"So something else could have attracted the killer to this victim. Maybe he's a guy can't resist a great rack. We might know more when we get to those boobs."
Liking Nift less and less, Pearl backed out of the bathroom and left Quinn to deal with the obnoxious little medical examiner. As she did so, she couldn't help but notice Nift's shoes, gleaming black and as meticulously clean as what was left of Florence Norton. Strange how images stuck in the mind. Pearl knew that when she was an old lady she'd be able to recall those polished black wingtips contrasting with the clean tile floor and chalk-white body parts stacked neatly in the tub.
"Did you close her eyes?" Quinn asked, as Pearl backed into the hall.
"Sure did," she heard Nift answer. "I didn't like the way she was looking at me."
So sensitive.
Pearl walked over to a small desk that was situated near a window so Florence would have natural light to work by during the day.
"Done with this?" she asked one of the techs.
He nodded. "We got what we can. Your turn."
Pearl put on her evidence gloves anyway, before opening the top desk drawer. Maybe Florence knew who'd killed her and had his name in her address book. It had happened.
But not this time. There was a dog-eared address book, but it contained almost exclusively the phone numbers of merchants or fellow employees. Or women. It seemed Florence Norton hadn't had much of a love life.
Still, the numbers would prove useful.
Other than the book, the desk contained only the usual pens, pencils, stamps, stationary, paid bills, and canceled checks for utilities or credit cards. There was a self-inking stamp with the victim's name and address, a stack of old checkbook pads (which Pearl placed off to the side with the address book and checkbook), and a tangle of rubber bands and paper clips in a plastic drawer divider. Unpaid bills indicated that Florence still owed more than five thousand dollars on her MasterCard.
One way to beat them, Pearl thought, reminding herself that her own monthly payment was due.
Staying out of the techs' way, she moved across the room to where Florence's obvious Prada knockoff purse lay on a table near the door. Fedderman and the uniform, who were standing nearby, glanced at her, then moved away to give her room. They were still conversing in low tones. Pearl heard Fedderman say something about an Italian restaurant where the two men used to eat, asking if the place was still in business.
Good investigating, Feds. You're sure to come away with something.
She caught the same tech's eye and pointed to the purse. He nodded, then ignored her as thoroughly as did Fedderman and the uniform.
Pearl carefully unzipped the purse and began examining its contents: wadded tissue; a small folding umbrella that didn't look as if it could be more than a foot in diameter when opened; loose change; a tiny round mirror; comb; lipstick; wrapped condom (Florence living in hope?); half a box of lemon-flavored cough drops; and a bulging red leather wallet.
It continued to bother Pearl that this victim wasn't in her thirties, like the other victims, and she wouldn't be regarded as a beauty. She'd died simply because of her last initial. And Quinn was right; there were lots of younger, more attractive brunettes whose last names began with the letter N, so why Florence?
Pearl decided to look through Florence's wallet.
She withdrew it carefully from the purse, then opened it.
Lots of credit cards, way too many. Pearl wondered what the dead woman had owed on them combined. Or did she merely carry the extra cards as backup, as many women did? A plastic security blanket. Or were they in her wallet simply to make her feel richer?
The bills in the wallet added up to twenty-seven dollars. An old theater stub from a play called I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change was stuffed in among them. There were no photos, but there was a New York Public Library card, a small plastic calendar from an insurance company, a Metrocard, and a medical insurance card that had been laminated.
Pearl held the med insurance card up and squinted at it. Florence had belonged to an HMO Pearl had never heard of. Pearl, who was barely insured.
The card had Florence's account number and the expiration date-six months from now. On the flip side of the card was some general information about the insured. She'd been five-foot-two and would have been forty-four in December. She-
Pearl felt a chill on her neck and stood motionless, staring at the card.
If she hadn't once loved and lived with Quinn, she might not have noticed.
She returned to the bathroom, carrying the insurance card.
Quinn was still watching Nift work. Some of the body parts were spread out in the tub now. The head was near the drain. Quinn looked over at Pearl, his face completely without emotion-holding his feelings at bay like the pro he had been and still was. His dreams, the sudden unbidden images, would come later.
Fedderman had finished his conversation with the uniform and had come to stand in the bathroom doorway. He was looking over Pearl's shoulder. "Jesus H. Christ," he said softly, staring at what was in the tub.
"I guess He's here someplace," Nift said, still leaning over the tub, his voice echoing faintly against porcelain. "You want I should call Him?"
"We want you should go see him personally," Pearl said.
She handed Quinn Florence's medical insurance card.
He glanced at it, then looked inquisitively at her.
"The victim's date of birth," Pearl said. "December fourth. The same as yours."
That caused Nift to pause in what he was doing. Pearl instantly regretted having told Quinn about this in his presence.
Nift turned only his head. "You and the victim shared a birthday?"
"It looks that way," Quinn said.
"That's why the killer couldn't be so particular about looks," Nift said. "He wanted one with your birthday and the last initial N. That's why he killed such a dog."
Pearl couldn't hold it in. "You little asshole!"
Quinn gripped her shoulders, pulling her away from Nift, out of the bathroom. Pearl heard Nift chuckle.
"He's such a…a…" Pearl sputtered.
"But he's right," Fedderman said somberly. "First there's the note to Renz about Quinn, then the dead women whose last initials are spelling out Quinn's name, and now this victim, whose birthday's the same as Quinn's. She had two criteria to meet. The killer couldn't be his usual particular self, which is why he settled for Florence."
"Feds, why don't you-"
"Ease up, Pearl." Quinn handed her back Florence Norton's insurance card. "And don't forget the 'coincidence' of one of the victims living in your old apartment."
"So what's it all mean?" Pearl asked, still too angry, primarily at Nift, to think clearly.
"It suggests the killer maneuvered the police into assigning Quinn, and us, to track him down," Fedderman said. "Spelling out Quinn's name, he's finishing what he started, and he chose a victim with Quinn's birthday so we wouldn't have any doubt about what he's doing."
"And so we know he's in control," Quinn said. "Moving us around like pawns."
Pearl did some deep breathing, feeling her rage at Nift dissipating now that she had something else to occupy her mind. The person she should be mad at, the killer. "You really figure that's what this is about?"
"It's at least a possibility," Fedderman said.
"We all know when we can be positive," Quinn said.
"She did have pretty good boobs," Nift called from the bathroom.
Pearl started toward him, but this time Fedderman held her back.
"Ignore the little prick, Pearl. He just wants to get to you. We've got other things to think about."
They both knew what Quinn had meant. There was little doubt that the killer knew how to spell Quinn's name: with two Ns.