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Authors: Margarite St. John

BOOK: The Art of Death
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Chapter 14
Thousand Points of Light
Saturday, May 11, 2013

In a conference room at the Conrad Hotel, Madeleine Harrod took her place at the podium with more nervousness than usual. Getting an award from the Association of Forensic Artists was not the highlight of her life, for she’d received many other awards, but still it put the cap on a weekend of triumph in all three of her professional interests: unique toys for a global market, oil paintings that were now selling nationally, and three-dimensional forensic art that actually solved cold cases.  

It was not the fact of speaking publicly that made her nervous but the subject of today’s presentation. She would lead the audience step by step through her reconstruction of Nicole Whitehead’s face, focusing on advanced traditional and digital imaging techniques and on stereolithography (three-dimensional printing), concluding with the shocking fact of how the face turned out to be that of the very girl she once tried to save from drowning. The difficult part was explaining that even before she recognized the skull as Nicole’s, somehow she “saw” the details that complete a face and distinguish one from another -- the mole on the cheek, the almost invisible eyebrows, the blue eyes, the shoulder length hair, the cleft chin. Only when they were in place did she know who had died.

In the case of Nicole Whitehead, the convergence of Madeleine’s insight with the victim’s identity seemed to other professionals somehow more than coincidence, though no one could quite explain why that was so. Putting a face on Nicole’s skull had made Madeleine both the subject of great acclaim and the object of much suspicion and envy.

Despite her years of therapy, Madeleine had no idea herself what to call that kind of insight: a hunch, coincidence, sixth sense, second sight, intuition, clairvoyance, or a message from beyond. Or even, God forbid, something as indelicate as gut instinct. Though she recoiled at the occasional snide remark from detractors about how she was preternaturally gifted, she privately acknowledged that her insight looked supernatural. In another era, she might have been burned at the stake instead of recognized for her art.

As she always did when she gave a public speech, Madeleine checked and double-checked her computer to ensure that her PowerPoint presentation was in working order.

She also adjusted her designer suit, a sober gray Michael Kors with a turquoise zipper enlivening the jacket from neck to waist. In 2013, zippers were strangely chic and the color happened to draw attention to her eyes. Though the audience couldn’t see the designer label, she knew it was there. It made her feel rich and professional, a cut above everyone else.

After she checked PowerPoint and adjusted her suit, she gazed out at the audience, reminding herself not to lick her bright red lipstick away or mess with her hair.  Nervousness was no reason to disturb perfection.

As the presenter introduced her, Madeleine briefly closed her eyes and concentrated on her breathing, willing herself to stay calm. Hyperventilation had bedeviled her when she first started speaking publicly, but Anthony had taught her breathing exercises to prevent it. The words of the moderator -- “gifted artist,” “trained at Quantico,” “graduate of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago,” “winner of numerous awards” -- passed through one ear and out the other without lodging in her brain. She was so focused on appearing calmer than she felt that she almost missed her cue to walk to the podium.

Once there, everything in place, she swept the room with her eyes to locate Anthony. He was supposed to be in the back row, but he wasn’t. His absence brought a frown to her lovely face. She wanted him where she could see him. If she faltered, if the audience didn’t respond as she anticipated, then she focused on him to regain her confidence. A friendly face in an audience of strangers was priceless. His reminder, “Just remember, you know more than the audience about your subject,” was helpful but not as reassuring as her father’s sentiment that she silently recited like a mantra: “You’re brilliant!”

It was a rule of hers never to speak longer than twenty minutes, no matter how complex the subject or skillful the presentation. Modern audiences, raised on Cirque du Soleil, cartoons and Twitter, had short attention spans, no more than twelve minutes, some experts said. So even at twenty minutes she could lose them if she weren’t careful. When after twenty minutes she turned off the PowerPoint, asked for the lights to be brought back up, and said she was ready to take questions, she spotted Anthony in the chair where he had promised to be. She smiled his way, though he didn’t return her greeting. He seemed to be focused on something else.

