Read Four Scarpetta Novels Online
Authors: Patricia Cornwell
“You get a description?” Marino asks. “See what he was driving? A truck, I assume, for hauling his boat?”
“He had a hat pulled low, sunglasses. Don't seem he was real big, but I couldn't tell you. And I had no reason to look hard and didn't want him thinking I was looking at him. That's how things get started, you know. My recollection is he had on boots. Long pants and a long-sleeve T-shirt, for sure, and I remember wondering about that because it was a warm, sunny day. I never did see what he was driving because I left before he did and there was a number of trucks and cars in the lot. A busy time. Folks coming in, buying and selling fresh-caught seafood.”
“In your opinion, would someone have to know that area to dispose of a body there?” Scarpetta asks.
“After dark? Lord. I don't know anybody who goes in creeks like that after dark. I wouldn't. But that don't mean it didn't happen. Whoever did it isn't like regular people anyhow. Couldn't be, to do something like that to a little child.”
“Did you notice any disturbance in the grass, the mud, the oyster bed when you found him?” Scarpetta asks.
“No, ma'am. But if somebody put the body there the night before during low tide, then during high tide the water would have smoothed out the mud just like when a wave goes over the sand. He would have been underwater for a while, but stayed put because of all that tall grass he was in. And the oyster bed, you wouldn't want to step on that anyhow. Would step over it or go around it as best you can. Nothing much hurts worse than a cut from an oyster shell. You step in the middle of them and lose your balance, you can get mighty cut up.”
“Maybe that's what cut you up,” Marino says. “You fell in the oyster bed.”
Scarpetta knows cutting injuries made by a blade when she sees them, and says, “Mr. Grant, there are houses set back from the marshland, and long piers, one not far from where you found him. Possible he could have been transported by car, then carried over a pier, let's say, and ended up where he was found?”
“I can't imagine anybody climbing down the ladder of one of them old piers, especially after dark, while carrying a body and a flashlight. And you sure would have to have a powerful flashlight. A man can sink up to his hips in that mud, suck the shoes right off your feet. Would think there would have been muddy footprints on the pier, assuming he climbed back up and left that way after he done it.”
“How do you know there weren't any muddy footprints on the pier?” Marino asks him.
“The man from the funeral home told me so. I was waiting in the parking lot until they brought in the body, and he was there talking to the police.”
“This would be Lucious Meddick again,” Scarpetta says.
Bull nods. “He spent a lot of time talking to me, too, wanting to know what I had to say. I didn't tell him much.”
A knock on the door and Rose walks in, sets a mug of coffee on the table next to Bull, her hands shaking. “Cream and sugar,” she says. “Sorry it took so long. The first pot overflowed, grounds everywhere.”
“Thank you, ma'am.”
“Anybody else need anything?” Rose looks around, takes a deep breath, looks more exhausted and paler than she did earlier.
Scarpetta says. “Why don't you go home? Get some rest.”
“I'll be in my office.”
The door shuts and Bull says, “I'd like to explain my situation, if you don't mind.”
“Go ahead,” Scarpetta says.
“I had me a real job until three weeks ago.” He stares down at his thumbs, slowly twiddles them in his lap. “I'm not gonna lie to you. I got in trouble. You can look at me and tell that much. And I didn't fall in no oyster bed.” He meets Marino's eyes again.
“In trouble for what?” Scarpetta asks.
“Smoking weed and fighting. I never really smoked the weed, but I was going to.”
“Now, ain't that nice,” Marino says. “It just so happens one of the requirements we got in this joint is anybody wants to work here has to smoke weed and be violent and find at least one dead body of somebody murdered. Same requirements for gardeners and handymen at our personal residences.”
Bull says to him, “I know how it sounds. But it's not like that. I was working at the port.”
“Doing what?” Marino asks.
