Изменить стиль страницы

Bending at the waist, Mary pulled paper slippers over her shoes. "I've met some of those in my life. I think I've even been one upon occasion."

Gillian laughed, surprised that Mary had made a joke.

"Does he know we're coming?" Anthony asked.

"Sure, but he didn't invite us. Cough drop?" She extended an open tin.

Mary took a lozenge and popped it in her mouth.

Anthony shook his head. "I can't handle any of that eucalyptus stuff anymore. I associate it with dead bodies."

"Luckily I haven't reached that point," Gillian said.

After donning the bio safety hoods, they moved from the preparation room to the autopsy suite, their paper suits rustling.

The Hennepin County Morgue had four exam tables, each separated by a curtain. A special room to one side was reserved for the badly decomposed. Gillian had been in there only once-and had no desire to go again. When she was done she had to throw out her clothes, and a full bottle of lemon shampoo hadn't been enough to get the stink from her hair.

Several people were already present-two detectives Gillian recognized from Homicide, along with one of the crime scene investigators, and the two policemen who'd answered the initial call. Mary and Anthony slipped into a space near the foot of the body. Gillian took a position directly opposite the infamous Dr. Phillips, the stainless steel exam table between them.

"I don't know why you can't just read my autopsy report," Phillips grumbled. "Those Tyveks aren't cheap."

Gillian looked at Mary. What'd I tell you?

The table was equipped with one of the newer down vents rather than an exhaust fan above the work area. Next to the doctor were trays containing some of the tools of his trade: scalpels, saws, needles, tweezers, mallets, and shears. The exam hadn't started, yet the overpowering smell of formalin filled the room. The cough drop didn't help. Instead, the synergy of the two odors created something entirely new and repulsive, and Gillian decided Anthony might have a point about eucalyptus.

"It used to be nobody wanted to see an autopsy," Dr. Phillips remarked. "Now so many people want in on it that we've had cases where we had to hold a lottery."

The nude body was removed from the sealed body bag and placed on the tunneled exam table, a case number attached to her shoulder: ME-02-652. Her skin had a waxy, transparent quality, her hair matted, her lips almost black. In death, there was something regai and beautiful about her. And, as with all the dead, something secretive and mysterious.

The exam began with the doctor recording vital statistics-name, race, social security number, date of birth, medical history, and case number-into the tiny microphone clipped to his scrub suit. "This is the body of a well-developed, well-nourished white female," Dr.Phillips stated. "She is five feet seven inches tall, weighing approximately one hundred and thirty pounds."

The body had already been identified by the family as Charlotte Henning. Now it was gone over from head to toe. Case numbers were also affixed to various areas of the body as they were examined. Photos were taken with a digital and a 35-millimeter camera.

"I like to have negatives for the file," Dr. Phillips said.

The epidermis was examined.

"Some slight tissue damage on both sides of the mouth," he said. He pulled the swing-arm light closer. With a scalpel, he lightly scraped the abrasion. "I'm removing some foreign material from the right side of the face, below the cheekbone. Slide." His assistant stepped forward, and Dr. Phillips transferred the possible evidence from the scalpel to the slide.

He continued with the preliminary pass, examining the body from front to back, the diener helping at the appropriate times. More photos were taken. He made note of any birthmarks; those were also photographed.

"Abrasions on both wrists." Photos of the wrists were taken.

Scrapings were lifted from beneath the fingernails. Then, using the scalpel, he cut around the wrist and slipped the withered, unprintable skin of the entire hand away until it lay like a crumpled latex glove in his palm. As in most cases where the body had been submerged in water, the skin slipped free easily.

"Who has small hands?" he asked, eyeing the audience.

One detective and a cop took a step back. Gillian offered her gloved hand, which he accepted. He slipped the peeled skin over hers, smoothing the fingertips so a decent print could now be retrieved. His assistant produced the metal container of ink. Wearing the skin, Gillian inked all of the fingers and thumbs and then pressed the prints onto cards. Even when family or friends had visually identified a body, prints were always taken.

"You earned the right to be here," the pathologist said, helping her slip the skin from her hand.

Gillian had felt Mary's eyes on her the entire time. Now she looked up to see that her sister appeared impressed by her coolness.

The ME's examination continued. "Broken forearm, two broken ankles."

"Postmortem?" Mary asked.

"Most likely. The injuries are consistent with a body that's been found in water. The strong current would have banged it against rocks and outcroppings. I'd expect broken bones and lacerations such as these."

"Anything that looks like an inflicted wound?" The question came from Anthony.

"No."

With a syringe, Dr. Phillips drew blood by puncturing the heart; then he filled several tubes.

Now it was time for the internal exam.

Gillian braced herself for the initial cut.

He made a long, deep, Y-shaped incision, beginning at the shoulders and ending at the pubic bone. With shears, he snipped through the rib cartilage and removed the rib cage. More blood was collected for a microorganism culture.

The dissecting continued inside the neck. He removed the trachea and esophagus. "There's your probable cause of death," Dr. Phillips said, placing them in a stainless steel tray. Asphyxiation." With a scalpel, he poked around at the trachea, separating some small pieces of foreign matter. "Regurgitated food particles." He moved to the head, examining the eyelids. "Petechial hemorrhaging. A classic sign of asphyxiation."

"She choked on her own vomit?" Mary asked.

Using his foot, the doctor clicked off the tape recorder. "It would appear so."

He moved sback to the face, touching the skin damage he'd pointed out earlier. "I would guess that she was bound and gagged, her mouth sealed with tape. During that time, she got sick and threw up. No place for the vomit to go except, of course, out the nose. The nostrils immediately became plugged, and that was that. Asphyxiation. Since the exam isn't finished, this information is off the record, and nothing is a hundred percent until I've sewn up the body, gone over the slides, and gotten the reports back from the labs."

He turned the recorder back on, then continued with the dissection, proceeding to the carotid artery and jugular veins. Half an hour later, he'd moved down to the abdomen.

"Sulfhemoglobin," Phillips noted, pointing to the green discoloration in the abdominal cavity.

A heavy, cloying, familiar odor filled the room, a smell that was as unforgettable as it was indescribable. Maybe if you put a combination of rancid gym shorts, dirty diapers, and rotten food outside in a hot, sealed car for a couple of days, then you might come close to recreating the stench. One thing for sure, it was a smell nobody ever forgot.

"What's this?"

From the vaginal cavity, Phillips pulled out a small sandwich bag with a plastic zipper. He unzipped the bag. Using a pair of tweezers, he extracted an object and deposited it on a tray. Everybody leaned closer. On the* small stainless steel tray was a single red rose petal.

"That's a first for me," Phillips said.

"Weird as hell," said one of the police officers.