Patricia Cornwell – Scarpetta11 – The Last Precinct

Dear Benton,

I’m the president of the Ugly Fan Club and you’ve been picked to he an honorary member! Guess what? Members get to be ugly for free! Aren ‘t you excited? More later…

This was followed by five more letters, all within weeks of each other, all making the same references to an Ugly Fan Club and Benton’s becoming the newest member. The paper was plain, same Ransom font, no signature, same New York zip code, clearly the same author for all. And a very clever one until this person mailed the sixth letter and made a mistake, a rather obvious one to the investigative eye, which is why I am baffled that Benton didn’t seem to catch it. On the back of the plain white envelope are writing impressions that are notice­able when I tilt the envelope and catch light at different an­gles.

I get a pair of latex gloves out of my satchel and put them on as I wander into the kitchen to find a flashlight. Anna keeps one on the counter by the toaster. Back in the dining room, I slip the envelope out of its plastic cover, hold it up by the cor­ners and shine the flashlight on the paper obliquely. I catch the shadow of the indented word Postmaster and it becomes in­stantly clear to me what the author of this letter did.

“Franklin D.,” I make out more words. “Is there a Franklin D. Roosevelt post office in New York? Because this definitely says N-Y, N-Y.”

“Yes. The one in my neighborhood,” McGovern says, her eyes getting wide. She comes over to my side of the table to get a closer look.

“I’ve had cases where people try to create alibis,” I say, shining the light from different angles. “An obvious, shop­worn one is you were in a different, very distant location at the time of the murder and therefore couldn’t have done it. An easy way to do that is have mail posted from some remote lo­cation at or around the time the murder happens, thereby mak­ing it seem the killer couldn’t be you because you can’t be in two places at once.”

“Third Avenue,” McGovern says. “That’s where the FDR post office is.”

“We’ve got part of a street address; some of it’s obliterated by the flap. Nine-something. Three A-V. Yes, Third Avenue. What you do is address the letter, put on the appropriate postage, then enclose it in another envelope addressed to the postmaster of whatever post office you want your letter mailed from. The postmaster is obliged to mail your letter for you, postmarked in that city. So what this person did was tuck this letter inside another envelope, and when he addressed that outer envelope, the impressions of what he wrote were left on the envelope underneath.”

Lucy has come behind me, too, and is leaning close to see. “Susan Pless’s neighborhood,” she says.

Not only that, but the letter, which is by far the most vile, is dated December 5, 1997the same day Susan Pless was mur­dered:

Hey Benton,

How are you, soon-to-be-ugly boy. Just wondering Got any idea what it’s like to look in the mirror and want to commit suicide? No? Will soon. Wiiiilllll soooonnnn. Gonna carve you up like a Christmas turkey and same goes for the Chief Cunt you screw when you got time off from trying to figure out people like me & you. Can’t tell you how much l’m-a-gonna (to quote Southerners) like using my big blade to open her seams. Quid pro quo, right? When you gonna learn to mind your own business?

I imagine Benton receiving these sick, crude missives. I imagine him in his room at my house, sitting at the desk with laptop opened and plugged into a modem line, his briefcase nearby, coffee within reach. His notes indicate he determined the font was Ransom and then contemplated the significance. To obtain release by paying a price. To buy back. To deliver from sin, I read his scribbles. I might have been down the hall­way in my study or in the kitchen at the very moment he was reading this letter and looking up “ransom” in the dictionary, and he never said a word. Lucy volunteers that Benton

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