The questions came thick and fast. Most were professional, some very technical, none hostile. She had just finished explaining the difference in value between a two-dimensional and a three-dimensional postmortem reconstruction when someone she couldn’t see asked whether the crack in Nicole’s skull had occurred before death as the result of blunt force trauma or after death from the natural damage inflicted on a drowned body.

Madeleine donned her eyeglasses and peered toward the back of the room but could not see who had asked the question. The moderator reminded the audience that they must stand and state their name before asking a question. An older woman got to her feet, apologized for her lapse, said she was Lynda Bergstrom, a medical examiner’s assistant from Ohio, and repeated the question.

But it was not Lynda Bergstrom that Madeleine focused on, for suddenly she noticed the man sitting next to Anthony at the end of the row. It was the ship captain from the art gallery. She gripped the edges of the podium as if anticipating an earthquake. Who in hell was he? How long had he been in the room? Why was he even present? Did Anthony realize he was sitting right next to the elusive man, the sunburned figure with the dead eyes who’d followed her for hours at the art gallery last night?

Madeleine did her best to pull herself together, directing her answer to Lynda Bergstrom. “If I hadn’t known Nicole and the circumstances of her swimming accident, I wouldn’t know the answer. But because I was present when she was swept away by a riptide and know that at that time she wasn’t wounded, I can say affirmatively that the crack was not a perimortem wound -- that is, one that occurred just before death -- but postmortem damage from the body being tossed around in Lake Michigan for years afterward.”

Lynda Bergstrom hadn’t even sat down before the ship captain shot to his feet with an enigmatic smile, a challenging look. Even from twenty feet away, Madeleine could clearly see his stony eyes. Though the moderator didn’t seem to notice the man, Madeleine, breathless, stared at him. Was he going to repeat his claim of the night before that he’d seen her and Nicole in the water on July Fourth? And then what? Would he make the same alarming claim as Kimmie, that there had been a fight?

The man began to speak in that flat monotone that set the hairs on the back of her neck on end. Though Madeleine willed Anthony to turn his head and look at his neighbor, he stayed focused on something else. The ship captain’s words reached her ears like a mad tyrant’s scrambled radio broadcast, incoherent but menacing. She could not make sense of his question.

The room slowly tipped on its side and fractured into a thousand points of light. Madeleine Harrod, winner of the Directors’ Citation of the Association of Forensic Artists for excellence in facial reconstruction in the case of Nicole Whitehead, fainted dead away.

Chapter 15
Jane Doe
Saturday, May 11, 2013

Madeleine’s faint was momentary. She awoke to the sound of worried murmurs and chairs scraping on the floor. She allowed the moderator and one of the Association’s officers to help her to feet, then sat on a folding chair with her head down, taking deep breaths, until the dizziness went away. She waved off a glass of water that someone tried to put into her hands.

The moderator asked if there was a doctor in the house. Anthony had already left his chair and was at the dais in seconds. “Can you walk?”

Madeleine nodded that she could. His arms around her shoulders, Anthony led his lady love out through the curtains behind the dais to the hotel elevator and up to their suite.

“You’ve got to start eating breakfast,” Anthony said, helping her out of her suit and into a robe. He led her to the bed. “Carbs for energy, protein for endurance. A pot of coffee doesn’t do it. You should know that.”

“That wasn’t the problem,” she murmured.

“Then what?”

“That ship captain again. This time you had to see him.”

Anthony, puzzled, shook his head.

She frowned at him. “He was sitting beside you to your left. He shot to his feet, ready to ask a question right after I answered that woman from Ohio about whether Nicole’s wound was postmortem or not.”

Anthony took a chair, picked up the phone, and asked for room service. While he was placing an order, Madeleine closed her eyes in frustration at his failure to have noticed the sunburned man who was dogging her. She was also very tired, but she had enough energy to ask if he’d taken her Jane Doe statuette with him.

Anthony returned the phone to its cradle and checked his watch. “No. Your computer’s still downstairs too. The conference won’t adjourn for a few more minutes, but I’ll go down then and pick up everything.”

“Did you get my purse?”

