From another, however, events could evolve, become more complex, deepen in significance until they ultimately emerged as constituent parts of an overall pattern of cause and effect that could never have been dreamed of originally, let alone guessed at.
These were the facts as far as she could telclass="underline" Short had worked at Fort Knox. He was young and healthy. He was happily married with three children he adored. He was a regular churchgoer. And he was liked and respected at work. All in all, he was certainly not your average suicide material. So from one perspective, the fact that he had committed suicide just a few days before the discovery that five gold coins had been stolen from Fort Knox was just a terrible coincidence.
And yet, when viewed from another, more cynical perspective it was no coincidence at all. It was downright suspicious.
Corbett had agreed when she had finally managed to track him down the previous afternoon on his way to another internal meeting, a look of grim-faced resignation stamped across his face. He had greeted her with a tired smile.
“Five minutes, Browne, that’s all I got. So you’d better make it quick. Let’s talk and walk.”
She had rapidly explained what she had found out about Short, choosing to omit Viggiano’s mistake, although she knew he wouldn’t have done the same for her. Corbett had clearly been impressed, even pausing to give her a pat on the side of the shoulder that had made her swell with pride.
“So he didn’t leave a note?”
“No.” She had given a firm shake of her head. “All the witness statements say it was totally out of character. He was happily married and doing well at work. He just doesn’t fit the profile.”
“I agree.” A brief pause. “And you say he was one of the guards down at Fort Knox?”
“Yeah. One of their star performers, apparently. Whatever that means.”
“And tell me again when this happened?”
“Four days ago. That’s just two days after Ranieri was murdered in Paris.”
“Hmmm.” Corbett’s forehead had creased in thought.
“The autopsy hasn’t happened yet. I spoke to the Louisville coroner’s office earlier and they’ve agreed to delay the procedure until tomorrow so I can observe. I’ve booked a flight.”
“Good.” Corbett had nodded as he reached the meeting room door he’d been heading for. “You’re right, it doesn’t add up. Let me know what you find. Oh, and Browne… ” he had said as she turned away. “Nice work.” She could almost have kissed him.
The mortuary was an anonymous white slab of a building on the outskirts of town, only a short drive from Louisville International Airport and screened from the road by a wall of cedar trees. Jennifer stepped gratefully out of the humidity’s dank embrace into the building’s refrigerated reception area.
There was a hint of desperation to the way it had been decorated, the walls painted a jarring concoction of pinks and blues, orange molded plastic seating lining one wall. The Beach Boys were being piped through a lone ceiling speaker, the noise muffled where the protective mesh had been painted over by mistake.
An expressionless woman, funereally dressed behind a rectangular access hatch punched into the far wall, acknowledged her with a shrug, dialed a number, and announced her arrival in a whisper. A few minutes later and a short balding man, about fifty years old, Jennifer guessed, bustled into the room, gold pocket-watch chain spanning his stomach before vanishing into the depths of his vest pocket.
“Agent Browne? I’m Dr. Raymond Finch, the pathologist here. We spoke earlier on the phone.”
“Hello.” Jennifer shook his hand warmly, holding out her ID in her other hand, although she noticed that he barely gave it a glance. “Thank you for inviting me down here.” He’d had no choice, really, but she knew that it never hurt to show a little humility, especially with the locals.
“No problem. We’re pretty much good to go if you are.”
“Great.”
He led her through a door, along a narrow corridor, down some stairs and then through a set of heavy double doors that swung open in front of them to reveal a small, white-tiled anteroom. The temperature had dropped down here and her throat had a slight burning sensation from the cocktail of disinfectant and formaldehyde that seemed to grow stronger as she penetrated deeper into the building’s entrails.
“You ever done one of these before?” Finch handed her a long white gown that she slipped on over her black jacket and long skirt, taking one for himself to cover the pale green scrub suit he was pulling on. He then placed a set of plastic shoe covers over his brown deck shoes.
“No.”
“Well, it’s pretty straightforward. Ugly but straightforward. You’re welcome to sit out here until we’re done, if you like.”
He smiled sympathetically but Jennifer gave a firm shake of her head. She hadn’t traveled all this way to miss the action.
“I’ve seen a lot of dead bodies, Doctor. One more won’t hurt.”
“Okay. Then let’s get started.”
Finch led her through another set of double doors to the autopsy room. It was quite a wide space, perhaps twenty foot square and blindingly white. Powerful lights beat down on the spotless tiled walls and floor and reflected off the stainless-steel work tops and glass-fronted cabinets that wrapped themselves around two of the walls. In the middle of the room stood a stainless-steel table, a waist-high slanted tray that had been plumbed for running water. A chrome hanging scale rocked gently in the air-conditioning’s hum like a medieval gibbet.
“So what’s the Bureau’s interest in this case?”
“It’s just a routine inquiry. Nothing to get excited about,” she lied, hoping that she had disguised the deceit in her answer better than Finch had disguised the curiosity in his original question.
“Ah.” She could tell he didn’t believe her. “Well, it may be routine for you but we don’t get too many suicides round these parts. And when we do, they tend to have put a gun to their head. So this is about as exciting as it gets.”
He laughed and in different circumstances, Jennifer knew that she would have found Finch quite soothing, kind gray eyes peering warmly over the top of half-moon glasses, a grandfatherly white moustache bristling under his beaked nose. But she was cold and her eyes stung from the whiteness of the room and she just wanted him to get on with it.
“So where’s the body?”
Finch didn’t seem to notice the slight impatience in her voice.
“My assistant should be along with Mr. Short any minute now. Ah, here he is.”
A gurney rolled in, a white sheet covering the body lying on it, closely followed by a bored-looking youth sporting a disconcerting blaze of peroxide hair and matching tongue stud and nose rings. He was dressed like Finch in medical scrub suit and protective gown.
“You’ve read the police report, I expect?” asked Finch as the assistant scraped the gurney along the side of the autopsy table with a metallic screech. Jennifer nodded, flinching at the noise.
“Of course. His son saw smoke coming from the garage and found his father in the car. The police tried to administer first aid on the scene but it was too late.”
“Yes. They found him on the backseat.”
“Did they? That wasn’t mentioned anywhere.”
The assistant levered the body onto the autopsy table with a brutal series of pushes and shoves that made Jennifer wince. Short lay awkwardly, like a hastily arranged doll. His skin was waxy and bleached, the face flat with dark rings under the eyes, the flesh slack and gloopy.