Chapter 71 – Solstice – Part 4
Chapter 71 – Solstice – Part 4
KLEMPNER
“Did he suceed?”
“Not in this case. Susumu’s stomach contains only the remains of her last meal. However, Victim
Number Two, Achara Saelim, did succeed in swallowing the banknotes. The first set at least. They
were found in her stomach during the autopsy. But in that case, yes, the killer simply repeated the
process. Although he didn’t waste more money on her. He used newsprint for the second attempt,
again ramming it down her throat until the airway was blocked and she asphyxiated.”
Borje’s warning not to eat before I arrived was good advice. I tap on the bag containing the flattened
banknote. “Are those stains blood?”
“Yes. Whatever it was he used to force the notes down, it damaged her oesophagus and trachea.”
“What does damaged mean, in this context?”
Borje pauses, breathes. “He forced the notes down her throat using some semi-sharp instrument. In
the process, he ripped her throat lining. Banknotes aside, there’s a good chance she would have
choked on her own blood.”
My stomach churns. “Can you speculate what this sharp instrument might have been?”
“Something long and blunt-ended, but sharp enough to cut the lining of the throat. Probably metallic.”
He rocks his hand. “Screwdriver maybe?”
“Was it the same with all the previous victims?”
“Yes, each woman. Identical method each time. Two twenties. Jammed down far enough to block the
airway and cause asphyxiation. The violence committed on the bodies afterwards has escalated, but
the murder method has remained the same.”
I ponder. “What will forty buy you these days?”
He arches brows. “From a street hooker in those areas? Pretty much anything most clients would ask
for I’d have thought.”
I gesture down to the brutalised corpse. “But not this.” I’m thinking aloud, not really expecting a
response, but he replies anyway, his voice quiet.
“No, not this.”
“Where’s the rest of her? Do we know?”
“Yes. Her internal organs were still with her, scattered over the surrounding area. We retrieved them
piecemeal.” He gestures vaguely to the second locker where, now I look, I see several boxes of the
kind a hospital might use for the transport of biological materials.
“When you say scattered, was there any kind of pattern? As though he’d been trying to arrange or
display them? Or was it random?”
“Random so far as we can judge. You have the photos of the site where she was discovered, I
believe?”
“That’s right.”
“Judge for yourself then. But the investigating officers saw no pattern to it. And neither did I.”
“And in the earlier cases?”
“In the earlier cases, the damage was not so severe. The body was mutilated but still in one piece. The
scale of the post-mortem assault has escalated in each case. Susumu is the worst so far.”
Borje maintains a steady monotone. I follow his lead. “And did you find… all of her?”
“Almost all. Not all the damage was inflicted by the killer. There are teeth marks on some of the bones
and flesh. Canine teeth.”
“Dogs?”
“Or urban foxes perhaps.” He shrugs. “Can’t blame them. The body was out in the open. From the point
of view of the local wildlife, she was just meat by then. They were doing what came naturally.”
“That’s what predators and scavengers do.”
“Quite. Her liver was partially eaten. And her limbs had been gnawed, as you can see from the damage
to the calf of the left leg and hand. But…” He raises a finger to underline the word… “…what certainly
wasn’t due to the City wildlife was that Susumu here, and all the other victims, each had a strand of
hair missing. Clipped short, close to the scalp.”
I chew that one over. I’ve known some of the psycho types that kill and torture for fun. Some of them
had me in mind as a target. But I never made a study of the mindset. “Some serial killers do that, don’t
they? Take…” I flounder for a moment, trying to think of an appropriate word… “… souvenirs?”
“Yes. It’s a common pattern, and this one apparently fits that pattern. Give me a second…”
Borje extracts a pair of vinyl gloves from the box by the washbasin and snaps them on, then returns to
the cadaver. Reaching in, he parts the woman’s hair to reveal the scalp. “If you look here… In each of
the murders being attributed to the Surgeon, you’ll find something similar.”
From the exposed area, a stump of hair, perhaps half an inch long, protrudes amid the remaining hair.
“… You can see there’s a lock been cut.”
“And it remains missing? It wasn’t found with the… scattered remains?”
“That’s correct. I went to…” Borje pauses as the double doors bang open ahead of a green-uniformed
orderly towing a steel trolley, the draped hump of the latest of the deceased laid out on top. A second
orderly pushes from the rear. Fitted green caps cover their hair. Matching masks are pulled down under
their chins like green beards.
“Where do you want him, Doc?” asks the first. “Car smash. Joy rider. DOA. No ID yet, but the fire crew
said what was left of the car stank of whiskey when they pulled him off the steering column.” He
glances at me, apparently registering a stranger, then sniffs, screwing up his face. With a sharp look at
the covered male cadaver… “Fuck me…” … he tugs the mask up to cover his nose. His co-worker
follows suit.
Borje gestures vaguely to the table at the far end of the room. “Thanks, Ricky. Number Four, please.”
He blows out his cheeks. “It’s not even Tuesday yet.”
