登陆注册
10821800000004

第4章

The park had already been closed off to the public.

Two plainclothes officers flagged down Ramirez's car and quickly waved them away from the main parking lot and over to the left. Among the officers that were obviously from her department, Avery spotted a number of state police.

"Why are the troopers here?" she asked.

"Their home base is right up the street."

Ramirez pulled over and parked next to a line of police cruisers. Yellow tape had sectioned off a large area of the lot. News vans, reporters, cameras, and a bunch of other runners and park regulars stood by the tape to try to see what was happening.

"Nobody beyond this point," an officer said.

Avery flashed a badge.

"Homicide," she said. It was the first time she'd actually acknowledged her new position, and it filled her with pride.

"Where's Connelly?" Ramirez asked.

An officer pointed toward the trees.

They made their way across the grass, a baseball diamond on their left. More yellow tape met them before a line of trees. Under thick foliage was a walking path that wound its way along the Charles River. A single officer, along with a forensics specialist and a photographer, stood before a bench.

Avery avoided initial contact with those already on the scene. Over the years, she'd come to find that social interactions strained her focus, and too many questions and formalities with others sullied her point of view. Sadly, it was yet another characteristic of hers that had incurred the scorn of her entire department.

The victim was a young girl placed askew on the bench. She was obviously dead, but with the exception of her bluish skin tone, her position and facial expression might have made the average passerby think twice before they wondered if something was wrong.

Like a lover waiting for her paramour, the girl's hands were placed on the bench-back. Her chin rested on her hands. A mischievous smile curled on her lips. Her body was turned, as if she'd been in a sitting position and had moved to look for someone or breathe out a heavy sigh. She was clothed in a yellow summer dress and white flip-flops, lovely auburn hair flowing over her left shoulder. Her legs were crossed and her toes rested gently on the path.

Only the victim's eyes gave away her torment. They emanated the pain and disbelief.

Avery heard a voice in her mind, the voice of the old man that haunted her nights and daydreams. In regards to his own victims, he had once asked her: What are they? Only vessels, nameless, faceless vessels-so few among billions-waiting to find their purpose.

Anger rose up in her, anger born at being exposed and humiliated and most of all, from having her entire life shattered.

She moved closer to the body.

As an attorney, she'd been forced to examine endless forensics reports and coroner's photos and anything else related to her case. Her education had vastly improved as a cop, when she routinely analyzed murder victims in person, and could make more honest assessments.

The dress, she noticed, had been washed, and the victim's hair cleaned. The nails and toenails were freshly polished, and when she took a deep whiff of skin, she smelled coconut and honey and only the faint hint of formaldehyde.

"You gonna kiss it or what?" someone said.

Avery was bent over the victim's body, hands behind her back. On the bench was a yellow placard labeled "4." Beside it, on the girl's lower waist, was a stiff orange hair, barely perceptible among the yellow of her dress.

Homicide Supervisor Dylan Connelly stood akimbo and waited for an answer. He was tough and rugged, with wavy blond hair and penetrating blue eyes. His chest and arms nearly tore out of his blue shirt. His pants were brown linen, and thick black boots adorned his feet. Avery had noticed him often in the office; he wasn't exactly her type, but he had an animal ferocity about him that she admired.

"This is a crime scene, Black. Next time, watch where you're walking. You're lucky we already dusted for prints and shoes."

She looked down, baffled; she had been careful where she had walked. She looked up at Connelly's steely eyes and realized he was just looking for a reason to ride her.

"I didn't know it was a crime scene," she said. "Thanks for filling me in."

Ramirez snickered.

Connelly bit down and stepped forward.

"You know why people can't stand you, Black? It's not just that you're an outsider, it's that when you were on the outside, you had no real respect for cops, and now that you're on the inside, you have even less respect. Let me be perfectly clear: I don't like you, I don't trust you, and I sure as hell didn't want you on my team."

