Kay Scarpet - Postmortem Part 6
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"But he wouldn't be expecting to smell it. No reason it should come to mind at first. Now me, when I went in the bedroom, I didn't smell nothing like he was describing."
"Do you recall smelling anything peculiar at the other strangling scenes?"
"No, ma'am. Which just further corroborates my suspicion that either Matt imagined it or is making it up, to throw us off track."
Then it came to me. "In the three previous cases, the women weren't found until the next day, after they'd been dead at least twelve hours."
Marino paused in the doorway, his face incredulous. "You suggesting Matt got home just after the killer left, that the killer's got some weird case of B.O.?"
"I'm suggesting it's possible."
His face tightened with anger, and as he stalked down the hall I heard him mutter, "G.o.ddam women a"
Chapter 5.
The Sixth Street Marketplace is a Bayside without the water, one of these open, sunny malls built of steel and gla.s.s, on the north edge of the banking district in the heart of downtown. It wasn't often I went out for lunch, and I certainly didn't have time for the luxury this afternoon. I had an appointment in less than an hour, and there were two sudden deaths and one suicide in transport, but I needed to unwind.
Marino bothered me. His att.i.tude toward me reminded me of medical school.
I was one of four women in my cla.s.s at Hopkins. I was too naive in the beginning to realize what was happening. The sudden creaking of chairs and loud shuffling of paper when a professor would call on me were not coincidence. It was not chance when old tests made the rounds but were never available to me. The excuses - "You wouldn't be able to read my writing" or "Someone else is borrowing them right now" - were too universal when I went from student to student on the few occasions I missed a lecture and needed to copy someone else's notes. I was a small insect faced with a formidable male network web in which I might be ensnared but never a part.
Isolation is the cruelest of punishments, and it had never occurred to me that I was something less than human because I wasn't a man. One of my female cla.s.smates eventually quit, another suffered a complete nervous breakdown. Survival was my only hope, success my only revenge.
I'd thought those days were behind me, but Marino brought all of it back. I was more vulnerable now because these murders were affecting me in a way others had not. I did not want to be alone in this, but Marino seemed to have his mind made up, not only about Matt Petersen, but also about me.
The midday stroll was soothing, the sun bright and winking on winds.h.i.+elds of the pa.s.sing traffic. The double gla.s.s doors leading inside the Marketplace were open to let the spring breeze in, and the food court was as crowded as I knew it would be. Waiting my turn at the carry-out salad counter, I watched people go by, young couples laughing and talking and lounging at small tables. I was aware of women who seemed alone, preoccupied professional women wearing expensive suits and sipping diet colas or nibbling on pita bread sandwiches.
It could have been in a place like this he first spotted his victims, some large public place where the only thing the four women had in common was that he took their orders at one of the counters.
But the overwhelming and seemingly enigmatic problem was that the murdered women did not work or live in the same areas of the city. It was unlikely they shopped or dined out or did their banking or anything else in the same places. Richmond has a large land area with thriving malls and business areas in the four major quadrants. People who live Northside are catered to by the Northside merchants, the people south of the river patronize the Southside businesses, and the same is true in the eastern part of the city. I mainly restricted myself to the malls and restaurants in the West End, for example, except when I was at work.
The woman at the counter who took my order for a Greek salad paused for a moment, her eyes lingering on my face as if I looked familiar to her. I uncomfortably wondered if she'd seen my picture in the Sat.u.r.day evening paper. Or she could have seen me in the television footage and court sketches the local television stations were constantly pulling out of their files whenever murder was big news in central Virginia.
It has always been my wish to be unnoticed, to blend. But I was at a disadvantage for several reasons. There were few women chief medical examiners in the country, and this prompted reporters to be unduly tenacious when it came to pointing cameras in my direction or excavating for quotes. I was easily recognized because I am "distinctive" in appearance, "blond" and "handsome" and Lord knows what else I've been called in print. My ancestors are from northern Italy where there is a segment of blue-eyed, fair natives who share blood with the people of Savoy, Switzerland and Austria.
