Текст книги "Bones Never Lie"
Автор книги: Kathy Reichs
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CHAPTER 11
I LOGGED ON to my computer and pulled up the file. Scanned the contents. As I feared, case number ME107-10 fit the pattern.
The skull had been found by hikers off South New Hope Road, near the town of Belmont, just west of Charlotte and just north of the South Carolina border. It lay in a gulley across from the entrance to the Daniel Stowe Botanical Garden.
The facial bones and mandible had been missing, and the calvarium gnawed and weathered. Remnants of brain matter had adhered to the endocranial surface, suggesting a PMI of less than a year.
I’d led a recovery team. For a full day we’d worked a grid shoulder to shoulder, poking under rocks and fallen trees, sifting through vines, leaves, and brushy undergrowth. Though we found a fair number of bones, much of the skeleton had been lost to scavenging animals.
I was able to determine that the remains were those of a twelve– to fourteen-year-old child. What was left of the cranium suggested European ancestry.
Gender determination based on skeletal indicators is unreliable prior to puberty. But articles of clothing found in association with several bone clusters suggested the victim was female.
A search of MP files turned up no match in North or South Carolina. Ditto when we ran the profile through NamUS and the Doe Network, national and international data banks for missing and unidentified persons.
So the child remained nameless, ME107-10. The bones were archived on a shelf down the hall.
I pushed from my desk and walked to the storage room, boot heels echoing in the quiet of the empty building.
After locating the correct label, I pulled the box and carried it to autopsy room one. Larabee’s closed office door told me he’d already left. The autopsy table was empty. Its small occupant had been stitched, zipped into her body bag, and rolled to the cooler.
I thought of the heartrending conversation Slidell was having with Shelly Leal’s grieving parents. Receiving autopsy results is never easy. Nor is delivering them. I felt empathy for all three.
Deep breath. Only a faint trace of odor lingered in the air.
After gloving, I lifted the lid.
The skeleton was as I remembered, stained tea brown by contact with the vegetation in which it had lain. And woefully incomplete.
Still psyched about finding the lip print, I spread paper sheeting on the table and placed all the bones and bone fragments on it.
The skull’s outer surface was scored by tooth marks, and the orbital ridges and mastoids were chewed. Most of the vertebrae and ribs were crushed. The one pelvic half had several canine punctures. Each of the five long bones was truncated and cracked at both ends.
I examined everything first with a magnifying lens, then with the ALS. Spotted no hairs or fibers snagged on or embedded in the bones. Detected not the faintest suggestion of a glimmer.
I was repacking the skeleton when my eyes fell on a bag tucked into one corner of the box. Odd. Had the clothing never left the MCME? Had it gone to the CMPD lab and come back? I’d noted no report in the electronic file.
I opened the bag, withdrew the contents, and placed everything on the sheet.
One lavender sandal, size marking abraded by wear.
One pair of purple polyester shorts, girls’ size twelve.
One T-shirt saying 100% Princess, size medium.
One pink polyester bra, size 32AA.
One elastic band from a pair of girls’ panties, label faded and unreadable.
I repeated the process with the lens and the ALS.
Except for a few short black hairs, obviously animal, I got the same disappointing result.
Discouraged, I reshelved the box, then returned to my office. Thinking perhaps an error had occurred and a report hadn’t been entered, I pulled my own file on ME107-10. I still keep hard copy. Old habits die hard.
Data entry omission. The clothing had been submitted, examined, and, for some strange reason, returned to us. The lab had gotten zilch.
I was dialing Slidell when my iPhone rang. He and Ryan were going to the Penguin. The junkie inside me rolled over and opened an eye.
What the hell. I was done here.
I cleaned up and headed out.
Larabee’s car was gone from the lot. But two vans sat outside the security fence. One had WSOC written on the side panel, the other News 14 Carolina.
Crap.
As I crossed to my Mazda, each van’s doors thunked open and a two-person crew leaped out. One member of each pair held a mike, the other a shoulder-propped camera.
