Postmortem. Patricia Cornwell

“He hasn’t gone back to Charlottesville?”

Marino flicked an ash out the window. “He’s hanging around for a while, says he’s too upset to go back. He’s moved, staying in an apartment on Freemont Avenue, says he can’t set foot in the house after what happened. I think he’s gonna sell the joint. Not that he’ll need the money.”

He glanced over at me and I was briefly faced with a distorted image of myself in his mirrored shades. “Turns out the wife had a hefty life insurance policy. Petersen’s going to be about two hundred grand richer. Guess he’ll be able to write his plays and not have to worry about making a living.”

I didn’t say anything.

“And I guess we just let it slide he was brought up on rape charges the summer after he graduated from high school.”

“You’ve looked into that?”

I knew he had or he wouldn’t have mentioned it.

“Turns out he was doing summer theater in New Orleans and made the mistake of taking some groupie too seriously. I’ve talked with the cop who investigated the case. According to him, Petersen’s the lead actor in some play, and this babe in the audience gets the hots for him, comes to see him night after night, leaves him notes, the whole nine yards. Then she turns up backstage and they end up bar-hopping in the French Quarter. Next thing you know, she’s calling the cops at four in the morning, all hysterical, claiming she’s been raped. He’s in hot water because her PERK’s positive and the fluids pop up nonsecreter, which is what he is.”

“Did the case go to court?”

“Damn grand jury threw it out. Petersen admitted having sex with her inside her apartment. Said it was consensual, she came on to him. The girl was pretty bruised up, even had a few marks on her neck. But no one could prove how fresh the bruises were and if Petersen caused ’em by working her over. See, the grand jury takes one look at a guy like him. They take into account he’s in a play and this girl initiated the encounter. He still had her notes inside the dressing room, which clearly showed the girl had a thing for him. And he was real convincing when he testified she had bruises when he was with her, that she supposedly told him she’d been in a fight several days earlier with some guy she was in the process of breaking up with. Nobody’s going to throw the book at Petersen. The girl had the morals of a guppy and was either a Froot Loop or else she made a stupid mistake, laid herself wide open, so to speak, for getting a number done on her.”

“Those kinds of cases,” I quietly commented, “are almost impossible to prove.”

“Well, you just never know. It’s also sort of coincidental,” he added as a by-the-way for which I was completely unprepared, “that Benton called me up the other night to tell me the big mother computer in Quantico got a hit on the MO of whoever’s whacking these women here in Richmond.”

“Where?”

“Waltham, Massachusetts, as a matter of fact,” he replied, glancing over at me. “Two years ago, right at the time Petersen was a senior at Harvard, which is about twenty miles east of Waltham. During the months of April and May, two women was raped and strangled inside their apartments. Both lived alone in first-floor apartments, was tied up with belts, electrical cords. The killer apparently got in through unsecured windows. Both times it occurred on the weekend. The crimes are a carbon copy of what’s been happening here.”

“Did the murders stop after Petersen graduated and moved here?”

“Not exactly,” he replied. “There was one more later that summer which Petersen couldn’t have committed because he was living here, his wife just starting at VMC. But there were a few differences in the third case. The victim was a teenager and lived about fifteen miles from where the other two homicides occurred.

She didn’t live alone, was shacked up with a guy who was out of town at the time. The cops speculated her murder was a copycat some squirrel read about the first two in the papers and got the idea. She wasn’t found for about a week, was so decom posed there wasn’t a hope in hell of finding seminal fluid. Typing the killer wasn’t possible.”

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