The Scarpettas are a traditionally ethnocentric group, Italians who have married other Italians in this country to keep the bloodline pure. My mother's greatest failure, so she has told me numerous times, is that she bore no son and her two-daughters have turned out to be genetic dead ends. Dorothy sullied the lineage with Lucy, who is half Latin, and at my age and marital status it wasn't likely I would be sullying anything.
My mother is p.r.o.ne to weeping as she bemoans the fact that her immediate family is at the end of its line. "All that good blood," she would sob, especially during the holidays, when she should have been surrounded by a bevy of adorable and adoring grandchildren. "Such a shame. All that good blood! Our ancestors! Architects, painters! Kay, Kay, to let that go to waste, like fine grapes on the vine."
We are traced back to Verona, the province of Romeo of Montague and Juliet Capulet, of Dante, Pisano, t.i.tian, Bellini and Paolo Cagliari, according to my mother. She persists in believing we are somehow related to these luminaries, despite my reminders that Bellini, Pisano and t.i.tian, at any rate, influenced the Veronese School but were really native to Venice, and the poet Dante was Florentine, exiled after the Black, Guelf triumph and relegated to wandering from city to city, his stay in Verona but a pit stop along the way to Ravenna. Our direct ancestors, in truth, were with the railways or were farmers, a humble people who immigrated to this country two generations ago.
A white bag in hand, I eagerly embraced the warm afternoon again. Sidewalks were crowded with people wandering to and from lunch, and as I waited on a corner for the light to change, I instinctively turned toward the two figures emerging from the Chinese restaurant across the street. The familiar blond hair had caught my eye. Bill Boltz, the Commonwealth's attorney for Richmond City, was slipping on a pair of sungla.s.ses and seemed in the midst of an intense discussion with Norman Tanner, the director of public safety. For a moment, Boltz was staring straight at me, but he didn't return my wave. Maybe he really didn't see me. I didn't wave again. Then the two men were gone, swept up in the congested flow of anonymous faces and scuffling feet.
When the light turned green after an interminably long time, I crossed the street, and Lucy came to mind as I approached a computer software store. Ducking in, I found something she was sure to like, not a video game but a history tutorial complete with art, music and quizzes. Yesterday we had rented a paddleboat in the park and drifted around the small lake. She ran us into the fountain to give me a tepid shower, and I found myself childishly paying her back. We fed bread to the geese and sucked on grape snow cones until our tongues turned blue. Thursday morning she would fly home to Miami, and I would not see her again until Christmas, if I saw her again at all this year.
It was quarter of one when I walked into the lobby of the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, or OCME, as it was called. Benton Wesley was fifteen minutes early and sitting on the couch reading the Wall Street Journal.
"Hope you got something to drink in that bag," he said drolly, folding the newspaper and reaching for his briefcase.
"Wine vinegar. You'll love it."
"h.e.l.l. Ripple - I don't care. Some days I'm so desperate I fantasize the water cooler outside my door's full of gin."
"Sounds like a waste of imagination to me."
"Nawwww. Just the only fantasy I'm going to talk about in front of a lady."
Wesley was a suspect profiler for the FBI and located in Richmond's field office, where he actually spent very little time. When he wasn't on the road, he was usually at the National Academy in Quantico teaching death-investigation cla.s.ses and doing what he could to coax VICAP through its rocky adolescence. VICAP is an acronym for Violent Criminal Apprehension Program. One of VICAP's most innovative concepts was regional teams, which yoke a Bureau profiler with an experienced homicide detective. Richmond P. D. called in VICAP after the second strangling. Marino, in addition to being a detective sergeant for the city, was Wesley's regional team partner.
"I'm early," Wesley apologized, following me into the hallway. "Came straight here from a dental appointment. Won't bother me if you eat while we talk."
"Well, it will bother me," I said.
His blank look was followed by a sheepish grin - as it suddenly occurred to him. "I forgot. You're not Doc Cagney. You know, he used to keep cheese crackers on the desk in the morgue. In the middle of a post he'd take a break for a snack. It was unbelievable."
