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"Four months ago. We're still waiting for a cold hit."
"But there's no DNA in this case?"
"Not on the body. I told Chapman to go back and swab the doorknobs and some of
the surfaces the killer may have touched."
The technology of this science had become so sophisticated that a serologist
could develop a genetic fingerprint from the mere sloughing off of skin cells
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onto most objects that had been handled during the crime, called touch
evidence.
"But you don't think this is your senior citizen serial killer?"
"Too many distinctions, Alex. The pillow was undoubtedly the weapon. That's
certainly a similarity. We'll work it up for amylase," Kirschner said,
referring to an enzyme found in saliva that might tell us whether the fabric
had been held over Ransome's mouth to kill her.
"You're bothered by the fact there's no sexual assault, I guess," Mercer said.
"What if he was interrupted? What if he meant to do that, but got distracted
because, unlike the others, there really were so many possessions here that he
ransacked the place. Maybe he thought someone heard noise and was coming to
check on Queenie."
Kirschner removed a pipe from his rear pants pocket and raised it to his
mouth.
He tamped tobacco in, lit the match, and filled the tiny room with the welcome
aroma of a sweet, smooth blend that temporarily masked the smell of death.
"Possible, of course," he said. "But all the other crime scenes were in such
perfect order. Chapman left these here for you two to study. Look again. Take
your time."
The eight-by-ten color crime scene shots of the Ransome apartment had been
developed immediately and hand-delivered to Kirschner.
"You've really got juice," I said. "I'd be lucky to get these in a week."
"Don't be jealous. It's not a full set. I just get a few body shots to get me
started."
There was McQueen Ransome, lying on her back on the bed. Her housecoat was
pulled up to expose her genitals, with panties and what appeared to be thick
support hose rolled up in a ball beside her. Her head was turned to the side,
faded hazel eyes fixed in a vacant gaze.
"Somebody sure wants to make the point about the sexual aspect of this,"
Mercer said. "Nothing like this in the Park Plaza cases?"
Kirschner shook his head. "No. Unless your killer read about the exhumations
in the tabloids and decided to change his signature."
Queenie's legs were spread apart, twisted slightly, with one knee bent beneath
the other in what seemed to be almost an obscene pose.
Next to the bed was a metal walker, and I remembered Mike telling me the woman
had suffered a stroke several years ago.
I strained to study her head and hands more closely.
"Are those scratches on her face?"
"Yes, Alex. By her own hand. Typical in asphyxia. She was trying to clear the
airways of the obstruction, so she could breathe. Free her mouth from whatever
was covering it. Probably the pillow."
"And the killer?" I asked.
"Several of her nails are broken. We might get lucky and come up with
something other than her own blood in the cuttings. He might have some marks
on his face or hands, if she had the strength to swipe at him."
The six photographs Kirschner had were all of Queenie's body, taken from every
position in the room. I thought of the indignity of this kind of death, in
which dozens of strangers had entered her home to catalog and ferret through
her meager accumulation of possessions. A young medical examiner on duty and
his assistant, cops in uniform to secure the scene, a crew from the Crime
Scene Unit to take photographs and dust for fingerprints, and a team of
detectives who would try to find a motive for this murder-and a killer.
I thought ahead to the scores more who would pore over these photographs in
the months to come. Colleagues of mine would study them as they worked up the
case for trial, forensic consultants would enlarge them to look again for any
kind of trace material or significant detail, and psychologists would struggle
with them as they searched for an understanding of the murderer's mind.
Eventually, when Chapman and his team caught the man-and I needed, now, to
believe that they would-a defense attorney would be entitled to a complete set
of pictures, too, and even the killer himself could revisit the scene of his
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pathetic triumph in the privacy of his jail cell.
"The person who did this wants you to think 'sadistic sex murderer,' Alex,"
Kirschner said to me. "I suggest you broaden the search. Some other motive."
Mercer and I had handled cases in which the appearance of a rape had been
staged. Once we'd recognized that fact we'd had to find another reason-the
real reason-for the crime to have occurred. Here was an elderly woman,
partially disabled, living on welfare in a Harlem tenement. Her death was not
a matter of academic rivalry, professional jealousy, domestic rage, or a fancy
jewel heist gone violent.
"It'll be interesting to see what the rest of the photos show," said Mercer.
"Everything within sight has been turned topsy-turvy."
On the side of the bed was a nightstand. The shallow bowl with the victim's
dental plate had been overturned. Both shelves had been emptied and their
contents spilled on the floor. The edge of the dresser was in view, and each
of the three drawers had been dumped out and spread across the floor. [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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