“She was, what, sixteen?” Slidell asked.
“Fifteen. A store owner in Mascouche nabbed her for shoplifting in 1990. Insisted on pressing charges. This was the only picture we had back in ’04.”
“Ryan couldn’t dig up something less vintage?”
“Pomerleau’s parents lost all their belongings in a fire in ’92. By then she was out of the house, raising hell in Montreal.”
“Five-finger discounting?”
“And some petty stuff I don’t remember.”
“So her prints are on file?”
I nodded.
“Fifteen? Mom and Dad didn’t drag her back to the old homestead?”
“They were in their forties when Anique was born. By the time she bagged school to hit the big city, they were exhausted and tired of dealing with her crap.”
Slidell pooched out his lips and rubbed the back of his neck. “So she enters the States sometime between ’04, when you and Ryan bust her in Montreal, and ’07, when she leaves DNA on the Gower kid.” He squinted as he did some math. “She’s thirty-nine now, surely using an alias. And I’m guessing she’s street-savvy?”
“Pomerleau is vicious and delusional but smart as hell.”
“And her only surviving pic’s got more than two decades on it. No wonder she’s managed to fly under the radar.”
Sudden thought. I shifted to Leal’s board. On it was a black-andwhite printout of a child’s face showing a reasonable though lifeless resemblance to the school portrait on top. I guessed the image had been generated by software such as SketchCop, FACES, or Identi-Kit, in which interchangeable templates of features were selected based on an individual’s memory of an actual face. I assumed Slidell’s eyewitness from Morningside had given the input.
“Who did the composite?” I asked.
“We get ’em done through an FBI liaison.”
“Could he do an age progression on Pomerleau’s mug shot?” As I said it, I was surprised none had been done before. Or had I missed that? I made a note to check.
Slidell smiled. I think. “Not bad, Doc.”
“Rodas says Gower was wearing a house key on a chain around her neck.” Ryan spoke from across the room. “They never found it.”
Slidell and I crossed to him. “What about Estrada?” I asked.
“There’s no mention in the file.” Ryan gestured at the papers fanned out before him. “Hull knew nothing about missing effects. Said she’d check in to it.”
I met Ryan’s eyes. He gave me a straight look, then went back to reading interviews.
“I’ll call over about that sketch.” Slidell turned and chugged from the room.
I dropped into a chair. Trolled through the Estrada file until I found what I wanted.
Estrada’s autopsy report consisted of a single page of text and four pages of scanned color photos. It was signed by Perry L. Bullsbridge, MD.
Slidell was right. Considering a child had been murdered, Bullsbridge had done a piss-poor job of documenting the postmortem. Considering anyone had been murdered.
I read the section on physical descriptors and condition of the body. The brief remarks on health, hygiene, and nutrition. The one-sentence statement regarding absence of trauma.
I skimmed the organ weights. I was scanning the list of items submitted as evidence when an entry jumped out at me.
“They pulled two hairs from Estrada’s trachea.”
“And?” Ryan didn’t look up.
“Larabee pulled two hairs from Leal’s trachea.”
“He thought they were probably hers.”
“He said it was odd to find hair so far down the throat.”
Ryan’s eyes met mine. “What are you saying?”
“I don’t know.” I didn’t. “Coincidence?”
“You don’t believe in coincidence.”
“No,” I said. “I don’t.”