“Called a heavy-lift mechanic helper. That was my job title. Mainly, I did whatever my supervisor told me. Helped take care of equipment, lifting and carrying. Had to be able to talk on the radio and fix things, do whatever. Well, when I was signed off the clock one night, I decided to slip off near some of these old containers you find in the shipyard. The ones I'm talking about aren't used anymore, sort of banged up and off to the side. You drive by on Concord Street and you can see what I mean, right there on the other side of the chain-link fence. It'd been a long day, and to tell you the truth, me and my wife had words that morning so I was in a mood, so I decided to smoke me some weed. It wasn't something I made a habit of, can't even remember the last time I did it. I hadn't lit up yet when all a sudden this man come out of nowhere from near the railroad tracks. He cut me up bad, real bad.”
He pushes up his sleeves, holds out his muscular arms and hands, turning them, displaying more long slashes, pale pink against his dark black skin.
“Did they catch who did it?” Scarpetta asks.
“Don't think they tried real hard. The police accused me of fighting, said I'd probably got into it with the man who sold me the weed. I never said who that was, and I know it wasn't him who cut me. He don't even work at the port. After I got out of the emergency room, I spent a few nights in jail until I went before the judge, and the case got dismissed because there was no suspect and no weed was found, either.”
“Really. So why did they accuse you of possessing marijuana if none was found?” Marino says.
“Because I told the police I was getting ready to smoke weed when it happened. I had rolled me one and was about to light it when the man came after me. Maybe the police just never found it. I don't think they was all that interested, truth is. Or maybe the man who cut me took it, I don't know. I don't go near weed no more. Don't touch a drop of liquor, either. Promised my wife I wouldn't.”
“The port fired you,” Scarpetta assumes.
“Yes, ma'am.”
“What is it you think you could help us with around here, exactly?” she asks.
“Whatever you need. Nothing I'm above doing. The morgue don't scare me. I got no trouble with dead people.”
“Maybe you can leave me your cell phone number or whatever is the best way to get hold of you,” she says.
He pulls a folded piece of paper out of a back pocket, gets up and politely places it on her desk. “Got it all right here, ma'am. Call me anytime.”
“Investigator Marino will show you out. Thank you so much for your help, Mr. Grant.” Scarpetta gets up from her desk and carefully shakes his hand, mindful of his injuries.
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Seventy miles southwest on the resort island of Hilton Head, it is overcast, and a warm wind gusts in from the sea.
Will Rambo walks the dark, empty beach, headed to a destination. He carries a green tackle box and shines a Surefire tactical light wherever he likes, not really needing it to find his way. The light is powerful enough to blind someone, at least for seconds, and that's enough, assuming a situation requires it. Blasts of sand sting his face and click against his tinted glasses. Sand swirls like gauzy dancing girls.
And the sandstorm roared into Al Asad like a tsunami and swallowed the Humvee and him, swallowed the sky, the sun, swallowed everything. Blood spilled through Roger's fingers, and his fingers looked as if they had been painted bright red, and the sand blasted and stuck to his bloody fingers as he tried to tuck his intestines back in. His face was panicky and shocked like nothing Will had ever seen, and he could do nothing about it except to promise his friend he would be all right and help him tuck his intestines back in.
Will hears Roger's shrieks in the gulls wheeling over the beach. Screams of panic and pain.
“Will! Will! Will!”
The screams, piercing screams, and the roar of sand.
“Will! Will! Please help me, Will!”
It was some time after that, after Germany. Will returned stateside to the Air Force base in Charleston, and then to Italy, different parts of Italy where he grew up. He wandered in and out of blackouts. He went to Rome to face his father because it was time to face his father, and it seemed like a dream to sit amid the stenciled palmette design and trompe l'oeil moldings of the dining room of Will's boyhood summer home at the Piazza Navona. He drank red wine with his father, wine as red as blood, and was irritated by the noise of tourists below the open windows, silly tourists no smarter than pigeons, throwing coins into Bernini's Fontana dei Quattro Fiumi and taking photographs, water constantly splashing.
“Making wishes that never come true. Or if they do, too bad for you,” he commented to his father, who didn't understand but kept looking at him as if he were a mutant.
