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I. Both cerebral hemispheres have been removed, with the cerebellum and lower brain left intact.

I shut the file and took a slow breath, trying to settle my stomach.

"I'm sorry," said Moreland, "but I want you to see that I'm not concealing anything from you."

"The killer was never caught?"

"Unfortunately not."

"And the Navy man theory?"

He blinked and fidgeted with his glasses. "In all the years I've lived here, the islanders have never engaged in serious violence, let alone this. I suppose it could have been one of the cargo boat deckhands, though I've come to know most of them and they're decent chaps. And Dennis did question them. Unlike the sailors."

Remembering Laurent's remark about not having his call to Stanton returned, I said, "He never got access to the base?"

"No, he didn't."

"Why do you still have the file? Is the investigation ongoing?"

"Dennis thought I might come up with something if I studied it for a while. I haven't. Any suggestions?"

"It's not your typical sadistic murder," I said. "No rape- though Creedman said there was."

"You see," he said. "The man has no credibility."

"No positioning of the body, either. Mutilation, but of the head and the back and the legs, not the genitalia or the breasts. Then there's the multiple organ theft- coring out the femur to remove the marrow. It sounds ghoulish- almost ritualistic."

He smiled sourly. "The kind of thing some primitive native would do?"

"I was thinking more of a satanic rite… Were any satanic symbols left behind?"

"None that we found."

"Does the killing bear the mark of some sort of ritual?"

He rubbed his bald head, took a thick, black fountain pen out of his pocket, uncapped it and inspected the nub.

"What do you know about cannibalism, Alex?"

"Mercifully little."

"Conducting the autopsy brought to mind things I'd heard about when I was stationed in Melanesia back in the fifties."

He put the pen back, uncrossed his legs, and rubbed a bony knee.

"The sad truth is, from an historical perspective, eating human flesh isn't a cultural aberration. On the contrary, it's culturally entrenched. And I don't mean just the so-called primitive continents. Old Teuton had its menschenfressers; there's a grotto in Chavaux in France, on the banks of the Meuse, where archaeologists found heaps of hollowed-out human leg and arm bones- your early Gallic gourmets. The ancient Romans and Greeks and Egyptians consumed each other with glee, and certain Caledonian tribes wandered the Scottish countryside for centuries turning shepherds into two-legged supper."

He started to sit back, then grimaced violently.

"Are you all right?" I said.

"Fine, fine." He touched his neck. "A crick- slept the wrong way… Where was I- ah, yes, patterns of anthropophagy. The most common motive, believe it or not, is nutrition-the quest for protein in marginal societies. However, when alternative sources are provided, sometimes the preference endures: "tender as dead man' was once high praise among the old tribes of Fiji. Cannibalism can also be a military tactic or part of a spiritual quest: ingesting one's own ancestors in order to incorporate their benevolent spirits. Or a combination of the two: eating the enemy's brain grants wisdom; his heart, courage; and so on. But despite all this diversity, there are fairly consistent procedural patterns-decapitation, removal of vital organs, shattering the long bones for marrow. As the Bible says, "The blood is the soul."'

He tapped the file in his lap. Looked at me expectantly.

"You think this woman was killed to be eaten?" I said.

"What I'm saying is her wounds were consistent with classic cannibalistic practices. But there are also inconsistencies: her heart, typically considered a delicacy, was left intact. Skulls are frequently taken as trophies and preserved, yet hers was left behind. I suppose both could be explained in terms of time pressure- the killer may have been forced to leave the beach before finishing the job. Or perhaps- and I think this is the best guess- he was just a psychopathic deviant mimicking some ancient rite."

"Or someone who'd watched the wrong movie," I said.

He nodded. "The world we live in…"

Finishing the job.

I pictured the gentle waves of the lagoon, the arc of a long blade cutting the moonlight. "What he did to her took quite a bit of time. What's your estimate?"

"At least an hour. The human femur's a sturdy thing. Can you imagine sitting there working at sawing it free?" He shook his head. "Repulsive."

"Why'd you suggest to Laurent that he not publicize the details?"

"Both as a means of concealing facts only the killer would know and in order to maintain public safety. Tempers were already running high, rumors spreading. Can you imagine what the notion of a cannibal sailor would have done?"

"So the villagers still don't know."

"No one knows, other than you, Dennis, and myself."

"And the murderer."

He winced. "I know I can trust you to keep it to yourself. I showed you the file because I value your opinion."

"Cannibalism's not exactly my area of expertise."

"But you have some understanding of human motivation- after all these years, I find people more and more perplexing. What could have led to this, Alex?"

"God only knows," I said. "You said the villagers aren't violent. What about the sailors? Any previous incidents of serious violence?"

"Brawls, fistfights, nothing worse."

"So Creedman's story about locals storming the southern road was true?"

"Another exaggeration. No one stormed. A few of the younger men, fortified with beer, tried to reach the base to protest. The sentries turned them back and there was some shouting and shoving. But anyone who thinks the Navy would go to the expense of building that blockade two days later to keep out a handful of kids is naive. I spent enough time in the service to know that nothing moves that quickly in the military. The blockade must have been planned for months."

"Why?"

He frowned. "I'm afraid it may very well be the first stage in closing down the base."

"Because it has no strategic value?"

"That's not the point. Aruk was created by colonial powers and the Navy's the current colonizer. To simply pull out is cruel."

"How do the villagers make a living, now?"

"Small jobs and barter. And federal welfare checks." He said it sadly, almost apologetic.

"The checks come on the supply boats?"

He nodded. "I think we both know where that kind of thing leads. I've tried to get the people to develop some independence, but there's very little interest in farming and not enough natural resources for anything commercial. Even before the blockade, basic skills were already dropping, and most of the bright students left the island for high school and never returned. That's why I'm so glad people like Ben and Dennis choose to stay."

"And now the blockade has sped up the decline."

"Yes, but things don't need to be hopeless, son. One good trade project- a factory of some kind- would sustain Aruk. I've been trying to get various businesses to invest here, but when they learn of our transport problems they balk."

"Pam said you've corresponded with Senator Hoffman."

"Yes, I have." He placed the murder file on the couch.

"Is there any history of tribal cannibalism on Aruk?" I said.

"No, because there's no pre-Christian culture of any kind. The first islanders were brought over by the Spanish in the fifteen-hundreds already converted to Catholicism."

"A pre-Christian culture is necessary for cannibalism?"

"From my reading it's a virtual constant. Even the most recent documented cases seem to incorporate Christian and pre-Christian ideas. Are you familiar with the term "cargo cult'?"