“That is normal,” Vinnie said, writing it down.
“Jacobsen’s lungs were the same,” Marvin said. “Dr. Montgomery felt that there was minimal if any pulmonary edema.”
“I’d have to say the same with these,” Jack said. He took the lungs from the scale, placed them on a cutting board, and made a series of slices to look at the interior. “Yup, minimal edema, if any. That’s weird. The respiratory depression from the fentanyl had to be really rapid, almost like turning out the light. That makes me suspect we are dealing with a very powerful fentanyl analogue, like carfentanil or, even worse, the cis version of 3-methylfentanyl.”
“Don’t listen to him,” Vinnie said, talking to Marvin. “He wants to impress you.”
“Really,” Jack said. He knew Vinnie was teasing him, but he wanted to be sure the techs knew he was telling the truth. “Those analogues are up to ten thousand times stronger than morphine in all regards, including suppression of respiration. It’s the potency of fentanyl analogues and their ease of manufacture that’s the major cause of the rising opioid death rate.”
As the autopsy continued and no pathology was being found, Jack’s imagination began to be stimulated. Certainly, one of the ungodly powerful fentanyl analogues could explain Aria’s death and the lack of pathological findings. There was no question in his mind. The same could be said about Kera Jacobsen’s death, since no pathology was found there, either, as confirmed by Marvin. Could the same analogue be involved in both deaths? Jack thought the chances were high, so Toxicology had to bear the burden of making that determination. The drug Aria used and the drug Kera used had to be compared. If it was the same, the city authorities would have to be alerted to warn addicts. Such a situation of a particularly potent batch of drugs on the black market had happened in the past, resulting in a sharp uptick in the already high number of opioid deaths. The user community had to be informed.
This line of thinking plus the lack of signs of previous intravenous use motivated Jack to try something he normally wouldn’t have done on an obvious intravenous overdose case, and that was to test the stomach contents for fentanyl. His thought was that maybe Aria had taken some orally and had been disappointed in the result before switching to the intravenous route. While Vinnie and Marvin were washing out the intestines at the sink, Jack took a small syringe, pulled out a fluid sample from the stomach, which was easy since the organ was in plain view after the intestines had been removed, and used a fentanyl test strip. He was surprised when it tested positive.
When Vinnie and Marvin returned to the table, Jack told them what he’d found.
“What does that mean?” Vinnie asked.
“I have no clue,” Jack said. “Except it suggests that Aria ingested some fentanyl before injecting it.”
“That doesn’t make any sense to me,” Vinnie said.
“Did the stomach contents get tested on the Jacobsen case?” Jack asked Marvin.
“I don’t think so,” Marvin said.
“Maybe I’ll ask Toxicology to do it,” Jack said.
The rest of the autopsy went quickly, especially since absolutely no pathology was found. At the very end, Jack thanked the two mortuary techs and left the autopsy room. Normally he would have stayed to give Vinnie a hand with the body and with cleaning up, but with Marvin there, he knew he wasn’t needed. Instead he picked up all the toxicology samples and, juggling them with a bit of difficulty, took them up to the sixth floor. There he found the head of Toxicology, John DeVries, in his spacious new office.
Back when Jack had been a new hire, he’d had issues with John, as he was a cantankerous individual struggling to run one of the key departments of the OCME with inadequate space and an inadequate budget. For his investigations, Jack needed answers, and he felt he needed them quickly. When the toxicology results weren’t forthcoming, he complained, and John’s response was to passive-aggressively delay the results even more. It became thornier still when the chief medical examiner got involved. There was even a time when Jack and John nearly came to blows.
Things changed dramatically after the new high-rise was opened, and many OCME departments moved into the slick new space. Toxicology stayed in the old building, and instead of occupying a few cramped rooms on a low floor, it moved into renovated space, consisting of the entire top two floors. And the Toxicology budget was increased commensurably, changing John overnight from an aging, cranky, gaunt, and bitter man into a younger-appearing, happier version of himself. In contrast to the “olden” days, Jack enjoyed running into the man or stopping into his new office on occasion.
“What do you have?” John asked graciously when Jack appeared at the door.
Jack explained the situation and his concern that the OCME had an obligation to the city’s addicted population to let them know if there was a new batch of particularly lethal drugs on the market. He explained the two cases of highly accomplished young women whose autopsy findings matched, making him feel that there might be a new fentanyl analogue out in the community, and that he needed to know if the two cases matched.
“We’ll get right on it,” John said, as he helped Jack unload his clutch of sample bottles from Aria’s autopsy.
“I have one more request,” Jack said.
“I would be surprised if you didn’t,” John said with a smile. “Ask away!”
Jack told him about his running the fentanyl test strip on a fluid sample of Aria’s stomach and getting a surprising positive result. “I’m wondering if you might run a speed test for fentanyl on the stomach contents of the first case, Kera Jacobsen. She was autopsied several days ago.”
“I’ll be happy to do so,” John said. He wrote down Kera’s name. “Where will you be in the next half hour or so?”
“I’ll be available,” Jack said. “Just call my mobile number.”
“I or Peter will be back to you shortly,” John said. Peter Letterman was the deputy director of Toxicology.
As Jack walked out to summon an elevator, he had to smile. The change in John DeVries had been nothing short of astonishing. It was now a pleasure to work with the man, whereas prior to his metamorphosis it had been a battle.
Retreating to his office, Jack tried not to think about what was going on in one of the Langone Medical Center’s hybrid operating rooms. He even avoided checking the time for fear he’d start worrying that he hadn’t gotten the call to tell him the procedure was over and there was nothing to worry about. Knowing himself, he needed to keep busy to mentally survive. As sad as it was, the autopsy on Aria Nichols had done the trick, but it was now over.
The growing stack of unfinished cases beckoned as did all the histology slides that needed to be reviewed, but he quickly nixed the idea. That kind of busywork didn’t require enough brainpower to keep him from thinking about things he didn’t want to think about, like Laurie’s biopsy being positive. He needed something else that was more demanding and used more parts of his brain, like the rarely used creative sections. Jack was totally aware that he was a man of action who needed physical exertion to keep himself focused, which was why he still liked to play sports rather than watch them.
Thinking about sports brought up the idea of heading home and getting in a bit of basketball despite his promise to Laurie. He felt his mental equilibrium trumped her worry that he might injure himself. He knew that a good run would surely take his mind off Laurie’s surgery. Jack liked the idea more and more until he checked the time.
“Damn,” he said out loud. It was 2:25 P.M., much too early for basketball. People didn’t start showing up on the court until at least 4:30. Unfortunately, checking the time had the negative effect he feared and was trying not to think about, namely that Dr. Cartier had not called him. If Laurie’s surgery had begun around noon, that meant it had been going on for more than two hours, not a good sign.