He left long before I did, and when he went out of the building he was alone and unwatched . . .
I blanked the images out of my mind, refused to see them anymore. This was outrageous. I was losing control. Bill would never do such a thing. In the first place, there would be no point. I couldn’t imagine how such an act of sabotage could possibly profit him. Mislabeled slides could only damage the very case he eventually would be prosecuting in court. Not only would he be shooting himself in the foot, he’d be shooting himself in the head.
You want someone to blame because you can’t face the fact that you probably screwed up!
These strangling cases were the most difficult of my career, and I was gripped by the fear I was becoming too caught up in them. Maybe I was losing my rational, methodical way of doing things. Maybe I was making mistakes.
Vander was saying, “We’ve got to figure out the composition of this stuff.”
Like thoughtful shoppers, we needed to find a box of the soap and read the ingredients.
“I’ll hit the ladies’ rooms,” I volunteered.
“I’ll hit the men’s.”
What a scavenger hunt this turned out to be.
After wandering in and out of the ladies’ rooms throughout the building I got smart and found Wingo. One of his jobs was to fill all the soap dispensers in the morgue. He directed me to the janitor’s closet on the first floor, several doors down from my office. There, on a top shelf, right next to a pile of dusting rags, was an industrial-sized gray box of Borawash hand soap.
The main ingredient was borax.
A quick check in one of my chemical reference books hinted at why the soap powder lit up like the Fourth of July. Borax is a boron compound, a crystalline substance that conducts electricity like a metal at high temperatures. Industrial uses of it range from the making of ceramics, special glass, washing powders and disinfectants, to the manufacturing of abrasives and rocket fuels.
Ironically, a large percentage of the world’s supply of borax is mined in Death Valley.
Friday night came and went, and Marino did not call.
By seven o’clock the following morning I had parked behind my building and uneasily began checking the log inside the morgue office.
I shouldn’t have needed convincing. I knew better. I would have been one of the first to be alerted. There were no bodies signed in I wasn’t expecting, but the quiet seemed ominous.
I couldn’t shake the sensation another woman was waiting for me to tend to her, that it was happening again. I kept expecting Marino to call.
Vander rang me up from his home at seven-thirty.
“Anything?” he asked.
“I’ll call you immediately if there is.”
“I’ll be near the phone.”
The laser was upstairs in his lab, loaded on a cart and ready to be brought down to the X-ray room should we need it. I’d reserved the first autopsy table, and late yesterday afternoon Wingo had scrubbed it mirror-bright and set up two carts with every conceivable surgical tool and evidence-collection container and device. The table and carts remained unused.
My only cases were a cocaine overdose from Fredericksburg and an accidental drowning from James City County.
Just before noon Wingo and I were alone, methodically finishing up the morning’s work.
His running shoes squeaked across the damp tile floor as he leaned a mop against the wall and remarked to me, “Word is they had a hundred cops working overtime last night.”
I continued filling out a death certificate. “Let’s hope it makes a difference.”
“Would if I was the guy.” He began hosing down a bloody table. “The guy’d be crazy to show his face. One cop told me they’re stopping everybody out on the street. They see you walking around late they’re going to check you out. Taking plate numbers, too, if they see your car parked somewhere late.”
“What cop?” I looked up at him. We had no cases from Richmond this morning, no cops in from Richmond either. “What cop told you this?”
“One of the cops who came in with the drowning.”
“From James City County? How did he know what was going on in Richmond last night?”
Wingo glanced curiously at me. “His brother’s a cop here in the city.”
I turned away so he couldn’t see my irritation. Too many people were talking. A cop whose brother was a cop in Richmond just glibly told Wingo, a stranger, this? What else was being said? There was too much talk. Too much. I was reading the most innocent remark differently, becoming suspicious of everything and everybody.
Wingo was saying, “My opinion’s the guy’s gone under. He’s cooling his heels for a while, until everything quiets down.” He paused, water drumming down on the table. “Either that or he hit last night and no one’s found the body yet.”