Lenz likes to hear himself talk, and does not take kindly to interruptions. But Daniel Baxter doesn't hesitate to cut him off.
“Roger Wheaton,” Baxter says in the tone of a man reading from a cue card. “Born 1943, in rural Vermont. Youngest of three brothers. His brothers joined the service upon graduating high schoolâone army, one navy. Wheaton had no formal training as a child, but in interviewsâof which he's done damned fewâhe says his mother was a great lover of classical art. She bought him supplies and encouraged him to imitate the old masters, copying color plates from a book she bought him. He showed phenomenal talent, and at seventeen he left home for New York. We don't have a lot of information on this period of his life, but in interviews he's said he supported himself doing odd jobs and painting portraits on the street. He was unsuccessful as an artist, and in 1966 he joined the Marine Corps. He did two tours in Vietnam, earning a Bronze Star and a Purple Heart. . . .”
I glance at Kaiser, who steps on my foot beneath the table.
“Wheaton also instituted a disciplinary action against two members of his platoon for raping a twelve-year-old Vietnamese girl. He pushed it to a court-martial, and the men did time in Leavenworth. Any thoughts, John?”
Kaiser nods in the half-dark. “That would have made Wheaton about as popular as trench foot in his platoon. It tells us something about him, but what, I'm not sure. Either what he saw was really bad, and he felt morally compelled to push it, or the guy has some kind of hero compulsion.”
This remark rankles me. “What rape wouldn't be really bad to see?” I ask, trying to keep my voice under control. “Why couldn't Wheaton simply have been doing the right thing by pushing it?”
Baxter answers for Kaiser. “I served in Vietnam myself, Ms. Glass. Most soldiers coming upon the situation I've described would have been offended and outraged, but they would have looked the other way. A few would have participated. But very few would have bucked the chain of command and forced disciplinary action. It's not pretty in hindsight, but at that time, no one was inclined to discipline our own troops for anything short of a massacre. Wheaton transferred out of his unit after that, and it's not hard to guess why. Still, he had a spotless record, with several commendations from his commanders.”
“We should track down the names of men he served with,” says Kaiser. “Not just his officers.”
“We're on it,” Baxter replies. “You should also note that Wheaton lost one brother in Vietnam. Killed in a Saigon bar by a terrorist bomb. The other died in 1974, from a stroke.”
Baxter shuffles some papers. “After Vietnam, Wheaton returned to New York, enrolled in the art program at NYU, and slowly made a name for himself painting portraits. He supported himself this way for years, while he worked on his private obsession, which is landscapes. For the past twenty years, he's painted the same subject over and over again. It's a forest clearing, and every painting in the series is called The Clearing. He began in a very realistic style, but over the years he's gone more abstract. The paintings are still called The Clearing, but they're not recognizable as such. The early, more realistic ones showed a Vermont-style forest clearing, but also jungle foliage typical of Vietnamâand sometimes the two mixedâso there's no telling about the real origin of the image, or its significance. When asked about it in interviews, Wheaton says the paintings speak for themselves.”
“A progression from realistic to abstract,” says Kaiser. “The exact opposite of the Sleeping Women.”
“Wheaton's progression is much more marked,” says Lenz. “His style is so defined now that it's spawned a genre or school in the worldwide art community. They call it âDark Impressionism.' Not because the paintings themselves are necessarily darkâthough most of his recent work isâbut because of their content. He uses Impressionist techniques, but the original Impressionists tended to paint what you might call happy subjects. Pastoral, tranquil themes. Think of Manet, Renoir, Monet, Pissarro. Wheaton's work is very different.”
“De Becque said the Sleeping Women artist uses Impressionist techniques,” I tell Lenz. “In the way he lays down color, anyway.”
“That's true,” says Lenz. “But he abandoned the pure style very quickly. Many beginning artists emulate the Impressionists, just as young composers imitate the popular composers of the past. But Impressionism in the pure sense is passé. Wheaton succeeds because he's brought something new to the style. As for him painting the Sleeping Women, though, two connoisseurs have already told us that the Sleeping Women share no similarities whatever with the paintings of Roger Wheaton.”
