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Face of Murder

Серия
Год написания книги
2020
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Once the door was firmly closed behind her and Wardenford was out of earshot, Shelley brandished her phone, indicating the source of the news that was spilling out of her. “They’ve found another body.”

Shelley’s words rolled over Zoe like a wave. There was another death. It had probably happened while Wardenford was in custody, which would mean that he was innocent.

But maybe it held another equation—another clue.

Zoe didn’t know whether to be pleased or dismayed. Their phantom math killer had struck again.

But that meant there was a whole wealth of more clues waiting, any of which might help them catch him and stop him in his tracks.

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

Zoe hit the brakes, almost sending the car into a skid. She had been driving so fast down the wide, leafy suburban streets that she had almost missed the police car parked up ahead and gone right into the back of it.

They had landed outside a huge Georgian colonial, not at all out of place in this expensive neighborhood. The one thing that did set it apart were the white-suited forensics experts and uniformed police bustling outside or rushing in and out of the door in a near-perpetual routine.

Shelley was already out of her seatbelt and the door by the time Zoe had turned the engine off, and she wasn’t far behind her. They both ran across the neatly kept lawn to the entrance, flashing their badges quickly at the policeman who tried to stop them approaching from the sidewalk.

The commanding officer at the scene met them at the door, knowing from a glance that they were the FBI agents he had been told to wait for.

“Agents, you’re going to want to come and see this. It’s a brutal one. Looks like another one of our math killer’s hits.”

They followed him hurriedly up a wide staircase to a master bedroom, dodging other personnel who were coming and going with fingerprint kits and DSLRs and spare evidence bags. Zoe had already counted thirteen pairs of boots on the ground. This was clearly a big deal to the locals—and of course it would be. When wealthy neighborhoods were home to violent and brutal murders, it was normally in the interest of the sheriff or chief of police to do something about it, and fast.

“Cleaner called us in when she reported for work and found the body. Thankfully she was in the habit of speaking to her employer first rather than getting right to it, so she didn’t wipe any evidence away. The vic is a neurologist from the local hospital, Dr. Edwin North. Pretty well-known around these parts. He and his wife used to take part in all the community events, you know? Real pillars. His late wife, that is. Cancer last year.”

This running commentary was given as they ascended the stairs, and the officer paused them outside the room itself. “I’ve got to tell you ladies, this is a real bad case. Maybe you shouldn’t go in there. We’ll have the crime scene photos along to you, but you might be better off not seeing it in person.”

“We’re not ladies,” Shelley said, brushing by him. “We’re federal agents, and I assure you we can handle it.”

Zoe held back a laugh at the man’s expression, and followed her. What she saw was not at all pretty. Shelley must have been fighting hard not to show any reaction, given how emotional she normally was at crime scenes.

The doctor’s head was crushed, visibly so. There was an odd shape to his head, newly formed after his skull gave way under the pressure. Oblong, distorted. His eyes had bulged out under the force, his eye sockets broken at their upper edge. Brain matter and blood, along with fragments of skull, decorated the headboard.

He was lying in bed, alone, still partially covered by a blanket. He was half-dressed, giving the impression that he had stolen into the bedroom for a quick nap and nothing more. It was a nap that he was never going to wake up from again.

But most exciting of all was the link that Zoe had been waiting for. His plain shirt had been ripped open, traces of blood still clinging to it where it had been thrown aside. Across his bare torso, another equation was written in thick black numbers and letters.

The blood was still wet. He had been killed in the last hour or less. Even as they watched, a small piece of brain matter that had attached itself to the wall slowly peeled away and dropped down. This crime scene was still settling into place.

This had happened while they were at James Wardenford’s home, arresting him, or at least in the minutes before or after. No way he could have got home, washed himself off, and played the part of the drunkard in time. Even the first part would have been too much of a stretch, given the distance between the homes. Wardenford was in the clear.

Shelley was taking it all in, breathing through her mouth rather than her nose, and Zoe took that as her cue. She was long used to gruesome scenes like these, and it was all just meat to her. Better that she take the lead while Shelley found her feet.

“What was his schedule for today?” Zoe asked.

The policeman flipped back a page in his notebook. “He finished his last shift early this morning, and then was due back in this evening at nine to handle a late shift. Looks like he was getting some shut-eye beforehand.”

