbecome, and the street is so crowded with people cruising and looking for parking, traffic barely moves. It’s irrational to look for Stevie. She didn’t show up. She’s probably a million miles from here. But Lucy looks.

  She thinks of Stevie claiming to have followed her footprints in the snow, follow them to the Hummer parked behind the Anchor Inn. She wonders how she could have accepted what Stevie said, not really questioned it. While Lucy’s footprints would have been obvious just outside the cottage, they would have gotten mixed in with other footprints along the sidewalk. It’s not as if Lucy was the only person in Ptown that morning. She thinks of the cell phone that belongs to a man named Doug, of the red handprints, of Johnny, and is sickened by how careless she has been, how myopic and self-destructive.

  Stevie probably never intended to meet Lucy at Deuce, just teased her, toyed with her the same way she did atLorraine’s that night. Nothing is Stevie’s first time. She’s an expert in her games, her bizarre, sick games.

  “You see her anywhere?” Marino’s voice sounds in her ear.

  “I’m turning around,” she says. “Stay where you are.”

  She cuts over on11th Street, then heads north onWashington Avenuepast the courthouse as a white Chevy Blazer with dark, tinted windows drives past. She walks quickly, uneasily, suddenly not so brave, mindful of the pistol in her ankle holster and breathing hard.

  49

  Another winter storm coversCambridge, andBentoncan barely make out the houses across the street. Snow falls steeply and thickly, and he watches the whitening of the world around him.

  “I can put on more coffee, if you’d like,” Scarpetta says as she walks into the living room.

  “I’ve had enough,” he says, his back to her.

  “So have I,” she says.

  He hears her sit on the hearth, set a coffee mug on it. He feels her eyes on him and turns around, looking at her, not sure what to say. Her hair is wet and she has th
rown on a black silk robe and is naked beneath it, and the satiny fabric caresses her body and reveals the deep hollow between her breasts because of the way she sits sideways on the hearth, bending into herself, her strong arms around her knees, her skin unblemished and smooth for her age. Firelight touches her short, blond hair and extremely handsome face, and fire and sunlight love her hair and her face the same way he does. He loves her, all of her, but right now he doesn’t know what to say. He doesn’t know how to fix it.

  Last night she said she was leaving him. She would have packed her suitcase if she’d had one, but she never brings a suitcase. She has belongings here. This is her home, too, and all morning he has listened for the sound of drawers and closet doors, for the sound of her moving out and never coming back.

  “You can’t drive,” he says. “I guess you’re stuck.”

  Bare trees are delicate pencil strokes against luminous whiteness, and there isn’t a moving car in sight.

  “I know how you feel and what you want,” he says, “but you aren’t going anywhere today. Nobody is. Some of the streets inCambridgedon’t always get plowed right away. This is one of them.”

  “You have four-wheel drive,” she says, staring down at her hands in her lap.

  “We’re expecting two feet of snow. Even if I could get you to the airport, your plane’s not going anywhere. Not today.”

  “You should eat something.”

  “I’m not hungry.”

  “How about an omelet withVermontcheddar? You need to eat. You’ll feel better.”

  She watches him from the hearth, her chin resting on her hand. Her robe is tied tightly around her waist and she is sculpted in glossy black silk, and he desires her just as much as he always did. He desired her the first time they met some fifteen years ago. Both of them were chiefs. His fiefdom was the FBI’s Behavioral Science Unit, hers theVirginiamedical examiner’s system. They were working an especially heinous case, and she walked into the conference room. He can still see the way she looked the first time he saw her, in a long, white lab coat with pens in the pockets over a pearl-gray pinstriped suit, a pile of case files in her arms. He was intrigued by her hands, strong and capable but elegant.

  He realizes she is staring at him.

  “Who were you on the phone with a little earlier?” he asks. “I heard you talking to someone.”

  She’s called her lawyer, he thinks. She’s called Lucy. She’s called someone to say she’s leaving him and means it this time.

  “I called Dr. Self,” she says. “Tried her, left her a message.”

  He is perplexed and shows it.

  “I’m sure you remember her,” she says. “Or maybe you listen to her on the radio,” she adds wryly.

  “Please.”

  “Millions of people do.”

  “Why would you call her?” he asks.

  She tells him aboutDavidLuck and his prescription. She tells him that Dr. Self wasn’t the least bit helpful the first time she called.

  “No surprise. She’s a crackpot, an egomaniac. She lives up to her name. Self.”

  “Actually, she was well within her right. I don’t have jurisdiction. Nobody’s dead, as far as we know. Dr. Self doesn’t have to respond to any medical examiner at this point, and I’m not so sure I’d call her a crackpot.”

  “How about a psychiatric whore? Have you listened to her lately?”

  “Then you do listen to her.”

  “Next time, invite a real psychiatrist to speak at the Academy, not some radio jackass.”

  “It wasn’t my idea, and I made it clear I was against it. But the buck stops with Lucy.”

  “That’s ridiculous. Lucy can’t stand people like her.”

  “I believe it was Joe’s suggestion to invite Dr. Self as a guest lecturer, his first big coup when he started his fellowship. Getting a celebrity lined up for the summer session. That and getting on her show, a repeat guest. In fact, they’ve talked about the Academy on the air, which I’m not happy about.”

  “Idiot. They deserve each other.”

  “Lucy wasn’t paying attention. Never, of course, attended the lectures. She didn’t care what Joe did. There’s a lot she doesn’t seem to care about anymore. What are we going to do.”

