Forty-Three

Mike Brindle was in a crouch position next to a large white leather sofa when he noticed Hunter standing by the door. Getting to his feet, he approached the detective in silence.

Brindle had been with the Los Angeles Scientific Investigation Division for over fifteen years, but the look in his eyes told Hunter that even he hadn’t seen anything like what had happened in that room.

They stood face to face without saying a word for a while before Brindle checked his watch.

‘I guess you take the prize,’ he finally murmured through his surgical mask.

Hunter narrowed his eyes and faintly shook his head.

‘Other than “yours truly”, nobody who’s come through that door has managed over forty seconds in here before losing their dinner,’ Brindle explained.

‘I didn’t have dinner.’

‘I guess he did.’ Brindle nodded towards Garcia, who had just re-entered the room. His surgical mask was back over his mouth and nose. His face was drained of all color.

‘What in the world’s happened here, Mike?’ Hunter asked once Garcia had rejoined them.

‘A lot of pain,’ Brindle said, turning to face the enormous river rock fireplace on the south wall. Just over a foot in front of it and tied to a metal high-back armchair sat the naked body of a woman. Most of the skin on the front of her torso, arms and legs had blistered, crinkled and burst open, revealing her bloody, now burned flesh. Parts of her body had completely carbonized, displaying a crusty texture and charcoal color, but all eyes were on her face.

Garcia felt his stomach play up again as they stepped closer to the body.

The skin on her face had been burned so badly that it seemed to have melted into crumpled and clustered lumps, like hot wax. Her exposed flesh and muscle tissue had severely wrinkled and hardened, as if her face had been deep-fried. Her eyeballs had exploded inside their sockets from the intense heat.

‘From what I’ve gathered so far,’ Brindle said, carefully sidestepping the small pool of blood, urine and feces that surrounded the armchair. ‘She was brought here on Saturday evening, tied to this chair and left in front of a blazing fire. She died long ago, but the fire was never turned off.’ He pointed to the fireplace. Heat still emanated from it.

Hunter’s stare quickly moved from the dead woman to Brindle. ‘The killer… cooked her?’

Brindle’s lips thinned as his head bobbed down. ‘Given her proximity to the fire, more like roasted her alive.’

‘This is fucking sick,’ Garcia commented, turning his head away.

‘This is a gas fire,’ Brindle continued. ‘Which means its intensity is controlled. Worst of all, it’s constant. It won’t die down unless somebody turns it off.’

‘Was it on when the body was found?’ Hunter asked, kneeling in front of the fireplace.

‘Yes.’ Brindle nodded. ‘But on a very low setting. Just enough to-’ he bit his lip ‘-simmer her. But look at the size of this fireplace, Robert. On its higher setting, it would feel like a proper bonfire.’

Hunter cleared his eyes, took a deep breath and forced himself to study the body for a moment. Garcia stayed a few steps behind. His right hand cupped over his nose. His face screwed up as if he’d tasted something sour.

The smell of burned human flesh is quite different from that of other animals because of our diet. Humans are the only animals who eat such diverse foods as meat, vegetables, sweets and chemically altered products. The combination of their smells gets embedded in the human flesh and then released, together with several toxins when the flesh burns.

Garcia felt something start to rise in his throat again.

‘We cut her loose,’ Brindle said, noticing Hunter’s look as he studied her severed restraints. ‘And that’s the reason why the two of you are here.’

Hunter’s brow creased in anticipation.

‘We’ve been here for a while. Her body and the scene have already been photographed. The two local detectives we thought would be taking the case had seen enough. The body was ready to be taken to the morgue.’

Brindle gestured for one of the crime-lab agents to come and give him a hand. Very carefully, they moved the dead woman’s back away from the armchair’s backrest.

‘And then we saw this.’

Hunter and Garcia repositioned themselves so they could have a better look.

‘Oh fuck,’ Garcia murmured through gritted teeth, pinching the bridge of his nose.

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