“Yes. I don’t know why you’re worrying about the Jane Doe statuette. I thought you didn’t care that much about awards.”

“I don’t.”

“But you want the silly thing anyway.”

She nodded.

He laughed dismissively. “It’s the worst statuette I’ve ever seen. Nickel-plated, badly cast, a face so generic it could belong to anybody. Not a good representation of what you did to win the award. If a generic face like that was all you came up with as a last resort to help the authorities, the victim would stay anonymous forever.”

Madeleine giggled despite the pain in her head. “True. But it’s mine and I want it.” She rolled to her side so she could see her suitor better. “You really didn’t notice the ship captain?”

“No.”

“Why not?”

“I was reading a text your friend Kimberly sent me.”

“You mean, your
patient
Kimberly. What’s she want?”

“An apology,” he said with disdain.

“For what?”

“The therapy I provided when she was young.”

“So what are you going to do?” she asked.

“Deny the details -- .”

“Deny what details?” she asked suspiciously.

Anthony gazed out the window. “Exercises I had her do. That sort of thing. And I’ll remind her that it worked.”

“But she wants an apology.”

Anthony stood up. “Well, she’s not getting it.”

“You better watch out, Anthony. Kimmie’s crazy.”

“Not a word I use, Schatzi, but I get your point. She says the therapy is ‘our little secret,’ but if I don’t apologize, she’ll not only go public about me but about you too.”

Madeleine struggled up on one elbow. “About me?”

He opened the door to the hallway. “I’m going down to get your computer and that ridiculous award before they’re moved to Lost and Found and it takes me an hour to track them down.”

“Wait!” she cried. “What was the question the ship captain asked?”

Anthony sighed heavily. “No one asked a question before you fainted.”

“But the man did! I know he did. I heard him but his words made no sense.”

“Then you’ll have to ask someone else because I didn’t see a man that looked like a ship captain and I didn’t hear a question just before you fainted.”

Madeleine flopped back on the bed. “You’re gaslighting me, aren’t you?”

He shot her a look of pity. “Take a nap, Schatzi. I’ll be back before room service knocks on the door.”  

Chapter 16
Shooting at the King
Saturday, May 11, 2013

While Madeleine was recovering from her fainting spell in an Indianapolis hotel, Kimmie was entering the Baker Street restaurant on Clinton in Fort Wayne. It was within biking distance of her apartment -- not an easy ride, for there were no shoulders on Auburn Road and no bike lanes on Clinton. She stowed her helmet and elbow and knee guards in a saddle bag, fluffed out her hair, and entered the bar.  Fortunately, both booths were empty, so she slipped into the one nearest the kitchen. 

She smiled at Dennis, the handsome bartender dressed in black, slipped off her messenger bag, extracted her cellphone, checked again to be sure it was fully charged, and laid it on the table.

“Are you alone today, Kimmie?” Dennis asked as he began removing the extra place settings.

“Amber will be here in a few minutes.”

“Do you want a menu?”

“Not until she gets here. Meanwhile, I’ll start with a martini, something summery. Surprise me.”

“My favorite request,” he said. “We have oysters on the half shell again in case you’re interested. Raw, Rockefeller, casino. . . .”

“Six of the Rockefeller when Amber arrives. But could I have the bread basket while I’m waiting?”

“Of course.”

When Dennis returned to the bar, Kimmie picked up her phone, willing it to ping. She couldn’t wait to get Dr. Beltrami’s reply to her very diplomatic request for an apology. Perhaps he would not only apologize for the unorthodox therapy he’d visited upon her when she was only thirteen but praise her for her good manners and maturity. Perhaps he would confess that a burden had been lifted from his shoulders and he too felt better.

“Ah,” she said when Dennis placed a martini in front of her. “Now tell me what’s in it.”

“Citron vodka, Chambord, and champagne, with a lemon twist and sugar rim. Now tell me what you think.”

Kimmie sipped the beautiful concoction, then looked up. “Sort of like raspberry lemonade with a kick. I like it. What’s it called?”

“Madame du Barry.”

