Good Blood (16 page)

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Authors: Aaron Elkins

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Police Procedural, #det_classic

BOOK: Good Blood
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“I see,” Caravale said, nodding. “That’s very interesting.”
“And if you look carefully at the way the splintering occurred at the break points, you can tell the direction of the blow as well.” He offered a borrowed magnifying glass to Caravale, who gave it a try, but within a few seconds he handed back the lens, shaking his head.
“I’ll take your word about the splinters, but let me guess the direction of the blow.” He held his left hand up, as if shading his eyes with his forearm, and with the fingers of his other hand, tapped his arm a few inches below the elbow.
“Here.”
Gideon nodded. Caravale had tapped himself on the ulnar aspect-the pinky side-of the forearm. It was the classic location of the fracture that resulted when a person threw up his arm to protect himself from an attack-the so-called “nightstick fracture.”
“And what that tells me…” Gideon began.
“What that tells you,” said Caravale slowly, “is that it’s extremely unlikely that he was shot. Because if the killer had a gun, he’d just go ahead and shoot him, right? Why would he have to attack him with some other object? Is that your reasoning?”
“That’s my reasoning.”
Caravale, who had grown increasingly absorbed, nodded thoughtfully several times. “Well, I think you’re on to something.”
Gideon felt as if he’d just passed a test. But then, so had Caravale. It worked both ways. The man was a quick study. He’d caught on at once, had taken the basic idea, and had run with it.
“So here’s what we think we know about him,” Caravale said a few minutes later. They were twenty yards from the burial, sitting in directors’ chairs from the van, in the shade of some softly rustling poplars. Nearby, the crime-scene crew was also taking a break, sprawled on the ground, smoking and animatedly arguing the finer points of a soccer match the evening before.
“We have a burial that’s been there for perhaps ten years-”
“Very approximately. Plus or minus five.”
“An adult male, fifty or more-”
“Make it sixty or more,” Gideon interrupted. He had upped his estimate as he’d gotten a better idea of the extensive porosity and thinning that was to be found in the bones. The scapulas in particular showed the atrophy and demineralization he’d expect in a man of seventy. “Also, he was a fairly small guy, and lightly built.”
“Lightly built… do you mean thin? Not fat?”
“No, there’s no way to tell fat or thin from the bones. What I meant was lightly muscled, what we call ‘gracile.’ I don’t know what the Italian word is.”
“The same,” said Caravale. “ Gracile.” Grah-chee-lay.
“Ah, grazie, Vaccari,” he said to one of his men, who had brought cans of Cola Light for him and Gideon. Popping the top on one, he arranged himself more comfortably in the chair. “All right, to review: sixty or more, male, lightly built, probably killed with a blunt instrument-”
“No, not necessarily blunt,” Gideon said. He was working his cramped neck muscles, tilting his head back and rolling it from side to side, watching the tree branches move against a bright blue sky. “It could have been a sharp instrument too; a knife, even.”
“A knife? You mean a knife could have cut through the bones like that? Both bones?”
“No. But remember, this was a fragile old guy, and the radius and ulna are thin bones to begin with. Say he threw up his arm to try to fend off a knife attack. His forearm could have been broken just from the force of the other guy’s arm.”
“Yes, all right.”
“But I’m hoping it wasn’t a knife. There are too many ways to kill someone with a knife without leaving a mark on the skeleton. I’m hoping he was killed with something cruder-an axe or a club.”
Caravale laughed softly. “A strange thing to hope for.”
“I only meant-” Gideon shook his head and drank from the can. It was too hard to explain. Anyway, Caravale knew what he meant: Not that he wished this man or anyone else to have been hacked to death with an axe or clubbed with a steel pipe, but only that-inasmuch as the deed was already done and he was dead anyway-it would be nice if the weapon was the kind that would leave some skeletal evidence, and maybe provide a clue or two.
All the same, Caravale had a point. It was a hell of a thing to be hoping for. But then, this kind of work had a way of altering your perspective on things.
“Is there anything else you can tell me at this point?” Caravale asked. “To help identify him?”
“Well, I’m pretty sure he limped,” Gideon said.
“Limped.” Caravale cocked his head and looked at him. “Is that so?”
