J. Bertrand - Nothing to Hide
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- Book:Nothing to Hide
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- Publisher:Baker Publishing Group
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- Year:2012
- ISBN:9781441271006
- Rating:4 / 5
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J. Mark Bertrand
Nothing to Hide
PART 1
Per, se l mondo presente disvia, in voi la cagione, in voi si cheggia.
If the present world goes astray,
the cause is in you. In you it is to be sought.
When an ulcer of the soul is to be probed, naturalism can do nothing.
JORIS-KARL HUYSMANSCHAPTER 1
Its the uniforms fault, my fall, for shining his light past my feet to the edge of the gully, flicking the beam back and forth in a skeptical circuit, saying, Careful there, Detective, in a cautious, solicitous tone, the same one hed use if his frail granddaddy reached on tiptoes for a too-high shelf. Hearing the voice, I ignore the distance between the two sides of the gully, ignore the muddy banks and the buzzing mosquitoes and the ripple of ditchwater down the middle. I kick my lead leg out into space, flashlight in one hand and notebook in the other.
Nothing but net, I think, clearing the gap, but then my foot lands just short of the other side. The ground gives a little, goes all slick, and Im aloft again, dipping backward, flailing the air until my body crashes spine-first into the mud.
I glance up into the dark pines, illuminated by moonlight and the Fenix still gripped in my hand. The damp seeps through the back of my shirt, through my pants and up against my hot skin. My gun, torqued by the fall, digs painfully into my flank. I blink a few times, taking inventory, and then the uniforms up above me, shining his light down.
You okay there, Detective March? I told you to watch out.
I roll a little onto one hip, then wrench myself over to the other side of the gully. No pain at first, not until I put weight on my left leg, at which point a knife blade runs up the back of my thigh and buries itself in my lower back.
You all right?
I wince a little, then shake it off. Im fine. Now leave me be and get back over there. I dont need your prints tracking up my scene. My own are bad enough.
He smiles at my irritation. I have to wave my hand to get him to go. Dont mind me, that hand says. I should have known better than to reach for the top shelf.
After surveying the ditch one last time-its just a couple of feet deep and maybe three and a half, four across-I straighten my holster and limp a little deeper into the woods.
Back there behind me, gathered in the parking lot under the mist-haloed streetlights, a row of cruisers cast blue and red filters over the night, along with the obligatory crime scene vans and support vehicles. Beyond the scrim of officialdom, the news crews are arriving, too, setting up their tripods and adjusting their lamps. Theres nothing for them to see but the coming and going of uniforms and plainclothes detectives. The bodys already been screened off by a tent enclosure erected on the free-throw line of the parks covered basketball court.
Whoever dumped our John Doe, he had a sense of humor.
Between the parking lot and the court, a path runs along a sandlot where several tetherball poles stand with severed cords dangling from their top loops, the balls carried off long ago. Big lights hang under the basketball courts corrugated roof, but according to the first officers on the scene, theyre no longer operational. To light things up, we had to bring our own equipment, something were accustomed to from long experience. Past the court, a cluster of lopsided picnic tables, weathered and sunbaked, separate the park from a thick perimeter of pines, and beyond them the poorly lit gully, and beyond that me.
I scratch at a fresh mosquito bite on the back of my neck, then limp through the trees a ways, testing my leg. Theres still a twinge. I wipe my waterlogged shoes against a nearby trunk, trying to scrape off the clumped mud. Then I head in deeper, tracing an imaginary line all the way from the body under the tent to here. The brush gets higher, the ground firmer, until finally I hit a tall hurricane fence half threaded with weeds. Beyond it a curving side street, with Allen Parkway in the distance.
Theres nothing out here. I pass my light over the ground once more to be certain, then hit the treetops with it just in case. Gotta think outside the box. But no ones been back here in a while. Another false lead.
It wont be the last.
Back under the tent, Jerry Lorenz crouches a few feet from the body, rubbing his chin in contemplation. He holds a ballpoint in the other hand, clicking out a preoccupied beat. While the photographer works, our bosses hold a confab in one corner-Captain Hedges, sweating through his summer-weight wool suit, briefs a uniformed assistant chief while my shift commander, Lt. Bascombe, nods in the background. Only the lieutenant seems to notice my arrival, giving me the slightest of nods.
As I approach the body, he comes over.
Where you been? he asks, not waiting for an answer. I assume you feel okay about this? He tilts his head doubtfully in Lorenzs direction.
Compared to the rest of the guys on our shift, hes practically an old-timer.
Even so, I want you on top of this one, March. You feel me?
Im all over it, sir.
He gives my shoulder a pat, then pulls his big hand away, noticing for the first time that Im caked in mud. Before he can ask, I limp over toward Lorenz.
Jerry glances up, eyebrows raised. You find it?
There was nothing out there.
Find what? Bascombe asks.
The hunch that led to my fall had been Jerrys idea in the first place, so I let him explain. The body was dumped, no question about that. If the killing had taken place here, there would have been a lot more blood. But whoever made the drop took the trouble to arrange the corpse, settling it down all neat and tidy like a body in a coffin, except for one arm extending in the direction of the woods, the skinned hand shaped into a fist apart from the index finger.
Like it was pointing, Jerry explains. I thought if we followed the line, we might find. . His voice trails off. You know. The head.
The three of us stare down at the nude, headless corpse of a Caucasian male, several days dead-though the medical examiner has yet to render an opinion on the exact time. The gray-green pallor of the muscled trunk leads to a jagged line over the neck, all crusted and glistening. Decapitation. A fine Latinate word for distancing ourselves from the mortal shock of the sight. The cap being the head, presumably, so the literal sense is something like having your cap removed. A polite-sounding way of describing a brutal-no, a feral act.
We have a whole vocabulary for such offenses. The crushed jumper doesnt plunge to his death from a high window, hes defenestrated. The teenaged abductee isnt raped and butchered, shes simply dismembered. And this particular victim, our headless John Doe, has suffered a further indignity. It wasnt enough to doff his cap. Whoever did this went to the trouble, starting above the wrists, of slicing through the back of the hand and peeling the skin back, revealing the now-black muscle, bone, and cartilage underneath.
What we call de-gloving.
Presumably this was to make identification harder, though once youve seen it, its hard to imagine any motive other than sick delight. Whether it was done pre- or postmortem we dont yet know, but I hope for his sake it was after.
The early evening cyclist who called the body in, not taking a close enough look, had told the emergency dispatcher that the hands were burned. Hed been so shocked by the sight that he failed to mention the bodys lack of a head. Maybe he hadnt even noticed.
Gazing down at the victim, Bascombes voice is hushed. Okay, so look. This goes without saying, but I want you both to put everything else on the back burner. Were working this and this only until I say otherwise, and any resources you need, you bring them to me and Ill make it happen. Nobody drops a body on our back porch and goes on about his business. Thats not how we roll, all right?
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