THE ROOM WAS COOL, and there were no odors.
Nic has read that line at least five times. Her mother might have been murdered just minutes before her husband-Nic's father-got home. Nic wonders if the killer heard her fathers car and fled, or if it was just fate that the son of a bitch left when he did.
It is ten p.m. Nic, Rudy, Scarpetta, Marino and Lucy sit inside Dr. Lanier s guest house, drinking Community Coffee, the local favorite.
"Multiple abrasions and lacerations to the face," Scarpetta reviews the autopsy report.
She said right off that she did not intend to gloss over any detail in order to spare Nic's feelings. She would not be helping Nic if she did that.
"Abrasion and laceration of the forehead, periocular ecchymoses, fracture of the nasal bones, frontal teeth are loosened."
"So he beat her face up pretty good," Marino says, sipping his coffee, which is just the way he likes it, white with Cremora and heavily laced with sugar. "Any possibility this was someone she knew?" he asks Nic.
"She opened the door for him. She was found right near the door."
"Was she careful about keeping the doors locked?" Lucy looks at her intensely, leaning into the conversation.
Nic stares back at her. "Yes and no. At night, we locked up. But she knew Papa and I would be coming home soon, so she may not have had the door locked."
"That doesn't mean the person didn't ring the bell or knock," Rudy points out. "It doesn't mean your mom was afraid of whoever it was."
"No, it doesn't mean that," Nic says.
"Blunt-force trauma to the back of the head. Stellate laceration of vertex, three by four inches. Massive hematoma of vertex and back of the head. Fifty milliliters of liquid subscalpular blood…"
Marino and Lucy trade scene photographs back and forth. So far, Nic has not looked at them.
"Blood on the wall just left of the door," Marino observes. "Hair swipes. How long was your mother's hair?"
Nic swallows hard. "Shoulder length. She had blond hair, pretty much like mine."
"Something happened the minute he walked in. Blitz attack," Lucy says. "Not so different from what happened to Rebecca Milton. Not so different from what happens in any blitz attack, when a victim really enrages the perp."
"Would injuries like this be consistent with her head being slammed against the wall?" Rudy asks.
Nic is stoical. She reminds herself she is a cop.
Scarpetta meets Nic's eyes. "I know this is hard, Nic. We're trying to be honest. Maybe you won't have so many questions if we're honest."
"I'll always have questions, because we're never going to know who did this."
"Never say never," Marino replies.
"Right." Lucy nods.
"Comminuted non-depressed fracture of the biparietal and occipital bones, fractures of the orbital roofs, bilateral subdural hematomas, thirty mls free blood over each… okay, okay, okay…" Scarpetta turns a page. It is typed, not computer-printed. "She has stab wounds," she adds.
Nic shuts her eyes. "I hope she didn't feel any of this."
No one comments.
"I mean"-she looks at Scarpetta-"was she feeling all this?"
"She was feeling terror. Physically? It's hard to say what pain she felt. When injuries occur so quickly…"
Marino interrupts. "You know when you stick your hand in a drawer and cut yourself with a knife and don't feel it? I think it's like that unless it's slow. Slow like in torture."
Nic's heart seems to flutter, as if something is wrong with it.
"She wasn't tortured," Scarpetta says, looking at Nic. "Definitely not."
"What about the stabs?" Nic asks.
"Lacerations of fingers and palms. Defense injuries." She glances at Nic again. "Punctures of the right and left lung with two hundred mis of hemothorax on each side. I'm so sorry. I know this is hard."
"Would that have killed her? The lung injuries?"
"Eventually. But in combination with the head injuries, absolutely. She also had fractured fingernails on the right and left. Nonidentifiable material recovered from under the nails."
"Do you think it was saved?" Lucy asks. "DNA wasn't as advanced then as it is now."
"I wonder what the hell nonidentifiable is," Marino says.
"What kind of knife?" Nic asks.
"Short-bladed. But just how short-bladed, I can't tell."
"Maybe a pocketknife," Marino offers.
"Maybe," Scarpetta says.
"My mother didn't have a pocketknife. She didn't have any…" Nic starts to tear up, then regains control. "She wasn't into weapons, is what I'm saying."
"He might have had one," Lucy tells her kindly. "But my guess is, if the weapon was a pocketknife, he didn't think he needed a weapon. Might have just been something he carried around with him like a lot of guys do."
"Are the stab wounds different than the ones we saw today?" Nic asks Scarpetta.
"Absolutely," she says.