Predator (9 page)

Read Predator Online

Authors: Patricia Cornwell

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General

    
“Well, I’m sorry for…”

    
“Please,” Stevie says intensely, strongly. “I know I’m not just another notch on your belt, as they say.”

    
“I’m not into that,” Lucy says, but she is.

    
She knows it, even if she would never describe it like that. She feels bad for Stevie. She feels bad for her aunt, for Johnny, for everyone she has failed.

    
“Some might argue you’re a notch on mine,” Stevie says playfully, seductively, and Lucy doesn’t want to have the feeling again.

    
Stevie is sure of herself again, full of secrets again, amazingly attractive again.

    
Lucy shoves the Hummer into reverse as snow blows in and her face stings from the snow and the wind blowing off the water.

    
Stevie digs in her coat pocket, pulls out a slip of paper, hands it to her through the open window.

    
“My phone number,” she says.

    
The area code is 617, the Boston area. She never told Lucy where she lived. Lucy never asked.

    
“That’s all I wanted to say to you,” Stevie says. “And happy Valentine’s Day.”

    
They look at each other through the open window, the engine rumbling, snow coming down and clinging to Stevie’s black coat. She’s beautiful and Lucy feels what she felt at Lorraine’s. She thought it was gone. She is feeling it.

    
“I’m not like all the rest,” Stevie says, looking into Lucy’s eyes.

    
“You’re not.”

    
“My cell phone number,” Stevie says. “I actually live in Florida. After I left Harvard, I never bothered to change my cell phone number. It doesn’t matter. Free minutes, you know.”

    
“You went to Harvard?”

    
“I usually don’t mention it. It can be rather off-putting.”

    
“Where in Florida?”

    
“Gainesville,” she says. “Happy Valentine’s Day,” she says again. “I hope it turns out to be the most special one you’ve ever had.”

Chapter 11

    
The smart board inside classroom 1A is filled with a colorful photograph of a man’s torso. His shirt is unbuttoned, a large knife plunged into his hairy chest.

    
“Suicide,” one of the students volunteers from his desk.

    
“Here’s another fact. Although you can’t tell from this picture,” Scarpetta says to the sixteen students who make up this session’s Academy class, “he has multiple stab wounds.”

    
“Homicide.” The student quickly changes his answer and everybody laughs.

    
Scarpetta flashes up the next slide, this one of multiple wounds clustered near the fatal one.

    
“They look shallow,” another student says.

    
“What about the angle? They should be angled up if he did it to himself?”

    
“Not necessarily, but here’s a question,” Scarpetta says from the podium in the front of the classroom. “What might his unbuttoned shirt tell you?”

    
Silence.

    
“If you were going to stab yourself, would you do it through your clothing?” she asks. “And, by the way, you’re right.” She directs this to the student who made the comment about shallow stab wounds. “Most of these”—she points them out on the smart board—“barely broke the skin. What we call hesitation marks. ”

    
The students take notes. They are a bright, eager bunch, different ages, different backgrounds, from different areas of the country, two of them from England. Several are detectives who want intensive forensic training in crime-scene investigation. Others are death investigators who want the same thing. Some are college graduates working on master’s degrees in psychology, nuclear biology and microscopy. One is an assistant district attorney who wants more convictions in court.

    
She displays another slide on the smart board, this one an especially gruesome photograph of a man with his intestines spilling out of a gaping incision to his abdomen. Several students groan. One says “ouch.”

    
“Who’s familiar with seppuku?” Scarpetta asks.

    
“Hari-kari,” a voice sounds from the doorway.

    
Dr. Joe Amos, this year’s forensic pathology fellow, walks in as if it is his class. He is tall and gangly, with an unruly shock of black hair, a long, pointed chin and dark, glittering eyes. He reminds Scarpetta of a black bird, a crow.

    
“I don’t mean to interrupt,” he says, then he does it anyway. “This guy”—he nods at the gruesome image on the smart board—“took a big hunting knife, stabbed it into one side of his abdomen and slashed across to the other. That’s called motivation.”

    
“Was it your case, Dr. Amos?” a student asks, this one female and pretty.

    
Dr. Amos moves closer to her, looks very serious and important. “No. What you need to remember, though, is this: The way you can tell suicide versus homicide is if it’s a suicide, the person will slash the knife across his abdomen and then cut upwards, making the classic L shape that you see in hari-kari. Which is not what you see here.”

    
He directs the students’ attention to the smart board.

    
Scarpetta holds in her temper.

    
“Be kind of hard to do that in a homicide,” he adds.

    
“This one’s not L-shaped.”

    
“Precisely,” he says. “Who wants to vote for homicide?”

    
A few students raise their hands.