He turned to Ramirez.

"Fill her in on what we know. I'm going home to take a shower. I feel sick," he said. Gloves were removed and thrown to the ground. To Avery, he added: "I expect a full report by the end of the day. Five o'clock sharp. Conference room. You hear me? Don't be late. And make sure you clean this mess up, too, before you leave. State troopers were kind enough to step aside and let us work. You be kind enough and show them some courtesy."

Connelly walked away in a huff.

"You have a real way with people," Ramirez admired.

Avery shrugged.

The forensics specialist on the scene was a shapely young African American named Randy Johnson. She had large eyes and an easy way about herself. Short, dreadlocked hair was only partially hidden behind a white cap.

Avery had worked with her before. They'd formed a fast bond during a domestic violence case. The last time they'd seen each other was over drinks.

Excited to be on another case with Avery, Randy held out a hand, noticed her own glove, blushed, guffawed, and said, "Oops," followed by a wacky, eek! expression and the proclamation: "I might be contaminated."

"Good to see you too, Randy."

"Congrats on Homicide." Randy bowed. "Moving up in the world."

"One wacko at a time. What have we got?"

"I'd say someone was in love," Randy replied. "Cleaned her up pretty good. Opened her up from the back. Drained her body, filled her up so she wouldn't rot, and stitched her up again. Fresh clothes. Manicure. Careful too. No prints yet. Not much to go on until I get to the lab. Only two wounds I can find. See the mouth? You can either pin this from the inside, or use gel to get a corpse to smile like that. From the puncture wound here," she pointed at the corner of a lip, "I'd guess injection. There's another one here," she noted on the neck. "By the coloring, this came earlier, maybe at the time of abduction. Body has been dead for about forty-eight hours. Found a couple of interesting hairs."

"How long has she been here?"

"Bikers found her at six," Ramirez said. "The park is patrolled every night around midnight and three a.m. They didn't see anything."

Avery couldn't stop staring at the dead girl's eyes. They seemed to be looking at something in the distance, yet close to the shoreline, on their side of the river. She carefully maneuvered to the back of the bench and tried to follow the line of sight. Downriver, there were a bunch of low brick buildings; one of them was short; a white dome rested on its on top.

"What building is that?" she asked. "The large one with the dome?"

Ramirez squinted.

"Maybe the Omni Theatre?"

"Can we find out what's playing?"

"Why?"

"I don't know, just a hunch."

Avery stood up.

"Do we know who she is?"

"Yeah," Ramirez replied and checked his notes. "We think her name is Cindy Jenkins. Harvard senior. Sorority sister. Kappa Kappa Gamma. Went missing two nights ago. Campus police and Cambridge cops put her picture up last night. Connelly had his people check through photos. Hers was a match. We still need confirmation. I'll call the family."

"How are we on surveillance?"

"Jones and Thompson are on that now. You know them, right? Great detectives. They're assigned to us for the day. After that, we're on our own unless we can prove we need the extra resources. No entrance cameras to the park, but there are some up the highway and across the street. We should know something this afternoon."

"Any witnesses?"

"None so far. The bikers are clean. I can troll around."

Avery surveyed the surrounding area. Yellow tape encompassed a large swath of the park. Nothing out of the ordinary could be found near the river or on the bike path or grass. She tried to form a mental picture of events. He would have driven in through the main road, parked his car close to the water for easy access to the bench. How did he get the body to the bench without causing suspicion?

She wondered. People might have been watching. He had to prepare for that. Maybe he made it look like she was alive? Avery turned back to the body. It was a definite possibility. The girl was beautiful, even in death, ethereal almost. He had obviously spent a lot of time and planning to ensure she looked perfect. Not a gang kill, she realized. Not a scorned lover. This was different. Avery had seen it before.

Suddenly, she wondered if O'Malley was right. Maybe she wasn't ready.

"Can I borrow your car?" she asked.

