Read THREE TIMES A LADY Online
Authors: Jon Osborne
A nervous tingle rippled through Dana’s stomach. The thrill of the chase at work again. ‘Does Dr Johnson have access to the tapes?’ she asked. ‘I’d like to take a look at them. One in particular.’
Lawson rolled her eyes halfway around her face. ‘Heck, to tell you the truth, Agent Whitestone, I’d be surprised if that man even knows the camera is
in
there. Or even what a camera
is
, for that matter. He’s completely lost when it comes to technology. From the way he looks at a computer, you’d think he was still living back in 1963.’
Lawson paused. ‘Probably still
is
living back in 1963 – in his mind, at least.’
Dana slipped her FBI shield back into the inside pocket of her leather jacket and resisted the urge to scream. Once again, it looked as though Dr Phillip Johnson would be of absolutely no help at all to her on this one. Then again, what else was new? Johnson had
never
been any help to her. Quite the opposite, unfortunately.
Dana gritted her teeth and fought back the powerful wave of irritation in her chest. She couldn’t
wait
for the day a new, more competent ME took Johnson’s place. Catching murderers was hard enough without constantly being hamstrung by people like Johnson – people who were
supposed
to be on her side. ‘Who else has access to the tapes?’ Dana asked.
Lawson fiddled with one of her gold hoop earrings and slid her small pink tongue across her teeth. Dentures, Dana guessed. Nice ones, too. ‘Funny you should ask, Agent Whitestone. Believe it or not,
I
’ve actually got access to them. But they’re not actually tapes. Everything’s digitised these days. The fact I’ve got access to them creeps me out, too, but we’re so shorthanded around here that I was designated as the backup A/V person even though I barely know the difference between a USB port and a telephone wire myself.’ Lawson shook her head, looking annoyed. ‘No raise to go along with it though, of course.’
‘Who’s permission would you need in order to get me the video of Christian Manhoff’s autopsy?’ Dana asked.
Lawson glanced around the lobby. The place was mostly empty, save for a tired-looking janitor who was mopping up the tiled floor beneath a television set hanging in the corner that was tuned into a rerun of
The Golden Girls
but turned down too low to hear. Plastic yellow signs were tented all around the man to separate him from the rest of the lobby and to warn passers-by the floor was slippery – in English on one side and in Spanish on the other. Losing loved ones was a multi-lingual proposition, after all.
‘Theoretically, I’m
supposed
to talk to Dr Johnson before I release anything like that,’ Lawson said, ‘but he always acts so goddamn irritated whenever I ask him a question that I stopped doing that a long time ago. The videos are public record anyway since the taxpayers pay for them, so I’m not too worried about that. Do you know the date of the autopsy you’re looking for?’
More hope tickled Dana’s chest, but was swallowed up quickly by even
more
anger at the chief coroner. For all intents and purposes,
autopsy
probably wasn’t the right word to use for it. Dana highly doubted Johnson had taken more than five minutes to examine Christian Manhoff’s lifeless body, much less shown the initiative to actually cut him open to see what might be inside. As with everything else concerning the good doctor, it had been an open and shut case for him. The faster he was done with it, the better.
‘I’m not sure when the autopsy took place,’ Dana said. ‘In the past couple of days or so. Couldn’t you just type the name into the database?’
‘Sure I could,’ Lawson said. Leaning forward in her chair, she punched a few keys on the computer in front of her before looking back up at Dana again. ‘What’s the name again?
‘Christian Manhoff.
M-A-N-H-O-F-F
.’
Lawson pecked away at the keyboard some more. After a moment two, she looked back up at Dana and said, ‘You can come over here if you want. I don’t like watching these things very much. They make my skin crawl.’
Dana pressed her lips into a tight line and gave the woman a sympathetic look. She didn’t blame Lawson one little bit for her squeamishness. After all, who in their right mind
would
like watching videos filled with nothing but blood and guts and despair? With the obvious exception, of course, being the killers and other dregs of society out there who actually
got off
on watching such dreadful things.
