Authors: Kelley Armstrong
On our walk across town, I ask about the raised buildings. Anders explains that’s to keep them off the permafrost, so you don’t have icy floors or tilting houses.
Every building also has lots of windows, and I ask Anders about that too, because there’s obviously no place nearby to make glass. He says it’s flown in, which isn’t easy or cheap, especially since they’re all triple-paned for the weather. But they splurge on windows to let in as much natural light as possible and keep the houses from feeling too much like prison cells in the long and dark winters. And they all have shutters to help keep out those winter blasts.
There are plenty of decks and balconies, too, and people are making use of them, sitting outside as they work. I notice Anders isn’t the only one in short sleeves, enjoying what must be a warm fall day to them. It’s only September and sunny, but I’m wearing a jacket, and when that sun drops, I suspect I’ll be unpacking my gloves.
We arrive at the clinic, which looks like every other building. And, like every other one, it seems to be only as big as it needs to be. I’m guessing that’s the heating issue and possibly conservation of overall space and materials.
As we open the door, we hear Hastings.
“—how long you’d last as a real cop, you knuckle-dragging psycho? Real cops don’t get away with this shit, which is why you hide up here, where you can act like the fucking sheriff in a fucking Wild West show.”
I glance at Anders. He’s paused in the reception area, making a hurry-up gesture in Hastings’s direction, waiting for the tirade to end. Just another day in Rockton.
Hastings is still going strong. “You think you can intimidate me, asshole? I’ve been dealing with bullies like you all my life. You might be bigger and stronger, but I’m a helluva lot smarter, and you’re going to regret you ever laid a finger on me.”
Silence. Then Dalton with, “You done?”
“No, I’m not. I’m speaking to the council, and I’m going to make sure you’re disciplined, Dalton.”
“Disciplined?” Dalton says the word slowly, as if testing it out, and I can’t suppress a small smile. “Sure, if that’s how you want to handle this. I thought you said you were going to make me regret it, though.”
“Oh, I’ll make you regret it. Using my brains. Not my fists.”
“By tattling to the council on me? Shit. I was hoping you were going to get creative.”
Anders chuckles and then walks to the doorway.
“Hey, boss,” he says. “Doc ready to talk to us yet?”
“I am,” says a woman’s voice from deeper in the building. “Jerry? Take the afternoon off and cool down. Will? Come on back.”
Hastings storms past me without a sidelong glance. He strides out the door, apparently having forgotten he’s still in his boxers.
I follow Anders into what looks like an examination room. It’s no bigger than the reception area—which held two chairs and the requisite table stacked with old magazines. We follow Dalton into a slightly bigger room, with another exam table and instrument trays. I resist the urge to look at the covered body and turn my attention to the doctor herself.
She’s in her late thirties. Chestnut-brown hair pulled back in a ponytail. Dressed in jeans and a T-shirt, she’s pulling on a lab coat as we walk in.
“I don’t know whether I’m hoping you’re right about Jerry or not, Eric,” she says. “If he’s making rydex, I can fire his whiny ass. But it also means I lose my lab assistant. How sure are you?”
“Ninety percent.”
She swears under her breath. Then she sees me. “Ah, yes, sorry. First thing we lose out here? Basic manners.” She extends a hand. “Beth Lowry. Harvard med school class of ’01. Charged with malpractice in 2010. Guilty.”
“Charged with…?” I say, certain I didn’t hear correctly.
“I’m getting it out of the way.” She flashes a humourless smile. “People come up here and meet the local doctor, the first thing they think is, ‘I hope she’s not fleeing a malpractice suit.’ So I clear the air with an affirmative. I’d been working double shifts for a month after two surgical residents quit. Living on amphetamines. I could point out they were supplied by the chief of staff, but that would suggest I was a wimp who didn’t have the guts to refuse.” She purses her lips. “Not entirely untrue. Point is, a patient died in my care, due to a stupid mistake that was one hundred percent my fault. But two other patients had died that month, under mysterious circumstances, and the administration fudged the records to make it look as if I’d played a greater role in their treatment. I was willing to take the blame for the mistake I made, but not the ones I didn’t. When it started looking like a criminal case on top of the malpractice, I came to Rockton.”
“Okay,” I murmur, because I have no idea what else to say.
