In a heartbeat the water went tepid, then cold. I leaped out of the shower, wrapped one towel around my torso, another around my hair, and headed for bed.
Things will be fine, I told myself.
Wrong.
Things were going to get worse before they got worse.
SUNDAY MORNING. TIME: SEVEN THIRTY-SEVEN. TEMPERATURE: seventy-four Fahrenheit. Humidity: eighty-one percent.
We were heading for a record. Seventeen straight days busting ninety degrees.
Entering the small vestibule of the MCME, I used my security card and passed Mrs. Flowers’s command post. Even her absence was imposing. All objects and Post-it notes were equally spaced. Paper stacks were squared at the edges. No pens. No paper clips. No clutter. One personal photo, a cocker spaniel.
Monday through Friday, Mrs. Flowers screened visitors through the plate-glass window above her desk, blessing some with a buzz through the inner door, turning others away. She also typed reports, organized documents, and kept track of every shred of paper stored in the black file cabinets lining one side of the room.
Turning right past the cubicles used by the death investigators, I checked the board on the back wall where cases were entered daily in black Magic Marker.
Boyd’s find was already there. MCME 437–02.
The place was exactly as I’d expected, deserted and eerily quiet.
What I hadn’t expected was the fresh-brewed coffee on the kitchenette counter.
There is a merciful God, I thought, helping myself.
Or a merciful Joe Hawkins.
The DI appeared as I was unlocking my office.
“You’re a saint,” I said, raising my mug.
“Thought you might be here early.”
During the recovery operation, I’d told Hawkins of my plans for a Monday escape to the beach.
“You’ll be wanting yesterday’s booty?”
“Please. And the Polaroid and the Nikon.”
“X rays?”
“Yes.”
“Main or stinky?”
“I’d better work in back.”
The MCME facility has a pair of autopsy rooms, each with a single table. The smaller of the two has special ventilation for combating foul odors.
Decomps and floaters. My kind of cases.
Pulling a form from the mini-shelves behind my desk, I filled in a case number and wrote a brief description of the remains and the circumstances surrounding their arrival at the morgue. Then I went to the locker room, changed to surgical scrubs, and crossed to the stinky room.
The bags were waiting. So were the cameras and the items needed to accessorize my ensemble: paper apron and mask, plastic goggles, latex gloves.
Fetching.
I shot 35-millimeter prints, backups with the Polaroid, then asked Hawkins to X-ray both bags. I wanted no surprises.
Twenty minutes later he wheeled the bags back and snapped a half dozen plates onto a light box. We studied the gray-on-grayer jumble.
Bones mixed with a pebbly sediment. Nothing densely opaque.
“No metal,” Hawkins said.
“That’s good,” I said.
“No teeth,” Hawkins said.
“That’s bad,” I said.
“No skull.”
“Nope,” I agreed.
After donning my protective gear, sans goggles, I opened the twist tie and emptied the uppermost bag onto the table.
“Holy buckets. Those look like the real deal.”
In all, there were eight semi-fleshed hands and feet, all truncated. I placed them in a plastic tub and asked for X rays. Hawkins carried them off, shaking his head and repeating his comment.
“Holy buckets.”
Slowly, I spread the remaining bones as best I could. Some were free of soft tissue. Others were held together by leatherized tendon and muscle. Still others retained remnants of decomposing flesh.
Sometime in late Miocene, roughly seven million years ago, a line of primates began experimenting with upright posture. The locomotor shift required some anatomic tinkering, but in a few epochs most kinks had been ironed out. By the Pliocene, roughly two million years ago, hominids were running around waiting for someone to invent Birkenstocks.
The move to bipedalism had its downside, of course. Lower back pain. Difficult childbirth. The loss of a grasping big toe. But, all things considered, the adjustment to upright worked well. By the time Homo erectus cruised the landscape looking for mammoth, approximately one million years back, our ancestors had S-shaped spines, short, broad pelves, and heads sitting directly on top of their necks.
