The Chemistry of Death

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The Chemistry of Death Page 17

by Simon Beckett


  ‘Hi, Linda. How are the boys?’

  ‘Fine.’ I was about to go on, but she called me back. ‘Dr Hunter…’

  I waited. She darted a quick look around, making sure no-one was in earshot. ‘The police…are you still helping them? Like you said?’

  ‘Sometimes.’

  ‘Have they found anything?’ she blurted.

  ‘Come on, Linda, you know I can’t tell you that.’

  ‘But they’ve not found her yet? You know. Lyn?’

  Whatever her reason for asking, it wasn’t idle curiosity. Her anxiety was unmistakable. ‘Not as far as I know.’

  She nodded, but didn’t seem reassured.

  ‘Why?’ I asked, although I was already starting to suspect.

  ‘Nothing. I just wondered,’ she mumbled, already scurrying off.

  I watched her go, disturbed by the encounter. I had the uneasy impression that she hadn’t been looking for news so much as confirmation. And I didn’t need to be told why. Like Sally Palmer, Lyn Metcalf had finally made an appearance in her dreams.

  But I quickly dismissed the notion. I’d been living in Manham too long if I was starting to believe in premonitions, or attach importance to dreams. Hers or mine. It was easy to be complacent. My own sleep had been undisturbed recently, my waking thoughts ones of Jenny and the future. It was as though I was surfacing into the air again after a long time underground. Selfishly, in spite of everything, it was hard not to feel optimistic.

  Then, midway through the next week, the inertia broke. The body of the young man was identified when his dental records provided a match with those of a twenty-two-year-old man. Alan Radcliff had been a postgraduate ecology student from Kent who had disappeared five years earlier. He’d been in the area, studying the countryside around Manham. At some point, he’d become a part of it. When his photograph was released a few people in the village could even remember him: a good-looking young man with an engaging smile. For a few weeks while he camped out on the marshes he’d become a familiar face in the village, brightening the days of the village girls before he moved on.

  Except he hadn’t gone anywhere.

  Manham reacted to this new development almost without comment. With the victim’s identity and connection to the area now known, no-one needed to state the obvious: the body’s location couldn’t be dismissed as a coincidence. The village could no longer distance itself from this very literal skeleton from its past.

  Coming on top of everything else, it was another, unlooked-for blow. And then, while this was still being absorbed, came a far worse one.

  I was just about to start afternoon surgery when the call came. I’d spoken to Mackenzie only the day before, when the student’s body had been identified, and it was a mark of how far I’d let my defences slip that I assumed this would be something relating to that. Even when he said he needed to see me straight away I didn’t make the connection.

  ‘Surgery’s about to start,’ I said, phone tucked under my ear as I signed a prescription form. ‘Can it wait until later?’

  ‘No,’ he said, and hearing his bluntness I stopped writing. ‘I need you out here now, Dr Hunter. As soon as possible,’ he added, as a sop to courtesy. But it was clear that politeness wasn’t a priority for him right now.

  ‘What’s happened?’

  There was a pause. I guessed he was weighing up how much he could tell me over a public phone line.

  ‘We’ve found her,’ he said.

  There are around a hundred thousand different species of flies. Different shapes, different sizes, different life-cycles. Blowflies, or blue- and greenbottles as the most familiar types are more commonly known, are part of the Calliphoridae family. They breed on decaying organic matter. Rotting food, faeces, carrion. Almost anything. Most people can’t see the point of them. They’re disease-carrying irritants, as ready to feed on fresh dung as fine cuisine, which they do in both cases by regurgitating onto it.

  But, as with everything else in nature, they play their role. As repulsive as it may seem, flies play an essential part in the breakdown of organic matter, helping to speed the process of dissolution, returning the dead to the raw materials of which they’re composed. They’re nature’s own recycling mechanism. And, as such, there’s a certain elegance to their single-minded devotion to their task. Far from being pointless, in the greater scheme of things, they’re more important than the hummingbird or deer on which they’ll one day feed. And from a forensic perspective, flies are not just an unavoidable evil, they’re invaluable.