We turned off into a room so small it was really an alcove, where there was a refrigerator, a c.o.ke machine and a coffeemaker. "He's lucky he didn't get hepat.i.tis or AIDS," I said.
"AIDS." Wesley laughed. "That would have been poetic justice."
Like a lot of good ole boys I've known, Dr. Cagney was reputed to be acutely h.o.m.ophobic. "Just some G.o.ddam queer," he was known to say when persons of a certain persuasion were sent in for examination.
"AIDS a"
Wesley was still enjoying the thought as I tucked my salad inside the refrigerator. "Wouldn't I love to hear him explain his way out of that one."
I'd gradually warmed up to Wesley. The first time I met him I had my reservations. At a glance, he made one a believer in stereotypes. He was FBI right down to his Florsheim shoes, a sharp-featured man with prematurely silver hair suggesting a mellow disposition that wasn't there. He was lean and hard and looked like a trial lawyer in his precisely tailored khaki suit and blue silk paisley-printed tie. I couldn't recall ever seeing him in a s.h.i.+rt that wasn't white and lightly starched.
He had a master's degree in psychology and had been a high school princ.i.p.al in Dallas before enlisting in the Bureau, where he worked first as a field agent, then undercover in fingering members of the Mafia, before ending up where he'd started, in a sense. Profilers are academicians, thinkers, a.n.a.lysts. Sometimes I think they are magicians.
Carrying our coffees out, we turned left and stepped inside the conference room. Marino was sitting at the long table and going through a fat case file. I was mildly surprised. For some reason, I just a.s.sumed he would be late.
Before I had a chance to so much as pull out a chair, he launched in with the laconic announcement, "I stopped by serology a minute ago. Thought you might be interested in knowing Matt Petersen's A positive and a nonsecreter."
Wesley looked keenly at him. "This the husband you were telling me about?"
"Yo. A nonsecreter. Same as the guy snuffing these women."
"Twenty percent of the population is nonsecreter," I matter of factly stated.
"Yeah," Marino said. "Two out of ten."
"Or approximately forty-four thousand people in a city the size of Richmond. Twenty-two thousand if half of that number is male," I added.
Lighting a cigarette, Marino squinted up at me over the Bic flame. "You know what, Doc?"
The cigarette wagged with each syllable. "You're beginning to sound like a d.a.m.n defense attorney." A half hour later I was at the head of the table, the two men on either side. Spread out before us were photographs of the four murdered women.
This was the most difficult and time-consuming part of the investigation-profiling the killer, profiling the victims, and then profiling the killer again.
Wesley was describing him. This was what he did best, and quite often was uncannily accurate when he read the emotion of a crime scene, which in these cases was cold, calculating rage.
"I'm betting he's white," he was saying. "But I won't stake my reputation on it. Cecile Tyler was black, and an interracial mix in victim selection is unusual unless the killer is rapidly decompensating."
He picked up a photograph of Cecile Tyler, dark skinned, lovely in life, and a receptionist at a Northside investment firm. Like Lori Petersen, she was bound, strangled, her nude body on top of the bed.
"But we're getting more of them these days. That's the trend, an increase of s.e.xual slayings in which the a.s.sailant is black, the woman white, but rarely the opposite - white men raping and murdering black women, in other words. Hookers are an exception."
He glanced blandly at the array of photographs. "These women certainly weren't hookers. I suppose if they had been," he muttered, "our job would be a little easier."
"Yeah, but theirs wouldn'ta been," Marino b.u.t.ted in.
Wesley didn't smile. "At least there would be a connection that maybe makes sense, Pete. The selection."
He shook his head. "It's peculiar."
"So what does Fortosis have to say these days?" Marino asked, referring to the forensic psychiatrist who had been reviewing the cases.
"Not a whole h.e.l.l of a lot," Wesley replied. "Talked to him briefly this morning. He's being noncommittal. I think the murder of this doctor's causing him to rethink a few things. But he's still d.a.m.n sure the killer's white."