I hurried to my car, jumped in, and palmed down the locks. Gunning through the gate, I lowered a window and waved a message that needed no clarification.
I knew the media had picked up on transmissions concerning the discovery of Leal’s body, and that the reporters sitting vigil at the morgue were just doing their jobs. I also knew that dozens more were swarming elsewhere—the underpass, the convenience store, the Leal home—salivating for an inside line to pipe to their editors.
My gesture was unfair. Definitely inelegant. But I refused to provide fodder for voyeurs wanting a peek into the heartbreak of others.
The Penguin drive-in is a clogged artery waiting to take you out. Featuring a menu with caloric levels very possibly illegal, the place has been a Charlotte institution since before I was born. I crave its burgers and fries like an addict craves dope.
The restaurant was close to the convenience store where Shelly Leal was last seen. Where she’d bought milk and candy and it had cost her life.
Pulling from Commonwealth into a spot by the entrance, I could see Ryan and Slidell through the double lens of my windshield and a tinted front window. The look on Skinny’s face almost made me regret my decision to come.
Though it was nearly two P.M., the place was crowded. And noisy with the hubbub of conversation emanating from fat-glutted brains.
The men looked up when I drew close. Ryan scooched left to make space for me in the booth.
Slidell was eating a sandwich that almost defied description. Blackened bologna on Texas toast with lettuce, tomato, and mayo. The Dr. Devil. One of the few offerings I’d never sampled. Ryan was working on a hot dog barely visible under a layer of queso and onion rings. Both were drinking sodas the size of oil drums. The iconic flightless bird grinned from each plastic cup.
I slid in and Ryan handed me a menu. No, thanks. I knew what I wanted.
The waitress appeared and queried my health in a syrupy drawl. I assured her I was swell and ordered the Penguin burger, a heart-stopper topped with pimento cheese and fried pickles.
While waiting for my food, I told Ryan and Slidell about the possible lip print.
“It could be Leal’s.” Ryan sounded skeptical.
“Yes,” I said. “Or it could have been left by her attacker. Maybe Leal fought and was pulled close, to pin her arms. Or maybe her body slipped while being carried to the underpass. There are lots of reasons her abductor’s face might have come in contact with the jacket.”
“You think DNA’s gonna last that long?” Slidell outdid Ryan at dubious.
“I’m hoping so.” I was. And that the match would send Pomerleau straight to hell.
My drink was delivered. Sugary tea, not the unsweetened I’d ordered. While sipping it, I shared my thoughts on the gap year, 2010. And described ME107-10.
The men listened, chewing and wiping grease from their chins. Though he hadn’t been involved, Slidell remembered the case.
I mentioned the media ambush at the MCME. Slidell delivered his usual rant. His suggestions for curtailing the power of the fifth estate did not involve amending the constitution.
By the time my food arrived, Slidell had finished his. He bunched and tossed his napkin and leaned back. “I’m convinced the parents are clear. Co-workers place the old man at the body shop when the kid went missing. Mother’s barely holding it together. Says she was home with the other two, waiting for the milk. It feels right to me.”
Ryan nodded agreement.
“How did they take the news?” I spoke through a mouthful of ground beef and pickle.
Shoulder shrug. You know.
I did. Though it wasn’t a frequent part of my job, I’d participated in the notification of next of kin. In that moment when lives changed forever. I’d seen people faint, lash out, cry, go catatonic. I’d heard them berate, accuse, beg for retraction, for reassurance that it was all a mistake. No matter how often I partook, the task was always heartbreaking.
“Mother wondered about a ring the kid always wore. Silver, shaped like a seashell. You got something like that?” Slidell asked.
“I didn’t see any jewelry in the autopsy room, but I’ll check,” I said. “Maybe Larabee bagged it before I arrived.” And separated it from the clothing? I doubted he’d do that. Didn’t say so.
“We did some poking into your other vics. Koseluk and Donovan are still missing. Both files are inactive, since no one’s been pressing.”
