Authors: Aaron Elkins
Tags: #Oliver; Gideon (Fictitious character), #Mystery & Detective, #Forensic anthropologists, #General, #College teachers, #Women Sleuths, #Fiction, #Gibraltar
“I don’t think I did . . . but I’m not sure. Maybe.”
“Then I better get yours, just in case.”
“Okay, I’ll come over there a little later. But Fausto—”
“Now, I talked with that tech guy at the cave, Derek? Who says the work crew all swear to God they never moved that mat, that they don’t know—”
“Fausto, that’s not what I was calling about.”
“What, this isn’t important enough for you? Okay then, tell me, what did you call about?”
“The old man that died in the fire yesterday?”
“Yeah?”
“He was Ivan Gunderson, right?”
“Yeah. So how do you know his name? Is it in the paper already? ”
“Ivan Gunderson was an archaeologist. He was one of our group. He was the one we had the testimonial dinner for the other night.”
“No, uh-uh, this guy was an archaeologist, all right, but he was a resident of Gib. He lived here, had a house in the South District. ”
“It’s the same person, Fausto. He owned several houses. One of them was here. It’s where he spent most of his time the last few years.”
Gideon heard — almost felt the breeze from — the long
whoosh
of Fausto’s let-out breath. “So . . . ?”
“So, with Sheila Chan,” Gideon said, “that makes two people connected with the dig who’ve now died in ‘accidents.’ Neither one with witnesses, let me point out. Add that to what now looks like an attempt to electrocute me, as well as—”
“But what’s the dig got to do with you? You weren’t on it, I thought.”
“No, but I did the analysis of the bones from it — of Gibraltar Boy.”
“Aw, jeez,” Fausto said.
“Fausto, is there anything at all that caught your eye about the fire? Anything that made you think it might not have been an accident? ”
“No, nothing, but I have to admit, I wasn’t looking that hard. No reason to. According to Burkhardt — this lieutenant, fire department — it started on the bed, that much is for sure. And he was smoking, that’s for sure too — or at least, what was left of his pipe, which wasn’t that much, was right next to what was left of him, which also wasn’t that much, which was on what was left of the bed, which was practically nonexistent. The whole cottage burned down to the ground, you know? Place was full of these glues and solvents—”
“He spent his days gluing pots.”
“—so there were accelerants all over the place. Neighbors said it was more like an explosion than a fire. You know,
whooof!
Never saw a body burned like that. He looked like a piece of burned wood, all black and shriveled. I mean, this one gives new meaning to the term
fried to a crisp
.”
Which is rapidly becoming one of my least favorite metaphors
, Gideon thought. “Where is it now?”
“The body? In the morgue. The ME just finished the postmortem.”
“Already?”
“Told you, we don’t have much call for postmortems. Did most of it yesterday afternoon, wrapped it up this morning. Don’t have his report yet — Figlewski, his name is — but he called me five minutes ago, soon as he was done. It’s the usual. Died of smoke inhalation. No reason to think it’s anything but what it looks like, he says.”
“Uh-huh.” Gideon hesitated. “Do you suppose I could have a look at it?”
“You want to look at the body?”
“Yes.”
A dry, one-note chuckle. “Trust me, there’s not a lot to look at.”
“Still.”
“Sure, why not? But what are you looking for?”
“I don’t know, but I’d like to have a try. What shape is the skull in? Is any of it left?”
“Ah, you want to know if somebody bashed him over the head or something first, then started the fire to cover it. Am I right, or am I right?”
“You’re right.”
“Well, I can answer that for you right now. The answer’s no.”
“Uh-huh. And how did you establish that? If I’m not being too inquisitive. ”
“I established it,” said Fausto, “with state-of-the-art, high-tech information I received at this seminar I once took from this famous professor.”
“Ah, well, then it must be reliable. Come on, Fausto, explain.”
“What is this, a test? Okay.” He paused to gather his thoughts.
“In this seminar I learned that, in a fire, a skull can explode from the heat. But only if it wasn’t broken to start with, you know? Because if there was a hole or a crack in it already, there would be a vent for the steam pressure from inside to escape?”