At the table beneath the chandelier, Will could see his face in the Venetian mirror on the far wall. It wasn't true. He looked like Will, not like a mutant, and he watched his mouth move in the mirror as he recounted to his father that Roger wished to be a hero when he returned from Iraq. His wish came true, Will's mouth said. Roger returned home a hero in a cheap coffin in the belly of a C5 cargo plane.
“We didn't have goggles or protective gear or body armor or anything,” Will told his father in Rome, hoping he would understand but knowing he wouldn't.
“Why did you go if all you do is complain?”
“I had to write you to send batteries for our flashlights. I had to write you for tools because every screwdriver broke. The cheap shit they gave us,” Will's mouth said in the mirror. “We had nothing unless it was cheap shit because of goddamn lies, the goddamn lies politicians tell.”
“Then why did you go?”
“I was fucking told to, you foolish man.”
“Don't you dare talk like that! Not in this house, where you will treat me with respect. I didn't choose that fascist war, you did. All you do is complain like a baby. Did you pray over there?”
When the wall of sand slammed into them and Will couldn't see his hand in front of his face, he prayed. When the explosion from the roadside bomb flipped the Humvee on its side and he couldn't see and the wind screamed as if he were inside the engine of a C17, he prayed. When he held Roger, he prayed, and when he could no longer endure Roger's pain, he prayed, and that was the last time he prayed.
“When we pray we are really asking ourselvesânot Godâfor help. We're asking for our own divine intervention,” Will's mouth in the mirror told his father in Rome. “So I don't need to pray to some god on a throne. I'm God's Will because I'm my own Will. I don't need you or God because I'm God's Will.”
“When you lost your toes, did you also lose your mind?” his father said to him in Rome, and it was an ironic thing to say in the dining room where on a gilded console below the mirror was a stone foot of antiquity with all of its toes. But then, Will had seen dismembered feet over there after suicide bombers drove into crowded places, so he supposed to be missing a few toes was better than to be a whole foot missing everything else.
“That's healed now. But what do you know?” he said to his father in Rome. “You never came to see me all those months in Germany or Charleston or the years before. You've never been to Charleston. I've been here in Rome countless times, but never for you, even if you thought otherwise. Except this time, because of what I have to do, a mission, you see. I was allowed to live so I can relieve others of their suffering. Something you would never understand because you're selfish and useless and don't care about anyone except yourself. Look at you. Rich and uncaring and cold.”
Will's body got up from the table, and he watched himself walk to the mirror, to the gilded console beneath it. He picked up the stone foot of antiquity as the fountain below the window splashed and the tourists were noisy.
He carries the tackle box, a camera slung over his shoulder as he walks the beach in Hilton Head to carry out his mission. He sits and opens the tackle box, and takes out a freezer bag full of special sand, then small vials of pale violet glue. With the flashlight, he illuminates what he's doing as he squeezes the glue over the palmar surfaces of his hands. He plunges them one at a time into his bag of sand. He holds up his hands in the wind and the glue dries quickly and he has sandpaper hands. More vials, and he does the same thing with the bottoms of his bare feet, careful to completely cover the pads of his seven toes. He drops the empty vials and what's left of the sand back into his tackle box.
His tinted glasses look around and he turns off the flashlight.
His destination is the
No Trespassing
sign planted in the beach at the end of the long wooden boardwalk that leads to the fenced-in backyard of the villa.
T
he parking lot behind Scarpetta's office.
It was the cause of much contention when she started her practice, and neighbors filed formal objections to almost every request she made. She got her way with the security fence by obscuring it with evergreens and Cherokee roses, but she lost out on the lighting. At night the parking lot is much too dark.
“So far I see no reason not to give him a try. We really could use somebody,” Scarpetta says.
Palmettos flutter and the plants bordering her fence stir as she and Rose walk to their cars.
“I have no one to help me in my garden, for that matter. I can't distrust everybody on the planet,” she adds.
“Don't let Marino push you into something you might regret,” Rose says.
“I do distrust him.”
“You need to sit down with him. I don't mean at the office. Have him over. Cook for him. He doesn't mean to hurt you.”
They have reached Rose's Volvo.
“Your cough is worse,” Scarpetta says. “Why don't you stay home tomorrow.”