Ryan excused himself. I stood and watched him walk to the door. Knew he was going outside to smoke.
As I sat back down, Slidell freed a toothpick from its cellophane and began mining a molar. The action didn’t stop the flow of his narrative. “Lead on the Koseluk girl is a guy named Spero. Kannapolis PD. He’s okay. Worked with him once. Gangbanger got capped—”
“What’s his take?”
“He’s still liking the ex.”
“Al Menniti?”
Slidell nodded.
“Has he surfaced?”
“No.” Slidell withdrew the toothpick and inspected something on the tip. “Talked to the mother. She says the dumb fuck couldn’t hide his own ass, much less a kid. Says he didn’t give two shits about fatherhood. Her words.”
“Lyrical. What about Colleen Donovan?”
“Parents both dead, lived with an aunt, Laura Lonergan, who spends her time frying her brains on meth. And there ain’t much to fry. That conversation was a treat.”
I gestured for Slidell to skip the character analysis. “Does Colleen have a jacket?”
Slidell nodded. “Juvie, so we’ll need a warrant to unseal it.” I raised my brows in question.
“Yeah, yeah. I’m writing something up.” Slidell paused, as though debating whether to make the next comment.
“What?” I urged.
“One weird thing. According to the file, Donovan was entered into a national database for missing kids.”
“By whom?”
“MP investigator name of Pat Tasat.”
“What’s weird about that?”
“I checked for the hell of it. Six months out, the kid was removed from the system.”
“Did Tasat say why?”
“No. And he won’t.” Tight. “Poor schmuck drowned in Lake Norman last Labor Day weekend.”
“I’m sorry. Did you know him?”
Slidell nodded. “Jimmy B and Jet Skis don’t mix.”
I thought a moment. “Isn’t it standard to enter a reason when removing a name from the database?”
“Yeah. That’s what’s weird. No reason was given.”
“Who removed her?”
“That wasn’t there, either.”
I gnawed on that, wondering what it could mean. If anything. “And Estrada?” I asked.
“Kid vanished in Salisbury—that’s Rowan County—turned up in Anson, so they caught the file. The investigation went nowhere, eventually landed with a ballbuster at the sheriff’s department name of Henrietta Hull. That’s who I talked to. Goes by Cock. You believe that?”
Hen. Cock. I was sure fellow cops had crafted the nickname. Doubted she went by it. “Was the problem lack of interjurisdictional sharing?” I asked.
“Partly that. Partly the Anson County Sheriff’s Office was busy mucking out its own barn.”
“Meaning?”
“Couple of their superstars got nailed for taking bribes.”
I remembered now. Both deputies had gone to jail.
“Partly it was timing. The initial lead retired some months into it. That’s when the case bounced to Hull. Mostly it was the fact that no one found dick. No physical evidence, no eyewitnesses, no cause of death.”
“Who did the post?”
“Some hack who didn’t bother to visit the scene.”
I wasn’t surprised. The Charlotte Observer had done more than one exposé on the failings of the North Carolina medical examiner system. A scathing series ran in 2013 after an elderly couple and an eleven-year-old boy died three months apart in the same motel room in Boone, and it turned out the culprit was carbon monoxide. The local ME had neither visited the motel nor filed a timely report after the first deaths. Another series shocked the public in 2014. Murders classified as accidental deaths, accidents as suicides, misidentified bodies delivered to the wrong funeral homes.
When interviewed, the state’s new chief ME attributed problems in the system to inadequate funding. No kidding. Except for Mecklenburg County, local medical examiners were paid a hundred dollars per case. And since the state didn’t require it, many had little or no training in forensic pathology. Some weren’t even physicians. The new boss was trying to bring about change, but without increased financial support, her chance of success was unlikely.
“No one kept pushing?” I asked.
“Estrada’s mother got deported to Mexico shortly after the kid vanished. There was no señor in the picture.”
