Robin finished up one of the natural causes cases, freeing her up to finally check the STR results from Oscar Woody’s killer. She walked from the autopsy room to her desk in the admin area. She sighed and looked over at her pictures of Emma. It was almost seven o’clock. Robin wanted to get out of there, get back to her apartment, crawl into bed and have Emma curl up beside her. Sure, the dog would shed all over the bedspread and probably fart something horrible, but when it came to nap time, Emma was Little Miss Lights-Out. Emma couldn’t sleep on the empty side, of course, she had to lie right on top of Robin. But that was the point, really. Robin didn’t have a man in her bed anymore — Emma’s weight, her breathing (hell, even the farts in a weird way), they were comforting beyond anything Robin knew.
She turned to her computer and called up the STR results. Yes, confirmed — the saliva sample found on Oscar Woody came from a human, as did the material taken from the hair follicles. Due to the signs of mauling there had to be a large animal involved, but there was no longer any question that a human killer had left DNA on Oscar’s body.
The computer system had automatically submitted the STR test results to the CODIS system. That check didn’t produce a match; whoever the killer was, his DNA had never been entered into the FBI’s database.
But there was something strange about the sample. In addition to a genetic fingerprint, the test also indicated a person’s sex by detecting a gene known as AMEL. AMEL is on the male and female sex chromosomes, but it isn’t quite the same on both. Men have two sex chromosomes — X and Y — while women have two Xs. The STR test didn’t show the actual chromosome, only another test known as a karyotype could do that, but it did show spikes indicating the presence and relative number of AMEL genes on each sex chromosome. If the test only showed a spike for AMEL-X, the subject was female. If it showed two equal spikes, one for AMEL-X and one for AMEL-Y, that meant the subject was male.
This sample, however, showed AMEL-X and AMEL-Y spikes that were not equal. The X spike was twice as high as the Y spike. That suggested the presence of a second X, which would mean the killer could have three sex chromosomes.
It wasn’t a contaminated sample — she had run enough parallel tests to know, for certain, that the material came from just one killer. Robin felt a rush of excitement: either the killer was XXY, or he had an even more rare condition she had yet to identify.
She heard people approaching. She looked up to see Rich Verde and Bobby Pigeon walking toward her desk. Bobby smiled at her. Rich just scowled. Good God, but Rich was a horrible dresser.
“Hudson,” Verde said. “I’m here to talk to you about the Oscar Woody case.”
She felt a deep twinge of disappointment. “I thought this case belonged to Bryan Clauser and Pookie Chang.”
Verde shook his head. “Case is mine. Covered in piss, right?”
There was a question you didn’t hear every day. She nodded.
“Mine,” Verde said. “Normally Metz would handle a case like this.”
“Well, I assure you I’m perfectly qualified to—”
“Whatever,” Rich said. “This case will run a little different than maybe you’re used to. Special deal. Call the chief right now. She’s expecting to hear from you.”
Robin’s eyebrows rose. “Call Chief Zou?”
“That’s right,” Verde said. “And make it snappy, I got shit to do.”
Metz frequently talked to Chief Zou. Robin was the temporary head of the department, so it made sense she’d be the one to answer any questions Zou might have. Robin picked up her phone, then started scanning a list tacked to her cubicle wall to find the chief’s extension.
Verde reached across her and dialed the phone for her.
“There you go,” he said.
She glared at him as she waited for someone to answer. Like he couldn’t have just told her the extension number?
“Chief Zou’s office.”
“This is Robin Hudson from the ME department. I was told—”
“One moment, Doctor Hudson, the chief is expecting your call.”
Chief Zou came on the line, her words as terse and clipped on the phone as they were in person. “Doctor Hudson?”
“Yes.”
“Rich Verde is in charge of the Oscar Woody case,” Zou said. “This case is of particular interest to me. I don’t want anything getting out to the media, understand?”
The Medical Examiner’s Office and the police department worked closely together, but Zou was not Robin’s boss. Robin tried to think of how Metz would handle the same situation. The Silver Eagle would be polite, but firm. “Chief Zou, you know we don’t release anything to the media.”
“And yet the media somehow gets information from many places,” Zou said. “Doctor Hudson, I’m not insinuating anything, I’m asking. Please limit any access to information on Oscar Woody. Move his body to the private examination room, the one Doctor Metz uses. Access to any electronic records are for Inspector Verde’s eyes only. The mayor said you can call his office if you have any questions.”
Call the mayor? Well, that was a hint and a half. If you want the top spot, play ball . But was Chief Zou really asking for anything unusual? Maybe there was a good reason for her secrecy. Covered in piss , Verde had said. Robin again thought of Paul Maloney. Maybe her initial hunch was right and the two cases were related — a potential serial killer could be out there. Any leaked information might compromise finding that killer.
“Yes, Chief,” Robin said. “I’ll use the private room and keep things quiet.”
“Thank you for your time, Doctor.”
Chief Zou hung up. A strange call. It nagged at Robin, the way Zou seemed to be dangling the potential chief medical examiner position as a reward for playing along. Or … was it more of a threat of punishment, that not playing along would cost Robin the job?
Robin turned to Verde. A told you so sneer twisted his mouth to the left.
“You know, Rich, she’s not asking for anything crazy, so you don’t have to be such a sanctimonious dick about this.”
“When I want your opinion, I’ll ask for it,” Verde said. “Just do your job, file the report, and don’t go blabbing about this case with your girlfriends at the watercooler. Come on, Bobby, let’s go.”
Verde turned to walk away. Bobby looked at him with confusion, the same confusion, probably, that Robin felt.
“Wait a minute,” she said. “I found some really interesting things that will help in the investigation. Don’t you want to know what they are?”
“It was an animal attack,” Verde said. “I’ll read your report.”
“It wasn’t just an animal attack.”
He sighed. “Okay, fine, there were people involved who used the animal to kill the kid. Whatever. The death was due to mauling, and that’s that. Sammy Berzon’s preliminary crime-scene report said there was dog fur all over the body.”
“It wasn’t dog fur.” Robin said. “The hair samples were human.”
Verde’s eyes narrowed. He seemed almost … bothered by the information.
“It’s some kind of animal,” he said. “Your results are wrong.”
What a pompous ass. “And you know this because you got your medical degree where, exactly? You don’t get to dismiss my results because you don’t like what they say, Rich.”
Verde threw up his hands in annoyance. “The boy was attacked by a guy, a couple of guys, whatever. They beat him and sicced a fucking animal on him. The animal tore off the kid’s arm, the kid died, done deal. If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, and—”
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