  I hate them.

  Not because I find them irritating or disgusting, although I’m no more immune to those aspects than anyone else. Or even because they’re a reminder of our ultimate physical fate. I hate them because of the noise.

  The flies’ music was audible as I made my way across the marsh. At first it was almost felt rather than heard, a low thrumming that seemed part of the heat itself. It grew steadily more pervasive as I approached the centre of activity, a senseless, idiot drone which seemed to constantly waver in pitch without actually changing. The air became busy with darting insects. I waved away those that were drawn by the sweat on my face, but by now they were accompanied by something else.

  The smell was at once both familiar and repellent. I’d smeared my top lip with menthol, but it cut right through. I’d once heard it likened to an over-ripe cheese left to sweat in the sun. It wasn’t—not really. But that was as close as anything came to describing it.

  Mackenzie acknowledged me with a nod. The crime scene team went about their tasks in grim-faced silence, faces flushed and damp in the hot coveralls. I looked down at the object that was the reason for all this activity, from the perspiring police officers to the frenzied swarm of flies.

  ‘We haven’t moved it yet,’ Mackenzie said. ‘I wanted to wait until you got here.’

  ‘How about the pathologist?’

  ‘He’s been and gone. Said it was too decomposed for him to tell us anything for the moment, except that it was dead.’

  It was that all right. It had been a long time since I’d been to a crime scene and looked on what had until recently been a living, breathing person. Sally Palmer’s body had already been taken away by the time I’d arrived, and examining it later, in the sterile environment of a lab, was a far more clinical business. Even the remains of Alan Radcliff had been buried for so long they’d become a mere structural relic, with precious little evidence of humanity left about them. This, though, this was different. This was death in its busiest, awful glory.

  ‘How did you find it?’ I asked, pulling on a latex glove. I’d already suited up at the nearby trailer. We were several miles from the village, in a bleak region of drained marsh almost diametrically opposed to where the first body had been found. The lake glinted indifferently a few hundred yards away. This time I’d come prepared, and underneath the coveralls I was wearing only shorts. Even so, I was already slick with sweat, just from walking the short distance.

  ‘The chopper spotted it. Fluke, really. They had some sort of systems glitch, so they were on their way back. They wouldn’t have flown over here if not. This area’s already been searched.’

  ‘When was the last time?’

  ‘Eight days ago.’

  That gave us an upper limit of how long the body had been here. Perhaps also how long it had been dead, although that was less certain. People have been known to move bodies, sometimes more than once.

  I snapped my other glove into place. I was ready, but felt no enthusiasm for what I was about to do. ‘You think it’s her?’ I asked Mackenzie.

  ‘Officially, we’ll have to wait until a formal identification. But I don’t think there’s much doubt.’

  Neither did I. There had already been one reprieve when the grave had yielded the long-dead student. Somehow I didn’t think there would be another.

  Lyn Metcalf was unrecognizable. Her body lay face down, half-hidden by hummocks of marsh grass. She was naked, but on one fo
ot was a single running shoe, incongruous and somehow pitiful. She’d been dead for several days, that much was obvious. Death had wrought its usual grim changes, a reverse alchemy transforming the gold of life into a base and stinking matter. But at least this time her killer hadn’t added his own obscene modifications.

  There were no swan wings.

  I shut down the part of me that kept trying to superimpose a memory of the smiling young woman I’d bumped into only the week before and went to examine the body. There were what looked like several slashes in the darkened skin. But the most obvious wound was to the throat. Although the body lay face down, the extent of it was still all too apparent.

  ‘Can you say how long she’s been dead?’ Mackenzie asked. ‘Just roughly,’ he added, before I could say anything.

  ‘There’s still soft tissue left, and skin slippage is only just starting.’ I gestured at the wounds, now boiling colonies of maggots. ‘And with this amount of larval activity, we’re probably looking at between six and eight days.’

  ‘Can’t you narrow it down?’

