angle.
“Contact with some sort of debris?” I didn’t really think so.
“Maybe.” Larabee examined one upturned palm then the other. “No defense wounds. Looks like we may get usable prints.” To Hawkins. “Make sure to bag the hands.”
“This guy come out of the water?” Slidell asked.
“Doesn’t look like most floaters I’ve seen,” I said.
“No signs of aquatic scavenging,” Larabee said.
“Immersion time could have been brief.”
Larabee shrugged agreement. “In any case, there’s no need to check for water in the lungs. If he did wash out of the lake, he definitely wasn’t breathing when he went in.”
“So, how much time we looking at?” Slidell asked.
“The body’s been
“You gonna translate that for us average mopes?”
“Flies would have found the body in minutes, especially with such a massive open wound. Eggs would have been laid in a matter of hours. Hatching would have occurred anywhere from twelve to forty-eight hours later, depending on temperatures.”
“It’s been warm,” Rinaldi said.
“That would speed things up.”
“So whaddya think?” Slidell repeated his question, this time with a note of annoyance.
Given Funderburke’s story, I thought something was off. I kept it to myself.
“I’m not an entomologist,” I said. “I’ll collect samples for analysis.”
In addition to the lack of smell and paucity of insect activity, another thing bothered me. If the body had been dumped where it lay, or if its time in the lake had been brief, that might explain the absence of aquatic scavenging. But Funderburke’s story placed it on the shore last Tuesday morning. The local wildlife should have opened a soup kitchen. Why no signs of animal damage?
Slidell was about to comment when two CSS techs emerged from the trees. The woman was tall, with puffy cheeks and braids pinned to her head. The man was sunburned and wore Maui Jims.
Larabee filled them in. Neither seemed interested in lengthy explanations. Fair enough. They were facing a long afternoon of documenting and collecting evidence and remains.
We waited while markers were placed, photos were taken, and measurements were made. Prelims finished, both techs looked to the ME.
Turning to me, Larabee arm-gestured an invitation.
We stepped to the corpse, me at the hips, Larabee at the shoulders.
Behind us a boat whined approach, then retreat. A series of waves slapped the shore.
“Ready?” Above his mask, the ME’s brows were grimly knitted. The moment of truth. The turning of the body.
I nodded.
Together, we rolled the corpse onto its back.
Everyone there was a veteran, used to murder, mutilation, and all the horror one human can inflict on another. I doubt anyone present had seen this before.
Rinaldi spoke for us all.
“Holy hell.”
11
THOUGH CONTACT WITH THE GROUND HAD DISCOURAGED MOST flies, a few hardy ladies had managed to maneuver beneath the body. A white circle seethed in the pale, hairless chest. A smaller oval churned on the belly.
“What the hell?” Muffled through red polyester.
Leaning close, I could see that the egg masses weren’t evenly distributed, but appeared to cluster into patterns. With one gloved finger, I nudged outlier eggs back toward thicker bands that seemed to rim and crisscross the circle.
And felt coldness congeal in my chest.
The eggs formed an inverted five-point star.
“It’s a pentagram,” I said.
The others remained silent.
Using the same finger, I proceeded to “clean up” the oval until that pattern was clear: 666.
“That don’t say
“How…?” Rinaldi’s question trailed off.
“Flies are like the rest of us,” I said. “Given a choice, they take the easy route. Orifices. Open wounds.”
Slidell knew what I was saying. “The kid was carved up.”
“Yes.”
“Before or after his head was whacked off?” Angry.
“I don’t know.”
“So Lingo’s right.”
“We shouldn’t jump to-”
“You got another theory?”
I didn’t.
“Let’s go.” Stone-jawed, Slidell strode off.
“He means no disrespect.” Rinaldi’s tone was apologetic. “His niece had some problems in high school.” He stopped, considered whether to elaborate. Decided against it. “Anyway, he’s anxious to wrap up the Greenleaf business. We’ve got a line on Kenneth Roseboro, the kid that inherited the house.”
“Wanda Horne’s nephew,” I said.
“Yes.” Again, Rinaldi offered nothing further. “You want a cadaver dog to come sweep the area, maybe try to sniff out the head?”
I nodded.
“I’ll call in a request.”
When I returned from the car with my field kit, Hawkins was shooting video and the CSS team was walking the area. Already the shoreline was dotted with orange markers indicating the presence of potential trace evidence. Cigarette butts. Candy wrappers. Tissues. Most of it would turn out to be useless, but at this stage no one knew what was relevant and what was present due to accidental association.
Opening my kit, I spread out supplies. Beside me, the ME unsheathed a thermometer for insertion into the anus. Or the egg mass. I couldn’t be sure. For two hours we gathered and labeled evidence, Larabee on the corpse, Brennan on the bugs.
First I took close-ups, in case something matured into something else in transit to the entomologist. I’d made that mistake once.
Using a dampened child’s paintbrush, I then scraped up eggs. Half I preserved in diluted alcohol. RIP. The rest I wanted alive for the entomologist to raise to maturity for species identification. That lucky half I placed in vials with beef liver and damp tissue.
Then, I went for maggots. Since the few larvae present appeared to be of the same species and newly hatched, I didn’t worry about separation according to size, merely area of collection: neck, anus, surrounding soil. As with the eggs, one half went into vials with air, food, and perching material. The other half went into hot water, then an alcohol solution.
After netting and packaging adult flies, I gathered representatives of every species present within a yard of the