“Yes, you’re very lucky,” Nick agreed.
TWENTY-SIX
WHEN CARINA AND NICK ARRIVED at the coroner’s laboratory, Jim was already there. “You didn’t tell me you were coming in today.”
“I have no life outside work anymore,” he said pointedly.
“You didn’t ever have a life outside work,” Carina retorted.
“Ouch.”
“Children,” Chen said as he walked into the room.
Carina sobered up as Chen’s assistant wheeled the gurney into the autopsy room with the prepped body of Jodi Carmichael. They were in the main room, which Carina appreciated. The smaller room had a lower ceiling and was a third the size, putting Carina closer to the proceedings. Here, she could stand back and look at other things-cabinets, tools, lights-if she couldn’t stomach the autopsy. And three in one week? It had to be a record for her.
Dillon walked in and Chen said warmly, “To what do I owe this pleasure?”
“If you don’t mind I’d like to observe.”
“By all means, Dr. Kincaid. Glad to have you.”
“I need to leave early, but I wanted to get a sense of the killer’s mind-set. The body looks abused.”
“Yes. However, most of it occurred postmortem. She had been dead several hours.”
Dillon frowned. “She was sexually assaulted, correct?”
He nodded. “After Dr. Gage told me she had been drugged, I took the liberty of running a tox screen last night. A near-lethal dose of Rohypnol was in her system.”
Rohypnol, the so-called date-rape drug, was too often deadly. Some jerks gave it to their girlfriends thinking they’d become more compliant in bed. Others drugged their dates in order to get past first base. But sexual predators used it to knock out their victims. The women didn’t pass out immediately. Some became more susceptible to suggestions, others fell asleep, others acted like themselves but didn’t remember anything while on the drug.
And many died.
“Did the drugs kill her?” Carina asked.
“I don’t know yet, Detective,” Chen said. “From the levels in her system, I don’t think so, but I’ll know more when I inspect her organs. It may have been a contributing cause.”
He continued. “I have the victim’s medical records, which indicate that she had a history of asthma and was allergic to latex.” Chen continued his visual inspection of the body, documenting each external wound. While he did that, Nick said to Dillon, “No plastic wrap. Why?”
“She died on him. He didn’t have time.”
“There was no postmortem sexual assault,” Jim interjected. “He didn’t need the plastic to keep evidence off her body.”
“He gets his thrill from killing her during the rape,” Dillon said. “After she’s dead he doesn’t want to have anything to do with her. Gets rid of the body as quickly as possible.”
“Like a snuff film,” Nick said, and everyone grew silent.
“Yes,” Dillon said finally. “The suspect Scout’s profile says he’s studying computer science and photography.”
“I’ll pull Vice into the equation to watch and see if any films or photographs of the murders start showing up.”
“He’s not going to want to share,” Nick said.
“Why?” Dillon asked, curious.
“It’s just my gut feeling. I don’t have anything to base it on. I just think these are his women, he wants to keep them for himself. He might have pictures, or maybe even filmed the murder, but it will be for his eyes only. For his pleasure, no one else’s.”
Chen cleared his throat to indicate that he was getting started, then he cut open her chest.
Carina never felt the need to “be strong” and watch something that thoroughly disturbed her, so she turned her head and took a deep breath. The smell she could handle. She’d smelled far worse-her second homicide was a week-dead decomposing prostitute in a Dumpster in the heart of the Gaslight area. In general she could handle dead bodies in various states of murder.
But watching an autopsy seemed too clinical. Scientists dispassionately documenting injuries, weighing organs, as if the human body was a thing. It made her feel vulnerable, mortal. She didn’t want to think about what would happen to her own body after she died.
Jim walked over to the table. “Just what I suspected.”
“What?” Carina couldn’t help but ask, turning her attention back to the autopsy.
“Asphyxiation,” Jim said, “from anaphylactic shock.”
“Why didn’t Angie die the same way?”
“She wasn’t allergic to latex,” Jim explained. “In this victim, her airways became clogged with hives. With no medication to reduce the swelling, she suffocated.”
Carina pictured Jodi tied to a bed, struggling for her last breath, alone and scared. Her stomach flipped and she turned away from the dead girl’s corpse.
Nick touched her lightly on the small of her back, cleared his throat. “He came in and found her dead. Became enraged and punched her.”
“Repeatedly,” Chen said. “Two broken ribs, the nose, severe postmortem damage.”
“Her abdomen looks like pulp,” Jim said, disgusted. “She’d been dead about four to five hours before he found her.”
“Did he use his bare hands?” Carina asked.
“Absolutely. He may have had on gloves of some sort, but I don’t see any latex or fiber residue under the microscope. And if he’d used a hammer or another object the wounds would have a smaller center. These are fist-size impressions.”
“But if he didn’t use latex gloves, how could she have died from a latex allergy?”
“Some glues have latex in them. I’m going to check for latex on the glue samples when I get back to the lab.”
“His hands would be damaged, wouldn’t you say?” Carina asked. She couldn’t rid her mind of the image of Jodi fighting for breath as her body swelled up.
“Very likely. Bruised. Possibly split, especially on the knuckles.”
“He’s like a kid with a bug jar,” Nick said.
“Excuse me?” Jim looked over his shoulder. Nick had even attracted Chen’s attention.
“Essentially, he has a woman in a jar. She’s restrained, trapped. He can watch her if he wants. Prod her. Attack her. He touches her to see how she reacts. Rapes her for the sensation, then uses convenient items so he can watch. Like pulling the wings off a fly. It can’t go anywhere, can’t escape. When the bug finally dies, sometimes a kid gets mad. How dare the bug die on him. Stomps on it. Shows it how powerful he really is, though he really feels small and helpless because he couldn’t keep the bug alive long enough to do everything he wanted.”
No one said anything for a long minute.
“Sheriff, I think you’re right,” Dillon said. “She died before he wanted her dead. She shattered his fantasy. The ultimate high for him is sex and death.”
Dillon looked at everyone in the room. “He’s going to act again, and soon. Jodi cheated him and he’s angry. But because he’s angry, he has a greater chance of slipping up.”
Carina prayed they caught a break before another woman died.
His skin prickled, as if a spider were crawling on him. He batted it away, and it was replaced by another phantom spider.
It was Jodi’s fault. She’d ruined everything. She wasn’t supposed to just die like that. She wasn’t playing her part. In the back of his mind he kept thinking that somehow he’d forgotten something, that maybe he’d made a mistake. So he kept replaying everything in his mind. From going in through her window-he’d worn gloves-to putting her in the trunk-no one had seen him-to cleaning her body. He’d covered all bases.
So why did he feel so odd?
The high he’d had after Becca plummeted, and he didn’t know what to do. He watched his special tapes over and over. They didn’t help.
He watched the slide shows he’d made of Angie and Becca. That was a little better, but then the show he had of Jodi reminded him of his failure.