From Potter's Field (21 page)

Read From Potter's Field Online

Authors: Patricia Cornwell

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Women Sleuths, #Mystery Fiction, #Mystery, #Mystery & Detective, #Suspense, #Thrillers, #Fiction - Espionage, #Thriller, #Women Physicians, #Scarpetta, #Medical, #Kay (Fictitious character), #Virginia, #Forensic pathologists, #Medical examiners (Law), #Medical novels

BOOK: From Potter's Field
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I ran to the doors, slammed them shut and turned dead bolt locks as I fumbled inside my pocketbook for my revolver. Lipsticks and hairbrush clattered to the floor. I thought of the locker room, of places one could hide as I dialed the telephone, my hands trembling. Depending on how warmly he was dressed, he could hide inside the refrigerator, I frantically thought as I envisioned the many gurneys and black body bags on top of them. I hurried to the great steel door and snapped the padlock on the handle while I waited for Marino to return my page.

 

The phone rang in five minutes just as Evans began tentatively knocking on the locked autopsy suite doors.

 

'Hold on,' I called out to him. 'Stay right there.' I picked up the phone.

 

 

'Yo,' Marino said over the line.

 

'Get here right now,' I said, fighting to hold my voice steady as I tightly gripped the gun.

 

'What is it?' He got alarmed.

 

'Hurry!' I said.

 

I hung up and dialed 911. Then I spoke through the door to Evans.

 

'The police are coming,' I said loudly.

 

'The police?' His voice went up.

 

'We've got a terrible problem in here.' My heart would not slow down. 'You go on upstairs and wait in the conference room, is that clear?'

 

'Yes, ma'am. I'm on my way there now.'

 

A Formica counter ran half the length of the wall and I climbed on top of it, positioning myself in such a way that I was sitting near the telephone and could see every door. I held the Smith & Wesson .38 and wished I had my Browning or Marino's Benelli shotgun. I watched the black pouch on the gurney as if it might move.

 

The telephone rang and I jumped. I grabbed the receiver.

 

'Morgue.' My voice trembled.

 

Silence.

 

'Hello?' I asked more strongly.

 

No one spoke.

 

I hung up and got off the counter as anger began pumping through me and quickly turned to rage. It dispelled my fear like sun burning off mist. I unlocked the double doors leading into the corridor and stepped inside the morgue office again. Above the telephone were four strips of Scotch tape and corners of torn paper left when someone had ripped the in-house telephone list off the wall. On that list was the morgue's number and my direct line upstairs.

 

'Dammit!' I exclaimed under my breath. 'Dammit, dammit, dammit!'

 

The buzzer sounded in the bay as I wondered what else had been tampered with or taken. I thought about my office upstairs as I went out and pushed a button on the wall. The great door screeched open. Marino, in uniform, stood on its other side with two patrolmen and a detective. They ran past me to the autopsy suite, holsters unsnapped. I followed them and set my revolver on the counter because I did not think I would need it now.

 

'What the hell's going on?' Marino asked as he looked blankly at the body in its unzipped pouch.

 

The other officers looked on, not seeing anything wrong. Then they looked at me and the revolver I had just set down.

 

'Dr. Scarpetta? What seems to be the problem?' asked the detective, whose name I did not know.

 

I explained about the removal service while they listened with no expression on their faces.

 

'And he came in with what appears to be a note in his pocket. What police investigator would allow that? What police department is working this, for that matter? There's no mention of one,' I said, next pointing out that the head was bagged with a garbage bag tied with a shoelace.

 

'What does the note say?' asked the detective, who wore a belted dark coat, cowboy boots, and a gold Rolex that I was certain was counterfeit.

 

'I haven't touched it,' I said. 'I thought it wise to wait until you got here.'

 

'I think we'd better look,' he said.

 

With gloved hands, I slid the envelope out of the pocket, touching as little of the paper as I could. I was startled to see my name and home address neatly written on the front of it in black fountain ink. The letter also was affixed with a stamp. Carrying it to the counter, I carefully slit it open with a scalpel and unfolded a single sheet of stationery that by now was chillingly familiar. The note read:

 

HO! HO! HO! CAIN

 

'Who's CAIN?' an officer asked as I untied the shoelace and removed the trash bag from the dead man's head.