“Really?”

Dennis chuckled. “I don’t know. I just made that up.”

Kimmie touched his arm. “May I ask you something?”

Dennis checked the bar before nodding. He was busy but he wanted to humor her, she looked so forlorn.

“Say somebody did something very bad to you when you were little and he’s never apologized and you ask him to apologize now because, well, better late than never, right? Would you expect to get an apology?”

“How bad?” Dennis asked. “I mean, how bad was the something this person did when you were little?”

“Real, real bad. And he’s a psychiatrist. A very respected man.”

Dennis kept his face expressionless. As a bartender, he felt some sympathy with psychiatrists -- and priests too -- for everyday he heard more intimate personal details and confessions of misdeeds than most professionals. If the question was how to get a person to open up, then the answer was alcohol. “He gave you bad advice?”

“Worse than that. What he did to me was a crime in all fifty states.”

Dennis did his best to keep the disbelief out of his voice. “And you want him to admit . . . admit that he committed a crime in all fifty states? Are you asking for that in writing?”

“Oh, Dennis, put it that way and I sound completely stupid.”

“Didn’t mean it that way, Kimmie.” Checking the bar again and seeing two new customers, he squared his shoulders. “Time to get back to my duties. Maybe your friend will have a better answer.”

But Amber didn’t. She arrived wearing a pink track suit and running shoes, her dark eyes sparkling, her shiny black hair falling like a pony tail out of her pink and black Juicy Couture baseball cap. Amber, who’d been adopted from a Chinese orphanage into an American family already graced with two boys, was a perpetually happy woman. Though she was only a nail tech when Kimmie began giving facials at the same spa six years earlier, Amber had already moved up to supervisor and vowed someday to own that place or an even better one. At thirty-one, popular but unmarried, Amber still lived at home, where as the youngest child and the only girl, the light of her parents’ life, she still led the life of a princess. Kimmie, who was not an orphan but was also not a princess, sometimes wished she could exchange places with her friend.  

“What are you drinking?” Amber asked.

“A martini. Lemon and raspberry, a little champagne. Dennis made it up. Taste it. Madame du Barry, he called it.”

“Umm. Good.” Amber signaled Dennis that she wanted what Kimmie had.

“I ordered oysters Rockefeller for us. You want anything else?”

“Maybe. I’m hungry. So why do you keep looking at your phone, Kimmie?”

When Kimmie told her what she’d texted to Dr. Beltrami, Amber was horrified. “If he admits to having sex with you when you were a minor and giving you cocaine, then he’s admitting to felonies, Kimmie. Why would he do that?”

“To make me feel better. Isn’t that his job?”

“If he does that, you get out of psychological prison while he gets sent to a real one, where he doesn’t have any job except to try to stay alive.”

“Dennis sort of hinted the same thing.”

Amber closed her eyes in frustration. “Have you ever heard the proverb that if you shoot at the king, make sure you kill him?”

Kimmie buttered a piece of pretzel bread. “What?”

“You’ve threatened a man, Kimmie. Big time. He has a profession, a reputation, a place in the world. You’re threatening to destroy all that.”

“I didn’t threaten him.”

“Oh, but you did. You’ve taken a shot at him, but you missed. And you didn’t give him a way out. He’s alive and kicking and has a lot to lose, so he’s going to fight back.”

“Are you saying I should kill him?”

“Oh, for Pete’s sake, no, of course not. All I’m saying is, you’ve put the man in an impossible position. He either admits in writing to crimes he committed against you or he denies them. If he denies them, you plan to tell the world about them anyway. What’s he supposed to do? No matter what course he chooses, he loses.”

Kimmie flushed and her eyes blurred with fear. “So now what do I do?”

“Give him a way out. Take it all back.”

“I’m not going to do that.”

“Then tell the authorities and hope they’ll protect you when the war starts.”

“I want to but I can’t do that either,” Kimmie said with a little whine. “I don’t have any proof, nobody to back me up.”

Amber picked up her glass and toasted her friend. “Well, then, keep your head down, my friend. Way, way down.”

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