“Could one man paint two radically different styles and an expert not be able to tell he did both?” asks Baxter.
“If he did it to prove a point, probably.”
“What about to avoid detection?” says Baxter.
“Probably. But over the course of a body of work, certain idiosyncrasies reveal themselves. We've got hold of several portraits Wheaton painted years ago, to compare his execution of skin, eyes, hair, et cetera with that of the Sleeping Women artist. It's all very technical, but the final answer is no. He couldn't hide himself that way. Of course, we'll analyze the paints, canvases, and all other materials to be sure.”
“Have you found these Kolinsky sable brush hairs in Wheaton's paintings?”
“Yes. We've also found them in the paintings of Smith, Gaines, and Laveau.”
“Dating how far back?”
“Two years. When they came to Tulane.”
“Wheaton just started using these special brushes?”
“Apparently so. We'll have to ask him why. Let's move on. I could talk for an hour about Wheaton alone, but we have a much more viable suspect in this bunch.” Baxter says to the speakerphone, “Put up Gaines, Tom.”
The photo of Wheaton is replaced by a mug shot of the convict. This guy I would walk across a busy interstate to avoid. Crazed eyes, pasty skin, tangled black hair, a stubbled face, and a broken nose. The only paintbrush I can see him holding would be six inches wide.
“Leon Isaac Gaines,” says Baxter. “If I had to lay odds right now, this is our man in New Orleans. His father and mother were both drunks. The father did a stretch in Sing Sing for carnal knowledge of a juvenile, paving the way for junior, I guess.”
“Male or female juvenile?” asks Kaiser.
“Female.”
“Age?”
“Fourteen. Leon was arrested repeatedly as a juvenile. Burglary, assault, peeping, you name it. He did juvy time for starting fires, and was in and out of reformatories until he was twenty.”
Kaiser grunts, and I know why. Childhood arson is one leg of the “homicidal triangle” of indicators for serial killers as children. Bed-wetting, arson, and cruelty to animals: I remember them all from my reading last year.
“He rings the chimes on animals, too,” says Baxter. “When he was twelve, he buried a neighbor's cat up to its neck in a sandpile and rolled over it with a lawn mower.”
“Enuresis?” asks Kaiser.
“No record of it. Both parents are deceased, but they weren't the kind to have sought medical care for that. Still, we're trying to track down physicians working in the area at the time.” More shuffling paper in the semi-dark. “Gaines is a two-time loser, once for aggravated battery, once for attempted rape.”
“Jesus,” mutters Bowles.
“No gang affiliations while incarcerated, but he was part of a bad riot at Sing Sing. We're tracking down his cellmates and sending agents to interview them. Gaines never picked up a paintbrush in his life until his first term in Sing Singâ1975. He showed so much promise that the warden showed his stuff to some New York dealers. They apparently kept an eye on him, because during his second hitch, they made some sales for him. He attracted the attention of the New York art community, much as Jack Henry Abbott attracted the attention of Norman Mailer and those other chumps with his âBelly of the Beast' nonsense.”
“Is that when Wheaton first heard about Gaines?” asks Kaiser.
“Wheaton isn't mentioned by anyone at that time in connection with Gaines. Wheaton's always been a recluse, associates with no other artists. Since his diagnosis, he's broken off all contact with everyone but his dealer and his students. Local patrons of the arts in New Orleans have invited him for parties, dinner, like that, but he always declines. The president isn't happy about that.”
“What does Gaines paint?” asks Kaiser.
“He started with prison scenes. Now he paints nothing but his girlfriend. Whatever girlfriend he has at the time. As far as we can tell, he's regularly abused every woman he's ever been with. He paints that, as well, by the way. Reviews of his stuff call it âviolent,' and that's a quote.”
“How many applicants did Wheaton have to choose from when he picked this guy?”
“More than six hundred.”
“Jesus. Why did he pick Gaines?”
“You can ask him that tomorrow.”
Kaiser tenses beside me. “I'm doing the interview?”
“We'll get to that after we cover these bios,” Baxter says quickly.
The rivalry between Kaiser and Lenz will surely come to a head over this.