The bones I was viewing didn’t fit that pattern. The hip blades were narrow and straight, the vertebrae chunky, with long, swooping spinous processes. The limb bones were short, thick, and molded in a way not seen in humans.
I drew a sigh of relief.
The victims in the bag had run on all fours.
Often bones delivered to me as “suspicious” turn out to be those of animals. Some are leftovers from Sunday dinner. Calf. Pig. Lamb. Turkey. Others are relics of last year’s hunt. Deer. Moose. Duck. Some are the remains of farm animals or family pets. Felix. Rover. Bessie. Old Paint.
Boyd’s find fell into none of those categories. But I had a hunch.
I began sorting. Right humeri. Left humeri. Right tibiae. Left tibiae. Ribs. Vertebrae. I was almost through when Hawkins arrived with the X rays.
One glance confirmed my suspicion.
Though the “hands” and “feet” looked jarringly human, skeletal differences were evident. Fused navicular and lunate bones in the hands. Deeply sculpted ends on the metatarsals and phalanges of the feet. Increasing digit length from the inside toward the outside.
I pointed out the latter trait.
“In a human foot, the second metatarsal is the longest. In a human hand, it’s the second or third metacarpal. With bears, the fourth is the longest in both.
“Makes it look like the critter’s reversed.”
I indicated pads of soft tissue on the soles of the feet.
“A human foot would be more arched.”
“So what is it, Doc?”
“Bear.”
“Bear?”
“Bears, I should say. I’ve got at least three left femora. That means a minimum of three individuals.”
“Where are the claws?”
“No claws, no distal phalanges, no fur. That means the bears were skinned.”
Hawkins chewed on that thought for a while.
“And the heads?”
“Your guess is as good as mine.”
I flipped off the light box and returned to the autopsy table.
“Bear hunting legal in this state?” Hawkins asked.
I peered at him over my mask.
“Your guess is as good as mine.”
* * *
It took a couple of hours to sort, inventory, and photograph the contents of the first sack.
Conclusion: Bag one contains the partial remains of three Ursus americanus. Black bear. Species verification using Gilbert’s Mammalian Osteology and Olsen’s Mammal Remains from Archaeological Sites. Two adults and one juvenile represented. No heads, claws, distal phalanges, teeth, or outer integument present. No indicators of cause of death. Cut marks suggest skinning with a nonserrated double-edged blade, probably a hunting knife.
Between bags I took a break to phone US Airways.
Of course the flight was on time. Airlines operate to the nanosecond when the passenger or pickup is running late.
I looked at my watch. Eleven-twenty. If bag two held no surprises I could still make it to the airport on time.
I popped a can of Diet Coke and took a Quaker caramel-nut granola bar from a box I’d stashed in a kitchen cabinet. As I chewed I studied the Quaker pilgrim. He beamed at me with such a kindly smile. What could possibly go wrong?
Returning to the autopsy room, I glanced again at the X rays of bag two. Seeing nothing suspicious, I untied the knotted ends and upended the sack.
<
br /> A soupy conglomerate of bone, sediment, and decomposing flesh oozed onto the stainless steel. A stench filled the air.
Readjusting my mask, I began poking through the mess.
More bear.
I lifted a smaller long bone that was clearly not bear. It felt light in my hand. I noted that the outer envelope of bone was thin, the marrow cavity disproportionately large.
Bird.
I began a triage.
Ursus.
Aves.
Time passed. My shoulders began to ache. At one point I heard a phone. Three rings, then silence. Either Hawkins had answered or the service had picked up.
When I’d separated by taxonomic affiliation, I started an inventory of the new bear bones. Again, there were no heads, claws, skin, or fur.
An hour later the bear count had risen to six.
I rolled that around in my head.
Was it legal to hunt black bears in North Carolina? Six seemed like a lot. Were there limits? Did these remains represent one slaughter, or were they the accumulation of multiple outings? The unevenness in decomposition supported that hypothesis.
Why had six headless carcasses been bundled in trash bags and buried in the woods? Had the bears been killed for their skins? Were their heads kept as trophies?
