The Affair
opposite of a compression.
    I looked at Merriam and asked, “What do you make of this?”
    “The cause of death was exsanguination through severed carotid arteries,” he said. “That was what I was paid to determine.”
    “How much were you paid?”
    “The fee structure was agreed between my predecessor and the county.”
    “Was it more than fifty cents?”
    “Why?”
    “Because fifty cents is all that conclusion is worth. Cause of death is totally obvious. So now you can earn your corn by helping us out a little.”
    Deveraux looked at me and I shrugged. Better that I had said it than her. She had to live with the guy afterward. I didn’t.
    Merriam said, “I don’t like your attitude.”
    I said, “And I don’t like twenty-seven-year-old women lying dead on a slab. You want to help or not?”
    He said, “I’m not a pathologist.”
    I said, “Neither am I.”
    The guy stood still for a moment, and then he sighed and stepped forward. He took Janice May Chapman’s limp and lifeless arm from me. He looked at the wrist very closely, and then ran his fingers up and down, gently, from the back of her hand to the middle of her forearm, feeling the swelling. He asked, “Do you have a hypothesis?”
    I said, “I think she was tied up tight. Wrists and ankles. The bindings started to bruise her, but she didn’t live long enough for the bruises to develop very much. But they definitely started. A little blood leaked into her tissues, and it stayed there when the rest of it drained out. Which is why we’re seeing compression injuries as raised welts.”
    “Tied up with what?”
    “Not ropes,” I said. “Maybe belts or straps. Something wide and flat. Maybe silk scarves. Something padded, perhaps. To disguise what had been done.”
    Merriam said nothing. He moved past me to the end of the table and looked at Chapman’s ankles. He said, “She was wearing pantyhose when she was brought in. The nylon was undamaged. Not torn or laddered at all.”
    “Because of the padding. Maybe it was foam rubber. Something like that. But she was tied up.”
    Merriam was quiet for another moment.
    Then he said, “Not impossible.”
    I asked, “How plausible?”
    “Postmortem examination has its limits, you know. You’d need an eyewitness to be certain.”
    “How do you explain the complete exsanguination?”
    “She could have been a hemophiliac.”
    “Suppose she wasn’t?”
    “Then gravity would be the only explanation. She was hung upside down.”
    “By belts or straps, or ropes over some kind of padding?”
    “Not impossible,” Merriam said again. “Turn her over,” I said.
    “Why?”
    “I want to see the gravel rash.”
    “You’ll have to help me,” he said, so I did.

Chapter
    19
    The human body is a self-healing machine, and it doesn’t waste time. Skin is crushed or split or cut, and blood immediately rushes to the site, the red cells scabbing and knitting a fibrous matrix to bind the parted edges together, the white cells seeking out and destroying germs and pathogens below. The process is underway within minutes, and it lasts as many hours or days as are necessary to return the skin to its previous unbroken integrity. The process causes a bell curve of inflammation, peaking as the suffusion of blood peaks, and as the scab grows thickest, and as the fight against infection reaches its most intense state.
    The small of Janice May Chapman’s back was peppered with tiny cuts, as was the whole of her butt, and as were her upper arms just above her elbows. The cuts were small, thinly scabbed incisions, all surrounded by small areas of crushing, which were colorless due to her bloodlessness. The cuts were all inflicted in random directions, as if by loose and rolling items of similar size and nature, small and hard and neither razor-sharp nor completely blunt.
    Classic gravel rash.
    I looked at Merriam and asked, “How old do you think these injuries are?”
    He said, “I have no idea.”
    “Come on,

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