Shelley had recovered enough to draw closer to the body. “Any initial forensics reports?”

The officer followed her, leaning in to point at various parts of the skull with an outstretched pen. “They tell me the doctor was stunned first with a single blow, here. We can only just see the edge of the impact mark under all the rest of it, but it was likely solidly across the front of his head. Enough that even if he woke up, he’d have been out of it. Difficult for him to fight back at all.”

Shelley nodded, while Zoe ranged around the room, careful where she stepped. She was making calculations. She knew it took around a thousand pounds of force to cause the average skull fracture. Their killer certainly was not heavy or strong enough to provide that force himself—so he must have used something heavy, and thrown it down on top of the victim’s head.

“Have you recovered the weapon?” she asked.

Their guide, as well as the three forensics officials still working in the room, all shook their heads.

“Heavy, but thin,” Shelley suggested, studying the impact marks on the man’s face.

Zoe nodded approvingly. “No wider than my hand. Dropped three or four times, with decreasing force each time. Our killer was running out of strength.”

“Then, did he bring it with him? Or take it from the house?”

Zoe thought that over. “Interesting question. Either he planned in advance very carefully, or he took an opportunity when he found one. What do we think?”

“He seems like both. It’s a paradox, this case. Planned and premeditated—he waited for the professor. Took the student somewhere that wasn’t covered by surveillance. But the killings themselves are rage-driven, spontaneous. Using the environment.”

“How did he get in?” Zoe directed her question at the officer.

“Back door had been sabotaged. It’s almost as old as the house, beautiful wood paneling. Someone carefully and slowly sawed through it, put their hand through one of the panels, and turned the key from the outside to let themselves in. The doctor had ambient noise playing in here over his smart speakers. He wouldn’t have heard a thing, I don’t think.”

Zoe was done with the scene; she knew everything she needed to, from there at least. Nothing contradicted her earlier thoughts that the killer would be five foot nine, of average build, but perhaps a little muscular. Now she could let herself indulge in the one thing she was really interested in.

She took out her phone and started taking photographs of the equation, angling herself in to get the best shots. Shelley and the others in the room continued low conversations, but Zoe tuned them out, only keeping herself vaguely aware of what they were saying in case something important came up.

The shots taken, Zoe drifted down out of the room and down the corridor, lightly nudging the next door open with her elbow so as to avoid touching the handle. There was light afternoon sun streaming through the large windows, illuminating a miniature gym room with a treadmill set up to face the view.

Zoe moved past it, examining the other items. A large blue balance ball, several straps and lengths of stretchy material used for strength training. A rowing machine, low on the ground, with an empty water bottle still fitted into the appropriate slot.

Weights, stacked up against the far wall. Zoe counted their number and value, noted the thicker layer of dust on the bottom weights—the heaviest—compared to the top. By the pyramid-like stand was a bar, the kind you thought of when you imagined old-fashioned weightlifters. There were several flat, circular weights stacked beside it, evidently used to increase or decrease the weight on the bar as you wished.

Zoe crouched, her attention suddenly caught by something. And yes—there it was. On the edge of one of the larger weights, concentrated much more in one area with almost nothing further along the circle. Blood and fragments of brain and skull.

“In here!” she shouted, sure now that she was looking at the murder weapon.

Shelley arrived fast, the forensics people hot on her heels. Zoe moved out of the way to allow them in, pointing out the incriminating evidence. She looked over the rest of the room more closely, seeking another sign of their killer’s presence. A footprint in undisturbed dust, a smudge from a finger, anything that would help.

“What are these here?”

Shelley’s voice snapped Zoe out of her concentration. The forensics team rushed over to where Shelley was pointing, on the floor just by the dropped weight.

“Strands of hair,” one of them muttered, taking out an evidence bag. “Very short. Well spotted.”

“It could be the victim’s,” another of them pointed out, his voice muffled by the mask he wore over his mouth.

“One dark and one gray,” Shelley said. “The victim looks to have been blond. From here, at least.”

The two hairs were lifted with fine tweezers, dropped into the waiting evidence bag, and marked. “We’ll have them analyzed. With any luck, there will be enough of the hair follicle on there to get us a match.”

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