“So Gaines is essentially painting a series, as well?” I ask. “The same subject again and again? Just like Wheaton and the UNSUB?”
“The others are too, in their ways,” says Lenz. “Wheaton apparently used this as a criterion in his selection. He's on record as saying that only deep study of a particular subject can produce new understanding, deeper levels of truth.”
“That and fifty cents'll buy you a cup of coffee,” cracks Bowles.
“I'm inclined to agree,” says Baxter. “But they pay Wheaton very big bucks.”
“How much?” asks Kaiser.
“His last painting went for four hundred thousand dollars.”
“That's not even close to the Sleeping Women prices.”
“True. But Wheaton's a lot more prolific than our UNSUB. You should note that NOPD has been called to Leon Gaines's duplex several times by neighbors, but the girlfriend has yet to swear out a complaint. Gaines is usually drunk when they get there.”
“I think we've got the picture on Gaines,” says Kaiser.
“Not quite. He owns a Dodge utility van with tinted windows all around.”
The room goes silent.
“Anybody else have that kind of transport?” asks Kaiser in a soft voice.
“No,” says Lenz.
“We've got to get inside that van. If we find biological trace, we can compare it to samples from our victims' DNA bank.”
“Where did you get DNA from the victims?” I ask. “You have no bodies.”
“For four victims, we have locks of hair saved from childhood,” says Kaiser. “Two victims were breast cancer survivors, and have bone marrow stem cells stocked at hospitals for future transplant. Two victims have eggs stored at fertility clinics. And two stocked umbilical cord blood when their youngest children were delivered. That's not a direct match to the mother, but it could be helpful.”
“I'm impressed.”
“John put that together,” Baxter says proudly. “All grist to the mill.”
“As an identical twin,” says Kaiser, “you could add to the bank for your sister. I meant to ask you before.”
“Anytime.”
“As soon you conclude Gaines's interview tomorrow,” says Baxter, “NOPD will confiscate the van.”
“What's the deal with the utility van? Good way to move a body?”
Kaiser turns to me, his face a shadow with glinting eyes. “Rapists and serial killers favor this type of vehicle by a huge margin. It's the most important part of their equipment, a means to quickly get the victim out of sight, even in a public place. Later, it often becomes the scene of the final crime.”
I try in vain to shut out images of Jane being raped and cut up inside a dark and stinking van.
“My money's on Leon Gaines,” says Baxter. “But we need to cover everybody. Let's have Frank Smith, Tom.”
Gaines's face is replaced by the almost angelic visage I saw earlier in the composite.
“This one's a riddle,” says Baxter. “Frank Smith was born into a wealthy family in Westchester County in 1965. He focused on art from an early age, and took an MFA degree from Columbia. Smith is openly gay, and he's painted homosexual themesâusually nude menâfrom his college days.”
“Not nude sleeping men?” asks Kaiser.
“If only,” says Baxter. “By all reports, Smith is enormously talented, and paints in the style of the old masters. His paintings look like Rembrandt to me. Really unbelievable.”
“More like Titian, actually,” says Lenz, earning a snort from the SAC. “Frank Smith stretches his own canvases and mixes his own pigments. The mystery is what he's doing in Wheaton's program at all. He's already famous in his own right. Wheaton has far more stature, of course, but I'm not sure what Smith could learn from him.”
“I'll ask Smith tomorrow,” says Kaiser.
Lenz sighs and looks at Baxter, who gazes pointedly at the table. The blue light of the projector beam highlights the fatigue lines in the ISU chief's face.
“Smith's paintings now sell for upwards of thirty thousand dollars,” Lenz adds.
“Oh, I forgot,” says Baxter. “Wheaton's currently working on a painting that takes up a whole room over at the Woldenberg Art Center at Tulane.”
“You mean a whole wall?” asks Kaiser.
“No, a whole
room.
Multiple canvases stretched over curved frames to form a perfect circle. He's painted on curved canvases for years, to create a feeling that you're walking into this clearing he's painting. Monet tried this as well. But this new thing is a complete circle. Huge. Takes up half of a thirty-five-hundred-square-foot gallery.”