Ramirez cocked a brow.

"What about the crime scene?"

She offered a confident shrug.

"You're a big boy. Figure it out."

"Where are you going?"

"Harvard."

同类推荐
  • Harold Pinter: Plays 4
  • Station Island

    Station Island

    The title poem from this collection is set on an island that has been a site of pilgrimage in Ireland for over a thousand years. A narrative sequence, it is an autobiographical quest concerned with 'the growth of a poet's mind'. The long poem is preceded by a section of shorter lyrics and leads into a third group of poems in which the poet's voice is at one with the voice of the legendary mad King Sweeney. 'Surpasses even what one might reasonably expect from this magnificently gifted poet.' John Carey, Sunday Times
  • The Further Adventures of Robinson Crusoe(IV) 鲁滨逊漂

    The Further Adventures of Robinson Crusoe(IV) 鲁滨逊漂

    The Further adventures of Robinson Crusoe is a novel by Daniel Defoe, first published in 1719. The book starts with the statement about Crusoe's marriage in England. He bought a little farm in Bedford and had three children: two sons and one daughter. Our hero suffered distemper and a desire to see "his island." He could talk of nothing else, and one can imagine that no one took his stories seriously, except his wife. She told him"I will go with you, but I won't leave you." But in the middle of this felicity, Providence unhinged him at once, with the loss of his wife. Although intended to be the last Crusoe tale, the novel is followed by non-fiction book involving Crusoe by Defoe entitled Serious Reflections During the Life and Surprising Adventures of Robinson Crusoe: With his Vision of the Angelick World (1720).
  • The 7 Laws of the Golf Swing

    The 7 Laws of the Golf Swing

    Using groundbreaking imagery, Nick Bradley' s The 7 Laws of the Golf Swing gives readers an incredibly practical blueprint for golf success by giving them the ability to build and maintain their own winning technique.
  • Resurrection  复活(I)(英文版)

    Resurrection 复活(I)(英文版)

    Resurrection tells the story of a Russian nobleman who comes face to face with the sins of his past. When Prince Nekhlyudov serves on a jury at the trial of a prostitute arrested for murder, he is horrified to discover that the accused is a woman he had once seduced and abandoned. His guilt at the central role he played in her ruin soon leads him on a quest for forgiveness as he follows her into the prisons of Siberia. Conceived on an epic scale, this novel is both a trenchant denunciation of government, aristocracy, the judicial system, and the Church as well as a highly personal statement of Tolstoy's belief in human redemption and spiritual development.
热门推荐
  • 玄门修真天帝

    玄门修真天帝

    有一种世界,叫做乱世,有一种无敌,叫做强者,所谓遇强则强,作为这个乱世中的一粒尘埃,苏临成为了引领和平头号的人物,为了变强,征服三界,他不得不走上了玄门修真之路,且看他如何修真为天,走向人生巅峰。。。。。。
  • 混元仙境

    混元仙境

    浩瀚苍宇,包罗万象,那条璀璨的星河通向何方,至今无人知晓......作为一名习惯了都市生活的大学毕业生,姜新勉觉醒灵识之初,并不是很想一门心思的修仙,无奈他资质、天赋太好,偶尔还走上那么些狗shi运,最终在他不懈的努力下,这片星空终于是容不下他了......
  • 血浴狂飙

    血浴狂飙

    这是由一群起于草莽而纵横捭阖的人留传下来的令人开卷唏嘘掩卷深思的真实故事。在他们的故事里,包含着山规盟约、侠义豪情、绿林暗语、英雄相惜、江湖规则……在他们的故事里,充斥着涕泪交流、血肉横飞、明争暗斗、刀光剑影、枪林弹雨……在他们的故事里,交织着爱与恨、恩与怨、血与火、情与仇、沉与浮、生与死……他们,就是豫西蹚将!
  • 倾世特工狂妃