  I was about to point out that he’d asked for a rough estimate only a second before, but stopped myself. This wasn’t pleasant for any of us. ‘The weather’s been constant, so assuming the body hasn’t been moved, to get to this stage I’d say six or seven days in this heat.’

  ‘Anything else?’

  ‘Same sort of wounds as we saw on Sally Palmer, though not quite so many. Severed throat, and the body’s pretty desiccated again. Not as much, obviously, because it’s not been dead as long. But I’d take a preliminary guess that it bled out.’ I examined the blackened vegetation around it, seared by the alkali-rich chemicals released by the body. ‘We’ll need to test iron content to be sure, but I’d guess she was killed somewhere else and dumped here, like last time.’

  ‘Same person did it, would you say?’

  ‘Come on, I can’t tell you that,’ I said.

  Mackenzie grunted. I could understand his unease. In some respects this was similar to Sally Palmer’s murder, but there were enough departures from it to raise doubts that the same man was responsible. From what we could see so far there were no facial injuries. More significantly, the bird or animal fetish that had been evident before was conspicuously absent. From a detection point of view, that presented worrying problems. Either something had happened to force the killer to change his methods, or he was so erratic that there was no pattern to his actions. The third possibility was that the murders were the work of two different people.

  None of the options offered much cause for optimism.

  The monotone hubbub of the flies provided a backdrop as I took my samples. By the time I straightened, my joints and muscles were stiff from crouching.

  ‘Finished?’ asked Mackenzie.

  ‘Pretty much.’

  I moved back. The next step was never a pleasant one. Everything that could be managed without moving the body had been done; photographs taken and measurements made. Now came the moment when we would see what lay underneath. The crime scene officers carefully began to turn the body over. Disturbed, the whine of the flies became more agitated.

  ‘Oh, Christ!’

  I don’t know who spoke. Everyone there was seasoned in this work, but I don’t think any of us could have seen anything like this before. The mutilation had been reserved for the victim’s front. The abdomen had been cut open, and several objects spilled from the gaping wound as the body was turned. One of the officers quickly turned away, gagging. For a moment no-one moved. Then professionalism took over again.

  ‘What the hell are they?’ Mackenzie asked in a hushed, shocked voice. His normally sun-reddened face had turned white. I looked at them, but still couldn’t say. This was outside my experience.

  It was one of the crime scene officers who was the first to realize. ‘They’re rabbits,’ he said. ‘Baby rabbits.’

  Mackenzie came over to where I was sitting in the open back of the Land Rover, a bottle of chilled water in my hand. I’d done as much as I could for now. It had been a relief to finally take off my coveralls. But even though I’d washed myself at the police trailer I still felt unclean, and not just because of the heat.

  He sat next to me without saying anything. I took another drink of water as he unwrapped a packet of mints.

  ‘Well,’ he said at last. ‘At least we know it’s the same man.’

  ‘Silver lining to every cloud, eh?’ It came out sounding harsher than I’d meant. He glanced at me.

  ‘You OK?’

  ‘Just out of practice at this sort of thing.’

  I thought he might apologize for involving me. He didn’t. The silence ran for a while before he spoke again. ‘Lyn Metcalf’s been missing for nine days. If she’s been dead for six or seven, like you say, that means he kept her alive for at least two. The same as Sally Palmer.’

  ‘I know.’

  He stared off into the distance, where the mercury surface of the lake shimmered in the heat. ‘Why?’

  ‘I’m not with you.’

  ‘Why keep them alive for so long? Why take the risk?’

  ‘I’m sure this isn’t news to you, but we’re not exactly dealing with a rational mind.’

  ‘No, but he’s not stupid. So why’s he doing it?’ He chewed his lip, looking annoyed. ‘I can’t see what’s going on here.’

  ‘In what way?’

  ‘Usually when women are abducted and killed the motive’s sexual. But this doesn’t fit the usual pattern.’

  ‘So you don’t think they were raped?’ The condition of this second body meant it would be just as impossible to say for certain as it had been with Sally Palmer. But it would have been some small comfort if the victims had been spared that much at least.