“Yes, that is what I said, but—”
“Well, there sure as hell wasn’t any vent, because his skull looks like an exploded coconut. The top’s completely blown off, all the way down to the, what do you call ’em, right under the eyes, the cheekbones—”
“Malars.”
“Right, all the way down to the malars in front, and in the back, all the way down to the bone in the rear—”
“The occiput.”
“I know, dammit, I was just gonna say that. Let me finish a sentence, will you?” He waited to see if Gideon meant to comply, then went on. “The occiput, what’s left, you can really see how it just burst open, you know, because there are these kind of flaps of bone, bent outward, like—”
“And from all this you surmise?”
“I surmise,” said Fausto, bristling at Gideon’s tone, “that since the skull exploded, there was no preexisting opening in it to vent the pressure, and therefore no preexisting cranial trauma. Would that be correct, Professor Oliver?”
“No, that would be incorrect, Detective Chief Inspector Sotomayor. ”
“Whaaat?”
This exclamation was followed by a few seconds of aggrieved silence, and then a shouted: “You’re the frigging guy I learned that from! I was practically quoting you! I still got my notes, I—”
“Yes, but things change, my good fellow. New things are learned. Old assumptions are discarded. That is the nature of science. That is the essence of empiricism. One must be ready to cast off even the most cherished beliefs if they are contraindicated or unsupported by the evidence.”
“Yeah, right. In other words,
you
screwed up. When you were showing us all those fancy diagrams with those line-of-force arrows that explained everything? You didn’t know what the hell you were talking about. That’s what you’re telling me.”
“You could put it that way,” Gideon agreed.
He was far from the only one who’d been wrong. For decades the “exploding skull” hypothesis had been a cornerstone of forensic investigations involving burned bodies. The idea was that steam pressure built up inside the skull from the boiling (or rather, roasting) brain, eventually blowing apart the sealed vessel that was the cranium, much in the way that an unpunctured potato explodes in the microwave. But if the cranium was
not
sealed, that is, if there were preexisting openings — bullet holes, blunt force fractures — then the steam would safely escape through these vents without blowing up the skull — in the same way as it safely escapes through the skin of a fork-punctured potato. Thus, the reasoning went, while an unexploded skull was not proof positive of the lack of preexisting injuries — the effects of fire were not that predictable — an “exploded” skull was a good indication that it had been whole to begin with.
But when this intuitive, reasonable-sounding hypothesis was finally put to the test only a few years ago in a study involving the experimental burnings of scores of cadaver heads, it turned out not to hold up. Skulls did not explode like hot potatoes. They might fragment or warp because the heat had deformed them and made them brittle, or because a stream of cold water from a fireman’s hose hit the sizzling bone and cracked it, or because debris fell on them, or because they broke while being recovered. But explode — no, not a one.
“Well, that’s a hell of a note,” Fausto grumbled when Gideon had finished explaining. “So how much else of what you told us am I not supposed to believe anymore?”
“Fausto, except for this one thing, I promise you, you can rely with implicit faith on every word I uttered.”
“Uh-huh. Until they turn out to be contraindicated or unsupported by the evidence.”
Gideon nodded. “I couldn’t have put it better myself.”
“Okay,” Fausto said with a sigh, “so where does all that leave us?”
“Right where we were before. Would it be all right for me to have a look at the body?”
“Pick you up in twenty minutes,” Fausto said and clicked off.
THE
Gibraltar morgue was in St. Bernard’s Hospital, which stood at the northern end of the city in what was called Europort, a modern, waterside complex strikingly different from the cozy, matey, “ ’ere’s mud in yer eye” ambience of Main Street. Here were the high-end, balconied luxury apartments with their three-year waiting lists, and the tasteful, polished wood and brushed stainless steel headquarters of the colony’s financial, insurance, and investment companies. Here too were the not quite so refined offshore gambling and tax haven centers that had lately become main sources of Gibraltar’s income.
Fausto drove them there in his pride and joy, a gleaming black, low-slung sports car — a Lamborghini Diablo, he said, clearly expecting a gush of admiration and astonishment from Gideon (in this he was sorely disappointed) — that was perfectly suited to the DCI’s diminutive size, but required Gideon to sit with his feet off the floor and his knees jammed up against the dashboard. It also required some planning and a few contortions to get in and out through the butterfly-wing doors. And of course, Fausto drove it like any sports car enthusiast, which is to say like a maniac, careening joyfully around the narrow streets and tight corners of the old town, pedal to the floor. Gideon twice thought it was all over, but somehow they did make it. The hospital itself was brand spanking new, a smooth, cream-colored monolith of seven stories, of which Gideon was to see none. The hospital garage in which Fausto parked was underground, and the morgue was a floor below that.