I finished my burger and thought about Mama’s three girls, Koseluk, Estrada, and Donovan. One dead, two missing. Files ignored because no one was pushing.
Ryan rejoined us, carrying a hint of cigarette smoke into the booth.
“Tinker was at the scene last night?” I asked.
Slidell snorted loudly, then went back to working his gums.
“The SBI’s taking the position that the investigation will benefit from sharing information and resources at the state level.” Ryan’s first spoken contribution.
“There’s no way the SB-fucking-I will share piss-all.” Slidell jammed the toothpick into the remains of his slaw. “They think a clear on these cases is their ticket to a makeover. And that don’t include us.”
“What does Tinker think about these other three vics?” I asked.
“That asshat couldn’t think his way through a fart without coaching.” Slidell’s outburst caused several patrons to glance our way.
“He’s not convinced they’re related,” Ryan said.
“Leal?”
“That one he’s saying maybe.”
“What happens now?”
“I kicked what we got up the COC.” Slidell was using shorthand for “chain of command.” “Now we wait.”
We were returning to our cars when Slidell’s mobile sounded. He answered, and as he listened, his face grew red. Finally, “A couple extra whiteboards ain’t gonna clear this thing.”
Disconnecting with a furious one-finger jab, Slidell turned to us. “We’re screwed.”
CHAPTER 12
THE RULING WAS that the Leal homicide would continue to be viewed as a one-off, so there would be no task force. Slidell was getting space but not extra personnel. He was to cooperate with Tinker and use Ryan ex-officio. If the investigation tossed up stronger links to the other cases, the situation would be reassessed.
While Ryan and a seething Slidell headed back to the law enforcement center, I returned to the ME facility. The press vans were gone, in search of bloodier pastures.
Leal’s ring wasn’t in autopsy room one or lying in a Ziploc on Larabee’s desk. A quick scan of his paperwork turned up no mention of jewelry.
I thought a moment, then gloved, went to the cooler, and checked every inch of Leal’s body bag. Found twigs, leaves, some gravel, but no ring.
I phoned Larabee. Got voicemail and left a message.
Out of ideas, I drove to the LEC. Slidell wasn’t at the CCU or in his cubicle in the homicide squad. Ryan was nowhere in sight, either. A few detectives were talking on phones. A guy named Porter was discussing footprint impressions with a guy I didn’t know. He directed me to the conference room.
The scene looked like a setup in a low-budget cop show. A phone and computer sat, unstaffed, on a desk in one corner. Erasable boards stretched the length of the back wall, most used, two empty.
The large oak table still filled the center of the room. On it were the two MP and four homicide files. Those for Gower and Nance were hefty, a box and a tub, thanks to the work of Rodas and Barrow’s CCU team. The others were meager enough to fit into brown corrugated files secured with elasticized binders.
Ryan was trolling through Rodas’s box. Slidell was beside him, studying a printout. Neither looked up when I entered.
I crossed to the boards. Topping six of the seven were victim photos. A name was penned below each in large block letters. A last-seenalive location and date.
NELLIE GOWER, HARDWICK, VERMONT, 2007
LIZZIE NANCE, CHARLOTTE, 2009
AVERY KOSELUK, KANNAPOLIS, 2011
TIA ESTRADA, SALISBURY, 2012
COLLEEN DONOVAN, CHARLOTTE, 2013–2014
SHELLY LEAL, CHARLOTTE, 2014
Each LSA date marked the beginning of a time line tracing that child’s movements backward from the moment of her disappearance. Few items had been entered on any chronology. Posted on the Gower, Nance, Estrada, and Leal boards were CSS photos. I stepped up to inspect the Estrada pics, which I hadn’t seen.
Like the others, Tia Estrada lay faceup, fully dressed, with her arms at her sides. Beneath her were brown grass and dead leaves, above her gray sky. In the background I could see a picnic table and what looked like the base of a gazebo.
A soupçon of Brylcreem told me Slidell had closed in.
“Is it a campground?” I asked.