  ‘That’s not what I said. You find a woman’s body without any clothes, it’s a fair bet there was some kind of sexual assault, at least. But your run-of-the-mill sexual predator generally kills his victims straight away, as soon as he’s got his rocks off. Very occasionally you’ll get one who keeps them alive until he’s tired of playing with them. But what this one’s doing here, it doesn’t make sense.’

  ‘Perhaps he needs to build up to it.’

  Mackenzie looked at me for a moment without speaking. He shrugged. ‘Perhaps. But on the one hand we’ve got someone who’s intelligent enough to snatch two women and disrupt the search by planting snares, and on the other doesn’t bother to get rid of the bodies properly. And what about the mutilations? What’s the point of those?’

  ‘That’s one to ask the psychologists, not me.’

  ‘I will, don’t worry. But I don’t think they’re likely to know either. Is he deliberately showing off or just being careless? It’s like we’re dealing with two conflicting mindsets.’

  ‘A schizophrenic, you mean?’

  He was frowning, worrying at the puzzle. ‘I don’t think so. Someone obviously mentally ill would have shown up long before now. And I’m not sure they’d be capable of this.’

  ‘There’s another thing,’ I said. ‘He’s killed two women in, what, less than three weeks? And the second was only ten, eleven days after the first. That’s not…’ I was about to say ‘normal’, but that wasn’t a word that could be remotely applied to this. ‘That’s not usual, is it? Even for a serial killer.’

  Mackenzie looked tired. ‘No. No, it’s not.’

  ‘So how come he’s suddenly in such a rush? What’s triggered him?’

  ‘If I knew that we’d be halfway to catching the bastard.’ He stood up, wincing as he kneaded the small of his back. ‘I’ll have the body brought to the lab. Probably tomorrow, OK?’

  I nodded. But as he moved away I called him back. ‘What about the dead birds and animals? Are you going to go public about them now?’

  ‘We can’t release details like that.’

  ‘Not even if he’s using them to mark out his victims in advance?’

  ‘We don’t know he is for certain.’

  �
�You told me there was a stoat left on Sally Palmer’s doorstep, and Lyn Metcalf told her husband she’d found a dead hare the day before she disappeared.’

  ‘Like you said yourself, this is the countryside. Animals die all the time.’

  ‘They don’t tie themselves to stones or climb into a murdered woman’s stomach.’

  ‘We still don’t know he used them to target his victims beforehand.’

  ‘But if there’s even a chance don’t you think you should warn people?’

  ‘What, and invite all the cranks and practical jokers to waste everyone’s time? We’d be swamped with calls every time a bloody hedgehog gets run over.’

  ‘If you don’t he could target another victim without them knowing it. If he hasn’t already.’

  ‘I know that, but people are scared enough as it is. I’m not going to start a panic.’

  But there was an undercurrent of doubt to his voice. ‘He’s going to do this again, isn’t he?’ I said.

  For a second I thought he would actually answer. Then, without a word, he turned and walked away.

  CHAPTER 17

  NEWS THAT LYN METCALF’S body had been found detonated in Manham like a silent bomb burst. Given what had happened to Sally Palmer, few people could have been surprised exactly, but that didn’t lessen the shock. And while Sally, for all her popularity, had been an outsider, an immigrant to the village, Lyn had been born here. Gone to school here, married in the church. She was a part of Manham in a way that Sally could never be. Her death—her murder—had a far more visceral impact on people who could no longer pretend that the victim might somehow have imported the seeds of their fate from outside. Now the village mourned for one of its own.

  And feared another.

  There could no longer be doubt in anyone’s mind that something unprecedented and terrible was happening in Manham. For this to happen to one woman was bad enough. For it to happen to two, in so short a space of time, was unprecedented. Suddenly, we were news again. The village once again found itself caught in the spotlight, a collective traffic accident for the public to gawp at. As all victims do, it reacted first with bewildered disbelief, then resentment.

 

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