Dr. Kazimir Figlewski was waiting for them in the anteroom. Instead of the roomy hospital scrubs favored nowadays by most pathologists, he was wearing an old-fashioned black rubber apron over a sleeveless undershirt. He was a skinny, smiling scarecrow of a kid with a wild thatch of stiff, blond hair that sat on the top of his head like a nest, and big, round, flaming red ears that stuck out like a pair of mug handles. His pale, bare, unmuscled arms were covered in light brown freckles.
Gideon was visited by one of those intimations of his own advancing age that had begun popping up lately. When did they start making doctors this young? Fausto had told him Figlewski was somewhere in his late twenties, but since when were people in their late twenties as young as this?
“I am greatly happy to meet you, professor,” Figlewski said. His accent was what you might expect from someone named Kazimir Figlewski, throaty and Slavic, with long, broad, gliding vowels. He grinned and thrust out his hand.
Gideon, somewhat fastidious (many a small-minded colleague would say squeamish) around fresh remains (less than five hundred years old, say), couldn’t help sneaking a look at the proffered hand. Shaking hands with a man — a boy — who had just finished poking around inside a dead body didn’t appeal to him (some pathologists still worked without gloves part of the time, after all), but the hand looked clean and white enough. He took it.
“Thanks, Dr. Figlewski, same here.”
“Please, you call me Kaz.”
“And I’m Gideon. I hope you don’t think I’m horning in, Kaz.”
“Oh, no, please. Fausto warns me you are coming.” He laughed. “I mean he
tells
me you are coming, that you think maybe we got some foul play here. That’s great — I mean, I am wery interested to see what you do, how you do this. Is a great honor to meet you. I read your papers wery much in journals. ‘The Bone Doctor.’ ” He grinned.
“Close enough,” said Gideon, smiling.
“We don’t never have a real forensic scientist come here before, you know. No reason for it. Last murder we have is two years ago. This is before I start working with police.”
This is before you finished medical school
, Gideon thought. “Yes, Fausto told me,” he said.
Fausto had also told him that Figlewski wasn’t really an ME in the American sense of the word. While his formal title was “forensic medical examiner,” he was simply a local pediatrician who had a part-time contract with the Territory of Gibraltar; what might be called a police surgeon in a small American town. He spent a great deal more time clucking over infected ears than he did in the autopsy suite. Fausto thought highly of him, though, and with reason. He had emigrated from Poland to England as a fifteen-year-old speaking no English. Despite this language handicap, thirteen years later he had a medical degree from the University of East Anglia, and last year he had come to Gibraltar, answering the call for doctors to work in the new hospital.
“But I already do some traffic fatalities,” he said, lest Gideon should think him inexperienced.”
“Your first burn case, though?”
“On dead body, you mean? Because peoples, especially so many kids, always coming in—”
“On a dead body, yes,” Gideon said. “An autopsy.”
“Well . . . yes, this is true, but thermal injuries, they are covered in forensic course they send me to in London. But if I miss something, or if you have tip for me, I am standing all ears.”
Probably not the best metaphor in the world for you
, Gideon thought with the slightest of smiles, but he had already taken a liking to this chatty, earnest, slightly goofy young Pole. At least he had the right attitude for a forensic pathologist. In Gideon’s experience, medical examiners and pathologists, unlike their police and prosecutorial brethren (to say nothing of the defense side), had little sense of turf, little desire to protect their jurisdictions. This wasn’t the first autopsy he’d horned in on, and almost always he’d been warmly welcomed. They were scientists, not advocates, that was the difference. Nothing to support, or justify, or protect. They were more interested in teaching — and learning — than in proving or vindicating.
“Well, I don’t know how many tips I can give you,” he said. “I’ve never actually performed an autopsy myself, you know.” (
And with luck I never will
, he added silently.) “I generally work with skeletal remains.”