Jeffrey stood at the front of the briefing room, waiting for Lena to come out of the bathroom. After their discussion, she had asked for a few minutes. He hoped she took the time to get herself together. Despite her temper, Lena Adams was a smart woman and a good cop. He hated to see her going through this alone. Jeffrey also knew that she would not have it any other way.
Sara sat in the front row, her legs crossed. She was wearing an olive-colored linen dress that fell to just above her ankles. Two slits came up either side of her legs, stopping just below her knees. Her red hair was pulled up into a ponytail behind her neck, like she had worn it to church on Sunday. Jeffrey remembered the expression on her face when she had noticed him sitting in the pew behind her and wondered if there would ever be a time in his life again when Sara was actually pleased to see him. He had stared at his hands the entire service, biding his time until he could slip out without causing too much commotion.
Sara Linton was what Jeffrey’s father liked to call a tall drink of water. Jeffrey had been attracted to Sara because of her strong will, her fierce independence. He liked her aloofness and the way she talked down to his football buddies. He liked the way her mind worked and the fact that he could talk about every aspect of his job and know she would understand. He liked that she couldn’t cook and that she could sleep through a hurricane. He liked that she was a horrible house cleaner and that her feet were so big she could wear his shoes. What he really liked was that she knew all these things about herself and was actually proud of them.
Of course, her independence had a downside. Even after six years of marriage, he wasn’t sure he knew one damn thing about her. Sara was so good at projecting a strong facade that after a while he wondered if she even needed him. Between her family, the clinic, and the morgue, there did not seem to be a whole lot of time left for Jeffrey.
While he knew cheating on Sara was not the best way to go about changing things, he did know that at that point in time, something had to give in their marriage. He wanted to see her hurt. He wanted to see her fight for him and their relationship. That the first would happen and not the latter still kept his mind spinning. At times, Jeffrey was almost angry with Sara that something so meaningless, something so stupid as a mindless sexual indiscretion, had broken up their marriage.
Jeffrey leaned against the podium, his hands clasped in front of him. He pushed Sara from his mind and concentrated on the task at hand. On the card table beside him was a sixteen-page list of names and addresses. All convicted sexual offenders living in or moving to the state of Georgia were required to register their name and address with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation’s Crime Information Center. Jeffrey had spent last night and most of the morning compiling this information on the sixty-seven Grant residents who had registered since the law was passed in 1996. Going through their crimes was a daunting task, not least of all because he knew that sexual predators were like cockroaches. For every one you saw, there were twenty more hiding behind the walls.
He did not let his mind dwell on this as he waited to start the meeting. The briefing room was hardly filled to capacity. Frank Wallace, Matt Hogan, and five other detectives were part of the senior squad. Jeffrey and Lena rounded out this number to nine. Of the nine, only Jeffrey and Frank had worked in municipalities larger than Grant. Sibyl Adams’s killer certainly seemed to have better odds.
Brad Stephens, a junior patrolman who despite his youth and lack of rank knew how to keep his mouth shut, stood just beside the door in case anyone tried to come in. Brad was a kind of mascot around the squad, and the fact that he still had most of his baby fat gave him a round, cartoonish appearance. His thin blond hair always looked as if someone had just rubbed a balloon against it. His mother often brought his lunch to the station. He was a good kid, though. Brad had still been in high school when he contacted Jeffrey about being on the force. Like most of his younger cops, he came from Grant; his people were here. He had a vested interest in keeping the streets safe.
Jeffrey cleared his throat for attention as Brad opened the door for Lena. If anyone was surprised to see her there, they didn’t say. She took a chair in the back, her arms crossed over her chest, her eyes still red either from her recent binge or from crying or from both.
“Thank you for coming on such short notice,” Jeffrey began. He gave Brad a nod, indicating that he should start circulating the five packets Jeffrey had put together earlier.
“Let me preface this by saying anything said in this room today should be treated as highly confidential information. What you hear today is not for general consumption and any leaks could greatly impede our case.” He waited as Brad finished his rounds.
“I’m sure all of you know by now that Sibyl Adams was killed yesterday at the Filling Station.” Nods came from the men who were not going through the copies. What he said next made them all look up. “She was raped before she was killed.”
There seemed to be a rise in the temperature of the room as he let this set in. These men were from different times. Women were as mysterious to them as the origins of the planet. Sibyl’s rape would galvanize them into action like nothing else.
Jeffrey held up his copy of the list as Brad passed out the packets according to the names Jeffrey had written on the outside. Jeffrey said, “I pulled this list of offenders off the computer this morning. I’ve sectioned them off to the usual teams, with the exception of Frank and Lena.” He saw her mouth open to complain, but continued. “Brad will be working with you, Lena. Frank is with me.”