“I wish you'd never told him. I'm surprised you told any of us.”
“I believe it was my ring that said something.”
“You shouldn't have explained it,” Rose says.
“It's time Marino faces what he's avoided for as long as I've known him.”
Rose leans against her car as if she is too tired to stand on her own, or maybe her knees are hurting. “Then you should have told him a long time ago. But you didn't, and he held out hope. The fantasy festered. You don't confront people about their feelings, and all it does is make things⦔ She coughs so hard she can't finish her sentence.
“I think you're getting the flu.” Scarpetta presses the back of her hand against Rose's cheek. “You feel warm.”
Rose pulls a tissue out of her bag, dabs her eyes, and sighs. “That man. I can't believe you'd even consider him.” She's back to Bull.
“The practice is growing. I must get a morgue assistant, and I've given up hoping for somebody already trained.”
“I don't think you've tried very hard or have an open mind.” The Volvo is so old, Rose has to unlock the door with the key. The interior light goes on, and her face looks drawn and tired as she slides into the seat and primly arranges her skirt to cover her thighs.
“The most qualified morgue assistants come from funeral homes or hospital morgues,” Scarpetta replies, her hand on top of the window frame. “Since the biggest funeral home business in the area happens to be owned by Henry Hollings, who also happens to use the Medical University of South Carolina for autopsies that are his jurisdiction or sub-contracted to him, what luck do you think I might have if I called him for a recommendation? The last damn thing our local coroner wants is to help me succeed.”
“You've been saying that for two years. And it's based on nothing.”
“He shuns me.”
“Exactly what I was saying about communicating your feelings. Maybe you should talk to him,” Rose says.
“How do I know he's not the one responsible for my office and home addresses suddenly getting mixed up on the Internet?”
“Why would he wait until now to do that? Assuming he did.”
“Timing. My office has been in the news because of this child abuse case. And Beaufort County asked me to take care of it instead of calling Hollings. I'm involved in the Drew Martin investigation and just came back from Rome. Interesting timing for someone to deliberately call the Chamber of Commerce and register my practice, listing my home address as the office address. Even pay the membership fee.”
“Obviously, you had them remove the listing. And there should be a record of who paid the fee.”
“A cashier's check,” Scarpetta says. “All anyone could tell me is the caller was a woman. They removed the listing, thank God, before it ended up all over the Internet.”
“The coroner isn't a woman.”
“That doesn't mean a damn thing. He wouldn't do his dirty work himself.”
“Call him. Ask him point-blank if he's trying to run you out of town. Run all of us out of town, I should say. It seems you have a number of people to talk to. Starting with Marino.” She coughs, and as if on command, the Volvo's interior light goes out.
“He shouldn't have moved here.” Scarpetta stares at the back of her old brick building, small, with one floor and a basement she converted into a morgue. “He loved Florida,” she says, and that reminds her of Dr. Self again.
Rose adjusts the air-conditioning, turns the vents to blow cold air on her face, and takes another deep breath.
“Are you sure you're all right? Let me follow you home,” Scarpetta says.
“Absolutely not.”
“How about we spend some time together tomorrow? I'll cook dinner. Prosciutto and figs and your favorite drunk pork roast. A nice Tuscan wine. I know how much you like my ricotta and coffee crème.”
“Thank you, but I have plans,” Rose says, her voice touched by sadness.
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The dark shape of a water tower on the southern tip of the island, or the toe, as it is called.
Hilton Head is shaped like a shoe, like the shoes Will saw in public places in Iraq. The white stucco villa that belongs to the
No Trespassing
sign is worth at least fifteen million dollars. The electronic blinds are down, and she is probably on the couch in the great room watching another movie on the retractable screen that covers an expanse of glass facing the sea. From Will's perspective, outside looking in, the movie plays backward. He scans the beach, scans the nearby empty houses. The dark, overcast sky hangs low and thick as the wind gusts in fierce fits and starts.
