Five Scarpetta Novels (64 page)

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Authors: Patricia Cornwell

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This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

 

The Penguin Putnam Inc. World Wide Web site address is
http://www.penguinputnam.com

Point of Origin
PATRICIA CORNWELL

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

 

POINT OF ORIGIN

 

A
Berkley
Book / published by arrangement with the author

 

All rights reserved.

Copyright ©
1998
by
Cornwell Enterprises, Inc.

This book may not be reproduced in whole or part, by mimeograph or any other means, without permission. Making or distributing electronic copies of this book constitutes copyright infringement and could subject the infringer to criminal and civil liability.

For information address:

The Berkley Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Putnam Inc.,

375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014.

 

The Penguin Putnam Inc. World Wide Web site address is http://www.penguinputnam.com

 

ISBN:
978-1-1012-0734-5

 

A
BERKLEY
BOOK®

Berkley
Books first published by The IMPRINT Publishing Group, a member of Penguin Putnam Inc.,

375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014.

BERKLEY
and the “
B
” design are trademarks belonging to Penguin Putnam Inc.

 

First edition (electronic): July 2001

http://us.penguingroup.com

 

 

 

With love
to
Barbara Bush
(for the difference you make)

Every man's work shall be made manifest: for the day shall declare it, because it shall be revealed by fire; and the fire shall try every man's work of what sort it is.

(I Corinthians 3:13)

D
AY
523.6

O
NE
P
HEASANT
P
LACE
K
IRBY
W
OMEN'S
W
ARD
W
ARDS
I
SLAND
, NY

Hey DOC,

Tick Tock

Sawed bone and fire.

Still home alone with FIB the liar? Watch the clock BIG DOC!

Spurt dark light and fright

TRAINSTRAINSTRAINS.

GKSFWFY wants photos.

Visit with we. On floor three. YOU trade with we.

TICK TOC DOC! (Will Lucy talk?)

LUCY-BOO on TV. Fly through window. Come with we

Under covers. Come til dawn. Laugh and sing. Same ole song.

LUCY LUCY LUCY and we!

Wait and see.

Carrie

1

B
ENTON WESLEY WAS
taking off his running shoes in my kitchen when I ran to him, my heart tripping over fear and hate and remembered horror. Carrie Grethen's letter had been mixed in a stack of mail and other paperwork, all of it put off until a moment ago when I had decided to drink cinnamon tea in the privacy of my Richmond, Virginia, home. It was Sunday afternoon, thirty-two minutes past five, June eighth.

“I'm assuming she sent this to your office,” Benton said.

He did not seem disturbed as he bent over, peeling off white Nike socks.

“Rose doesn't read mail marked personal and confidential.” I added a detail he already knew as my pulse ran hard.

“Maybe she should. You seem to have a lot of fans out there.” His wry words cut like paper.

I watched him set pale bare feet on the floor, his elbows on his knees and head low. Sweat trickled over shoulders and arms well defined for a man his age, and my eyes drifted down knees and calves, to tapered ankles still
imprinted with the weave of his socks. He ran his fingers through wet silver hair and leaned back in the chair.

“Christ,” he muttered, wiping his face and neck with a towel. “I'm too old for this crap.”

He took a deep breath and blew out slowly with mounting anger. The stainless steel Breitling Aerospace watch I had given to him for Christmas was on the table. He picked it up and snapped it on.

“Goddamn it. These people are worse than cancer. Let me see it,” he said.

The letter was penned by hand in bizarre red block printing, and drawn at the top was a crude crest of a bird with long tail feathers. Scrawled under it was the enigmatic Latin word
ergo,
or
therefore,
which in this context meant nothing to me. I unfolded the simple sheet of white typing paper by its corners and set it in front of him on the antique French oak breakfast table. He did not touch a document that might be evidence as he carefully scanned Carrie Grethen's weird words and began running them through the violent database in his mind.

“The postmark's New York, and of course there's been publicity in New York about her trial,” I said as I continued to rationalize and deny. “A sensational article just two weeks ago. So anyone could have gotten Carrie Grethen's name from that. Not to mention, my office address is public information. This letter's probably not from her at all. Probably some other cuckoo.”

“It probably is from her.” He continued reading.

“She could mail something like this from a forensic psychiatric hospital and nobody would check it?” I countered as fear coiled around my heart.