“Yes, there’s aseptic necrosis over most of the right femoral head, probably avascular in origin-”
Caravale held up both palms and shook his head. His English, fluent as it was, had its limits, and Gideon didn’t have the ghost of an idea of how to say it in Italian. He put his Coke on the ground and stood up. “Come on, I’ll show you.”
ELEVEN
AT the exact moment that Gideon and Caravale rose from their chairs, some five miles to the south in Stresa, Leonora Fucini was setting out the swiveling postcard racks in front of her souvenir shop on Via Bolongaro. She was nervous, thinking about getting Davide from the tobacco shop next door to come over and do something about the unkempt youth who’d been looking at an umbrella display in her window when she had arrived twenty minutes ago, and who was still there. Staring at four plaid folding umbrellas on a shelf for twenty minutes. He was dirty-she’d caught a whiff of him when she’d first brushed by on her way in-and swaying slightly, forward and back. He was on drugs, no question about it, or maybe coming off a drunken spree the previous night. Either way, she didn’t want him out there. He was frightening away customers, and he was frightening her. She’d give him two more minutes, and then she’d call Davide.
But as soon as she went back into the shop, he stumbled in after her, a loose-lipped grin on his face. His eyes were frighteningly empty. She stiffened and backed against the counter, her hands raised in front of her.
He was wearing a shirt that said HOOTIE AND THE BLOWFISH. “Is this
…” he said thickly, swaying so much he had to prop himself on a counter. His speech was slurred, his eyes only half-open. “Is this a police station?”
“What we’re looking at is the femoral head,” Gideon told Caravale, indicating the globular top of the thigh bone, the “ball” that fit into the cuplike “socket” of the hip. He had lifted the right femur from its place in the gravel to show to Caravale. “And if you compare it to the other one, you can see that it’s got this unhealthy, shriveled, caved-in look. That’s because it was dead bone, not living; it wasn’t getting any blood supply. It would have been painful, and it would definitely have made him limp, maybe use a cane or even go around in a wheelchair. From the looks of it, it’s been this way for decades, maybe since he was a kid.”
“Childhood disease?”
“Possibly, but I doubt it. Most of the diseases that would do this would be bilateral; that is-”
“Two sides,” Caravale said. “Yes, yes, I know.”
“Sorry. Yes, two sides. But the left one is healthy. So I think it was an accident, a fall, probably, that broke the neck of the femur. That’s this part.” He tapped the diagonal, two-inch-long length of bone that connected the head to the femoral shaft. “It’s not an uncommon injury, especially in childhood, and if it’s a bad break, it can tear apart the blood vessels that run to the femoral head. And when that happens, this is what you get: aseptic necrosis of the femoral head.”
Caravale ran his finger down the neck of the femur. “I can’t tell where it was broken, exactly.”
“Neither can I. It’s repaired itself and I haven’t found any sign of the actual fracture yet. If it’s a really old break and was properly set, there may not be any sign. Or it could have been a stress fracture, in which case there might not be anything to see anymore. We’ll see later, when we get this scuzz cleaned off. But the neck’s a lot thicker and rougher than it ought to be, and that’s what injured bone tends to do when it heals itself. Look at the left one in comparison.”
Caravale did. “Gra-chee-lay,” he said after a moment.
“Exactly.”
Caravale now lost interest in the femur and knelt to peer into the empty mouth cavity of the skull, between the crushed maxilla and the mandible. He straightened up and brushed gravel dust from his knees, “It’s true, isn’t it, that it’s possible to identify a body-I’m talking about absolute certainty-from the dental work on its teeth?”
“Sure. So we’ll have your people take some close-up photos of the dentition and I’ll draw up a chart that can be sent around. This guy has had a number of teeth worked on, and any dentist should be able to recognize his own work.”
“Right. Good.” Caravale seemed barely to be listening. “Excellent.”
“I’m not sure you do see, Tullio. The identification itself is easy… once you find the right dentist. The trick is finding the right dentist. Where do you even start looking?”
“Colonel?”
Caravale turned. It was the uniformed sergeant. “Yes, Rocca?”
Rocca was bursting with excitement. “They’ve found him, the de Grazia boy.”
“Alive?”
“Yes, alive! He just walked into a shop in Stresa. He’s been drugged, he thought it was a police station. Apparently they let him out of a car nearby and he walked-”
“He’s not hurt?”