He steps up on the boardwalk and follows it toward the gate that separates the outside world from the backyard as images on the big movie screen flash backward. A man and woman fucking. His pulse quickens as he walks, his sandy footsteps quiet on the weathered boards, actors flashing backward on the movie screen. Fucking inside an elevator. The volume is low. He can barely hear the thudding and moans, those sounds that sound so violent as characters fuck in Hollywood, and then there is the wooden gate, and it is locked. He climbs over it and goes to his usual place at the side of the house.
Through a space between the window and the shade he has watched her on and off for months, watched her pace and cry and pull out her hair. She never sleeps at night, is afraid of the night, afraid of storms. She watches movies all night and into the morning. She watches movies when it rains, and if there's thunder, she turns the volume up very loud, and when the sun is bright, she hides from it. Usually she sleeps on the black leather wraparound couch where she's now stretched out, propped up by leather pillows, a blanket over her. She points the remote control and backs up the DVD, returning to the scene where Glenn Close and Michael Douglas are fucking in the elevator.
The houses on either side are obscured by tall borders of bamboo and trees, nobody home. Empty because the rich owners don't rent them out and aren't here and haven't been here. Families often don't start using their expensive beach homes until after their children are out of school for the year. She wouldn't want other people here, and no neighbors have been here all winter. She wants to be alone and is terrified of being alone. She dreads thunder and rain, dreads clear skies and sunlight, doesn't want to be anywhere anymore under any conditions whatsoever.
That's why I have come.
She backs up the DVD again. He's familiar with her rituals, lying there in the same soiled pink sweatsuit, backing up movies, replaying certain scenes, usually people fucking. Now and then she goes out by the pool for a smoke and to let her pitiful dog out of his crate. She never picks up after him, the grass full of dried shit, and the Mexican yardman who comes every other week doesn't pick up the shit, either. She smokes and stares at the pool while the dog wanders about the yard, sometimes baying his deep, throaty howl, and she calls out to him.
“Good dog,” or more often “Bad dog,” and “Come. Come here right now!” Clapping her hands.
She doesn't pet him, can scarcely bear to look at him. Were it not for the dog, her life would be unbearable. The dog understands none of it. It's unlikely he remembers what happened or understood it at the time. What he knows is the crate in the laundry room where he sleeps and sits up and bays. She thinks nothing of it when he bays as she drinks vodka and takes pills and pulls out her hair, the routine the same day after day after day.
Soon I'll hold you in my arms and carry you back through the inner darkness to the higher realm, and you'll be separated from the physical dimension that's now your hell. You will thank me.
Will keeps up his scan, making sure no one sees him. He watches her get up from the couch and walk drunkenly to the slider to go out for a smoke and, as usual, she forgets the alarm is set. She jumps and swears when it wails and hammers, and she stumbles to the panel to shut it off. The phone rings, and she rakes her fingers through her thinning dark hair, saying something, then she yells and slams down the receiver. Will gets low to the ground behind shrubbery, doesn't move. In minutes the police come, two officers in a Beaufort County sheriff's cruiser. Will watches invisibly as the officers stand on the porch, not bothering to go inside because they know her. She forgot her password again, and the alarm company dispatched the police again.
“Ma'am, it's not a good idea to use your dog's name, anyway.” One of the officers tells her the same thing she's been told before. “You should use something else for your password. A pet's name is one of the first things an intruder tries.”
She slurs. “If I can't remember the damn dog's name, how can I remember something else? All I know is the password's the dog's name. Oh, hell. Buttermilk. There, now I remember it.”
“Yes, ma'am. But I still think you should change it. Like I said, it's not good to use a pet's name, and you never remember it anyway. There must be something you'll remember. We have a fair number of burglaries around here, especially this time of year, when so many of the houses are empty.”
“I can't remember a new one.” She can barely talk. “When it goes off, I can't think.”
“You sure you're all right being alone? Is there anyone we can call?”
“I have no one anymore.”
Eventually, the cops drive off. Will emerges from his safe place and, through a window, watches her reset the alarm. One, two, three, four. The same code, the only one she can remember. He watches her sit back down on the couch, crying again. She pours herself another vodka. The moment is no longer right. He follows the boardwalk back to the beach.