Dana came around to Lawson’s side of the desk, bumping her hipbone painfully against the sharp edge of one corner in the process. ‘Not exactly must-see TV, huh?’ Dana asked, simultaneously wincing at the hot jolt of pain shooting through her hip.
Lawson shook her head and stood up, offering Dana the chair. ‘Whoa, careful there, honey. When you get to be my age, your hip will crack just like a bread stick if you’re not careful. And, no, it’s not must-see TV at all. Anyway, sit down, Agent Whitestone. I don’t know about you, but I have to sit about six inches away from the screen to see anything clearly any more. Old age is no fun, dear. If there’s any way you can avoid it, please do so. Just remember you heard it here first. I’d actually like to get some credit for my world-class brilliance one of these days.’
Lawson paused and sighed deeply. ‘Ah, what am I talking about? You’re still young and pretty so that’s something you don’t need to worry about for a very long time. Lucky girl.’
Lawson shook her head to chase away the thought and leaned down over Dana’s right shoulder, positioning the cursor over the ‘play’ button on the screen. ‘Just tap the trackpad once and you should be good to go,’ she said. ‘I think I’ll go grab a quick cup of coffee while you’re looking for what you need. Would you like some coffee, as well?’
Dana shook her head. ‘No, thank you, Miss Lawson. But are you sure you won’t get into any trouble for this? I could always come back later when you get the proper clearance – or when I get a search warrant. I’m not going to lie, though – this definitely saves me some time. It’s a huge help.’
Lawson waved a hand in the air and looked around the lobby again. ‘Hell, nobody ever comes in here,’ she said, almost underneath her breath. ‘Nobody who’d raise a stink about it, anyway. Besides, if we get caught I’ll just say that you overpowered me and threatened to arrest me if I didn’t let you see the video. Sound like a plan to you?’
Dana smiled. ‘Yep. Thanks again for all your help, Miss Lawson. I really appreciate this.’
Nancy Lawson squeezed Dana’s shoulder. ‘No problem, sweetheart. After all, we girls need to stick together, right? Anyway, I’ll be back in just a minute or two, OK?’
‘OK.’
Lawson headed down the hall with her high heels clicking loudly against the tiled floor, and Dana waited until the sound had faded away before tapping the trackpad on the computer. Movement sprang to life at once on the screen.
From the look of the angle of the footage, the camera Lawson had told Dana about had been mounted to the north wall of the autopsy room, mostly hidden by a potted plant that Dana only now realised she’d subconsciously thought looked out of place amongst all the cold gray steel. In the footage, Dr Phillip Johnson stood over Christian Manhoff’s naked body, accompanied by a pathology assistant.
Dana grimaced at the image of the huge rawhide bone shoved halfway down the dead man’s throat. The idea itself was bad enough, but to actually see it up close and personal and in living colour really hammered home the point just
how
horrific Manhoff’s death must have been.
There was no audio on the video, but Dana could see that Johnson was talking by the way his assistant scribbled down notes on a clipboard.
Dana leaned in closer to the computer. Unbelievably, thirty seconds later Johnson actually
left the room
.
Dana cursed under her breath. Obviously, five minutes had been far too generous of an estimate as to how much time the head coroner had spent with Christian Manhoff’s lifeless body. More like five
seconds
.
Dana clamped her teeth together until the muscles in her jaw-line bulged against the skin, leaning in even closer to the computer screen and focusing on the pathology assistant.
The man looked to be in his mid-forties, with thinning gray that had been parted sharply on the left side of his head. The paper mask covering the lower half of his face made determining any facial features difficult, but Dana felt certain Nancy Lawson would know who he was. The coroner’s office wasn’t all that big of a place – people-wise, at least – for the man to be an unknown entity. Unfamiliar faces wouldn’t go unnoticed around here, and Nancy Lawson seemed to be the sort of woman who’d notice
everything
.