“I don’t think so. Just drugged. He-”
“Where is he now?”
“At the shop, Colonel. This happened only a minute ago. The call just came in.”
“All right.” Caravale was already walking rapidly toward his car. “I want him taken to the hospital to be looked at. I’ll be there in ten minutes myself. And I want his father called and informed. And-oh.” An afterthought. He looked back over his shoulder. “Gideon, is it all right if you go back to Stresa in the van later? With the bones?”
“With the bones is fine. I have a little more to do anyway. And hey-I’m glad the de Grazia boy’s all right,” he called, but Caravale was already in the car, leaning over the wheel and gunning the engine.
By 11 A.M. the bones had been bagged, labeled, and boxed, ready for their trip to the morgue, which was in the hospital in Stresa, which turned out to be located on Via de Martini, only two blocks from the Hotel Primavera. Gideon, going along with them in the van, saw them safely delivered, took a break to clean up at the hotel and have lunch among the living and breathing at one of the hotel restaurants on the Corso Italia, shopped for the few forensic supplies that would be needed, and walked back to the hospital.
There he found Corporal Fasoli waiting for him. One of the youngest of the officers, he seemed genuinely interested in the bones and paid close attention as Gideon demonstrated, with some of the metacarpals, how it was to be done. Each bone was to be cleaned with nothing more than the fingers and the small paint brush or soft toothbrush that Gideon had provided, using water or acetone if necessary, to get the dried glop off. If any of the adhering tissue was stubborn, it was to be left for Gideon to deal with. The stains were not to be worried about. The most important thing, aside from taking care not to clean too vigorously, especially where there had been abrasion or breakage, was to be careful not to lose anything. If bones were washed in the sink, it was to be done over the screen-bottomed tray he’d brought. When the cleanup was finished, the bones were to be laid out on paper toweling on one of the autopsy tables to dry overnight, and in the morning Gideon would position them in anatomical order and get to work.
Fasoli, who had already rolled up his sleeves, nodded crisply, eager to begin. He understood perfectly. It was a privilege to assist the famous detective delle ossa. Would the professor like him to try to place the bones in the proper anatomical positions himself? He could surely find an anatomy book here at the hospital, and it was a task he would like to try.
In the face of Fasoli’s natural enthusiasm, Gideon felt no guilt whatever about leaving him to the cleanup, and at one-thirty in the afternoon he was sitting happily on the grass in the sunshine, eating mortadella and tomato-and-cheese panini with Phil and Julie (by his reckoning, having had no breakfast entitled him to two lunches) at Camping Costa Azzurra, a giant camping village on the lake near Fondotoce, between Stresa and Ghiffa. As scheduled, the Pedal and Paddle group had pulled in early to allow for a visit to the little stone Oratorio of Saint Giacomo, said to be from Roman times, and to take it easy for an afternoon before embarking on the two-day bicycling excursion to Lake Orta the next morning.
“Leave it to you,” Julie said in mock wonderment when he had finished telling them about the events of the last few hours. “Come to Italy for a vacation and wind up digging a skeleton out of a shallow grave in the woods. Amazing.”
“Just another knack, I guess,” Gideon said.
“But that’s really great news about Achille,” Phil said. “I was starting to get worried when he didn’t show up.”
“So was everybody else. Caravale looked as if someone just took a hundred-pound load off his shoulders when they told him.”
“Speak of the devil,” said Phil, pointing with his chin.
Gideon, following his gaze toward the parking area, was surprised to see Caravale himself climb out of his black Fiat and look around, shading his eyes with his hand, obviously searching for someone. As to who that might be, there wasn’t any doubt. Gideon had given him the group’s itinerary in case there was any reason to find him. “I’ll be damned,” he said and got up on one knee to wave. “Tullio-over here!”
Phil and Julie looked at him. “‘Tullio?’” Phil said. “My, my.”
Caravale, not seeing them, headed off toward the camp-ground office, creating a rolling wave of concerned looks from the campers who saw him. He had changed into his uniform, which didn’t surprise Gideon. At the excavation site, he’d had the impression that Caravale felt anything but at home in jeans and polo shirt. And with reason: A spiffy, well-tailored uniform-especially one with shoulder boards-did a lot for a pudding-shouldered, dumpy type like Caravale.

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