Was there a bear season? Had the hunting taken place during a legally approved period? When? It was hard to tell how long the animals had been dead. Until Boyd came along, the plastic had acted as an effective barrier to insects and other scavengers that hasten decomposition.
I was turning to the bird bones when voices floated in from the corridor. I stopped to listen.
Joe Hawkins. A male voice. Hawkins again.
Holding gloved hands in the air, I pushed the door with my bum and peeked out.
Hawkins and Tim Larabee were engaged in conversation outside the histology room. The ME looked agitated.
I was retreating when Larabee spotted me.
“Tempe. I’m glad to see you. I’ve been phoning your cell.” He was wearing jeans and a tweedy golf shirt with black collar and trim. His hair was wet, as though he’d just showered.
“I don’t bring my purse to an autopsy.”
He looked past me to the table.
“That the stuff from out near Cowans Ford?”
“Yes.”
“Animal?”
“Uh-huh.”
“Good. I need your help on something else.”
Oh, no.
“I got a call from the Davidson PD about an hour ago. A small plane went down just past one.”
“Where?”
“East of Davidson, that spot where Mecklenburg County corners out to meet Cabarrus and Iredell.”
“Tim, I’m pretty—”
“Plane slammed into a rock face, then fireballed.”
“How many on board?”
“That’s unclear.”
“Can’t Joe help you out?”
“If the victims are both burned and segmented, it’ll take a trained eye to spot the pieces.”
This couldn’t be happening.
I checked my watch. Two-forty. Ninety minutes to touchdown.
Larabee was gazing at me with soulful eyes.
“I have to clean up and make a few phone calls.”
Larabee reached out and squeezed my upper arm.
“I knew I could count on you.”
Tell that to Detective Studpuppy, who’ll be hailing a cab in an hour and a half. Alone.
I hoped I’d make it home before he was sound asleep.
AT 4 P.M. THE TEMPERATURE WAS NINETY-SEVEN, THE HUMIDITY roughly the same. Slam dunk for the record keepers.
The crash site was almost an hour north of town, in the far northeastern corner of the county. Unlike the Lake Norman sector to the west, with its Sea-Doos and Hobie Cats, and J-32s, this part of Mecklenburg was corn and soybeans.
Joe Hawkins was already there when Larabee and I pulled up in his Land Rover. The DI was smoking a cigarillo, leaning against a quarter panel of the transport van.
“Where’d she go down?” I asked, slinging my backpack over a shoulder.
Hawkins pointed with a sideways gesture of his cigarillo.
“How far?” I was already perspiring.
“’Bout two hundred yards.”
By the time our little trio traversed three cornfields, Larabee and Hawkins with the equipment locker, I with my pack, we were wheezy, itchy, and thoroughly soaked.
Though smaller than usual, the normal cast of players was present. Cops. Firemen. A journalist. Locals, viewing the proceedings like tourists on a double-decker.
Someone had run crime scene tape around the perimeter of the wreckage. Looking at it across the field, I was struck by how little there seemed to be.
Two fire trucks sat outside the yellow tape, scars of flattened cornstalks running up to their tires. They were at ease now, but I could see that a lot of water had been pumped onto the wreckage.
Not good news for locating and recovering charred bone.
A man in a Davidson PD uniform appeared to be in charge. A brass tag on his shirt said Wade Gullet.
Larabee and I introduced ourselves.
Officer Gullet was square-jawed, with black eyes, a sculpted nose, and salt-and-pepper hair. The leading-man type. Except that he stood about five-foot-two.
We took turns shaking.
“Glad you’re here, Doc.” Gullet nodded at me. “Docs.”
The ME and I listened as Gullet summarized the known facts. His information went little beyond that which Larabee had provided outside the autopsy room.
“Landowner called in a report at one-nineteen. Said he looked out his living room window, saw a plane acting funny.”
“Acting funny?” I asked.
“Flying low, dipping from side to side.”