 

'Oh shit,' the detective said, taking a step back.

 

'Holy Christ,' Marino exclaimed.

 

Sheriff Santa had been shot between the eyes, a nine-millimeter shell stuck in his left ear. The firing pin impression was distinctly Glock. I sat down in a chair and looked around. No one seemed quite sure what to do. This had never happened before. People didn't commit homicides and then deliver their victims to the morgue.

 

'The night-shift security guard is upstairs,' I said, trying to catch my breath.

 

'He was here when this was delivered?' Marino lit a cigarette, eyes darting.

 

'Apparently.'

 

'I'm gonna go talk to him,' said Marino, who was in command, for we were in his precinct. He looked at his officers. 'You guys poke around down here and out in the bay. See what you find. Put something out over the air without tipping off the media. Gault's been here. He may still be in the area.' He glanced at his watch, then looked at me. 'What's the guy's name upstairs?'

 

'Evans.'

 

'You know him?'

 

'Vaguely.'

 

'Come on,' he said.

 

'Is someone going to secure this room?' I looked at the detective and two uniformed men.

 

'I will,' one of them said. 'But you might not want to leave your gun sitting there.'

 

I returned my revolver to my purse, which I carried with me. Marino stabbed the cigarette in an ash can, and we boarded the elevator across the hall. The instant the doors shut his face turned red. He lost his captain's composure.

 

'I'm not believing this!' He looked at me, eyes filled with fury. 'This can't happen, it just can't happen!'

 

Doors opened and he angrily strode down the hall on the floor where I had spent so much of my life.

 

'He should be in the conference room,' I said.

 

We passed my office and I barely glanced inside. I did not have time now to see if Gault had been in there. All he had to do was get on the elevator or climb the stairs, and he could have walked into my office. At three o'clock in the morning, who was going to check?

 

Inside the conference room, Evans sat stiffly in a chair about halfway between the head and foot of the table. Around the room many photographs of former chiefs gazed at me as I sat across from this security guard who had just allowed my workplace to be turned into a crime scene. Evans was an older black man who needed his job. He wore a khaki uniform with brown flaps over the pockets and carried a gun that I wondered if he knew how to use.

 

'Do you know what's going on?' Marino pulled out a chair and asked him.

 

'No, sir. I sure don't.' His eyes were scared.

 

'Someone made a delivery they wasn't supposed to make.' Marino got out his cigarettes again. 'It was while you was on.'

 

Evans frowned. He looked genuinely clueless. 'You mean a body?'

 

'Listen.' I stepped in. 'I know what the SOP is. We all do. You know about the suicide case. We just talked about it on the phone . . .'

 

Evans interrupted, 'Like I said, I let him in.'

 

'What time?' Marino asked.

 

He looked up at the ceiling. 'I guess it would've been around three in the morning. I was next door at the desk where I always sit and this hearse pulls up.'

 

'Pulls up where?' Marino asked.

 

'Behind the building.'

 

'If it was behind the building, how could you see it? The lobby where you sit's in front of the building,' Marino bluntly said.

 

'I didn't see it,' the guard went on. 'But this man walks up and I see him through the glass. I go out to ask what he wants, and he says he has a delivery.'

 

'What about paperwork?' I asked. 'He didn't show you anything?'

 

'He says the police hadn't finished their report and told him to go on. He says they'll bring it by later.'

 

'I see,' I said.

 

'He says his hearse is parked out back,' Evans continued. 'He says a wheel on his stretcher's stuck and asks if he can use one of ours.'

 

'Did you know him?' I asked, containing my anger.

 

He shook his head.

 

'Can you describe him?' I then asked.

 

Evans thought for a minute. 'To tell you the truth, I didn't look close. But it seems like he was light skinned with white hair.'

 

'His hair was white?'

 

'Yes, ma'am. I'm sure of that.'

