Aviva Goldsmith shook her head. ‘You may not be aware that at Sanctuary House we don’t know the names of the women who seek shelter. This is done for everyone’s protection so that if their abusive partner comes here looking for them, we can protect them without deceit.’
Angie resumed. ‘Ms Goldsmith, we’re in the midst of a manhunt for someone we believe may have harmed Eleanor Patterson. Could you look at this photograph and tell us if you recognize this woman?’
‘I can look at it but I won’t be able to tell you if it’s the person you’re looking for.’
Angie brought out a copy of the photograph Eric had used in the briefing room that morning. Eric watched Aviva Goldsmith closely as she looked at the photo and thought he detected relief under her calm exterior.
She said, ‘I don’t recognize her.’
Jayne spent the duration of the drive from the FBI building to Mead Street training her brain to think of their destination as a site, not Gene’s house. But when Mark parked the Suburban and she looked out the tinted back window, she just saw a house. A two-story Victorian building covered in siding that was supposed to look like bricks but didn’t succeed, topped with a chimney and an attic window in the peak of the roofline. A small porch above three concrete steps fronted the house and a large police tent dominated the unkempt yard.
Jayne got out of the car and waited for Steelie to come around from the other side. She looked down the street and saw a television crew and a small crowd of people on the other side of some yellow tape. She and Steelie joined Scott and Mark to cross the street toward the house.
Inside the tent, a police officer and an FBI agent logged them into the Site Visitor books, then gave them protective gear to put on over their clothes and shoes. Once everyone was suited up, Mark led the way from the tent to the front porch of the house. He greeted a police officer standing sentry on the door and then he addressed Steelie and Jayne.
‘The electricity was turned off here. We’re working on having it restored but take these flashlights. Use them. We’ll be going straight through the house to the back; the side access is barricaded. You’ll meet the Medical Examiner and it’ll be easier if you don’t make a reference to ever having met King.’
He handed them the flashlights and they entered the house.
On stepping over the threshold, Jayne felt like she’d walked into another climate zone. Where it was warm and humid outside, the house was cool and smelled of old carpet. Boxes and debris crowded a narrow hallway that led past a staircase. At the top of the stairs, voices and light emanated from a room off of the landing.
Mark called back, ‘The evidence techs are working off a generator upstairs.’
Past the base of the stairs, rooms came off to the left of the hallway but it seemed even darker. Jayne swung the beam of her flashlight across the floor and up the walls to make sure she didn’t bump into anything, until they emerged out the back door into the sunlight and a strong smell of decomposing tissue.
The back yard was narrow but long, and bare in the middle. Rangy bushes hugged the tall wood fence that separated it from the neighbors on each side. There was a concrete path leading to a clapboard garage whose double doors stood open, and Jayne could see floodlights set up on stands, their extension cords running to the generator humming on the path outside. Scott was going toward the garage but the decomposition smell was coming from the open section of the yard.
Mark said, ‘Let me introduce you to the doc and his team.’
Over by the right fence-line, there were four people working in different sections of a grid marked out by fluorescent pink twine suspended between stakes hammered into the ground. They were all wearing Tyvek protective suits and rubber boots. Beyond them were three more Tyvek-suited people standing at waist-high sifting trays suspended over large plastic buckets. A table near the sifting station was laden with plastic bags, paper bags, evidence labels, photograph markers and other tools needed to document evidence emerging from the excavation.
A man was walking across to them by following plastic squares placed on the ground like stepping-stones. He pulled his mask down as he approached, revealing a lined, olive-colored face. His protective suit was baggy and slightly twisted off the mid-line of his slight frame but his voice was strong.
‘You must be the anthropologists. I’m Leonard Penman, the ME.’
Mark introduced Steelie and Jayne to the Chief Medical Examiner. They shook gloved hands.
‘We’re not completely backwards out here,’ Dr Penman said with a smile, ‘but we’re honest enough to say that we haven’t had to deal with multiple sets of buried remains, let alone mostly skeletonized remains. Even our biggest recovery effort – the commuter jet crash last winter – was fleshed remains and we had DMORT’s help on that one.’
Jayne nodded. She and Steelie had enormous respect for the regional Disaster Mortuary Operational Response Teams that were made up of forensic scientists and dispatched to scenes of mass fatalities to provide immediate human identification services.
Dr Penman waved a hand to indicate the yard behind him. ‘As you can see, the criminalists have already put a grid over the area where we started. We’re working over there by the fence first because it’s where the soil was recently disturbed – by a dog, most likely – which exposed the remains that are putting out the stink. We’ve got Dr Greg Parker from the university here. He’s the archaeologist and it’s his grad students from the Anthropology Department over there sifting the soil. I’ve been told that you two can advise on strategy? If so, you’ve arrived just in time because we’re reaching the bigger body parts now.’
Steelie said, ‘I guess the best thing at this stage would be for us to have a closer look at what you’re dealing with.’
‘Follow me,’ said Dr Penman, with something like relish.
Scott emerged from the garage and called out, ‘Thirty-two One. I need you for a second.’
They looked to Dr Penman, who said, ‘Go on. We’re not going anywhere.’
Scott held a clear evidence bag with something inside it. He pointed inside the garage.
‘You see that cabinet against the back wall?’
Jayne saw a metal wardrobe. A criminalist was collecting and documenting items that were on the labeled shelves.
Scott continued. ‘OK, next to it is a huge chest freezer where King probably kept body parts. But he used that cabinet for a different bunch of mementos. This was in there.’ He held up the bag to show the large cream-colored purse inside. ‘There wasn’t much in it, but one thing it did have was an Oregon driver’s license for one Eleanor Patterson.’
Steelie let out a low whistle.
‘What else is in the purse?’ Jayne asked.
‘Like I said, not much.’ He glanced at it. ‘An empty coin purse, an empty wallet, a powder compact, a tube of lipstick, and a, ah, sanitary pad.’ He hurried on. ‘Looks like he kept belongings from other vics on the shelves.’
He started to go back inside but Jayne said, ‘Wait.’
He stopped and looked at her.
Jayne was thinking about the contents of the purse and about Patterson’s arms as they’d seen them at Critter Central. In her mind’s eye, she could see the sunspots on the forearms. ‘You told us you’d ID’d Patterson from the surgical plate on her arm. How old did they say she was?’
‘Fifty-one when she went missing. Why?’
She ignored his question and held out her hand. ‘Can I see that purse?’
He hesitated.
She turned her hand and flicked her fingers toward her palm. ‘I know it’s evidence but you haven’t sealed the bag yet. I’m gloved.’
He handed over the bag.