Isle of Dogs. PATRICIA CORNWELL

Be careful out there!

Eighteen

Paramedics did not try to resuscitate Caesar Fender, who remained unidentified as he smoldered and smoked near his smashed tackle box. The body was charred in a very odd pattern. Only the chest had burned, and there was no evidence of a fire in the local vicinity that might account for his appalling death.

“It’s like his heart caught on fire,” Detective Slipper said. “Or maybe his lungs. Could smoking do that?”

“You mean, if you was smoking and somehow your lungs caught on fire?” said Treata Bibb, who had been driving an ambulance for fifteen years and had never seen anything like this. “No,” Bibb then answered her own question upon reflection. “Not hardly. I don’t think smoking’s got a thing to do with what killed this unlucky guy.” She squatted to get a closer look. “It’s like he’s got a crater burned in him all the way through, from front to back. Look, you can see the pavement through this big hole. See here?” She touched charred flesh with a gloved finger. “Even the bones in the middle of his chest burned up. But the rest of him is fine.” She was amazed and disturbed, wondering who had done this and how and why.

Cars were pulling off the road, and people lined the street as if waiting for a parade. Police were having a difficult time controlling the gathering crowd of sightseers and reporters as word spread that a fisherman had exploded into a ball of fire just off Canal Street, very near where Trish Thrash’s mutilated body had been found on Belle Island.

“What’s going on?” a housewife named Barbie Fogg asked through the open window of her minivan.

“You’ll have to read about it in the paper.” An officer motioned with his flashlight for her to move on.

“I don’t get the paper.”

She shielded her eyes from his waving flashlight and wondered why on earth all these big helicopters were flying around with searchlights probing the city and neighboring counties. “There must be some violent serial killer that broke out of jail or something,” she decided with horror as a chill tickled up to the roots of her frosted hair. “Maybe the same one who murdered that poor woman the other day! And now I won’t know enough to protect myself and my family because I don’t get the paper and you won’t tell me the smallest detail. And you wonder why people don’t like police.”

She sped off, and another car stopped, this one occupied by an old woman whose night vision wasn’t what it used to be.

“Excuse me, I’m trying to find the Downtown Expressway,” the old woman, whose name was Lamonia, said to the officer with the flashlight. “I’m late for choir practice. What’s all that racket up there?”

Lamonia peered up at Black Hawk helicopters she couldn’t see. But there was nothing wrong with her hearing.

“Sounds like a war going on,” she declared.

“Just a little situation, but we’re handling it, ma’am,” the officer said. “The Downtown Expressway’s over there.” He pointed the flashlight. “Turn left on Eighth and it will run you right into it.”

“I’ve run into it before,” Lamonia said with a pained, humiliated catch in her voice. “Last year, I hit the guardrail. To tell you the truth, officer, I probably shouldn’t be driving at night. I can’t see at night. But if I keep missing choir practice, they’ll kick me out, and it’s really all I have left in my life. You know, my husband passed on two years ago, and then my cat died when I accidentally backed the car over him.”

“Maybe you’d better pull over.”

Lamonia stared blindly to her left and right and thought she detected a speck of light that reminded her of those eye tests that required her to center her face in a machine and push a clicker every time she saw a little light in her peripheral vision. Last week, she had hit the clicker randomly and often in hopes she could fool the eye doctor again.

“I know exactly what you’re doing,” the eye doctor had said as he put drops in Lamonia’s pupils. “Don’t think you’re the first one who’s tried,” he added.

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