Lena sat back in a defiant posture. Brad was hardly on her level, and her look said she knew exactly what he was doing. She would also realize as soon as she interviewed the third or fourth man on her list that Jeffrey was keeping her on a tight leash. Rapists tended to attack women in their own ethnic and age group. Lena and Brad would be interviewing every minority over the age of fifty with a sexual assault on his record.
“Dr. Linton will give you the rundown on the specifics.” He paused, then, “My first guess would be that the attacker has some kind of religious leaning, maybe a fanatic. I don’t want that to be the focus of your questioning, but keep it in the back of your mind.” He stacked the papers on the podium. “If somebody comes up that we should look at, I want a call on my radio. I don’t want any suspect falling down in custody or accidentally getting his head blown off.”
Jeffrey studiously avoided meeting Sara’s eyes as he said this last part. Jeffrey was a cop, he knew how things worked in the street. He knew that every man in this room had something to prove where Sibyl Adams was concerned. He also knew how easy it was to slip over that line between legal justice and human justice when you were out in the field, facing down the kind of animal who could rape a blind woman and carve a cross onto her abdomen.
“That clear?” he asked, not expecting an answer and not getting one. “I’ll turn this over to Dr. Linton, then.”
He walked to the back of the room, standing behind and to the right of Lena as Sara took the podium. She walked over to the chalkboard, reached up, and pulled down the white projection screen. Most of the men in this room had seen her in diapers, and the fact that they all had their notebooks out said volumes about Sara’s professional abilities.
She gave Brad Stephens a nod and the room went dark.
The green opaque projector whirred to life, sending a flash of bright light onto the screen. Sara moved a photograph onto the bed and slid it under the glass.
“Sibyl Adams was found by me in the women’s bathroom of the Filling Station around two-thirty yesterday afternoon,” she said, focusing the projector’s lens.
There was movement in the room as a Polaroid of Sibyl Adams lying partially nude on the bathroom floor came into view. Jeffrey found himself staring at the hole in her chest, wondering what kind of man could do the things that had been done to that poor young woman. He did not want to think about Sibyl Adams, blind, sitting on that toilet while her attacker slit her open for his own sick reasons. He did not want to think about what was going through her mind as her abdomen was being raped.
Sara continued. “She was sitting on the toilet when I opened the door. Her arms and legs were splayed open and the cut you see here”—she indicated the screen—“was bleeding profusely.”
Jeffrey leaned over slightly, trying to see what Lena’s reaction to this was. She stood stock still, her spine a perfect right angle to the floor. He understood why she needed to do this, but he could not grasp how she was doing it. If someone in his family had gone through this, if Sara had been ravaged like this, Jeffrey knew in his heart that he would not want to know. He could not know.
Sara stood at the front of the room, her arms crossed over her chest. “She started to seize shortly after I established that she had a pulse. We fell to the ground. I tried to control the seizures, but she expired several seconds later.”
Sara jerked the projector’s drawer out to replace the photo with another. The machine was a dinosaur, borrowed from the high school. It wasn’t as if Sara could send the crime photos down to the Jiffy Photo for enlargements.
The next picture that came on-screen was a close-up of Sibyl Adams’s head and neck. “The bruise under her eye came from a superior position, probably early on in the assault to discourage a struggle. A knife was held at her throat, very sharp, measuring about six inches. I’d say this was a boning knife, probably common to any kitchen. You can see a slight cut here.” She traced her finger on the screen, along the middle of Sibyl’s neck. “It didn’t draw blood, but enough pressure was used to score the skin.” She looked up, catching Jeffrey’s eye. “I would imagine the knife was used to keep her from calling out while he raped her.”
She continued. “There is a small bite mark on her left shoulder.” The picture of this came up. “Bite marks are common with rape. This one shows the impression of the upper teeth only. I found nothing distinctive in the pattern, but I’ve sent the…” Sara paused, probably remembering Lena was in the room. “The impression was sent to the FBI lab for cross matching. If a known offender on file matches the impression, then we could assume that he’s the perpetrator in this crime. However,” she warned, “as we all know, the FBI won’t consider this a high-priority case, so I don’t think we can hang out hats on this piece of evidence. A more likely scenario would be to use the impression as validation after the fact. That is to say, find a solid suspect and nail him with the dental impression.”
Next, the screen showed a photograph of the inner sides of Sibyl’s legs. “You can see scrapes here at the knee where she gripped her legs around the toilet bowl during the assault.” Another picture came, this one of Sibyl’s bottom. “There are irregular bruises and scrapes on the buttocks, again from friction against the toilet seat.
“Her wrists,” Sara said, putting in another photo, “show bruising from the handicap bars on the stall. Two fingernails were broken in the process of gripping the bars, probably to lift herself up and away from her assailant.”