“The good doctor believes in laying her cards on the table,” Anders says.
“You’ll find that a lot up here,” Lowry says. “People who just say ‘screw it’ and either embrace total honesty or fabricate their lives from whole cloth.”
“You done confessing?” Dalton asks.
She shoots him a look. “It’s not—”
“Sure as hell is, doc. Now tell us what we’ve got here.”
“A dead man.”
Now that look comes from Dalton. Lowry smiles and turns to me. “I’m guessing you know all about the case, Detective Butler?”
“It’s Casey. And I haven’t been … fully briefed yet.”
“Really, boys? Here’s a hint. If you hire a detective, you want her to detect. That requires talking to her about the cases.”
“She’s smart,” Dalton said. “She’ll pick it up.”
“Oh, I know she’s smart. IQ of 135. University GPA 4.0.”
She rattles off my stats like they’re tattooed on my forehead, which is a little disconcerting. And a little weird.
“I’m on the admittance committee,” she explains. “Plus, I have a photographic memory. Your mom was a chief of pediatric surgery. Dad was a cardiologist, well-enough known that I recognized his name. Medical-field background and a near-genius IQ. So I have to ask, detective, what the hell are you doing in law enforcement?”
I say only, “It’s what I like.”
“Good answer. Bet you got used to saying it to your parents.”
I don’t reply and try to conceal my discomfort with the rather blunt observation.
“Want to know what my parents were?” she says. “Law enforcement. Never could understand why I’d want to go around cutting people up. Especially when my own IQ is barely above a hundred.” The grin returns. “The photographic memory is what got me through med school.”
Anders leans over and mock-whispers, “Don’t mind Beth. She’s a little odd. Everyone here is. Except me, of course.”
“Are we cutting this guy up today, doc?” Dalton says. “Or is tomorrow better for you?”
“I’m making conversation. It’s not often we get new bodies in town.” She looked at the covered corpse. “Dead ones, though? A dime a dozen.”
“She’s kidding,” Anders says.
“Have you told her the homicide stats?” Lowry says. “I interned in Detroit. Rockton’s rate is ten times that.”
“There are extenuating circumstances,” Anders says.
She shakes her head and disappears through a door in the back.
He continues, “And ten times the rate only means we had one homicide in the past year.”
“Better make that two,” she calls back.
Anders looks down at the covered body. “Shit.”
As Dr. Lowry scrubs up, she calls for Anders to fill me in.
“First,” he says. “We weren’t trying to make things tough for you. At least, I wasn’t.” A meaningful glance at Dalton. “It’s just that everything up here is a hundred layers of complicated. Ideally, you’d have come in, and things would have been quiet, and I could have spent a few days showing you the ropes and gradually explaining—”
“No time,” Dalton says.
“Right, so the point is—”
“The point is there’s no time for a gradual explanation,” Dalton says. “Including right now. It’s not going to take Beth a week to scrub in.” He points to the corpse. “Harry Powys. Former doctor. He was caught doing illegal organ transplants, using illegal immigrants who weren’t always dead before he started. And you can wipe that look off your face, detective. We sure as hell didn’t approve a son of a bitch like that. We approved a pharmacist who’d been blackmailed by a prescription drug ring.”
“That was my fault,” Lowry says as she walks in. “I sympathized with the blackmailing, and I wanted someone with pharmacy training.”
“Stop confessing. We all approved him. Including me. And before you think we’re all fucking morons, detective, I’ll point out that the paper trail was solid.”
“You mean they’re fabricating records,” I say. “Those in charge. The council.”
Dalton stops, mouth still open. I seem to have accomplished the impossible: I’ve surprised him.
I continue. “Drugs are being smuggled in, presumably in the drop-offs handled by the council. You have Hastings, a chemist who can manufacture designer drugs. Now you have this guy. It’s possible he faked his background records, but more likely the council did. They’re letting in hardened criminals. Including murderers who’d woo immigrants hoping for a better life and carve them for a profit.”
“It’s not the whole council,” Lowry says.
Dalton gives her a look, as if to say,
And that makes it better?
Then he says to me, “Good work, detective. You’ve earned your rep. Yeah, we believe they green-light criminals who will pay a shitload for the privilege. Unlike with the white-collar guys, none of that extra goes to running the town. The council members pocket it.”
I stare at him.