A minute or so after Johnson had left the room, his pathology assistant followed suit, closing the door behind him.
Dana frowned as the image on the video stood still for what seemed a lifetime then – just Christian Manhoff’s dead body alone in the room with a large rawhide dog bone shoved halfway down his throat. Finding the fast-forward button on the computer, Dana watched the same scene unfold for two more minutes, according to the time-stamp located in the lower left-hand corner of the screen.
And then the door to the autopsy room opened up again.
Dana widened her eyes. A woman in her late-thirties or early forties entered the room, dressed to the nines in a designer dress and high-heeled shoes. She was holding something in her right hand.
Turning directly to the camera hidden behind the potted plant, the woman smiled at the viewfinder before lifting up the picture of Dana’s brother and mouthing three distinct words that you didn’t need to be a professional lip-reader to figure out.
Fuck you, Dana.
Dana recoiled from the computer screen, as though the woman might somehow reach through the monitor and grab her by the throat. Dana’s pulse skipped three beats in a row in her neck as the woman attached the picture of Nathan Stiedowe to Christian Manhoff’s nipple ring. Then the woman simply turned around, flipped off the camera with both her middle fingers and left the room.
Dana rewound the video and watched it again. And then for a third and fourth time.
Fuck you, Dana.
Fuck you, Dana.
Fuck you, Dana.
Fuck you, Dana.
Dana’s ears rang. Her hands shook. Her palms flooded with sweat. It was clear that the woman in the autopsy video had
zero
interest in concealing her identity, no fear at all about her face being captured on tape. And that worried Dana.
A lot.
Because only someone with nothing to lose would display such carelessness. And how in the hell had the woman known the camera had been hidden behind the plant in the first place? Did she work there?
Dana shook her head. Didn’t seem likely considering the fact that it would have taken all of about five minutes to identify her if she
did
work there. So if that wasn’t it, what
was
it then? Was she a disgruntled former employee? A relative of one? And just how exactly had she gained access to the autopsy room in the first place? Nancy Lawson had said the camera had been installed just a couple weeks prior, so that meant the woman had been privy to
that
information too. But how in the hell could she have known that if she didn’t work there?
Dana tapped the trackpad to stop the video and called up the Internet browser on Nancy Lawson’s computer before saving the footage in a zip file and e-mailing it to herself.
Just then, Nancy Lawson’s voice sounded directly behind her. ‘Find anything interesting, Agent Whitestone?’
Dana nearly jumped out of her skin. A cold trickle of sweat slid down the back of her neck. Her heartbeat thudded dully in her chest. ‘Not a damn thing,’ Dana lied, standing up quickly and moving around to the other side of the desk, instinctively putting some distance between herself and the coroner’s office employee. ‘Didn’t find anything, at all.’
The well-dressed woman on the autopsy footage didn’t resemble Nancy Lawson in the least little bit, but Dana had been burned in the past by such simple oversights and she didn’t want to get burned again. Not this time.
Everyone
had to remain a suspect until Dana could rule him or her out, and she hadn’t done that yet with Nancy Lawson.
Dana tried to keep the adrenalin out of her voice as she continued to speak. Wasn’t easy. ‘Thank you again for all your help, Miss Lawson. I can’t tell you how much this means to me.’
Nancy Lawson blew off a thick cloud of steam from her piping-hot Styrofoam cup of coffee and took a tentative sip.
‘Don’t mention it, honey. That’s what they pay me the big bucks for.’
Hands still shaking, Dana ducked into the gleaming public restroom at the coroner’s office building and tried to steady herself. Wasn’t easy.
A familiar dread washed through her stomach as she splashed some cold water onto her face and tried to calm down. No good. She was still too shaken up from the shocking video she’d just watched to even
breathe
properly, much less
think
straight – a shocking video she hadn’t been expecting to see at all.