Sara slid in the next photograph. “This is a close-up of the incisions to her abdomen,” she narrated. “The first cut was made from just below the collarbone all the way to the pelvic bone. The second cut was made from right to left.” She paused. “I would guess from the irregular depth of the second cut that this was a backhanded movement by a left-handed assailant. The cut is deeper as it moves to her right side.”
The next Polaroid was a close-up of Sibyl’s chest. Sara was quiet for a few beats, probably thinking the same thing Jeffrey was thinking. Up close, he could see where the puncture wound had been stretched. Not for the first time, he felt his stomach roll at the thought of what was done to this poor woman. He hoped to God she had not been conscious of what was happening to her.
Sara said, “This is the final cut. It’s a puncture wound through the sternum. It goes straight through to her spine. I would guess this was the source of most of the blood.” Sara turned to Brad. “Lights?”
She walked toward her briefcase, saying, “The symbol on her chest seems to be a cross. The assailant used a condom during the rape, which as we know is pretty common with the advent of DNA testing. Black lighting revealed no sperm or fluids. Blood on the scene appears to be only from the victim.” She took a sheet of paper out of her briefcase. “Our friends at the Georgia Bureau of Investigation were nice enough to pull some strings last night. They worked up the blood analysis for me.” She put on her copper-rimmed glasses and began reading, “High concentrations of hyoscyamine, atrosin and belladonnine as well as traces of scopolamine were found in her central blood and urine.” She looked up. “This would suggest that Sibyl Adams ingested a lethal dose of belladonna, which belongs in the deadly nightshade plant family.”
Jeffrey glanced at Lena. She remained quiet, her eyes on Sara.
“An overdose of belladonna can mimic a complete shutdown of the parasympathetic nervous system. Sibyl Adams was blind, but her pupils were dilated from the drug. The bronchioles in her lungs were swollen. Her core body temperature was still high, which is what made me wonder about her blood in the first place.” She turned to Jeffrey, answering the question he had asked this morning. “During the post, her skin was still warm to the touch. There were no environmental factors that would cause this. I knew it had to be something in the blood.”
She continued. “Belladonna can be broken down for medical applications, but it’s also used as a recreational drug.”
“You think the perp gave it to her?” Jeffrey asked. “Or is this the kind of thing she would take on her own?”
Sara seemed to consider this. “Sibyl Adams was a chemist. She certainly wouldn’t take such a volatile drug, then run out for lunch. This is a very strong hallucinogen. It affects the heart, breathing, and circulation.”
“Nightshade grows all over town,” Frank pointed out.
“It’s pretty common,” Sara agreed, looking back at her notes. “The plant isn’t easy to process. Ingestion is going to be the key component here. According to Nick, the easiest and most popular way to take belladonna is to soak the seeds in hot water. Just this morning I found three recipes on the Internet for preparing belladonna as a tea.”
Lena offered, “She liked to drink hot tea.”
“There you go,” Sara said. “The seeds are highly soluble. I imagine within minutes of drinking it she would have started experiencing elevated blood pressure, heart palpitations, dry mouth, and extreme nervousness. I would also guess this led her to the bathroom, where her rapist was waiting for her.”
Frank turned to Jeffrey. “We need to talk to Pete Wayne. He served her lunch. He gave her the tea.”
“No way,” Matt countered. “Pete’s lived in town all his life. This isn’t the kind of thing he’d do.” Then, as if this was the most important thing in Pete’s favor, Matt added, “He’s in the lodge.”
Murmurs came from the other men. Someone, Jeffrey wasn’t sure who, said, “What about Pete’s colored man?”
Jeffrey felt a trickle of sweat run down his back. He could see where this was going already. He held his hands up for silence. “Frank and I will talk to Pete. You guys have your assignment. I want reports back at the end of the day.”
Matt seemed about to say something, but Jeffrey stopped him. “We’re not helping Sibyl Adams by sitting in this room pulling theories out of our asses.” He paused, then indicated the packets Brad had handed out. “Knock on every goddamn door in town if you have to, but I want an accounting for every man on those lists.”
* * *
As Jeffrey and Frank walked to the diner, the words “Pete’s colored man” sat in the back of Jeffrey’s mind like a piece of hot coal. The vernacular was familiar from his childhood, but he had not heard it used in at least thirty years. It amazed Jeffrey to see that such overt racism still existed. It also scared him that he had heard it in his own squad room. Jeffrey had worked in Grant for ten years, but he was still an outsider. Even his southern roots didn’t pay his dues into the good old boy club. Coming from Alabama didn’t help matters. A typical prayer among southern states was “Thank God for Alabama,” meaning, Thank God we’re not as bad off as they are. This was part of the reason he was keeping Frank Wallace close at hand. Frank was a part of these men. He was in the club.
Frank shucked off his coat, folding it across his arm as he walked. He was tall and thin like a reed with a face rendered unreadable from years of being a cop.