    
“My vote, too,” he says with confidence.

    
“Dr. Amos? How quickly would he have died?”

    
“You might survive a few minutes. You’re going to bleed out really fast. Dr. Scarpetta, I wonder if I could see you for a minute. I’m sorry to interrupt,” he says to the students.

    
She and Joe walk into the hallway.

    
“What is it?” she asks.

    
“The hell scene we have scheduled for later this afternoon,” he says. “I’d like to spice it up a little.”

    
“This couldn’t wait until after class?”

    
“Well, I thought you could get one of the students to volunteer. They’ll do anything you ask.”

    
She ignores the flattery.

    
“Ask if one of them will help out with this afternoon’s hell scene, but you can’t tell the details in front of everyone.”

    
“And what are the details, exactly?”

    
“I was thinking of Jenny. Maybe you’ll let her skip your three o’clock class so she can help me.” He refers to the pretty student who asked him if the evisceration was his case.

    
Scarpetta has seen them together on more than one occasion. Joe is engaged, but that doesn’t seem to stop him from being quite friendly with attractive female students, no matter how much the Academy discourages it. So far, he hasn’t been caught committing an unredeemable infraction, and, in a way, she wishes he had been. She’d love to get rid of him.

    
“We get her to play the perp,” he explains quietly, excitedly. “She looks so innocent, so sweet. So we take two students at a time, have them work a homicide, the victim shot multiple times while on the toilet. This is in one of the motel rooms, of course, and Jenny comes in acting all broken up, hysterical. The dead guy’s daughter. We’ll see if the students let their guard down.”

    
Scarpetta is silent.

    
“Of course, there’ll be a few cops at the scene. Let’s say they’re looking around, assuming the perp’s fled. Point is, we’ll see if anybody’s smart enough to make sure this pretty young thing isn’t the person who just blew the guy away, her father, while he was taking a dump. And guess what? She is. They let their guard down, she pulls a gun and starts shooting, gets taken out. And voilà. A classic suicide by police.”

    
“You can ask Jenny yourself after class,” Scarpetta says as she tries to figure out why the scenario seems familiar.

    
Joe is obsessed with hell scenes, an innovation of Marino’s, extreme mock crime scenes that are supposed to mirror the real risks and unpleasantries of real death. She sometimes thinks Joe should give up forensic pathology and sell his soul to Hollywood. If he has a soul. The scenario he has just proposed reminds her of something.

    
“Pretty good, huh?” he says. “It could happen in real life.”

    
Then she remembers. It did happen in real life.

    
“We had a case in Virginia like that,” she recalls. “When I was chief.”

    
“Really?” he says, amazed. “Guess there’s nothing new under the sun.”

    
“And by the way, Joe,” she says. “In most cases of seppuku, of hari-kari, the cause of death is cardiac arrest due to sudden cardiac collapse due to a sudden drop in intra-abdominal pressure due to sudden evisceration. Not exsanguination.”

    
“Your case? The one in there?” He indicates the classroom.

    
“Marino’s and mine. From years back. And one other thing,” she adds. “It’s a suicide, not a homicide.”

Chapter 12

    
The Citation X flies south at just under mach one as Lucy uploads files on a virtual private network that is so firewall-protected not even Homeland Security can break in.

    
At least, she believes her information infrastructure is secure. She believes that no hacker, including the government, can monitor the transmissions of classified data generated by the Heterogenous Image Transaction database management system that goes by the acronym HIT. She developed and programmed HIT herself. The government doesn’t know about it, she is sure of it. Few people do, she is sure of it. HIT is proprietary, and she could sell the software easily, but she doesn’t need the money, having made her fortune years ago from other software development, mostly from some of the same search engines she is conducting through cyberspace this minute, looking for any violent deaths that might have occurred in a South Florida business of any description.

    
Other than homicides in the expected convenience and liquor stores, massage parlors and topless clubs, she has found no violent crime, unsolved or otherwise, that might verify what Basil Jenrette told Benton. However, there once was a business called The Christmas Shop. It was located at the intersection of A1A and East Las Olas Boulevard, along a strip of tacky touristy boutiques and cafés and ice-cream joints on the beach. Two years ago, The Christmas Shop was sold to a chain called Beach Bums that specializes in T-shirts, swimwear and souvenirs.

    
It is hard for Joe to believe how many cases Scarpetta has worked in what is a relatively brief career. Forensic pathologists rarely land their first job until they are thirty, assuming their arduous educational track is continuous. Added to her six years of postgraduate medical training were three more for law school. By the time she was thirty-five, she was the chief of the most prominent medical examiner system in the United States. Unlike most chiefs, she wasn’t just an administrator. She did autopsies, thousands of them.

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