The Girl In The Ice (Detective Erika Foster, #1)(54)
‘Thanks.’
‘Anything I can do?’
‘You can keep me in the loop. Even if it does mean freezing your tits off in the car park.’
Crane laughed. ‘I’ll keep you in the loop as much as I can, boss, okay?’
‘Thanks, Crane,’ said Erika. As she hung up, she reached for her coat. It was time to pay Isaac Strong a visit.
34
It was early evening, and Isaac Strong was in his office adjacent to the morgue. Shirley Bassey’s Performance album was playing, and he was preparing to write his report on the Ivy Norris autopsy. He relished this calm time. His favourite music, the lights low in his office. It was in stark contrast to the violence of slicing open a body, weighing its organs, analysing the contents of bowel and stomach, swabbing and scraping for DNA evidence, and piecing together the acts of violence inflicted on the corpse to form a narrative – the story of its demise.
A cup of peppermint tea steamed lightly by his computer monitor, the delicate leaf of mint still twirling in the freshly poured cup. There was a faint beeping sound, and a window popped up on his computer screen. It was a blue-grey CCTV image of DCI Erika Foster standing in the hallway outside the lab. She looked up at the camera. His hand hesitated, and then he buzzed her in.
‘Is this an official visit?’ asked Isaac when he met her at the door of the lab.
‘No,’ she said, hitching her bag up her shoulder. She wore jeans and a jumper. Her tired face was free of make-up. She looked around at all the freshly scrubbed steel.
‘Officially, you have no authority to be here. You’ve been removed from the case.’
‘Yep. No ID, no car. I’m just Jo Public.’
Isaac paused, regarding her for a moment. ‘How about a cup of tea then?’ he said.
He took her through to his office. The Girl From Tiger Bay was playing softly, and Erika chose a comfy armchair next to his desk. Isaac went to a kettle on a table in one corner. His neat office was crammed with bookshelves. An iPod glowed in a Bose sound system. The shelf next to the sound system differed from the others, which were filled with medical reference books. This shelf contained fiction – mainly crime thrillers.
‘Surely you don’t read police procedurals in your spare time?’ asked Erika.
Isaac turned from switching on the kettle and laughed wryly. ‘No. They’re complimentary copies, sent from the publisher. I was an advisor on a couple of the DCI Bartholomew books . . . How does peppermint tea grab you? I’m afraid I try to avoid caffeine.’
‘Sounds good. I should have avoided caffeine today – she says, four coffees later.’
There was a small tree of mint by a tiny high window. Isaac twisted the pot round and selected a couple of leaves.
‘My ex-partner is Stephen Linley, author of the DCI Bartholomew books,’ he said.
‘Oh.’
‘Oh, I’m gay, or oh, how odd to be with someone who writes crime thrillers?’
‘Oh, to neither.’
Isaac dropped the leaf into the cup and waited for the kettle to boil.
‘Actually, that is a bit odd, that you dated someone who writes crime thrillers,’ said Erika.
The kettle came to the boil and Isaac poured in water. ‘He based one of his forensic psychologists on me. Then killed the character off when our relationship ended.’
‘How?’
‘Gay bashed and dumped in the Thames.’
‘Sadly the pen is mightier than the sword,’ said Erika, taking the steaming cup.
Isaac took a seat at his desk and twirled the chair round to face her. ‘Ivy Norris had two types of semen inside her vagina. Her arms were bound, and she was strangled. Our attacker had not long departed. She’d been dead less than an hour.’
‘Anything from the DNA database?’
‘We’ve run both samples of semen, but nothing has come up.’
Erika nodded, and almost subconsciously looked at the back of her hand.
‘Is that a bite mark?’ asked Isaac.
‘Yes. It was Ivy’s grandson.’
‘Ivy’s blood work came back. She was a heroin addict and HIV positive. It’s feasible she passed it on to her grandson.’
‘When he bit me, he broke the skin,’ said Erika, sipping her tea.
‘Then I’d advise an HIV test.’ Isaac wrote a number on a piece of paper and handed it to her. ‘Here, it’s the drop-in clinic I use when I get tested. It’s fast, clean and anonymous. It can take up to six or nine months for the virus to show itself, so to speak. You’ll have to get tested again.’
‘Thank you.’
‘What are you going to do?’
‘I have to attend a formal hearing. Psychiatric evaluation. A medical, no doubt.’
‘If you are diagnosed with HIV . . .’
‘I’ll deal with that if it happens. Right now a fear of dying is well down my list.’
The album had finished and there was a comfortable silence in the room. Isaac looked at her, debating whether or not to say anything.
‘Don’t give up on this case,’ said Isaac.
‘I think the case has given up on me,’ said Erika.
‘I’ve been back through my records. There were three cases, autopsies I conducted, where the victims were Eastern European girls, all suspected of having been trafficked to the UK. All three were found raped and strangled, hands bound, dumped in water around London, hair pulled out, no clothes below the waist.’