The face from my dream violated my mind, the white face without features.
"He's probably between twenty-five and thirty-five."
Wesley continued staring into his crystal ball. "Because the murders aren't related to any particular locality, he's got some way of getting around, a car versus a motorcycle or a truck or a van. My guess is he's stas.h.i.+ng his wheels in some inconspicuous spot, going the rest of the way on foot. His car's an older model, probably American, dark or plain in color, such as beige or gray. It wouldn't be the least bit uncommon for him to drive, in other words, the very sort of car plainclothes law-enforcement officers drive."
He wasn't being funny. This type of killer is frequently fascinated by police work and may even emulate cops. The cla.s.sic post offense behavior for a psychopath is to become involved in the investigation. He wants to help the police, to offer insights and suggestions, and a.s.sist rescue teams in their search for a body he dumped in the woods somewhere. He's the kind of guy who wouldn't think twice about hanging out at the Fraternal Order of Police lounge clacking beer mugs with the off duty cops.
It has been conjectured that at least one percent of the population is psychopathic. Genetically, these individuals are fearless; they are people users and supreme manipulators. On the right side, they are terrific spies, war heroes, five star generals, corporate billionaires and James Bonds. On the wrong side, they are strikingly evil: the Neros, the Hitlers, the Richard Specks, the Ted Bundys, antisocial but clinically sane people who commit atrocities for which they feel no remorse and a.s.sume no blame.
"He's a loner," Wesley went on, "and has a difficult time with close relations.h.i.+ps, though he may be considered pleasant or even charming to acquaintances. He wouldn't be close to any one person. He's the type to pick up a woman in a bar, have s.e.x with her and find it frustrating and highly unsatisfactory."
"Don't I know the feeling," Marino said, yawning.
Wesley elaborated, "He would gain far more satisfaction from violent p.o.r.nography, detective magazines, S M, and probably entertained violent s.e.xual fantasies long before he began to make the fantasies reality. The reality may have begun with his peeping into the windows of houses or apartments where women live alone. It gets more real. Next he rapes. The rapes get more violent, culminating in murder. This escalation will continue as he continues to become more violent and abusive with each victim. Rape is no longer the motive. Murder is. Murder is no longer enough. It has to be more s.a.d.i.s.tic."
His arm extended, exposing a perfect margin of stiff white cuff, he reached for Lori Petersen's photographs. Slowly he looked through them, one at a time, his face impa.s.sive. Lightly pus.h.i.+ng the stack away from him, he turned to me. "It seems clear to me that in her case, in Dr. Petersen's case, the killer introduced elements of torture. An accurate a.s.sessment?"
"Accurate," I replied.
"What? Busting her fingers?"
Marino posed the question as if looking for an argument. "The Mob does s.h.i.+t like that. s.e.x murderers usually don't. She played the violin, right? Busting her fingers seems kinda personal. Like the guy who did it knew her."
As calmly as possible I said, "The surgical reference books on her desk, the violin - the killer didn't have to be a genius to pick up a few clues about her."
Wesley considered, "Another possibility is her broken fingers and fractured ribs are defense injuries."
"They aren't."
I was sure of this. "I didn't find anything to send me the message she struggled with him."
Marino turned his flat, unfriendly eyes my way. "Really? I'm curious. What do you mean by defense injuries? According to your report, she had plenty of bruises."
"Good examples of defense injuries," - I met his gaze and held it - "are broken fingernails, scratches or injuries found in areas of the hands and arms that would have been exposed had the victim attempted to ward off blows. Her injuries are inconsistent with this."
Wesley summarized, "Then we're all in agreement. He was more violent this time."
"Brutal's the word," Marino quickly said as if this were his favorite point to make. "That's what I'm talking about. Lori Petersen's different from the other three."