“Saint Elizabeth's, Bellevue, Mid-Hudson, Kirby.” He did not glance up. “The Carrie Grethens, the John
Hinckley Juniors, the Mark David Chapmans are patients, not inmates. They enjoy our same civil rights as they sit around in penitentiaries and forensic psychiatric centers and create pedophile bulletin boards on computers and sell serial killer tips through the mail. And write taunting letters to chief medical examiners.”

His voice had more bite, his words more clipped. Benton's eyes burned with hate as he finally lifted them to me.

“Carrie Grethen is mocking you,
big chief.
The FBI. Me,” he went on.

“FIB,”
I muttered, and on another occasion, I might have found this funny.

Wesley stood and draped the towel over a shoulder.

“Let's say it's her,” I started in again.

“It is.” He had no doubt.

“Okay. Then there's more to this than mockery, Benton.”

“Of course. She's making sure we don't forget that she and Lucy were lovers, something the general public doesn't know
yet,”
he said. “The obvious point is, Carrie Grethen hasn't finished ruining people's lives.”

I could not stand to hear her name, and it enraged me that she was now, this moment, inside my West End home. She might as well be sitting at my breakfast table with us, curdling the air with her foul, evil presence. I envisioned her condescending smile and blazing eyes and wondered what she looked like now after five years of steel bars and socializing with the criminally insane. Carrie was not crazy. She had never been that. She was a character disorder, a psychopath, a violent entity with no conscience.

I looked out at wind rocking Japanese maples in my
yard and the incomplete stone wall that scarcely kept me from my neighbors. The telephone abruptly rang and I was reluctant to answer it.

“Dr. Scarpetta,” I said into the receiver as I watched Benton's eyes sweep back down that red-penned page.

“Yo,” Peter Marino's familiar voice came over the line. “It's me.”

He was a captain with the Richmond Police Department, and I knew him well enough to recognize his tone. I braced myself for more bad news.

“What's up?” I said to him.

“A horse farm went up in flames last night in Warrenton. You may have heard about it on the news,” he said. “Stables, close to twenty high-dollar horses, and the house. The whole nine yards. Everything burned to the ground.”

So far, this wasn't making any sense. “Marino, why are you calling me about a fire? In the first place, Northern Virginia is not your turf.”

“It is now,” he said.

My kitchen seemed to get small and airless as I waited for the rest.

“ATF's just called out NRT,” he went on.

“Meaning us,” I said.

“Bingo. Your ass and mine. First thing in the morning.”

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms' National Response Team, or NRT, was deployed when churches or businesses burned, and in bombings or any other disaster in which ATF had jurisdiction. Marino and I were not ATF, but it was not unusual for it and other law enforcement agencies to recruit us when the need arose. In recent years I had worked the World Trade
Center and Oklahoma City bombings and the crash of TWA Flight 800. I had helped with the identifications of the Branch Davidians at Waco and reviewed the disfigurement and death caused by the Unabomber. I knew from stressful experience that ATF included me in a call-out only when people were dead, and if Marino was recruited, too, then the suspicion was murder.

“How many?” I reached for my clipboard of call sheets.

“It's not how many, Doc. It's
who.
The owner of the farm is media big shot Kenneth Sparkes, the one and only. And right now it's looking like he didn't make it.”

“Oh God,” I muttered as my world suddenly got too dark to see. “We're sure?”

“Well, he's missing.”

“You mind explaining to me why I'm just now being told about this?”

I felt anger rising, and it was all I could do not to hurl it at him, for all unnatural deaths in Virginia were my responsibility. I shouldn't have needed Marino to inform me about this one, and I was furious with my Northern Virginia office for not calling me at home.

“Don't go getting pissed at your docs up in Fairfax,” said Marino, who seemed to read my mind. “Fauquier County asked ATF to take over here, so that's the way it's going.”

I still didn't like it, but it was time to get on with the business at hand.

“I'm assuming no body has been recovered yet,” I said, and I was writing fast.

“Hell no. That's going to be your fun job.”

I paused, resting the pen on the call sheet. “Marino, this is a single-dwelling fire. Even if arson is suspected,
and it's a high-profile case, I'm not seeing why ATF is interested.”

“Whiskey, machine guns, not to mention buying and selling fancy horses, so now we're talking about a business,” Marino answered.

“Great,” I muttered.

“Oh yeah. We're talking a goddamn nightmare. The fire marshal's gonna call you before the day's out. Better get packed because the whirlybird's picking us up before dawn. Timing's bad, just like it always is. I guess you can kiss your vacation goodbye.”

