Chaos. Patricia Cornwell
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“The first guy there checked her vitals said she’s already stiff,” Marino replies, and the connection is almost perfect suddenly.
“And have you seen this yourself or is it what you’ve been told?” I reply because what he’s saying sounds completely wrong.
“I was told.”
“Were there any attempts at resuscitation?”
“She was obviously dead,” Marino says clear as a bell.
“That’s what you were told.”
“Yeah.”
“What was obvious about it?” I ask.
“For one thing she was stiff. The squad didn’t touch her.”
“Then how did they determine she’s stiff?”
“I don’t know but apparently she is.” Marino again reminds me he hasn’t been to the scene.
“As far as we know, the first responding officer is the only one who’s touched her?” I want to know.
“That’s what I’ve been told.”
“And what about her temp? Warm? Cool?”
“Warm supposedly. But what do you expect when it’s still ninety degrees out? She could be out there all day and not cool off.”
“I’ll have to see when I get there. But the rigor doesn’t make sense,” I tell Marino. “Unless she’s been out there much longer than one might initially assume. And that wouldn’t make sense either. Even in this weather there are still some people out and about, especially near the water. She would have been found long before now, I would think.”
For rigor mortis to be obvious, the victim would have had to be dead for several hours at least, depending on what muscles are noticeably affected and how advanced the postmortem process has gotten. The high temperatures we’ve been having would escalate decomposition, meaning rigor would set in sooner. But it’s extremely unlikely that what Marino’s been told is correct. That’s also not surprising. Patrol officers are often the first responders, and they can’t always know what they’re looking at.
“… Got him waiting with the twins … uh, who found the body …” Marino is saying, and then I lose the rest.
“Okay. You must be in a bad space again.” I’m getting exasperated, but at least it sounds like he has the scene secured.
But I can’t imagine what he meant when he said that Interpol was trying to call him.
“Looks like someone was hiding in the trees, waiting,” he then says, and the connection is much better again. “That’s what I’m guessing. No eyes or ears.”
“Not if it were the middle of the day,” I point out as I continue glancing around me, making sure no one can hear. “And if she’s been dead for hours as her alleged rigor would suggest? There would have been eyes and ears because it would have been broad daylight, possibly early or midafternoon.”
“I agree with you. That part can’t be right.”
“It doesn’t sound it. But I’ll see when I get there,” I repeat. “What else can you tell me?”
Marino begins to describe what he knows about a violent death that may have happened within the past hour not even a mile from here. The woman’s body is on the fitness path along the river. Some of her clothing has been ripped off, her helmet more than twenty feet away, and there’s visible blood. It appears she died from a blow to the head, or that’s what the first responding officer told Marino.
“He says you can see where she was struggling, moving around as her head was banged against the path,” Marino adds, but what I alert on is his mention of a helmet. “Like someone was waiting until she was passing through a thick clump of trees where nobody could see, then grabbed her and she fought like hell.”
“What helmet?” I ask. “The victim was on a bicycle?”
“It appears she was attacked while she was riding,” Marino answers, and I can hear his excitement in his tense tone while I feel a chill along my spine.
I can’t help but think of my encounter earlier today, first at the repertory theater and then on the sidewalk along Quincy Street. Suddenly the young woman with the British accent is in my mind, and I wish she weren’t.
“She was on the path that cuts through the middle of the park,” Marino is explaining, “and it happened in the spot where there’s a small clearing in a stand of trees. I’m thinking it was planned like that to ambush her.”
“And her helmet was off and some twenty feet from the body?” It’s another detail that like her rigor defies logic, and I wonder what color the helmet is.
I hope it’s not a robin’s-egg blue.
“That’s the story,” Marino says, and I know exactly what he sounds like when something big goes down.
Not just big. But explosively bad. The blitz attack he’s describing will create a public panic if it’s not handled properly. I feel slightly sick inside. I remember the young woman on her bicycle looking at me quizzically as Benton handed her the bottle of water she dropped. She put her helmet back on before she rode off, and she didn’t bother fastening the chin strap. I remember seeing it dangling as she rode off across the street, through the Yard, heading in the direction of the Square and the river.
This would have been close to seven P.M., barely an hour ago as the sun was setting. I tell myself if it turns out the victim is the woman I saw, it would be a bizarre twist of fate, an almost unbelievable one. I almost hope the detail about rigor turns out to be accurate. If it is, the victim couldn’t be the young cyclist in Converse sneakers.
But even as I reassure myself, I also know that what Marino said about the rigor can’t be true. Or the reporting officer is confused. Because I don’t think it’s possible—even in this weather—for a dead body on the fitness path inside John F. Kennedy Park not to be discovered for hours. I suspect the death happened recently, and then I envision the young woman’s flushed face and smile again.
What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger. I hear her voice in my head.
“I’ve already talked to your office,” Marino says in my earpiece. “Rusty and Harold are bringing a truck.”
“I need a big one.”
“The MCC,” he says, and the tri-axle thirty-five-foot mobile command center is a fine idea if there’s a place to park it.
“We’re going to need a barricade,” I remind Marino, and I can’t get the woman’s face, her sporty sunglasses and self-assured smile, out of my thoughts.
“That’s what I ordered. Remember who you’re talking to.”
When he headed investigations at the CFC, he was in charge of our fleet. In some ways he knows more about the nuts and bolts of our operations