    倾世特工狂妃

    21世纪的金牌杀手莫倾曲,在一次执行任务成功后与同伴庆祝不小心跌落山崖,爆体而亡,魂穿到异世。当不幸死去的废物小姐再睁眼,光芒万丈,锋芒毕露,从人人看不起的温婉小姐一步一步走向强者之道。被四皇子抛弃又如何?她还有能携手一生的墨君;什么?你有六品灵兽?不好意思,姐有极品圣兽;你能炼就高阶丹药?姐把神丹当糖果。男主清冷腹黑,贤惠宠妻;女主张狂霸气。本文1v1,男强女强。
  • 琴断口

    琴断口

    该书由六位名家所著的中短篇小说组成,囊括了方方、林那北、徐则臣、陈河、雪静、王雪梅等当代中国具有广泛影响力作家的得意之作。这些中短篇小说构思精巧,语言风格独特,内涵深刻,视角独特,色彩斑斓,处处藏着智慧与玄机,能让读者被复杂的故事情节牵动,引发相应的共鸣与思考。
  • 那年那天,我爱你

    那年那天,我爱你

    曾经,他是她心中的神话。她常常在校园的某个角落里偷偷地望着他,然后一颗心扑通扑通地跳。后来的有一天,她为了救出爸爸,去求他,他却颠覆了她的余生。 那一天,她把自己对他的喜欢一点一点地从心里拔除。多年以后,她以为她的生活终于回归平静,可他还是出现了,再次搅乱她的生命。她说:“顾南晨,我早就已经不喜欢你了。”他却霸道地把她扣在怀里,不愿放手:“从前是我的错,以后我会对你好。”
  • 漫威之神级收集者

    漫威之神级收集者

    这是一个让英雄们又爱又恨的人“陈晨!卧槽!你放下,那是我的盾牌!”美队欲哭无泪“我靠!陈晨!放下那个,那是我的战甲!”托尼快要崩溃“陈晨,你放下我的锤子,一切都好说……对对,啊啊啊……我靠,我不是让你放哪里啊!”抚摸着自己的收藏柜的陈晨一脸无辜的看着托尔“来来,陈晨,放下宇宙魔方,一切都好说,不就是女朋友吗,我帮你找……尼克严肃的说……PS:本书免费哦,不打算签约,但一定会更新,打赏请在群里进行。
  • 至尊狙神

    至尊狙神

    这天上天下的神灵圣阶尽踩爷的脚下。这天上天下,唯爷独尊!爷的枪下,谁敢不服?!!
  • 异世界的超神学院

    异世界的超神学院

    当超神学院的科技世界变成了修炼世界,人类又将如何在神与魔的战争中夹缝求生?被召唤而来的中二少年带着一个成精的系统,能否在这片大陆走出属于自己的道路?叶苏:未来,我想变强!系统:宿主,看你骨骼惊奇定是练武奇才,哲学格斗了解下?叶苏:格斗是不可能格斗的,这辈子都不可能!恩,拳拳到肉的感觉真爽!叶苏:葛小伦,看你身披大剑肯定是个巨剑战士,我这有一战技名为“大崩”,想不想学啊?葛小伦:不学不学!一个月后····葛小伦:赵信快闪开,我放错技能啦!又名《系统成精了怎么办?》不一样的世界,不一样的精彩故事,是成为万人敬仰的英雄?还是安安静静任人宰割?
  • 华娱之光影帝国

    华娱之光影帝国

    这是一个不知道算不算普通的穿越众,来到一个新时空不断搞事的故事。简介能力实在堪忧,各位凑合着看吧。反正简介神马的,肯定没有正文好看的……PS:本故事纯属虚构,娱人娱己,切勿对号入座群·号:943981219,欢迎各位前来聊天吹牛,提供意见建议。新书书名为:《华娱之巨星崛起》这次是从演员开始的哟……链接如下:https://pgsk.com/info/1019243981期待各位翻牌!