Slidell was particularly eager to talk to Hamilton. She’d been on duty when Colleen Donovan and Shelly Leal presented at the ER. And Ellis Yoder had hinted that Ajax and Hamilton were friendly.
Slidell had phoned Hamilton repeatedly. Left messages on her mobile, gotten no reply. It didn’t predispose him to warm feelings toward the woman.
Hamilton lived on North Dotger, within spitting distance of Mercy Hospital. The street was winding and, in summer, overshaded by trees large enough to form a canopy blocking all sunlight.
Hamilton’s wasn’t one of the townhomes that had sprouted like toadstools after a rain, progeny of the yuppification of the Elizabeth neighborhood. Her apartment was in an uninspired brick bunker dating to the postwar era. One of four such bunkers, all painted beige in an unsuccessful attempt to discourage algae growth.
On their street sides, the bunkers had paired concrete patios surrounded by metal fences and protected by metal awnings, every one rusted and warped. Each patio was large enough to hold a chair, maybe two if your personal space requirements weren’t demanding. Each was accessed by double glass doors gone milky with age. The units above had uncovered balconies. Same square footage. Same cloudy doors.
Slidell and I took the walk, mud-caked and, like the brick, exuberantly green with life, and entered a small lobby with a grimy blackand-white floor. Four mailboxes formed a square on the wall to the left.
Overflow mail lay on the tile, mostly flyers and ads, a few magazines. Good Housekeeping. O. Car and Driver.
A. Hamilton was on the box marked 1C. Penned by hand and slipped behind a tiny rectangle of cracked glass.
Slidell pressed the bell. Waited. Pressed again.
No buzz. No voice from the little round speaker.
“Goddammit.” Slidell pressed harder, jabbing repeatedly with his thumb.
While waiting, I scanned labels at my feet. The automotive magazine was for Roger Collier, Oprah’s monthly for Hamilton. The housekeeping tips were going to Melody Keller.
Slidell rang a fourth time, his anger so palpable that I felt it elbow my ribs.
“Don’t have a heart attack,” I said.
“Why don’t she answer?”
“Maybe she’s not home?”
Slidell stared at the mailboxes, narrow-eyed and tight-mouthed.
“What did her supervisor say?”
“She’s on some kinda arrangement she don’t have to work regular.”
“PRN. Pro re nata. It’s a common arrangement in hospitals. Means the employee’s schedule changes a lot and hours aren’t guaranteed.”
“Whatever.”
“Let’s move on. Talk to the other nurse.”
“Pisses me off Alice goddamn Hamilton don’t call me back.”
Slidell was on his fifth round of jabbing when my iPhone vibrated in my jacket pocket. I answered.
Larabee had DNA results on the materials from Ajax’s trunk.
CHAPTER 37
“IT WAS POMERLEAU. The blood, the scalp.”
“I knew it.”
“Some of the Kleenex had saliva.”
“Pomerleau?”
“Yes.”
My pulse threw in a few extra beats.
“What are you thinking?” Larabee asked when I didn’t reply.
“The killer seeded the bodies.”
“That’s my take.”
“With Gower and Nance, he put saliva on tissue and left it in the child’s hand.”
“But that’s iffy. What if it rains? What if the tissue blows away? Animals drag it off?” Larabee was right there with me. “He had to get more sophisticated.”
I closed my eyes. Saw a syrupy corpse on a stainless steel table.
“Pomerleau had punctures on her inner elbows,” I said. “The ME in Vermont thought they looked wrong for needle drugs. So did I. And Pomerleau’s tox screen came back clean.”
“Ajax drew her blood and stored it in vials.”
“Or she gave it to him.”
“I doubt she gave him hunks of her head.”
I spent a moment grinding that down.
“He’s smart,” I said. “Knows shaft isn’t good enough. That root is needed to sequence nuclear DNA.”
“You think he scalped her when he killed her?”
“Yes.”
A pause. Metal rattled in the background. I figured Larabee was in an autopsy room.