“Once will be enough for most of them,” I commented abstractedly. “Wait until they try changing lanes or finding a parking place.”
But he could have just sent a memo through the electronic mail if he’d had a question about DNA tests or anything else. That’s what Amburgey usually did. In fact, that’s what he’d always done in the past.
“Huh. That’s the least of it. Our man Bo was born and bred in Tennessee and never goes anywhere without his piece.”
“He went to New York without his piece, I hope.” My mouth was talking to her. The rest of me was elsewhere.
“Huh,” she said again. “His captain told him to, told him about the gun laws up there in Yankeeville. Bo was smiling when he came up to get the samples, smiling and patting what I presume was a shoulder holster under his jacket. He’s got one of these John Wayne revolvers with a six-inch barrel. These guys and their guns. It’s so Freudian it’s boring . . .”
The back of my brain was recalling news accounts of virtual children who had broken into the computers of major corporations and banks.
Beneath the telephone on my desk at home was a modem enabling me to dial up the computer here. It was off-limits, strictly verboten. Lucy understood the seriousness of her ever attempting to access the OCME data. Everything else she was welcome to do, despite my inward resistance, the strong sense of territory that comes from living alone.
I recalled the evening paper Lucy found hidden under the sofa cushion. I recalled the expression on her face as she questioned me about the murder of Lori Petersen, and then the list of my staff’s office and home telephone numbers—including Margaret’s extension—tacked to the cork bulletin board above my home desk.
I realized Betty hadn’t said anything for quite a long time. She was staring strangely at me.
“Are you all right, Kay?”
“I’m sorry,” I said again, this time with a sigh.
Silent for a moment, she spoke sympathetically. “No suspects yet. It’s eating at me, too.”
“I suppose it’s hard to think of anything else.” Even though I’d hardly given the subject a thought in the last hour or so, and I should be giving it my full attention, I silently chastised myself.
“Well, I hate to tell you, but DNA’s not worth a tinker’s damn unless they catch somebody.”
“Not until we reach the enlightened age where genetic prints are stored in a central data base like fingerprint records,” I muttered.
“Will never happen as long as the ACLU has a thing to say about it.”
Didn’t anybody have anything positive to offer today? A headache was beginning to work its way up from the base of my skull.
“It’s weird.” She was dripping naphthyl acid phosphate on small circles of white filter paper. “You would think somebody somewhere has seen this guy. He’s not invisible. He doesn’t just beam into the women’s houses, and he’s got to have seen them at some point in the past to have picked them and followed them home. If he’s hanging out in parks or malls or the likes, someone should have noticed him, seems to me.”
“If anybody’s seen anything, we don’t know about it. It isn’t that people aren’t calling,” I added. “Apparently the Crime Watch hot lines are ringing off the hook morning, noon and night. But so far, based on what I’ve been told, nothing is panning out.”
“A lot of wild-goose chases.”
“That’s right. A lot of them.”
Betty continued to work. This stage of testing was relatively simple. She took the swabs from the test tubes I’d sent up to her, moistened them with water and smeared filter paper with them. Working in clusters, she first dripped naphthyl acid phosphate, and then added drops of fast-blue B salt, which caused the smear to pop up purple in a matter of seconds if seminal fluid was present.
I looked at the array of paper circles. Almost all of them were coming up purple.
“The bastard,” I said.
“A lousy shot at that.” She began describing what I was seeing.
“These are the swabs from the back of her thighs,” she said, pointing. “They came up immediately. The reaction wasn’t quite as quick with the anal and vaginal swabs. But I’m not surprised. Her own body fluids would interfere with the tests. In addition, the oral swabs are positive.”
“The bastard,” I repeated quietly.
“But the ones you took of the esophagus are negative. Obviously, the most substantial residues of seminal fluid were left outside the body. Misfires, again. The pattern’s almost identical to what I found with Brenda, Patty, and Cecile.”