“Back to work,” Dalton says, as if we’ve just discussed a rather dull town bylaw. He waves at Lowry. She hesitates and glances at me, knowing I want more. I nod for her to go on. I’ll deal with this later, after I’ve processed it.
Lowry peels back the sheet. I see the body of Harry Powys, and my stomach churns. I’ll partially blame what I’ve just learned—about the town and about him. But the body …
I’ve witnessed autopsies. I was always fine with taking that chore from my partners. My parents inured me to gore—via surgery videos—from an early age. That’s because they wanted me to have a strong stomach for a career in medicine, but it inadvertently prepared me to be a cop, too.
One thing you don’t see on a city beat? Predation—the point at which a victim turns into meat. That’s what I’m looking at here. A side of half-devoured meat wearing a human head and the tattered remains of clothing.
I don’t throw up. I’m not even tempted. But I do decide I’ll skip lunch today. Anders looks green, though he stands his ground. And Dalton? He’s right in there, as if this is a biology dissection sample. He’s circling the body, leaning down for a better look, poking at the spots where both legs have been removed. He even grabs a blunt probe from the tray and prods aside some of the mangled flesh.
Lowry watches while he examines the ribs. Then he looks at her. She nods.
“Fuck,” he says.
He shakes his head and drops the probe back on the tray with a clatter.
“You said homicide?” I begin.
She nods. “Looks like massive blood loss.”
“We didn’t see that at the scene,” Anders says.
“Because the body was moved.”
“By predators?” There’s a note of hope in his voice.
Please, please tell me this was a grizzly.
“Possibly,” she says. “There are signs of animal predation.”
I look at her and hope my disbelief isn’t too obvious.
Signs
of animal predation? The body is hamburger.
Half
a hamburger. You don’t need a medical degree to know something has eaten Harry Powys.
“So, massive blood loss,” I say. “Could be a bullet in the femoral artery, but we don’t have the legs to check that. It’s not the neck.” The head is the one part relatively untouched, except for the eyes, which have been pecked out. “Stabbing?”
“Cutting.”
“Cut…” I look toward the missing legs. “You mean he was…”
“Alive, most likely.”
“A saw?” I manage to ask.
“Hatchet.”
“At the hip?” I say. It’s not an easy cut, and I’m struggling to imagine holding a man down for that.
“The upper cut appears to be post-mortem. I’m guessing there was a lower one. Likely the knee.”
“I’ve seen dismembering once. But that was chopping up a corpse for disposal. Why kill him by hacking off his lower legs and
then
remove the thighs?”
I walk to the tray and take the blunt probe Dalton used. I push aside tattered flesh from the ribs. As I do, I mentally process the condition of the flesh. It isn’t tattered. Not the way I’d expect from a beast with teeth and claws. I’m looking for evidence of those teeth and claws on the ribs. Instead, I see knife marks.
Harry Powys hasn’t just been murdered. He’s been butchered. By humans.
When I tell the others what I think happened, Anders stares at me. Then he looks at Lowry and Dalton. After a moment, Dalton says, “Yeah.” Anders looks at the body again. Then he’s in the next room, puking in the sink. It only takes a minute, then he’s storming back into the autopsy room, wiping his face on his sleeve.
“You knew about this,” he says to Dalton.
The sheriff grunts.
“Cannibals?” Anders stalks over and plants himself in front of Dalton. “You’ve got fucking cannibals in the forest and you didn’t see fit to tell me?”
“Did you read the files?”
“What?”
“The files I gave you. The town’s background. What we have out there.”
“I went through them.”
“
Flipped
through them. Didn’t actually read them. Or you’d have known that we’ve found evidence of cannibalism before. Been a few years and, yeah, it’s questionable. But the possibility has always been there, in the files. Not my fault you did a half-assed job reading them.”
“Cannibals, Eric? Fucking cannibals, and you can’t be bothered—”
“—telling people everything that might be out there? Yeah, I’m just lazy that way.”
“I don’t mean—”
“Folks don’t argue when we insist on escorted hikes and hunts because they know ninety percent of the danger out there. The other ten? That’s the fine line between scaring people and shoving them into outright panic.” He waves at the corpse. “This would be panic. So it’s need-to-know, and if you didn’t read the goddamn files, then I guess you don’t need to know too badly.”