The half inch of suture had edges that were smooth and unfused. The vascular grooves on all endocranial surfaces were shallow. Age: young adult.
The curvature on the frontal suggested a brow ridge of moderate size. Which meant sex could be male or female.
There was no marker to even hint at ancestry.
“Now what?” Ramsey asked when I’d told him.
“Now you deliver the swabs to the lab.” I stripped off my mask and gloves. “And we wait.”
“How long?”
“This sucker’s big.” Gesturing at the hardening cast. “Probably overkill, but I want to give it a couple of days.”
“Sorry I’ll miss the unveiling.”
“Could be a bust.”
“Isn’t that the goal?”
Not bad, Deputy. I’d missed my own pun.
Back in my office, Ramsey collected his jacket, slipped an envelope from one pocket and handed it to me.
“One’s a bit outdated, the other was taken a few months before Cora ‘ran off.’ ” Hooking air quotes around the final two words. “But I think I got the views you wanted—one from the side, one from the front. Mama and Daddy didn’t offer a wide range of choices.”
“Then these will have to do.”
“I’m going to make some inquiries, see what I can dig up regarding the nanny job.”
“Did you ask the Teagues?”
“John felt revealing the name of Cora’s employer would be a breach of confidentiality.”
“That’s bizarre.”
“It is indeed.”
When Ramsey had gone, I checked the contents of the envelope. Two color prints.
I slid the photos onto my blotter and arranged them side by side. One showed a girl of twelve or thirteen with pale skin, freckles, and long blond braids. John Teague stood behind her, hand on one of her shoulders. A second man stood facing her, thumb on her forehead. He was wearing red robes and a miter—the ceremonial garb and headgear of a Catholic bishop. “Confirmation. March 19, 2006” was handwritten on back.
The other picture had been taken outside. A young woman was seated at a picnic table, arms crossed, huge green eyes grimly fixed on the lens. Her hair was drawn tightly back from her face. Long wavy strands flowed forward over her shoulders, sparking in the sun like liquid gold.
Like the filaments I’d swabbed from the concrete?
I sat staring at the time-gap versions of Cora Teague, doubts winging in my head like startled moths. Was she dead? Would I reveal her in 3-D death mask form? Would the cast even work?
The landline shrilled into my thoughts.
“I’m in autopsy room one.” Larabee sounded nuclear-level amped. “Get down here. Fast.”
Larabee was on the far side of a gurney, studying a corpse still packaged in its going-for-a-ride bag. The zipper was closed, but the contouring of the lumps told me the occupant was a good-size adult.
The man on my side of the gurney had his back to me. The silhouette looked familiar—tall, with shoulders too narrow for the waist and bum. Yet it was wrong, somehow.
As I paused, palm still pressed to the door, the man turned. And confirmed what I’d hoped had been a case of mistaken identity.
Eyeing me coolly was Erskine “Skinny” Slidell, CMPD homicide squad. And a magnum-force legend in his own narrow mind.
Slidell graced me with a nod.
“Detective.” Discreetly assessing what was off about Slidell’s appearance.
His face was clammy and gray. Autopsies did that to him. Otherwise, he looked better than I’d seen him in years. Perhaps ever. I guessed he’d lost fifteen to twenty pounds. He was rocking a suede jacket, shirt with no tie, and khakis combo, and his hair was buzz-cut, Bruce Willis style.
“Come here.” Larabee gestured me to him with an agitated curling of gloved fingers.
“Doc, this don’t—”
“Bear with me, Detective.” Larabee was clearly not up for attitude from Slidell.
As I rounded the gurney, Larabee picked up a clipboard holding an intake file.
“Sixty-one-year-old white female. Height: seventy-one and a half inches. Weight: one hundred and eighty-two pounds. Spotted by a neighbor at eight-oh-seven this morning wedged under a dock in the lower pond at the RibbonWalk Nature Preserve.”
“Where’s that?” Charlotte is lousy with parks. I hadn’t heard of this one.
“Derita neighborhood, off Nevin Road. It’s got a couple of ponds, a wetland bog, trails.”
Across the gurney, Slidell cleared his throat. Loudly.
Larabee ignored the not so subtle prod. “The victim lived a few blocks away. According to the neighbor”—checking one of the sheets clipped to his board—“Franco Saltieri, she liked to walk there.”
“Any history of depression?”
Larabee shrugged. Who knows?
Realizing the significance of Slidell’s presence. “You’re thinking murder?”
“Unless Granny opted for a midnight dip.”
Larabee did not acknowledge Skinny’s attempt at humor. “There’s an awful lot of facial trauma.”
“How long was she in the water?”
“Saltieri says he saw her around seven Saturday morning. She must have died sometime after that.”
Given the cool weather and the short period of submergence, the body would have undergone little postmortem change. I wondered why I’d been summoned. Was about to ask when Larabee flipped back to the cover page and read off a name.
“Hazel Lee Cunningham Strike.”
The room receded around me.
“Isn’t Hazel Strike the woman who came here to see you?” I sensed Larabee’s eyes on my face, narrow and watchful. “The websleuth?”
I could only nod.
“That’s what I thought.”
I heard a clipboard clatter against stainless steel. The buzzy rip of a zipper. The whistle of air in Slidell’s nose.
“Is this Strike?”
I took a second to clear my head. Deep breath. Then I looked down.
The garish hair lay wet against the right side of Hazel Strike’s face. The skin was morgue white, shadowed where the underlying bone had caved in—the cheek, the upper rim of the orbit. The lips hung slack, revealing bruising and broken teeth.
“What’s he mean, she came to see you?” Slidell demanded from the far side of the gurney.
“He means she came to see me,” I said, not looking up.
At that moment Hawkins pushed through the door. Larabee gestured him in, then refocused on Slidell and me. “How about you two take this elsewhere so we can get on with the autopsy?”
I cast one last glance at Hazel Strike’s face. Recalled the messages on my phone. Urgent. Pleading that I call.
Mind already packing for a guilt trip, I brushed past Slidell and headed out into the corridor. Skinny hesitated a beat, then followed.
In my office, I took up position behind my desk. Slidell sat facing me, shoulders and jaw tight, already in confrontational mode.
“When’d she come here?”
“A week ago.”
“Why?”
Words and images were spinning wheelies in my mind. I tried to force them into alignment. To arrange them into some sort of meaningful pattern. Slidell granted me at least thirty seconds of patience.
“We gonna do this today, Doc?”
“Fine.”
I relayed what I hoped was an accurate chronology. Strike’s hobby as a websleuth and her visit to the MCME. Cora Teague. My trips to Burke County, the Lost Cove Cliffs, and Wiseman’s View, the three overlooks for Brown Mountain. The printless fingertips, the fragmented skeletal remains, the Devil’s Tail trail concrete with its contents now hardening in autopsy room four. Deputy Zeb Ramsey. John and Fatima Teague and the Church of Jesus Lord Holiness. The suspicious death of their youngest, Eli, at age twelve. The insistent calls from Hazel Strike the previous Saturday.
Slidell listened, taking not one single note. When I’d finished he looked at me as though I’d said Elvis was tone-deaf.