Frank said, “This black guy, Will Harris. I got called in a few years back on a domestic dispute. He popped his wife.”
Jeffrey stopped. “Yeah?”
Frank stopped alongside him. “Yeah,” he said. “Beat her pretty bad. Busted her lip. When I got there, she was on the floor. She was wearing this cotton bag–looking kind of dress.” He shrugged. “Anyway, it was torn.”
“You think he raped her?”
Frank shrugged. “She wouldn’t press charges.”
Jeffrey started walking again. “Anybody else know about this?”
“Matt,” Frank said. “He was my partner then.”
Jeffrey felt a sense of dread as he opened the door to the diner.
“We’re closed,” Pete called from the back.
Jeffrey said, “It’s Jeffrey, Pete.”
He came out of the storeroom, wiping his hands on his apron. “Hey, Jeffrey,” he said, nodding. Then, “Frank.”
“We should be finished up in here this afternoon, Pete,” Jeffrey said. “You’ll be able to open tomorrow.”
“Closing for the rest of the week,” Pete said as he retied his apron strings. “Don’t seem right to be open what with Sibyl and all.” He indicated the row of stools in front of the bar. “Get y’all some coffee?”
“That’d be great,” Jeffrey said, taking the first stool. Frank followed suit, sitting down beside him.
Jeffrey watched Pete walk around the counter and take out three thick ceramic mugs. The coffee steamed as he poured it into the cups.
Pete asked, “You got anything yet?”
Jeffrey took one of the mugs. “Can you run through what happened yesterday? I mean, from the point Sibyl Adams came into the restaurant?”
Pete leaned back against the grill. “I guess she came in about one-thirty,” he said. “She always came in after the lunch rush. I guess she didn’t want to be poking around with her cane in front of all those people. I mean, we knew she was blind, sure, but she didn’t like drawing attention to it. You could see that. She was kind of nervous in crowds.”
Jeffrey took out his notebook, though he didn’t really need to take notes. What he did know was that Pete seemed to know a lot about Sibyl Adams. “She come in here a lot?”
“Every Monday like clockwork.” He squinted his eyes, thinking. “I guess for the last five years or so. She came in sometimes late at night with other teachers or Nan from the library. I think they rented a house over on Cooper.”
Jeffrey nodded.
“But that was only occasionally. Mostly it was Mondays, always by herself. She walked here, ordered her lunch, then was out by around two usually.” He rubbed his chin, a sad look coming over his face. “She always left a nice tip. I didn’t think anything about it when I saw her table empty. I guess I just thought she had gone while I wasn’t looking.”
Jeffrey asked, “What’d she order?”
“Same thing as always,” Pete said. “The number three.”
Jeffrey knew this was the waffle platter with eggs, bacon, and a side of grits.
“Only,” Pete clarified, “she didn’t eat meat, so I always left off the bacon. And she didn’t drink coffee, so I gave her some hot tea.”
Jeffrey wrote this down. “What kind of tea?”
He rooted around behind the counter and pulled out a box of generic brand tea bags. “I picked it up for her at the grocery store. She didn’t drink caffeine.” He gave a small laugh. “I liked to make her comfortable, you know? She didn’t get out much. She used to say to me that she liked coming here, that she felt comfortable.” He fiddled with the box of tea.
“What about the cup she used?” Jeffrey asked.
“I don’t know about that. They all look the same.” He walked to the end of the counter and pulled out a large metal drawer. Jeffrey leaned over to look inside. The drawer was actually a large dishwasher filled with cups and plates.
Jeffrey asked, “Those from yesterday?”
Pete nodded. “I can’t begin to guess which one was hers. I started the washer before she was—” He stopped, looking down at his hands. “My dad, he always told me to take care of the customers and they’d take care of you.” He looked up, tears in his eyes. “She was a nice girl, you know? Why would anybody want to hurt her?”
“I don’t know, Pete,” Jeffrey said. “Mind if we take this?” He pointed to the box of tea.
Pete shrugged. “Sure, nobody else drank it.” The laugh came again. “I tried it once just to see. Tasted like brown water.”
Frank pulled a tea bag out of the box. Each bag was wrapped and sealed in a paper envelope. He asked, “Was old Will working here yesterday?”
Pete seemed taken aback by the question. “Sure, he’s worked lunch every day for the last fifty years. Comes in about eleven, leaves by two or so.” He studied Jeffrey. “He does odd jobs for people around town after he leaves here. Mostly yard work, some light carpentry.”
“He buses tables here?” Jeffrey asked, though he had eaten enough lunches in the diner to know what Will Harris did.
“Sure,” Pete said. “Buses tables, mops the floors, takes people their food.” He gave Jeffrey a curious look. “Why?”
“No reason.” Jeffrey answered. Leaning over, he shook the man’s hand, saying, “Thanks, Pete. We’ll let you know if we need anything else.”