back in, her fingers adept at the movement, now so familiar. âIâm ready when you are, Doctor.â
âGood,â he said. âTonight, a brief primer. Weâll see if youâre able to draw any conclusions.â He turned to the chalkboard, but his fingers played with the chalk as he spoke.
âDo you remember the Ripper killings in London a few years back?â
âI remember everyone talking about them,â Grace said. âBut I donât know much about the murders. Mother said it wasnât a fit topic for me, and she wouldnât allow the newspapers in the house for fear that . . .â Graceâs throat closed, as if a valve from her former life had turned, not allowing her to speak of it.
Thornhollow nodded, all his attention on her words, not her emotions. âIâm not surprised sheâd shield you from such events. It was a nasty business. The papers would have you think it was a new type of person altogether, or a demon at work. But there are thoseof us whoâve seen dark things long before the Ripper took his nighttime walks. The only thing new in this story was a method that the police used in an attempt to find the killer.
âMost crime solving involves a very simple approach, Grace. Who? When? Why? How? Thatâs it. These questions are pivotal and have done their duty for a long time, and done it well. But in the case of the Ripper they werenât doing the trick. Some scientists started looking at the behavior of the criminal before and after the crime, not just during, in order to collect information about who this person might be, what their profession is, their connection to the victim, even what their emotional state was like at different times before, during, and after the event. All these things can help establish a picture of your criminal well beyond the simple monosyllabic questions weâve been asking for centuries.â
Grace sipped her coffee, letting the warmth soothe her vocal cords and the rough spot that had opened up when she spoke of the past. âThatâs all very well, Doctor, but I have to point out that the Ripper was never caught, new method or not.â
Thornhollow stopped pacing and bit his cheek. âTrue. However, I became somewhat entranced by the idea and have spent years in study, gathering information about individuals that are known murderers so that we may have a collection of facts to draw from when we donât know who weâre looking for. Weâre drawing a picture, if you will, of what kind of manâor womanâwould do certain deeds, andhow theyâd go about doing them.â
âSo, you work backward, in a sense,â Grace said, her eyebrows drawing together as a headache began to form at her temples, pulsing against the bandage. âInstead of learning their biography after you catch them, you put together a story about who you think they are, and then use that to track them down.â
âPrecisely.â
A flush of pride flowed through Grace at his word, a warmth in her belly not provided by the coffee.
âIn the case of the Ripper, youâre right. He was never caught, but I believe the methodology is sound and have used it myself multiple times to aid the police in Boston. Coming to Ohio means Iâm casting my net in a smaller pond, no doubt. Boston was so full of murders some nights, I hardly knew which crime scene to attend, but the hospital here is the most humane Iâve seen, and I grew weary of operating in darkness both day and night.â
âDonât be deceived by a pleasant setting, Doctor,â Grace warned. âSometimes the loveliest places harbor the worst monsters.â
âVery true,â he acknowledged. âWith that in mind, Iâll ask you a straightforward question. If you were to murder someone, who would you kill?â
âMy father,â she said promptly.
He nodded, as if heâd expected the answer.
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