‘Hello . . . I thought you’d be asleep by now,’ she said softly.
‘I thought the same about you. Isn’t this a little late for a researcher? Don’t you have to be in the lab early tomorrow?’ Hunter asked with a little smile.
‘I never sleep much. Usually five to six hours max every night. My brain is always busy. Research work does that to you.’
‘Five to six hours only. That really isn’t much.’
‘Look who’s talking. Why aren’t you asleep?’
‘Insomnia is part of the package. It comes with the job.’
‘You need to learn how to unwind.’
‘I know. I’m working on it,’ he lied.
‘Talking about the job – is everything OK? You looked a little distressed after that phone call this afternoon.’
Hunter paused for a minute and rubbed his tired eyes. He thought of how innocent the majority of the people were, not knowing the evil that awaits just a stone’s-throw away. Part of his job is to make sure these people stay innocent.
‘Everything is alright. It’s just the job. It always carries that sort of pressure.’
‘I’m sure . . . more pressure than I can imagine. Anyway I’m really glad you called.’
‘I’m sorry I had to leave in such a hurry again. Maybe I can make it up to you.’ He could swear he heard her smile.
‘I’d like that . . . and that’s what I was thinking about. How would you like to have dinner with me at my place on Saturday evening?’
‘A dinner date?’ Hunter teased.
‘Well, now that the check out lunch date is out of the way, I thought dinner would be nice. Are you busy this Saturday?’
‘No, no, I’m free. Saturday is fine. What time shall I come over?’
‘How about six o’clock?’
‘That sounds great. I’ll bring a bottle.’
‘Fantastic. Do you remember the address?’
‘You’d better give it to me again, just in case. I was pretty drunk that night.’
‘Don’t I know it?’
They both laughed.
Twenty-Nine
The next morning Hunter and Garcia went back to the County Department of Coroner. Doctor Winston had called them at around ten o’clock, after he’d completed the autopsy on the new victim. He wanted both detectives to be the first ones to hear the results.
George Slater’s body rested on the metal autopsy table near the far wall. A white sheet covered him from the waist down. Most of his internal organs had been remo`ved, weighed, and placed over the organ tray. Doctor Winston had buzzed the two detectives into the basement autopsy room and left them waiting by the door as he finished analyzing a small piece of human tissue.
‘Well, one thing is for certain, our killer is very inventive,’ the doctor said, lifting his eyes from the dissecting microscope. Only then Hunter realized how tired Doctor Winston looked. His thin hair was messy, his complexion heavy and his eyes exhausted.
‘So he’s a murder victim?’ Hunter asked, pointing to the ghostly white body on the table.
‘No doubt about that.’
‘From our killer?’
‘Oh yes, unless someone else knows about this,’ the doctor said walking over to the body followed by both men. He lifted the victim’s head about four inches off the autopsy table surface. Hunter and Garcia bent over at the same time, almost hitting head against head. Their eyes met the unmistakable symbol.
‘It’s the same killer alright,’ Garcia said getting back to an upright position. ‘So what was all that crap about him dying from some sort of disease?’
‘That was no crap. A disease is exactly what killed him.’ The confusion and frustration intensified in Garcia’s face. ‘Have you ever heard of streptococcus pyogenes?’
‘What?’
‘I guess not. How about staphylococcus aureus?’
‘Yes, doc, Latin is a constant part of my everyday vocabulary.’ Garcia’s sarcastic tone brought a quick smile to Hunter’s lips. ‘What the hell is it?’
‘It sounds like a bacterium,’ Hunter said.
‘And you’re right on the money, Robert. Come here, let me show you.’ Doctor Winston took a` moment to search for a slide from a small portable archive and then walked back to the microscope desk. ‘Have a look,’ he said after placing the slide over the stage.
Hunter moved closer, bent over and positioned his eyes over the eyepiece. He rotated the coarse-focus knob and analyzed the slide for a moment.
‘What the hell am I looking for here, doc? All I can see is a whole bunch of . . . little worm-like things moving around like headless chickens.’