 

'He was old?'

 

Evans frowned again. 'No, ma'am.'

 

'How was he dressed?'

 

'Seems like he had on a dark suit and tie. You know, the way most funeral home folks dress.'

 

'Fat, thin, tall, short?'

 

Thin. Medium height.'

 

'Then what happened?' Marino said.

 

'Then I told him to pull up to the bay and I'd let him in. I cut through the building like I always do and open the bay door. He come in and there's a stretcher in the hall. So he takes it, gets the body and comes back. He signs him in and all that.' Evans's eyes drifted. 'And he put the body in the fridge and went on.' He wouldn't look at us.

 

I took a deep, quiet breath and Marino blew out smoke.

 

'Mr. Evans,' I said, 1 just want the truth.'

 

He glanced at me.

 

'You've got to tell us what happened when you let him in,' I said. That's all I want. Really.'

 

Evans looked at me and his eyes got bright. 'Dr. Scarpetta, I don't know what's happened, but I can tell it's bad. Please don't be getting mad at me. I don't like it down there at night. I'd be a liar if I said I did. I try to do a good job.'

 

'Just tell the truth.' I measured my words. That's all we want.'

 

'I take care of my mama.' He was about to cry. 'I'm all she's got and she's got terrible heart trouble. I been going over there every day and doing her shopping since my wife passed on. I got a daughter raising three young'uns on her own.'

 

'Mr. Evans, you are not going to lose your job,' I said, even though he deserved to.

 

He briefly met my eyes. Thank you, ma'am. I believe what you're saying. But it's what other people will say that worries me.'

 

'Mr. Evans.' I waited until he held my gaze. 'I'm the only other people you should worry about.'

 

He wiped away a tear. 'I'm sorry about whatever it is I done. If I caused somebody to be hurt, I don't know what I'm gonna do.'

 

'You didn't cause anything,' Marino said. That son of a bitch with white hair did.'

 

Tell us about him,' I said. 'What exactly did he do when you let him in?'

 

'He rolled the body in like I said, and left it parked in the hall in front of the refrigerator. I had to unlock it, you know, and I said he could roll the body on in there. Which he did. Then I took him in the morgue office and showed him what he needed to fill out. I told him he needed to put in for his mileage so he could get reimbursed. But he didn't pay no attention to that.'

 

'Did you escort him back out?' I asked.

 

Evans sighed. 'No, ma'am. I'm not going to lie to you.'

 

'What did you do?' Marino asked.

 

'I left him down there filling out paperwork. I'd locked the fridge back up and wasn't worried about shutting the bay door after him. He didn't pull into the bay 'cause there's one of your vans in there.'

 

I thought for a minute. 'What van?' I asked.

 

'That blue one.'

 

'There's no van in the bay,' Marino said.

 

Evans's face went slack. 'There sure was at three this morning. I saw it sitting right in there when I held open the door so he could roll the body in.'

 

'Wait a minute,' I said. 'What was the man with white hair driving?'

 

'A hearse.'

 

I could tell he did not know that for a fact. 'You saw it,' I said.

 

He exhaled in frustration. 'No, I didn't. He said he had one, and I just assumed it was parked in the back lot near the bay door.'

 

'So when you pushed the button to open the bay door, you didn't actually wait and watch what drove in.'

 

He looked down at the tabletop.

 

'Was there a van parked in the bay when you originally went out to push the button on the wall? Before the body was wheeled in?' I asked.

 

Evans thought for a minute, the expression on his face getting more miserable. 'Damn,' he said, eyes cast down. 'I don't remember. I didn't look. I just opened the door in the hallway, hit the button on the wall and went back inside. I didn't look.' He paused. 'It may be that nothing was in there then.'

 

'So the bay could have been empty at that time.'

 

'Yes, ma'am. I guess it could have been.'

 

'And when you held the door open a few minutes later so the body could be rolled in, you didn't notice a van in the bay?'

 

'That's when I did notice it,' he said. 'I just thought it belonged to your office. It looked like one of your vans. You know, dark blue with no windows except in front.'

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