Tags:
Fiction,
General,
thriller,
Suspense,
Medical,
Thrillers,
Mystery & Detective,
Women Sleuths,
Mystery,
Mystery Fiction,
Women physicians,
Forensic pathologists,
Virginia,
Fiction - Espionage,
Medical examiners (Law),
Medical novels,
Scarpetta,
Kay (Fictitious character)
- she set down her wine - 'I really didn't invite you over to interview you. But I would be less than honest if I told you that I didn't want an opportunity for us to get better acquainted.'
'Thank you, Frances,' I said. 'I am pleased you feel that way.'
'Excuse me a minute.'
She got up and returned to the kitchen. I heard a refrigerator door shut, water run and pots and pans quietly bang. Momentarily, she was back with the bottle of chardonnay inside an ice bucket, which she set on the glass coffee table.
'The bread is in the oven, asparagus is in the steamer, and all that's left is to saute the shrimp,' she announced, reseating herself.
'Frances,' I said, 'your police department has been on-line with CAIN for how long now?'
'Only for several months,' she replied. 'We were one of the first departments in the country to hook up with it.'
'What about NYPD?'
'They're getting around to it. The Transit Police have a more sophisticated computer system and a great team of programmers and analysts. So we got on-line very early.'
'Thanks to you.'
She smiled.
I went on, 'I know the Richmond Police Department is on-line. So are Chicago, Dallas, Charlotte, the Virginia State Police, the British Transport Police. And quite a number of other departments both here and abroad are in the process.'
'What's on your mind?' she asked me.
'Tell me what happened when the body of the unidentified woman we believe Gault killed was found Christmas Eve. How was CAIN a factor?'
'The body was found in Central Park early in the morning, and of course I heard about it immediately. As I've already mentioned, the MO sounded familiar, so I entered details into CAIN to see what came back. This would have been by late afternoon.'
'And what came back?'
'Very quickly CAIN called our VICAP terminal with a request for more information.'
'Can you recall exactly what sort of information?'
She thought for a moment. 'Well, let's see. It was interested in the mutilation, wanting to know from which parts of the body skin had been excised and what class cutting instrument had been used. It wanted to know if there had been a sexual assault, and if so, was the penetration oral, vaginal, anal or other. Some of this we couldn't know since an autopsy had not yet been performed. However, we did manage to get other information by calling the morgue.'
'What about other questions?' I asked. 'Did CAIN ask anything that struck you as peculiar or inappropriate?'
'Not that I'm aware of.' She regarded me quizzically.
'Has CAIN ever sent any messages to the Transit Police terminal that have struck you as peculiar or confusing?'
She thought some more. 'We've entered, at the most, twenty cases since going on-line in November. Rapes, assaults, homicides that I thought might be relevant to VICAP because the circumstances were unusual or the victims were unidentified.
'And the only messages from CAIN that I'm aware of have been routine requests for further information. There has been no sense of urgency until this Central Park case. Then CAIN sent an Urgent mail waiting message in flashing bold because the system had gotten a hit.'
'Should you get any messages that are out of the ordinary, Frances, please contact Benton Wesley immediately,'
'Would you mind telling me what it is you're looking for?'
'There was a breach of security at ERF in October. Someone broke in at three in the morning, and circumstances indicate Gault may have been behind it.'
'Gault?' Commander Perm was baffled. 'How could that have happened?'
'One of ERF's system analysts, as it turned out, was connected to a spy shop in northern Virginia that was frequented by Gault. We know this analyst - a woman - was involved in the break-in, and the fear is that Gault put her up to it.'
'Why?'
'What wouldn't he like better than to get inside CAIN and have at his disposal a database
Katie Ashley
Sherri Browning Erwin
Kenneth Harding
Karen Jones
Jon Sharpe
Diane Greenwood Muir
Erin McCarthy
C.L. Scholey
Tim O’Brien
Janet Ruth Young