Slidell nodded. “By the Pee Dee wildlife refuge. You know, for the boat and bug spray crowd. Has a couple docks, tent and trailer sites, latrines so the fam can take a dump with the birds.”
Nice.
“Was she found inside the grounds?”
“Eeyuh.”
“And no one saw anything?”
“It was winter. The place was deserted.”
“Were the neighbors questioned?”
“We’re talking the boonies.”
“Where people take notice.” Curt. “No one remembered selling gas to a stranger? No one saw an unfamiliar car pass by on the road? Parked on the shoulder?”
Slidell looked at me without blinking. “You know why these douchebags don’t acknowledge we got a serial here?”
Though I shared Skinny’s opinion that his superiors were wearing blinders, I had no desire to hear his latest conspiracy theory.
“I didn’t find Leal’s ring,” I said. “Could it be downstairs in the property room?”
Slidell gave an “I don’t think so” twist of his mouth. Then, “I’ll pull the CSS report, see if a ring turned up in their sweep.”
“And ask the mother to look around at home.”
Slidell nodded.
“Nance should have been carrying ballet gear, at least shoes. Nothing was listed in the file.”
Another nod.
“We should query Hull, see if anything was missing with Estrada. Maybe give Rodas a call about Gower.”
Slidell knew what I was thinking. Souvenirs. Reminders of the kills. He strode over to Ryan. Explained. Ryan nodded. Pulled out his phone.
As I moved to the last board, Slidell rejoined me.
“Did Ryan fill you in on Anique Pomerleau?” I asked. A decade had passed, and still I could barely say the name.
“Yeah.”
“Good.”
“Before we started setting up in here, he gave a yodel to the home folk. I don’t par-lay-voo, but it sounded like he had some ’splaining to do.”
I wondered how that had gone.
“He says he learned dick about Pomerleau. But I’m guessing he blew fire up some Canadian arses about needing to fix that.”
For a moment I concentrated on my breathing. My pulse. Then I looked at the photo.
It was a mug shot, taken years before the horror in Montreal. Pomerleau’s face was softer, an embryonic version of the one forever etched in my brain. I recognized the heavy brows slashing across the deep-set eyes. The pinched nose, the full lips, the jarringly square chin.
“She was, what, sixteen?” Slidell asked.
“Fifteen. A store owner in Mascouche nabbed her for shoplifting in 1990. Insisted on pressing charges. This was the only picture we had back in ’04.”
“Ryan couldn’t dig up something less vintage?”
“Pomerleau’s parents lost all their belongings in a fire in ’92. By then she was out of the house, raising hell in Montreal.”
“Five-finger discounting?”
“And some petty stuff I don’t remember.”
“So her prints are on file?”
I nodded.
“Fifteen? Mom and Dad didn’t drag her back to the old homestead?”
“They were in their forties when Anique was born. By the time she bagged school to hit the big city, they were exhausted and tired of dealing with her crap.”
Slidell pooched out his lips and rubbed the back of his neck. “So she enters the States sometime between ’04, when you and Ryan bust her in Montreal, and ’07, when she leaves DNA on the Gower kid.” He squinted as he did some math. “She’s thirty-nine now, surely using an alias. And I’m guessing she’s street-savvy?”
“Pomerleau is vicious and delusional but smart as hell.”
“And her only surviving pic’s got more than two decades on it. No wonder she’s managed to fly under the radar.”
Sudden thought. I shifted to Leal’s board. On it was a black-andwhite printout of a child’s face showing a reasonable though lifeless resemblance to the school portrait on top. I guessed the image had been generated by software such as SketchCop, FACES, or Identi-Kit, in which interchangeable templates of features were selected based on an individual’s memory of an actual face. I assumed Slidell’s eyewitness from Morningside had given the input.
“Who did the composite?” I asked.
“We get ’em done through an FBI liaison.”
“Could he do an age progression on Pomerleau’s mug shot?” As I said it, I was surprised none had been done before. Or had I missed that? I made a note to check.
