At half past one, we left the hotel in the rental car. He drove because he would never have it any other way, and we got on Madison Avenue and followed it east, away
from the Mississippi River. The brick university was so close we could have walked it, the Regional Forensic Center across the street from a tire store and the Life Blood Donor Center. Marino parked in back, near the public entrance of the medical examiner's office.
The facility was funded by the county and about the size of my central district office in Richmond. There were three forensic pathologists, and also two forensic anthropologists, which was very unusual and enviable, for I would have loved to have someone like Dr David Canter on my staff. Memphis had yet another distinction which was decidedly not a happy one. The chief had been involved in perhaps two of the most infamous cases in the country. He had performed the autopsy of Martin Luther King and had witnessed the one of Elvis.
'If it's all the same to you,' Marino said as we got out of the car, 'I think I'll make phone calls while you do your thing.'
'Fine. I'm sure they can find an office for you to use.'
He squinted up at an autumn blue sky, then looked around as we walked. 'I can't believe I'm here,' he said. 'This is where he was posted.'
'No,' I said, because I knew exactly who he was talking about. 'Elvis Presley was posted at Baptist Memorial Hospital. He never came here, even though he should have.'
'How come?'
'He was treated like a natural death,' I replied.
'Well, he was. He died of a heart attack.'
'It's true his heart was terrible,' I said. 'But that's not what killed him. His death was due to his polydrug abuse.'
'His death was due to Colonel Parker,' Marino muttered as if he wanted to kill the man. I glanced at him as we entered the office. 'Elvis had ten drugs on board. He should
have been signed out an accident. It's sad.'
'And we know it was really him,' he then said.
'Oh for God's sake, Marino!'
'What? You've seen the photos? You know it for a fact?' he went on.
'I've seen them. And yes, I know,' I said as I stopped at the receptionist's desk.
'Then what's in them.' He would not stop.
A young woman named Shirley, who had taken care of me before, waited for Marino and me to quit disagreeing.
'That is none of your business,' I sweetly said to him. 'Shirley, how are you?'
'Back again?' She smiled.
'With no good news, I'm sorry to say,' I replied.
Marino began trimming his fingernails with a pocketknife, glancing around like Elvis might walk in any minute.
'Dr Canter's expecting you,' she said. 'Come on. I'll take you back.'
While Marino ambled off to make phone calls somewhere down the hall, I was shown into the modest office of a man I had known since his residency days at the University of Tennessee. Canter had been as young as Lucy when I had met him for the first time. A devotee of forensic anthropologist Dr Bass, who had begun the decay research facility in Knoxville known as The Body Farm, Canter had been mentored by most of the greats. He was considered the world's foremost expert in saw marks, and I wasn't quite sure what it was about this state famous for the Vols and Daniel Boone. Tennessee seemed to corner the market on experts in time of death and human bones.
'Kay.' Canter rose, extending his hand.
'Dave, you're always so good to see me on such short notice.' I took a chair across from his desk.
'Well, I hate what you're going through.'
He had dark hair combed straight back from his brow, so that whenever he looked down it fell in his way. He was constantly shoving it out of his way but did not seem aware of it. His face was youthful and interestingly angular, with closely set eyes and a strong jaw and nose.
'How are Jill and the kids?' I inquired.
'Great. We're expecting again.'
'Congratulations. That makes three?'
'Four.' His smile got bigger.
'I don't know how you do it,' I said sincerely.
'Doing it's the easy part. What goodies have you brought me?'
Setting the hard case on the edge of his desk, I opened it and got out the plastic- enclosed sections of bone. I handed them to him and he took out the left femur first. He studied it under a lamp with his lens, slowly turning it end over end.
'Hmmm,' he said. 'So you didn't notch the end you cut.' He glanced at me.
He wasn't chastising, just reminding, and I felt angry with myself again. Usually, I
was so careful. If anything, I was known for being cautious to the point of obsession.
'I made an assumption, and I was wrong,' I said. 'I did not expect to discover that the killer used a saw with characteristics very similar to mine.'
'They usually don't use autopsy saws.' He pushed back his chair and got up. 'I've never had a case, really, just studied that type of saw mark in theory, here in the lab.'
'Then that's what this is.' I had suspected as much.
'I can't say with certainty until I get it under the scope. But both ends look like they've been cut with a Stryker saw.'
He gathered the bags of bones, and I followed him out into the hall as my misgivings got worse. I did not know what we would do if he could not tell the saw marks apart. A mistake like this was enough to ruin a case in court.
'Now, I know you're probably not going to tell much about the vertebral bone,' I said, for it was trabecular, less dense than other bone and therefore not a good surface for tool marks.
'Never hurts to bring it anyway. We might get lucky,' he said as we entered his lab. There was not an inch of empty space. Thirty-five-gallon drums of degreaser and polyurethane varnish were parked wherever they would fit. Shelves from floor to ceiling were crammed with packaged bones, and in boxes and on carts were every type of saw known to man. Dismemberments were rare, and I knew of only three obvious motivations for taking a victim apart. Transporting the body was easier.
Identification was slowed, if not made impossible. Or simply, the killer was malicious. Canter pulled a stool close to an operating microscope equipped with a camera. He moved aside a tray of fractured ribs and thyroid cartilage that he must have been working on before I arrived.
'This guy was kicked in the throat, among other things,' he absently said as he pulled on surgical gloves.
'Such a nice world we live in,' I commented.
Canter opened the Ziploc bag containing the segment of right femur. Because he could not fit it on the microscope's stage without cutting a section that was thin enough to mount, he had me hold the two-inch length of bone against the table's edge. Then he bent a twenty-five-power fiber optics light close to one of the sawn surfaces.
'Definitely a Stryker saw,' he said as he peered into the lenses. 'You got to have a fast- moving, reciprocating motion to create a polish like this. It almost looks like polished stone. See?'
He moved aside and I looked. The bone was slightly beveled, like water frozen in gentle ripples, and it shone. Unlike other power saws, the Stryker had an oscillating blade that did not move very far. It did not cut skin, only the hard surface it was pressed against, like bone or a cast an orthopedist cut from a mending limb.
'Obviously,' I said, 'the transverse cuts across the midshaft are mine. From removing marrow for DNA.'
'But the knife marks aren't.'
'No. Absolutely not.'
'Well, we're probably not going to have much luck with them.'
Knives basically covered their own tracks, unless the victim's bone or cartilage was stabbed or hacked.