JONATHAN KELLERMAN. A COLD HEART

“Yeah,” he said. “Too bad. I don’t like the guy—something about him . . .”

He forked omelet, gulped coffee.

“Stephanie,” I said. “You spoke to her?”

“I heard her friend call her that when they went to the ladies’ room.”

“You’ve been staking out the building?”

“At the time, it seemed prudent.” He shrugged. His phone went off. “Sturgis . . . hi . . . really . . . yeah, okay, I’ve got Alex with me, might as well bring him along . . .” He read his Timex. “From where we are, forty-five minutes. Yeah. Thanks. Bye.”

He clicked off, pocketed the phone, looked at my half-eaten toast. “That was Petra. How about taking that to go?” Pinning money under his plate, he waved to the waiter, pushed away from the table.

“What’s up?” I said, following him out to the Promenade.

“Dead woman,” he said. “Dead redhead.”

The autopsy room was spotless tile and stainless steel, silent and pleasantly cool. Petra and Milo and I stood next to a shrouded mass on a stainless table as a soft-spoken attendant named Rhonda Reese checked paperwork. Reese was thirtyish, chestnut-haired, curvy, with the open face of a tour guide.

I’d sailed to Boyle Heights on the 10, but Interstate 5 had been jammed by the proverbial jackknifed big rig, and the backlog had turned the drive to the coroner’s office to an hour-long ordeal. During that time, Milo had dozed, and I’d thought about women. Petra met us in the lobby.

“I’ve already checked us in,” she said. “Let’s go.”

Rhonda Reese drew the sheet back and folded it neatly at the foot of the table. The corpse was long and rawboned and female, waxy flesh tinted that unique green-gray. Eyes and mouth, shut. Peaceful expression, no obvious signs of violence. A scatter of pimples and fibroid lumps filled a flat expanse of chest between small, deflated breasts. Inverted, corrugated nipples, sharp hips, wide pelvis, skinny legs covered with curly, auburn down. The ankles crusted by red skin, hardened and crackled like alligator hide.

Street ankles.

The woman’s soles were black, as were the dirty, ragged nails on her toes and fingers. Fungus grew between the toes. An unruly rusty pubic thatch was littered with dandruff. A few white hairs sparked the thatch.

Red hair on top, as well, but much brighter, with claret roots and overlay of purple at the tips. Long, matted hair, filthy and dense, crowned a swollen face that might’ve been pretty once upon a time.

No needle marks.

“Any guesses?” said Milo.

Rhonda Reese said, “I can’t speak for Dr. Silver, but if you open her eyes you’ll see petechiae.”

“Strangulation.” He moved closer to the body, checked the eyes, squinted. “The neck’s a little rosy, too, but no ligature marks.” He glanced at Petra, and she nodded. Not like the others.

I said, “Gentle strangulation?”

Petra stared at me. Milo shrugged. The term was obnoxious but well-established jargon for a murderous ploy: using a broad, soft ligature to blunt the outward evidence of strangulation. Some people choke themselves that way to achieve heightened sexual pleasure and accidentally die.

Milo and I had worked a gentle strangulation case a few years ago. No accident, a child . . .

He said, “When’s the autopsy, Rhonda?”

“You’ll have to ask Dr. Silver. We’re pretty booked.”

“Dave Silver?” said Petra.

Reese nodded.

“I know him,” said Petra. “Good guy, I’ll talk to him.”

Milo eyed the body again. “When did it happen?” he asked Petra.

“Yesterday, early A.M. Two of our uniforms found her off the boulevard, on the south side of the street. Alley behind a church that had once been a theater.”

“That Salvadoran Pentecostal place?” said Milo. “East end?”

“That’s the one. She was propped sitting against the wall, garbage service came by, she was blocking their truck from getting close to the Dumpster and they thought she was asleep, so they tried to wake her.” To Reese: “Tell them about her clothes.”

“We removed layers,” said Reese. “Lots of them. Junky old clothes, really filthy.” She wrinkled her nose. “That rash on her legs, you know what it is, right? Circulation problems. She’s got tons of stuff growing on and in her. We cultured God-knows-what from her feet and nose and throat. On top of the body odor, you could smell the alcohol, the whole room reeked. Her blood work won’t be back till later today, but I’ll lay odds she’s a .3 or higher.”

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