Benton and I were supposed to drive to Hilton Head tonight to spend a week at the ocean. We had not had time alone so far this year and were burned out and barely getting along. I did not want to face him when I hung up the phone.

“I'm sorry,” I said to him. “I'm sure you've already figured out there's a major disaster.”

I hesitated, watching him, and he would not give me his eyes as he continued to decipher Carrie's letter.

“I've got to go. First thing in the morning. Maybe I can join you in the middle of the week,” I went on.

He was not listening because he did not want to hear any of it.

“Please understand,” I said to him.

He did not seem to hear me, and I knew he was terribly disappointed.

“You've been working those torso cases,” he said as he read. “The dismemberments from Ireland and here. ‘Sawed-up bone.' And she fantasizes about Lucy, and masturbates. Reaching orgasm multiple times a night under the covers. Allegedly.”

His eyes ran down the letter as he seemed to talk to himself.

“She's saying they still have a relationship, Carrie and Lucy,” he continued. “The
we
stuff is her attempt to make a case for disassociation. She's not present when she commits her crimes. Some other party doing them. Multiple personalities. A predictable and pedestrian insanity plea. I would have thought she'd be a little more original.”

“She is perfectly competent to stand trial,” I answered with a wave of fresh anger.

“You and I know that.” He drank from a plastic bottle of Evian. “Where did
Lucy Boo
come from?”

A drop of water dribbled down his chin and he wiped it with the back of his hand.

I stumbled at first. “A pet name I had for her until she was in kindergarten. Then she didn't want to be called that anymore. Sometimes I still slip.” I paused again as I imagined her back then. “So I guess she told Carrie the nickname.”

“Well, we know that at one time, Lucy confided in Carrie quite a lot,” Wesley stated the obvious. “Lucy's first lover. And we all know you never forget your first, no matter how lousy it was.”

“Most people don't choose a psychopath for their first,” I said, and I still could not believe that Lucy, my niece, had.

“Psychopaths are us, Kay,” he said as if I had never heard the lecture. “The attractive, intelligent person sitting next to you on a plane, standing behind you in line, meeting you backstage, hooking up with you on the Internet. Brothers, sisters, classmates, sons, daughters,
lovers. Look like you and me. Lucy didn't have a chance. She was no match for Carrie Grethen.”

The grass in my backyard had too much clover, but spring had been unnaturally cool and perfect for my roses. They bent and shivered in gusting air and pale petals fell to the ground. Wesley, the retired chief of the FBI's profiling unit, went on.

“Carrie wants photos of Gault. Scene photos, autopsy photos. You bring them to her, and in exchange she'll tell you investigative details, forensic jewels you've supposedly missed. Ones that might help the prosecution when the case goes to court next month. Her taunt. That you might have missed something. That it might in some way be connected with Lucy.”

His reading glasses were folded by his place mat, and he thought to slip them on.

“Carrie wants you to come see her. At Kirby.”

His face was tight as he peered at me.

“It's her.”

He pointed at the letter.

“She's surfacing. I knew she would.” He spoke from a spirit that was tired.

“What's the dark light?” I asked, getting up because I could not sit a moment longer.

“Blood.” He seemed sure. “When you stabbed Gault in the thigh, severing his femoral artery, and he bled to death. Or would have had the train not finished the job. Temple Gault.”

He took his glasses off again, because he was secretly agitated.

“As long as Carrie Grethen is around, so is he. The evil twins,” he added.

• • •

In fact, they were not twins, but had bleached their hair and shaved it close to their skulls. They were prepubescently thin and androgenously dressed alike when I last saw them in New York. They had committed murder together until we had captured her in the Bowery and I had killed him in the subway tunnel. I had not intended to touch him or see him or exchange one word with him, for it was not my mission in this life to apprehend criminals and commit judicial homicide. But Gault had willed it so. He had made it happen because to die by my hand was to bond me to him forever. I could not get away from Temple Gault, though he had been dead five years. In my mind were gory pieces of him scattered along gleaming steel rails and rats moiling out of dense shadows to attack his blood.

In bad dreams his eyes were ice blue with irises scattered like molecules, and I heard the thunder of trains with lights that were blinding full moons. For several years after I had killed him, I avoided autopsying the victims of train deaths. I was in charge of the Virginia medical examiner system and could assign cases to my deputy chiefs, and that was what I had done. Even now, I could not look at dissecting knives with the same clinical regard for their cold sharp steel, because he had set me up to plunge one into him, and I had. In crowds I saw dissipated men and women who were him, and at night I slept closer to my guns.

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