The pair of orderlies wheel the trolley to the end table, their manner brisk and, while not exactly
cheerful, with the air of having done this a thousand times before. Between them, they transfer the still-
obscured corpse to the table. A dark trickle from under the cloth drips to the floor.
‘Ricky’ unhooks a clipboard from the trolley, produces a ballpoint, signs at the bottom, then trots across,
passing the board to Borje. As he sees what’s on the tray, he stiffens. “Jesus Christ. Is that her?”
Borje doesn’t comment, merely giving a short nod as he scribbles the medically required unreadable
signature at the bottom of the sheet.
The second orderly joins him, staring at the gutted remains. “Holy Mother,” he murmurs. “What some Copyright Nôv/el/Dra/ma.Org.
people do…” He shakes his head, jerks his thumb back to where he came from. “That silly bastard got
what was coming, but this…” The pair of Trolley-Dollies hover over the corpse, gawping.
Borje scowls. “Alright, Liam,” he snaps, whipping the cover back into place. “That’s enough. She’s not a
damn showpiece.”
‘Liam’ flinches and backs off. “Sure thing, Doc. Sorry.” The pair reverse out of the morgue, taking the
trolley with them.
The brief break has given me the chance to get my thoughts back in order. “The mutilation. Stanton
suggested it was done with a scalpel?”
Borje glances away, then back...
Uncomfortable at the suggestion it could be another doctor?
“…For the organ removal, a sharp blade, certainly. And yes, it could have been a scalpel. But it would
have needed something heavier to open up her ribcage the way he has.”
“A bone saw? Of the sort you were using when I came in?”
“No.” He rubs the back of his neck. “Something much cruder.”
“Such as?”
“Ever seen that TV series? The one where the Viking chief performs the Blood Eagle on his enemy,
using an axe to open him up?” Borje pauses.
“I get the picture.” I consider that… “Another question. I gather that in the previous cases, the women
were found dumped: alleys, back lanes, the river. Was it the same this time? The site in the park,
where she was found. Was that the actual murder scene? Or had the body been moved?”
“Moved…” Borje takes a deep breath, looking down for a moment, his mouth and throat working. “…
Since the time of death, and not just by foxes. When you and I had our… encounter… I don’t always
visit the crime scene. I do most of my work from here. The corpses are brought to the lab after
accidents or misadventure, like...” He gestures to the end table… “… John Doe over there. But on this
occasion, I’d seen the site the day before, when you saw me running in. Even given what I do for a
living, it was the stuff of nightmares. But I wanted to go back.”
“For some specific reason?”
He hunches. “Partly, I thought it might give me some insight, professionally speaking. In truth, when I
saw her the first day, it was so shocking that I wasn’t sure I’d been thinking clearly. I wanted to be sure
I’d not overlooked anything. But really…” He spreads palms… “I suppose I felt the girl needed some
acknowledgement. That some recognition was due to her.”
Recognition?
I suppose…
Keep it professional…
“And what did you find?”
He breathes deep, looks up again. “Nothing really. Not that wasn’t already covered. I mean… I wasn’t
going to find it because I didn’t really know what I was looking for. The investigating team and the
sweepers had already been over the scene. It looked on the face of it, as you suggested, like a Ripper-
style murder. The grassed area in the park where she was found was awash with blood because the
killer scattered her internal organs over a wide area. But it wasn’t the kind of spray pattern you’d get if
she’d been alive while he was cutting her. It took a while for the photographers to finish their part of the
work. After that, they brought her to me here…”
“Was it the same pattern with the other women?”
“Broadly, yes.”
“That’s not something that’s appeared in the papers.”
Borje shudders. “You imagine the police want copycats out there?”
Fair point…
“Serial killers work to patterns. I have that right?”
“I’m not an expert, but that’s my understanding.” Borje sweeps a hand through his hair. “I’ll say that I
have become more knowledgeable on the subject since this started.”
“So… Were the women similar physically? It wasn’t easy to judge from the photographs. Were they all
Asian types perhaps? Like this one? Petite and athletic? Tall, dark and well-built?”
“Nope.” He gives a sharp jerk of the head. “No, not at all. The first victim, Olivia Wilson, was
Caucasian, tall. Perhaps five feet nine. So was the third, Emma Williams. Number Two. She was the
oldest, at twenty-four years old. Achara Saelim was Thai. About five feet, five. And the youngest at
seventeen. Number Four, Anna Jansons, was East European… Um… Latvian, I think. Five, seven.
Susumu here, she was of Japanese origin. And as you see, about five feet, five.”
“How about hair type? You said he took some from each of them.”
Another sharp jerk. “Achara, Thai, and Susumu, Japanese, were of course, both dark-haired. Anna had
the typical looks of an East-European. Blondish to fair. Olivia was strawberry blonde. Emma was
brunette. I’ll get you the files. And the in-life photographs. But I would never have put that set of women
in a group and thought, ‘there’s a man’s type.’”