Part 3 (1/2)
He wiped his mouth with a napkin and got up; no need to wait for a check that wouldn't come. James examined his pockets-sixty-five cents. He left five of them on the table as a tip for the waitress, or a hedge against completely giving in, the best he could do in the fight for his soul.
Then he followed his partner's broad back out to the car, thinking: There is no you and me. There is no me and anybody. There's just me.
Walter used one of the blue call boxes, placed on every other street corner, to check in. As rookie detectives, they didn't warrant one of the new radio cars. They could have gone back to the station but Walter preferred to stay out and about rather than hang around the smoky, cramped building. So did James.
Fall had come but no scent of dead leaves made it past the gasoline fumes and market stands. A horn blared. James watched a particularly pretty girl step off the curb and cross the street, her skirt brus.h.i.+ng the backs of her calves. Funny how hemlines went back down after the flapper dresses of the last decade. He would have preferred they kept going up. Had the crash sobered the country? Did Americans believe that because of their loose ways in the twenties they had somehow brought the Depression on themselves?
One year ago, a woman-or rather, parts of a woman-had washed up on the beach over in Euclid, a different precinct. Now and then Walter would wonder aloud what kind of pervert she must have been keeping company with to wind up like that, and the victim had never been identified, nor the case solved. If the city's police force didn't need Eliot Ness, why couldn't it solve such a brutal crime? No, the modern age had arrived, and James wanted to ride its crest instead of dragging his feet trying to hold it back.
Then Walter threw himself into the car with more than his customary enthusiasm. ”You are not gonna believe this.”
CHAPTER 5.
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3.
PRESENT DAY.
The bizarre circ.u.mstances of James Miller's death did not automatically confer top billing at the Medical Examiner's Office. He had not been the only citizen found dead during the previous twenty-four hours, so Theresa spent the morning with clothing examinations on two unrelated suicides and then returned to the lab to set up the spectrometer to run the gunshot residue a.n.a.lyses. The lab felt comfortable, for a change, now that the summer heat had faded. Once the snows came the building would always be either too hot or too cold, depending on how the furnace felt like working that day, but for these few weeks they could achieve a happy medium.
The notebook in Miller's pocket had not been cooperative, its pages fused together with decomposition fluid. She had placed it in the fume hood with a little humidity; if that could unstick the pages, then the alternate light source might be able to see the writing underneath the staining.
Theresa swallowed the dregs from her coffee cup, booted up her computer, swiveled to the other counter, and mounted the crumbling s.h.i.+rt fibers on a gla.s.s slide. It took her approximately two seconds to decide the s.h.i.+rt fibers were cotton.
Theresa swiveled back to her microscope to make some notes on the cotton fibers.
”That from your long-lost Torso victim?” The DNA a.n.a.lyst, Don Delgado, hitched one long leg over the corner of her workbench. Dark eyes in an olive-skinned face watched her rotate the lens to a higher magnification.
”I see the word's out.”
”Faster than a defense attorney's motion to suppress,” he said in agreement.” You think it's the guy Ness couldn't catch?”
”I think you're too young to even know who Eliot Ness was.”
He unhitched his leg, his foot slapping the floor with a sharp crack.
”Come off it, Theresa. You're only a few years older than me.”
”Eleven,” she muttered, her head still bent to the microscope.
”You counted?”
”Wait until you hit forty. Numbers take on a new importance.”
”Really.”
”For instance, last week my b.u.t.t fell. Overnight. I went to bed and everything's fine, I wake up and my b.u.t.tocks are resting on the tops of my thighs.”
”Want me to take a look?” he asked.
”If exercise and dieting won't budge them, there's nothing you can do.”
”Can I try anyway?”
She glared.
”That hostage negotiator guy still calling you?”
She glared again. The city manager's daughter had just turned twenty-five. She went on. ”Anyway, Frank and his partner learned, from the city building department, that the building on Pullman went up in 1933. A railroad guy named Arthur Corliss owned the place and rented out the offices, eight separate units, four on each floor. Then Frank and Angela went to the Western Reserve Historical Society to look through phone books. Dusty phone books, he whined at me. The city directories listed the tenants at that address.”
”I didn't know they even had phone books in 1935.”
Theresa made a note of the fibers' original colors-blue and brown-as well as the dried decomposition fluid coating them. ”They came up with a list of unit numbers, but there's no way to know how the suites were numbered. The owner had unit one, but we don't know if that was on the upper floor or the lower floor or where on the lower floor. There was also a tutor named Metetsky, a few architects, a medium. Like a talking-to-the-dead medium. Oh, and a nutritionist named Louis Odessa.”
”They had nutritionists in 1935?”
Theresa examined a slide of the dead man's sock fibers. Wool. ”Americans' obsession with health started in the twenties. Until then no one had heard of a balanced diet or the idea of losing weight instead of gaining it, or that kitchens were supposed to be sanitary. Plus, it was the roaring twenties. Times were good and new ideas were welcomed with open arms as Americans discovered a desire to be sophisticated and cosmopolitan. Until the 1929 crash, of course. Then people went back to eating what they could find.”
”Did you major in history or something?” Don demanded.
”As far as my mother is concerned, the TV set has two channels, the Food Network and the Discovery Channel.”
”So you can't figure out whose apartment he was in. What did the anthropologist say?”
The doctor had driven up from Kent State University after his morning cla.s.ses to consult with Theresa. ”He says the guy was decapitated, neatly, without nicking a bone. Not an easy thing to do, especially if the victim's still alive while you do it.”
”Is that the COD?”
She hoped not. The idea of James Miller being conscious while a man cut his head off gave her an uncomfortable twinge in her heart. Being able to do her job meant not picturing the victim's last moments. ”There could be another cause of death, sure, like poison or suffocation, something that wouldn't leave a mark on bones or clothing. Maybe toxicology can help. They should at least be able to find any heavy metal poisons in the hair, or perhaps the dried-up little prune thing that the stomach has shriveled to.”
”Yuck. You know Leo's already been on the phone with Court TV.”
Now she looked up from the ocular lenses. ”Oh, no.”
”Oh, yes. And Unsolved Mysteries. Just giving them the heads-up. So now I'm giving you the heads-up that where you want to keep your head is down. Leo's going to want results on this one, like, yesterday, so he can go on camera with all this new information.”
”Better him than me.”