“Female, caucasian, about thirty. I got the scene recorded. I was about to run her for ID when they told me you’d arrived on scene.” They walked together, Peabody in her comfortable airskids, Eve in the arch-killing heels. “Sexual homicide. Raped and strangled. But he didn’t stop there.”
“Who found her?”
“A couple of kids. Jesus, Dallas.” Peabody stopped a moment, stood in her hastily thrown-on clothes, rubbing a hand over her tired face. “Snuck out of the house, thought they’d have a little adventure. Sure as hell got more than that. We’ve contacted the parents and child services. We’ve got them in a black-and-white.”
“Where is she?”
“Down there.” Peabody led the way, then pointed.
She lay on the rocks, just above the dark, still water of the lak
e. She wore nothing but what looked to be a red ribbon tied around her neck. Her hands were clasped together between her breasts, as if in prayer, or plea.
Her face was smeared with blood. Blood, Eve thought, that had spilled out of her when he’d taken her eyes.
She had to ditch the shoes or risk breaking her neck. Using the can of Seal-It from the field kit Peabody handed her, she coated her hands, her bare feet. Even so, it wasn’t an easy climb down in the party dress, and she imagined she looked completely ridiculous, completely uncoplike, sparkling her way over rocks toward a body.
She heard something rip, and ignored it.
“Oh, man.” Peabody winced. “You’re going to ruin that dress, and it’s totally iced.”
“I’d give a month’s pay for a goddamn pair of jeans and a normal shirt. A pair of fucking boots.” Then she put it out of her mind, set her feet solidly, and turned to the body.
“Didn’t rape her down here. There’s going to be a secondary scene. Even a lunatic doesn’t rape a woman on a heap of rocks when there’s all this grass. Raped her somewhere else. Killed or incapacitated her somewhere else. Had to carry her down here. Had to have some muscle and bulk to manage that—unless there was more than one of them. She’s what, maybe a hundred and thirty pounds anyway. Deadweight.”
More to protect the scene than the dress, Eve hitched the skirt up. “Let’s get an ID on her, Peabody. Find out who she is.”
While Peabody used the Identi-pad, Eve studied the position of the body. “Posed her. Praying? Begging? Resting in peace? What’s your message?”
She crouched to examine the body. “Visual evidence of physical and sexual assault. Facial bruises, torso, forearms—those look defensive. She’s got some matter under her nails. Tried to fight, scratched at him. It’s not skin. Looks like fibers.”
“Her name’s Elisa Maplewood,” Peabody said. “Central Park West address.”
“Not so far from home,” Eve stated. “She doesn’t look uptown. No pedicure. Hands aren’t smooth and pampered. Got calluses.”
“Lists employment as a domestic.”
“Yeah, that’s more like it.”
“She’s thirty-two. Divorced. Dallas, she’s got a four-year-old kid. A daughter.”
“Oh, hell.” Eve drew it in, then set it aside. “Bruises on her thighs and the vaginal area. Red corded ribbon around her throat.”
It was dug into her skin so the bruised flesh puffed around it, then the tails draped down to her breasts.
“Time of death, Peabody?”
“Getting it.” Peabody drew back the gauge, studied the readout. “Twenty-two twenty.”
“About three hours ago. And the kids found her?”
“Just after midnight. First on scene responded, dealt with the kids, took a visual from above, and called it in at quarter to one.”
“Okay.” Steeling herself, she took the microgoggles, slipped them on, then bent over the ruined face. “Took his time here. Didn’t hack at her. Neat, precise cuts. Almost surgical, like he was doing a fucking transplant. So the eyes were what he was after. They were the prize. The beating, the rape, those were just the prelude.”
She eased back and took off the goggles. “Let’s turn her, check the back.”
There was nothing but the darkened flesh from the settling of blood, and what Eve identified as grass stains on the buttocks and down the thighs.