banned by FCC, so that’s why I’m telling you the program was made from scratch, and by someone with
Olsher gnawed on his cigar, perplexed, turning to Helen. “Any evidence to suggest Dahmer was skilled with computers?”
A memory floated, and a word.
“Here we go with Campbell again.”
Beck interjected. “Chief, face it. There
“So why would Dahmer call Helen?”
Beck made a frown. “Helen’s name is in the newspaper almost every day. They’ve
Olsher chewed on these considerations along with the cigar.
“Look, I never said I didn’t believe your theory about a conspirator. I just wasn’t too hip on this Campbell guy, considering the source.”
Now it was Helen’s turn to frown, but she said nothing.
Beck went on, “And it’s starting to seem to me that maybe Campbell’s not the only conspirator.”
“Why?” Olsher grunted.
“Because there’s no Campbell at St. John’s Hospital,” Helen said, “and there can be no doubt that St. John’s is the location where Kussler’s dead body was switched with Dahmer.”
“She’s right, Chief,” Beck plodded on. “Someone with hospital access
“Rosser died in the same hospital,” Helen pointed out.
“And I just got finished determining the cause of death.” Beck waved a dot-matrix printout from a tox-screen analysis. “Helen ordered me to do a blood run the minute we knew Rosser was dead. He was killed with a massive oral dose of succinicholine sulphate—the same drug being used to paralyze the victims.”
Helen smiled to herself, while Olsher stared. “Good work, both of you,” he admitted. “Keep it up and keep me posted.” Then he left but from the lab entry waved Helen out into the hall.
“What is it, Larrel?” Helen asked.
“This bit about a second person, a second conspirator with hospital access?”
“It makes a lot of sense, Chief. Look, you didn’t buy the part about Campbell and now you’re admitting he exists. The same goes for a second collaborator, someone specifically tied to St. John’s.”
Olsher rubbed his face. “I know, and that’s what bugs me. You know who fits the bill, don’t you?”
Helen swallowed before she could answer. “Tom. I know. I’ve given that a lot of thought. He did the autopsy, he was the duty pathologist for Dahmer’s post, and he’d have access to the psych wing med unit. Rosser was on a lithium compound to treat his hyper-activity. Someone could easily have slipped into the nurses’ station and spiked Rosser’s lithium with succincholine.”
“Shit,” Olsher said, impressed. “You
Helen felt less than resplendent revealing the rest. “He’s also had…affairs with men.”
Olsher gaped at her. “Are you shitting—”
“No, I’m not, and one more thing. He’s big into computers.”
By now Olsher had nearly chewed the cigar to wet shreds. “Yeah. Keep an eye on him, Helen. And I mean a
««—»»
Everything was coming out to dry now. Beck had no problem accepting the credibility of Rosser’s lithium dose being poisoned with succinicholine. The precaution ward, true, had a nurses’ station behind the locked ward door and a 24-hour security guard, but the drug prescriptions for every patient on the unit were prepared at the
But she’d still have to prove it, and that wouldn’t be easy. Tom may have assisted, but Campbell was still the key. She’d ordered CES to dust Kussler’s apartment for prints—Kussler and Campbell were lovers—at least before Campbell was loving enough to kill him—so it stood to reason Campbell’s prints would be there too.
More dumb luck, though, when Beck brought in the results. Prints other than Kussler’s were indeed found all over the apartment, but none of those prints were on file.
“You gotta figure, Captain, if Campbell’s smart enough to beat a phone-trace with a home-made software program, he’s definitely smart enough to know his prints aren’t on file,”
Beck commiserated.
Helen could only agree.
“And, check this out,” Beck told her, opening a magazine. “Have you seen this? It came out a few days ago.”
“I don’t read magazines, Jan. I don’t have time to read a fortune cookie.”
The glossy cover shined up.
“Goddamn it.” Helen was getting to hate this. Here was a long article not as much about the Dahmer Case as about
Helen rose a subtle brow.
“Turn the page,” Beck said.
“Oh, no!”
“
Helen gaped, aghast, at another snapshot. It was her and Tom, smiling and holding hands as they left Mader’s, downtown’s best German restaurant.
“
“Oh for Christ’s sake!” Helen griped. “And— How on earth did they get that picture?”
“You know these tabloid mags,” Beck informed. “They send their photographers out to hide in the bushes. That guy probably staked you and Tom out, followed you to the restaurant, and then waited for you to come out.”
Helen threw the magazine in the trash, infuriated, as Beck answered the phone.