“And the style isn’t recognizable,” Merriwether added. “Most of the pros say it’s an amateur working with a homemade stencil, applying the ink by hand.”
“Like jailhouse tats?” Len Sotheby wondered. “Could mean our guy has a rap sheet.”
“No, not jailhouse. Those are almost always gray and black, ’cause the scratchers can’t get hold of any colored pigments. It’s what the experts call blackwork. What we’re looking at here is bold color in a geometrical design. They tell me it’s similar to the original tattoo technique used in the Pacific-the Philippines, Samoa, Tahiti, places like that. In Samoa it’s still done.”
“What is the technique exactly?” Walsh asked, jotting down notes.
“Traditionally, the artist takes a piece of bone and files one end to, like, a serrated edge-you know, like a comb. Then he attaches it to a wooden handle, dips the pointy end in pigment, and drives it into the skin with a mallet.”
Expressions of dismay and a grunted “ouch” made their way around the table.
“They tattoo every part of the body that way,” Merriwether went on imperturbably, “even the genitals. It’s a test of manhood.”
“Really?” Donna Cellini said with a smile. “That’s a test none of you guys would pass.”
Laughter broke through the temporary discomfort in the room.
“Anyway,” Merriwether said, “instead of chiseled bone, our guy has needles, and instead of soot and water, which the Polynesians and the Samoans used, he buys ink. It would take him maybe half an hour to apply the tattoo postmortem. He uses a 0.3-inch diameter needle for line work, 0.36 for coloring. Standard sizes, don’t lead us anywhere. The ink is standard too-couple hundred thousand bottles sold each year.”
“How about the hourglass design?” Walsh asked.
“It could be a stencil, which would speed up the process, but if so, it’s one he made himself, not a commercially available variety. The fact that it’s a geometric pattern-two triangles-might or might not be significant. The Polynesians were really into geometrical designs. They had this pottery done in what’s called the Lapita style, and they used the same designs when making tattoos. So our guy might be knowledgeable about ancient Polynesian culture, but it’s just as likely to be a coincidence. Most of the Polynesian designs were a lot more complicated than an hourglass. It was a real art form, the way they did it.”
“Sounds like you’re really getting into this stuff,” Ed Lopez remarked. “You sure you haven’t got ‘To Protect and Serve’ tattooed on your butt?”
“Ask your wife,” Merriwether responded placidly, to general amusement.
“Okay,” Walsh said, “since the tats are a dead end, I want you two to go back to working the index cards.”
“Shit,” Stark groused, “that got us nowhere. They’re ordinary three-by-five cards. You can buy ’em in any stationery store.”
“Work them anyway.” Walsh sank back in his seat. “Ed, Gary, you have any better luck with the victims’ background checks?”
Ed Lopez fielded the question. “We haven’t found anything that ties Nikki Carter to Martha Eversol.” Eversol had been assumed to be the Hourglass Killer’s second victim even before her body was found; the date of her disappearance had fit the pattern begun by Nikki Carter. “Checked out their doctors, dentists, employers and their colleagues at work, neighbors, landlords, boyfriends, ex-boyfriends, every damn thing we could think of. No links.”
“There’s supposed to be six degrees of separation between any two people on earth,” Gary Boyle added, “but not here.”
Walsh shook his head. “Donna and Len, give me some good news.”
Len Sotheby simply threw up his hands and said, “Nada.”
Donna Cellini was more forthcoming. “There are unsolved stranglings all over the map, obviously. But we didn’t find any parallel with the tattoos anywhere. Either our guy is new at this, or the tats are a new twist. I’m guessing the latter.”
Lopez asked why.
“Didn’t you read the profile?” Cellini sounded irritated. “It said the unsub was experienced.”
“Unsub,” Stark echoed with a smirk. The term was FBI jargon for Unknown Suspect. “Maybe you’ll be enrolling in Quantico before long, huh, Cellini?”
“At least I’d associate with a better class of people.”
“Any of the unsolved cases look promising?” Walsh asked.
Cellini consulted her notes. “There’s a bunch of stuff that has possibilities. Serial strangulations of prostitutes in Portland, Oregon, 1996 to 1998. A coyote-you know, a guy who smuggles illegals across the border-suspected of strangling female clients in the southern Arizona desert near Nogales, circa 1995. Never caught. Guy named Charles William Baron, real estate broker in Philadelphia, strangled his wife and his mistress in the same night and disappeared. Still at large. That happened in 1993.”
“He’s probably in South America by now,” Sotheby interjected. “He had a passport and overseas bank accounts.”
“Anything else?” Walsh pressed.
“Janitor who strangled three female students at a junior college in Nebraska, 1989 and 1990. Still on the loose. Strangler of children who roamed the Mojave Desert, 1985 and
’86-never apprehended. In 1982-”
“Okay.” Walsh raised his hand. “We don’t have to go back that far. Bottom line is…”
“Nada,” Sotheby said again with stubborn pessimism.
“Any clue how he got access to the strip mall so he could dump the body there?” Boyle asked Walsh.
“We’re still working on that,” Walsh said, aware that everyone present knew this answer meant no.
“Security guard check out okay?”
“He looks clean. West LA is handling that angle. Checking out the building’s owners, the guard-anybody who had a key.”
Merriwether asked if there was any hope on the hair-and-fiber front.
“Nothing new,” Walsh said. “Martha Eversol was covered with some of the same gray rayon fibers we got off Nikki Carter, but they’re too generic to help nab this guy. They’ll help convict him when he’s caught, at least.”
“If he’s caught,” Sotheby said.
“When,” Walsh repeated.
No one disputed him this time. But no one met his gaze either.
Time to wrap up. Walsh leaned forward.
“All right, everybody. We know what today’s date is. We know what it means.”
There were a few unnecessary glances at the calendar on the wall, where Wednesday, January 31, was circled in red.
Nikki Carter had been abducted on November 30th. Martha Eversol, on December 31. Always the last day of the month.
“Tonight’s his night to howl,” Walsh said. “We don’t know where he’ll strike, but we know it’ll be within the next eight hours. There are extra squad cars on the streets, extra plainclothes officers working bars and nightclubs. Stark and Merriwether, I want you covering the club where Nikki Carter disappeared. Lopez and Boyle, you cruise the neighborhood where Martha Eversol was rear-ended.”
“He won’t return to the scene,” Stark said. “He’s too smart,”
“You’re probably right. But we’ll do it anyway. Maybe we’ll catch a break. Christ knows, we need one.”
Nobody could argue with that.
12
C.J. noticed the white van on Western Avenue as she headed north into the mid-Wilshire district. It was two car lengths behind her, visible in her rear-view mirror.
There was nothing unusual about the van, except that she recalled seeing a similar vehicle pull away from the curb outside the Newton Station parking lot when she left.
Probably a coincidence. No reason to think the van was following her or anything.
As she guided her Dodge Neon onto Pico Boulevard, she watched her rearview mirror to see if the van duplicated the maneuver. It did not.
“Getting paranoid, Killer,” she admonished herself. In private she sometimes used the nickname her fellow cops had bestowed on her, even though she disliked it.
She cruised west on Pico, planning her evening. Quick shower, bite to eat, some reps on her exercise machine, then the twenty-minute drive to Foshay Junior High School at Exposition and Western, a bad neighborhood. She was always mildly amazed when she emerged from the school and found that her car had not been stolen. Of course, it was only a matter of time until the little Dodge became another Grand Theft Auto statistic.