Authors: Kathryn Casey
In memory of my friend and mentor Ann Rule,
who is missed and will never be forgotten.
Some names have been changed in this book: Stan Rich, Teresa Montoya, and Christi Suarez.
Sunday, June 9, 2013
I
n his starched, blue-shirted uniform, Houston P.D. officer Ashton Bowie circulated through the eighteenth floor hallway of The Parklane, one of Houston's most stylish high-rise addresses, a smoky glass and off-white paneled structure that soared over the sixteenth hole of a lush green golf course. In daylight, floor-to-ceiling windows from the thirty-five floors offered breathtaking views of the city's impressive skyline.
At 3:41
A.M.
when the 9-1-1 call hit, however, darkness cloaked the nation's fourth largest city. On the phone, a desperate-sounding woman pleaded for help. Yet the apartment number on the transmission posed a problem. Dispatched to an assault in progress in apartment 1801, once he stepped off the elevator, Bowie saw that the apartments were designated by the floor number and a letter. Where was the crisis? In apartment 18A? 18D? Behind which closed door?
A fit man, Bowie worked the graveyard shift in this section of Houston, dominated by the elegant museum district, the hallowed halls of Rice University, and the expansive facilities that made up the Texas Medical Center, the largest hospital and medical research complex in the world. Among H-town's most expensive neighborhoods, the area suffered its share of common crimes: burglaries, robberies, shoplifting and car heists. This type of call, one potentially involving violence, was rare.
In The Parklane, Officer Bowie worked his way from door to door, lingering at times, listening intently, assuming the assignment could involve a domestic-violence situation, among the most dangerous for any officer. Entering a private residence where two people fought in the middle of the night, perhaps one armed, was unpredictable. When tempers and emotions flared, anything was possible.
Suddenly, from deep inside apartment 18B, Bowie heard a woman's moans, muffled by a thick door. He walked up and listened. Confident that the sobbing came from inside, his hand on the gun in his holster, he knocked.
“Police! Open up!”
A slight hesitation, then the door cracked open far enough to reveal a slice of a woman's face, mostly concealed behind the door. “Did you call 9-1-1, ma'am?”
“Yes,” the woman said, her words slurred.
At five-foot-five, the woman appeared to be of Latin descent, thick, long, dark hair held in a clip at the top, falling about her face and gathering around her shoulders. Something muddy looking marked her forehead and cheeks.
“What's wrong?” he asked. The woman looked unsteady, weaving slightly.
Not answering, she eased the door open a bit wider. Exposed to the light from the hallway, Bowie judged that the smudges on the woman's forehead, cheeks, and chin resembled blood. Her hands and her hair were streaked. Her lacy black tank top revealed little, but blood covered and saturated the legs of her jeans, especially around the knees. So much blood. The scene recalled a horror movie, one where the art director had been ordered to ramp up the gore. In real life, so much blood meant only one thingâsomeone was dead or dying.
“Are you hurt?” the officer asked. The woman didn't appear to be, but he wondered if it was possible that the blood was hers. The woman shook her head no, and Bowie caught a strong whiff of alcohol.
“He was holding me, and he wouldn't let go,” she said,
an eerie hollow whine to her voice. Now that he'd heard her speak, Bowie realized the woman had a Spanish accent, garbled by what appeared to be an overconsumption of liquor. “I said, âStefan! Let me go!'”
“Who is Stefan?” he asked.
“My fiancé,” she said. “Come in.”
The woman stepped back and opened the door into the foyer. She then pointed into the apartment, down a short hallway, one that T'ed off at a wall that separated the entry from the apartment's interior. Officer Bowie edged inside, his hand still hovering over the service weapon in his holster, his eyes surveying the scene.
“Are there any weapons?”
“No,” she said, choking out the word.
Once inside, Bowie's eyes trailed the brief hallway's off-white walls. Low to the floor, dark reddish-brown smudges and spots spattered in a chaotic pattern. More blood. Beside him, the woman sobbed. “He was holding me. He wouldn't let me go,” she wailed. “I told him, âStefan, please! Please! Let me go!'”