I suppressed my fury. The first three victims were tied up, raped and strangled. Wasn't that brutal? Did they need to have their bones broken, too? Wesley grimly predicted, "If there's another one, there will be more p.r.o.nounced signs of violence, of torture. He kills because it's a compulsion, an attempt to fill some need. The more he does it the stronger this need becomes and the more frustrated he gets, therefore the stronger the urge will become. He's becoming increasingly desensitized and it's taking more with each killing to satiate him. The satiation is temporary. Over the subsequent days or weeks, the tension builds until he finds his next target, stalks her and does it again. The intervals between each killing may get shorter. He may escalate, finally, into a spree murderer, as Bundy did."
I was thinking of the time frame. The first woman had been murdered on April 19, the second on May 10, the third on May 31. Lori Petersen was murdered a week later, on the seventh of June.
The rest of what Wesley said was fairly predictable. The killer was from a "dysfunctional home" and might have been abused, either physically or emotionally, by his mother. When he was with a victim, he was acting out his rage, which was inextricably connected to his l.u.s.t.
He was above average in intelligence, an obsessive-compulsive, and very organized and meticulous. He might be p.r.o.ne to obsessive behavior patterns, phobias or rituals, such as neatness, cleanliness, his diet anything that maintained his sense of con trolling his environment.
He had a job, which is probably menial - a mechanic, a repairman, a construction worker or some other labor-related occupation a I noticed Marino's face getting redder by the moment. He was looking restlessly around the conference room.
"For him," Wesley was saying, "the best part of what he does is the antecedent phase, the fantasy plan, the environmental cue that activates the fantasy. Where was the victim when he became aware of her?"
We did not know. She may not have known were she alive to tell. The interface may have been as tenuous and obscure as a shadow crossing her path. He caught a glimpse of her somewhere. It may have been at a shopping mall or perhaps while she was inside her car and stopped at a red light.
"What triggered him?" Wesley went on. "Why this particular woman?"
Again, we did not know. We knew only one thing. Each of the women was vulnerable because she lived alone. Or was thought to live alone as in Lori Petersen's case.
"Sounds like your all-American joe." Marino's acid remark stopped us cold.
Flicking an ash, he leaned aggressively forward. "Hey. This is all very good and nice. But me, I don't intend to be no Dorothy going down no Yellow Brick Road. They don't all lead to Emerald City, okay? We say he's a plumber or something, right? Well, Ted Bundy was a law student, and a couple years back there's this serial rapist in D.C. who turns out to be a dentist. h.e.l.l, the Green Valley strangler out there in the land of fruits and nuts could be a Boy Scout for all anybody knows."
Marino was getting around to what was on his mind. I'd been waiting for him to start in.
"I mean, who's to say he ain't a student? Maybe even an actor, a creative type whose imagination's gone apes.h.i.+t. One l.u.s.t murder don't look much different from another no matter who's committed it unless the squirrel's into drinking blood or barbecuing people on spits - and this squirrel we're dealing with ain't a Lucas. The reason these brands of s.e.x murders all profile pretty much the same, you want my opinion, is because, with few exceptions, people are people. Doctor, lawyer or Indian chief. People think and do pretty much the same d.a.m.n things, going back to the days when cavemen dragged women off by their hair."
Wesley was staring off. He slowly looked over at Marino and quietly asked, "What's your point, Pete?"
"I'll tell you what the h.e.l.l my point is!"
His chin was jutted out, the veins in his neck standing out like cords. "This G.o.ddam c.r.a.p about who profiles right and who don't. It frosts me. What I got here is a guy writing his friggin' dissertation on s.e.x and violence, cannibals, queers. He's got glitter c.r.a.p on his hands that looks like the same stuff found on all the bodies. His prints are on his dead wife's skin and on the knife stashed in one of his drawers-a knife that also has this glitter c.r.a.p on the handle. He gets home every weekend right about the time the women get whacked. But no. h.e.l.l, no. He can't be the guy, right? And why? *Cause he ain't blue collar. He ain't trashy enough."
Wesley was staring off again. My eyes fell to the photographs spread out before us, full-blown color shots of women who never in their worst nightmares would have believed anything like this could happen to them.
Kay Scarpet - Postmortem Part 6
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