behind.â
She nodded to him and looked for Paula. She was standing in the open living room, looking toward the back door. The great room of the house was separated from the eat-in kitchen by three columns, which mimicked the pyramid-shaped support columns out front. There was a small knot of people surrounding the center column, a surreal grouping of cops and techs waiting on her. Three things hit her: she couldnât see a body, the faces glancing her way were visibly disturbed, and there was a fetid whiff of decomposition in the air.
She stepped lightly toward the group, making sure she didnât tread in anything important. As she passed the column, Paula pointed toward it with her eyebrow raised. Taylor turned and sucked in her breath.
The victim was young, no more than twenty, black,naked, bones jutting out as if she hadnât eaten in a while, with dull, brittle bobbed hair. She hung on the center column.
To be more precise, sheâd been tacked to the column with a large hunting knife. A big blade, with a polished wood-and-pearl handle that was buried to the hilt square in her chest. She was thin enough that the blade, which looked to be at least eight inches, had passed through her body into the wood. Her arms were pulled up tight over her head, the hands together as if in prayer, but inside out. Her feet were crossed at the ankle, demure, innocent.
Pinned. At least, that was the illusion. At first glance, it looked like the knife was all that held her in that position. Taylor shook her head; it had taken strength, or potent hatred, to shove the knife through the girlâs breastbone into the wood behind.
Taylor ran her Maglite up and down the column, the concentrated beam reflecting off the nearly invisible wires that ran around the girlâs body to hold her suspended in midair. Clever. Some sort of fishing line held the body rigid against the wooden post. It cut into her flesh; the victim had been up on the post long enough that the grooves were deepening as the bodyâs early decomposition began.
The girlâs shoulders were obviously dislocated. Her skin was ashen and flaky, her lips cracked. She was stripped of dignity, yet the pose felt almostâ¦loving. Sorrow on her face, her mouth open in a scream, her eyes closed. Small mercies. Taylor hated when they stared.
Sheâd read the scene right. It was going to be a very long night.
Paula came to her side, fiddling with a small reporterâs notebook. âSorry I had to miss dinner. And sorry to ruin your night, too, but I knew you needed to see this. Thereâsno ID. I canât find a purse or anything. This place is clean. The neighbors say the owner is out of town.â
âThis isnât her home?â Taylor asked, gesturing to the body.
âNo. One of the neighbors, Carol Parker, is house-sitting, feeding the cat, taking in the paper. Ownerâs supposed to be gone all week. Parker came in, bustled around getting the cat fed and watered, then turned to leave and saw the body. She ran, of course. Called us. Swears up and down that sheâs never seen the girl around. Thereâs a circle of glass cut out of the back door, the lock was turned. Itâs been dusted, there were no usable prints. The blinds were closed, thatâs why the neighbor didnât see anything amiss. The alarm was disengaged too; the neighbor canât remember if she turned it on yesterday or not. That cute M.E., Dr. Fox? He was here earlier and declared her. He said to bring her in; either he or Sam will post her first thing.â
âOkay. Iâd like to talk to the neighbor. Do you have her stashed close by?â
âSheâs at her place next door with a new patrol. God, they get younger every day. This one canât be more than eighteen. We took the cat over there so it wouldnât interrupt the scene. Last I saw the patrol was talking to it like it was a baby. Not far enough removed from his own