Then Bowie saw the man sprawled on the floor, on his back, at the end of the hallway, his hands flung above his head. Beside him, near his face, more crimson pooled on the off-white carpet. At first, the officer, who walked forward for a closer look, assumed the cause of so much bleeding must have been a bullet. That, however, didn't seem to be the case. Careful not to contaminate the scene, Bowie bent down for a closer look and judged this was something else. He wasn't sure what. It looked like the white-haired man on the floor had been attacked with something, beaten about his head. Dozens of cuts, dents, and bruises pocked the face and scalp of the man on the floor, garish, seeping wounds.
“Sir, sir!” the officer said, but there was no answer. From the look of the man, Bowie hadn't expected one.
“I tried to give him CPR,” the woman said. “Can you try?”
Yet the officer never started CPR. The blood on the carpet was already drying. In Officer Bowie's estimation, any
opportunity to save the man had long since passed. Judging from the coagulating blood on the carpet and the cold, pale look of the body, the officer judged that the man on the floor had been dead for some period of time.
“What happened?” Bowie asked, turning his attention fully on the woman.
“We were arguing,” she said. As she talked, she grew calmer, but her voice was urgent, and her words rushed out in a torrent, jumbled, perhaps a result of the alcohol the officer smelled even more clearly now that she stood beside him. “He wouldn't let me leave. He was holding me, and he wouldn't let me go. I said, âStefan, let me go!'” This time when she recounted what she'd told the dead man, the woman held on to the vowels, turning her entreaty into a plea: “Pleeeeease, Stefan! Pleeeeease, let me go!”
Officer Bowie looked down and again considered the man's corpse, his face covered in a bizarre patchwork of wounds. The woman said there wasn't a weapon, but it was obvious that she hadn't done so much damage with her hands. “What did you hit him with?”
The woman's face twisted into a pained grimace, and she pointed a bloody finger toward something on the floor near the dead man's head, a size-nine, cobalt-blue suede stiletto, its five-and-a-half-inch heel stained with blood that held tufts of what appeared to be strands of the dead man's white hair.
“My shoe,” she said. “I hit him with my shoe.”
I
n the year that followed, the shock waves of the killing inside Parklane 18B echoed past the streets of Houston, mesmerizing the nation and the world. A sexy woman's shoe might have been a recurring weapon in movie plots, but on that awful June morning, in a posh Houston high-rise, it became reality.
Compounding the mystery surrounding the case was the identity of the dead man: Dr. Stefan Andersson, a brilliant scientist and researcher who investigated the interactions of
hormones and steroids, and the way both impacted women's bodies during pregnancy. At the University of Houston, Andersson, an esteemed professor, lectured medical students.
Yet questions emerged from that night when the call went out and homicide detectives flooded Andersson's apartment. Was the professor living a double life?
Those who knew him described the scientist as a quiet, kind, and generous man. But Ana Trujillo, the woman who'd beaten Andersson almost beyond recognition, characterized the dead man in vastly different terms. She called him controlling and abusive, to the point where she had no option other than to defend herself with the only weapon available.
“He wouldn't let me go,” she insisted, when she recounted to investigators the events of that night. “He pushed me . . . he grabbed me . . . he . . .”
But who was Ana Trujillo? And was she to be believed? Why, if not fearing for her life, would she kill the man? Perhaps a clue waited at the scene of the killing.
After Trujillo was transported to Houston Police Department's homicide bureau for questioning, the forensic unit took over Andersson's apartment. One officer inspected Trujillo's purse. Out of the black-leather sack with a drawstring, he pulled a pair of white tennis shoes, a black-and-white, snake-patterned wallet, and one more item: a thin, stained, and worn book with a white-wire spiral binding. Its gold-and-purple cover bore the title:
Tarot
.
The paperback was open to page twenty-one, on which the author explored the meaning of card number thirteen, accompanied by a chilling illustration of a skeleton on horseback, holding a sickle and wearing a hooded cape.
On the night she killed Stefan Andersson, Ana Trujillo had the
Tarot
book in her purse open to the death card.