Slidell smiled. I think. “Not bad, Doc.”
“Rodas says Gower was wearing a house key on a chain around her neck.” Ryan spoke from across the room. “They never found it.”
Slidell and I crossed to him. “What about Estrada?” I asked.
“There’s no mention in the file.” Ryan gestured at the papers fanned out before him. “Hull knew nothing about missing effects. Said she’d check in to it.”
I met Ryan’s eyes. He gave me a straight look, then went back to reading interviews.
“I’ll call over about that sketch.” Slidell turned and chugged from the room.
I dropped into a chair. Trolled through the Estrada file until I found what I wanted.
Estrada’s autopsy report consisted of a single page of text and four pages of scanned color photos. It was signed by Perry L. Bullsbridge, MD.
Slidell was right. Considering a child had been murdered, Bulls-bridge had done a piss-poor job of documenting the postmortem. Considering anyone had been murdered.
I read the section on physical descriptors and condition of the body. The brief remarks on health, hygiene, and nutrition. The one-sentence statement regarding absence of trauma.
I skimmed the organ weights. I was scanning the list of items submitted as evidence when an entry jumped out at me.
“They pulled two hairs from Estrada’s trachea.”
“And?” Ryan didn’t look up.
“Larabee pulled two hairs from Leal’s trachea.”
“He thought they were probably hers.”
“He said it was odd to find hair so far down the throat.”
Ryan’s eyes met mine. “What are you saying?”
“I don’t know.” I didn’t. “Coincidence?”
“You don’t believe in coincidence.”
“No,” I said. “I don’t.”
That night Ryan came over to my place and we got carryout sushi from Baku. We ate in the kitchen, under Birdie’s steadfast gaze. Every few minutes Ryan would slip the cat raw fish. I’d scold them both. The cycle would repeat.
We were clearing the table when Slidell phoned. By reflex, I checked the time. Nine-forty and he was still working. Impressive. His update was not.
The possible Leal witness from the convenience store whom he’d interviewed a week earlier had provided car descriptors and two digits from the license. The pairing had generated over twelve hundred possibilities. Someone was making calls.
Leal’s ring was neither listed on the CSS inventory nor in the property room. It appeared in none of the photos.
The IT guys had yet to recover any of the browser history deleted from Leal’s laptop. They were still trying.
The FBI’s sketch artist had agreed to age-progress Pomerleau’s mug shot. When he could.
Hot damn. We were on fire.
“I plan to visit my mother tomorrow,” I said to Ryan, rinsing rice and soy sauce from a plate.
“I’ll hang here, go through the rest of the files, and push harder on tracking Pomerleau.”
“Sounds good.”
“Shouldn’t you give Daisy a heads-up?”
“Like she won’t be there?” Turning off the tap.
“She is a known flight risk.”
“Funny.”
Actually, it was. Sort of.
I took my mobile to the study and settled on the couch. Ryan’s backpack now hung from the arm of the desk chair. His phone charger jutted from a socket. Inexplicably, seeing his belongings amid mine calmed me. And filled me with sadness.
I was glad Ryan had agreed to relocate to my guest room. It was nice having him under my roof. A friend now, nothing more. Still, I was glad he was here.
I dialed. The first ring was cut short.
“I am so glad you phoned.” Mama’s voice had the intensity of a pit bull signaling a break-in. “I was about to phone you.”
“Mama—”
“I wanted to be sure.”
“I’m coming to see you tomorrow.”
“I was hitting a lot of dead ends. ‘Daisy,’ I said to myself, ‘the devil’s in the details. Focus on the details.’ ”
When Mama’s round the bend, her listening skills are not at their best.
“I’ll be there by noon.”
“Are you hearing me, Tempe?”
“Yes, Mama.” I knew that trying to interrupt would only crank her up further.
“I’ve learned something dreadful.”
I felt a tickle of unease. “Dreadful?”
“Another little girl is going to die.”