  She isn’t talking about Lucy now.

  “I don’t know.”

  “You’re a psychologist. You should know. You deal with dysfunctions and misery every day.”

  “I’m miserable this morning,” he says. “You’re right about that. I suppose if I were your psychologist, I might suggest that you’re venting your pain and anger on me because you can’t vent it on Lucy. You can’t get angry with someone who has a brain tumor.”

  Scarpetta opens the screen and places another split log on the fire, and sparks fly and wood pops.

  “She’s made me angry most of her life,” she confesses. “There’s never been anyone who tries my patience the way she does.”

  “Lucy’s an only child raised by a borderline personality disorder,”Bentonsays. “A hypersexual narcissist. Your sister. Add to the equation, Lucy is unusually gifted. She doesn’t think like other people. She’s gay. And all that equals someone who learned a long time ago to be self-contained.”

  “Someone supremely selfish, you mean.”

  “Insults to our psyche can make us selfish. She was afraid if you knew about the tumor you’d treat her differently, and that would play right into her secret fear. If you know, then somehow it becomes real.”

  She stares out the window behind him as if transfixed by the snow. Already it is at least eight inches deep, and cars parked along the street are beginning to look like snowdrifts, and even the neighborhood children are staying in.

  “Thank goodness I went to the store,”Bentoncomments.

  “On that subject, let me see what I can throw together for lunch. We should have a nice lunch. We should try to have a good day.”

  “You ever had a body that was painted?” he asks.

  “Mine or somebody else?”

  He smiles a little. “Decidedly not yours. There is nothing dead about your body. This case up here. The red handprints on her body. I’m wondering if it was done while she was alive or after she was killed. Wish there was a way to tell.”

  She looks at him for a long moment, the fire moving behind her and sounding like the wind.

  “If he did it while she was alive, we’re dealing with a very different sort of predator. How terrifying and humiliating would that be?” he says. “To be restrained…”

  “Do we know she was restrained?”

  “There are some marks around her wrists and ankles. Reddish areas that the medical examiner lists as possible contusions.”

  “Possible?”

  “As opposed to postmortem artifact,”Bentonsays. “Especially since the body was exposed to the cold. That’s what she says.”

  “She?”

  “The chief here.”

  “Left over from theBostonMEoffice’s not-so-glorious past,” Scarpetta says. “Too bad. She single-handedly has pretty much ruined the place.”

  “I’d appreciate it if you’d look over the report. I have it on a disk. I want to know what you think of the bodypainting, of everything. It’s really important for me to know if he did it when she was alive or dead. Too bad we couldn’t scan her brain and replay what happened.”

  She treats it like a serious comment. “That’s a nightmare I’m not sure you want. Not even you would want to see that. Assuming it was possible.”

  “Basil would like me to see it.”

  “Yes, dear Basil,” she says, not at all happy about Basil Jenrette’s intrusion intoBenton’s life.

  “Theoretically,” he says, “would you want to see it? Would you want to see the replay if it were possible?”

  “Even if there were a way to replay a person’s final moments,” she replies from the hearth, “I’m not sure how reliable it would be. I suspect the brain has the remarkable capacity to process events in a w
ay that ensures the least amount of trauma and pain.”

  “Some people disassociate, I suspect,” he says as her cell phone rings.

  It’s Marino.

  “Call extensiontwo forty-three,” he says. “Now.”

  50

  Extension 243 is the fingerprints lab. It is also a favorite forum for Academy staff, a place to gather and talk about evidence that requires more than one type of forensic analysis.

  Fingerprints are no longer just fingerprints. They can be a source of DNA, not just the DNA of whoever left them but the DNA of the victim the perpetrator touched. They can be a source of drug residues or a material that was on the person’s hands, perhaps ink or paint, that requires analysis by such lofty instruments as the gas chromatograph or the infrared spectrophotometer or the Fourier transform infrared microscope. In the old days, a piece of evidence usually walked onstage alone. Now, with the sophistication and sensitivity of scientific instruments and processes, a solo becomes a string quartet or a symphony. The problem remains what to collect first. Testing for one thing can eradicate another. So scientists get together, usually in Matthew’s lab. They debate and decide what should be done and who goes first.

  When Matthew received the latex gloves from Daggie Simister’s scene, he was faced with a plethora of possibilities, none of them foolproof. He could put on cotton examination gloves, and on top of those wear the inside-out latex gloves. By using his own hands to fill out otherwise-limp latex, he makes it easier to lift and photograph latent prints. But in doing so, he runs the risk of ruining any possibility of fuming prints with superglue or looking for them with an alternate light source and luminescent powders or processing them with chemicals such as ninhydrin or diazafluoren. One process can interfere with another, and once the damage is done, there is no going back.

  It is half past eight, and the inside of his small lab right now looks like a mini staff conference, with Matthew, Marino, Joe Amos and three scientists gathered around a large transparent plastic box, the glue tank. Inside it are two inside-out latex gloves, one bloody, hanging from clips. Small holes have been cut into the bloody glove. Other areas of the latex, inside and out, were swabbed for DNA in such a way as not to disturb any possible prints. Then Matthew had to decide door number one, door number two, door number three, as he likes to describe a deliberation that involves just as much instinct, experience and luck as good science. He chose to place the gloves, a foil pack of superglue and a dish of warm water inside the tank.

 

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