Looking over Gullet’s head, I estimated the height of the rock outcrop at the far end of the field. It couldn’t have exceeded two hundred feet. I could see red and blue smears maybe five yards below the peak. A trail of scorched and burned vegetation led from the impact point to the wreckage below.
“Guy heard an explosion, ran outside, saw smoke rising from his north forty. When he got here the plane was down and burning. Farmer—”
Gullet consulted a small spiral notepad.
“—Michalowski saw no signs of life, so he hotfooted it home to call 911.”
“Any idea how many were on board?” Larabee asked.
“Looks like a four-seater, so I’m thinking less than a six-pack.”
Gullet apparently wanted to compete with Slidell for movie cop work.
Flipping the cover with a one-handed motion, Gullet slid the spiral into his breast pocket.
“The dispatcher has notified the FAA or the NTSB, or whatever feds need contacting. Between my crew and the fire boys, I think we can handle the scene here. Just tell me what you need on your end, Doc.”
I’d noticed a pair of ambulances parked on the shoulder where we’d pulled up.
“You’ve notified a trauma center?”
“Alerted CMC down in Charlotte. Paramedics and I took a peek once the fire was under control.” Gullet gave a half shake of the head. “There’s no one sucking air in that mess.”
As Larabee started explaining how we’d proceed, I snuck a look at my watch. Four-twenty. Visitor ETA at my condo.
I hoped he’d gotten my message saying I’d be late. I hoped he’d found a taxi. I hoped he’d spotted the key I’d asked Katy to tape to the kitchen door.
I hoped Katy had taped the key to the kitchen door.
Relax, Brennan. If there’s a problem he’ll phone.
I unhooked and checked my cell phone. No signal.
Damn.
“Ready for a look-see?” Gullet was saying to Larabee.
“No hot spots?”
“Fire’s out.”
“Lead on.”
Hating my job at that moment, I followed Gullet and Larabee through the cornrows and
under the police tape to the edge of the wreckage.
Up close, the plane looked better than it had from a distance. Though accordioned and burned, the fuselage was largely intact. Around it lay scorched and twisted pieces of wing, melted plastic, and a constellation of unrecognizable rubble. Tiny cubes of glass sparkled like phosphorous in the afternoon sun.
“Ahoy!”
At the sound of the voice, we all turned.
A woman in khakis, boots, and dark blue shirt and cap was striding toward us. Big yellow letters above her brim announced the arrival of the National Transportation Safety Board.
“Sorry it’s so late. I got the first available flight.”
Draping a camcorder strap around her neck, the woman offered a hand.
“Sheila Jansen, air safety investigator.”
We took turns shaking. Jansen’s grip was anaconda strong.
Jansen removed her cap and ran a forearm across her face. Without the hat she looked like a milk commercial, all blonde and healthy and lousy with vitality.
“It’s hotter here than in Miami.”
We all agreed it was hot.
“Everything as it was, Officer?” Jansen asked, squinting through the viewfinder of a small digital camera.
“Except for dousing the flames.” Gullet.
“Survivors?”
“No one’s reported in to us.”
“How many inside?” Jansen kept clicking away, moving a few feet left and a few feet right to capture the scene from different angles.
“At least one.”
“Your officers walked the area?”
“Yes.”
“Give me a minute?” Jansen raised the camcorder.
Larabee gave a go-ahead gesture with one hand.
We watched her circle the wreckage, shooting stills and video. Then she photographed the rock face and the surrounding fields. Fifteen minutes later Jansen rejoined us.
“The plane’s a Cessna-210. The pilot’s in place, there’s a passenger in back.”
“Why in back?” I asked.
“The right front seat’s not there.”
“Why?”
“Good question.”
“Any idea who owns the plane?” Larabee asked.
“Now that I have the tail registration number I can run a trace.”
“Where’d it take off?”
“That could be a tough one. Once you come up with the pilot’s name I can interview family and friends. In the meantime, I’ll check whether radar had tracking on the flight. Of course, if it was only a VFR flight, radar won’t have an identifier and it’ll be harder than crap to trace the plane’s course.”