Authors: Tania Carver
P
hil almost ran into the room. âI got here as quick as I could.'
Sperring, sitting on a chair, looked up from reading the
Daily Mail
. âIt's all right. Our pal's not going anywhere.' He went back to his paper, ignoring Phil.
Phil stood there trying not to bunch his hands into fists. âSo what are the findings?' No response. âObviously if you think it's more important to find out how gay Kosovan refugee benefit-scroungers are coming to take your job and undermine your way of life, you just keep on reading.'
Sperring gave a last glance at his paper, folded it and stood up. âYou're very funny. Sir.'
Phil didn't rise to it. âThe post-mortem?'
Sperring, disappointed not to be having a confrontation, said, âThis way,' then turned and walked off along the corridor. Phil followed.
The halls of the mortuary were like every other mortuary Phil had been in. Bare and cold. He heard occasional snatches of pop songs and radio jingles as he walked, incongruous bursts of life that just made their surroundings all the more deathly. At least that was how he felt. He had never been comfortable with this aspect of the job.
âSo where were you when I called?' asked Sperring.
âI'd just been to the letting agents,' said Phil.
Sperring grunted.
âApparently Glenn McGowan had a wife. We can give her a call when we've finished here. I've got some files about the house too. Letting agreements, that kind of thing.'
âGive them to the juniors. Got to earn their keep somehow.'
âThere's something else,' said Phil. Sperring didn't reply. Phil went on. âThe boss of the letting agency. Something about him. Red flag.'
âYeah?' Sperring couldn't have sounded more uninterested if he'd tried.
âYeah. Name of Ron Parsons.'
Sperring stopped walking. Turned to face Phil. âRon Parsons? You sure? Older guy, suit and braces type. Trilby.'
âThere was a trilby hanging up in the office. He was wearing the braces.'
âJesus bloody Christ. There's a name from Jurassic times. Ron bloody Parsons.'
âWho is he?'
Sperring opened his mouth as if about to tell all. Before he could, something flitted across his eyes. âLong story. All you need to know is Ron Parsons is as bent as bloody fuck.'
Before Phil could say anything else, Sperring stopped in front of a heavy industrial rubber and plastic door. âThrough here.' He opened it, and let it fall back on to Phil as he walked through. Phil managed to catch it before it connected with his face. He followed Sperring into the room.
White-tiled walls, angled cement floor with drainage channels and gratings. Stainless-steel body-shaped beds. And on several of the beds were plastic-sheet-covered bodies. The cutting room.
Esme Russell, wearing her blood-smeared work clothes, entered from her office at the far end of the room. âGood morning, gentlemen,' she said, smiling.
âVery cheerful,' said Sperring.
âThat's because you're here, handsome,' she said, laughing.
Sperring, Phil noticed, reddened.
She turned to Phil. âWell,' she said, âhave we got something interesting for you.'
âGood interesting or bad interesting?' asked Phil.
âDepends what you make of it. Come on.' She walked along the rows of bodies, coming to a stop before the final one in the row. âI bumped this up. I know I said I couldn't, road accidents and all that, but once I'd got it back here and taken a good look, I thought I'd better.'
âWhy?' asked Phil.
She pulled the sheet back. âSee for yourself.'
T
he Arcadian had tried to make the doll feel at home. It wasn't the same as where she had been, that beautiful doll's house he had taken her from, but he had tried his best with what he could afford. He put love into it. And he had to admit, he was pleased with the result.
The house was plastic, cheap, the furniture likewise. He had spent the morning in Toys R Us and going round charity shops until he had enough. The furniture didn't match but it was mostly pink, which was important. Hers had been pink. It wasn't pristine like hers had been: some of it was old and worn, chewed-looking in parts, but he tried to ignore that. The walls were pink. And the doll looked happy in there, like she belonged. That was the main thing.
He stood staring at her. For how long, he didn't know. He zoned out. He had heard that builders did that, stood and admired the work they had done. Not looking at any part of it in particular, just staring. Seeing it, seeing through it. That was what he was doing.
He imagined that she was talking to him, telling him about her life. Thanking him for putting her in the house, not letting her go. He remembered the butterfly he had seen when she had died, beautiful, iridescent, and then the smile on the doll's face. He knew what had happened. It was so obvious. She was thanking him in that smile. And telling him something else:
Take the doll. Give her a home. She's me now. And she's yours. I'm yours
.
She sat at her chewed table, teacup in hand, smile etched permanently in plastic. Perfect.
He shook his head, blinked. It brought him back to reality.
The previous night came to mind. And the elation he had felt at placing the doll in her house escaped out of him. He had entered the bar wanting to make contact. The friction of flesh, the frisson of fucking, the release. He knew he wouldn't recapture the high he had experienced with the doll, all smiles and butterflies and pure Arcadian pleasure, but he had to try. Or at least settle for the next best thing.
He had stood in the bar, hand in his pocket stroking the doll's beautiful blonde hair, looking round. The men were all shapes and sizes, but he felt they had one thing in common: they were staring at him. At first he didn't like that, felt naked, exposed. But he gradually became accustomed to it, drew strength from it, even. It gave him the power to choose.
Except there was no one there he wanted to choose.
The drag artist was up on stage, miming to some old pop song, and the audience were whooping it up. But the Arcadian didn't like it. The drag queen was doing the actions to the lyrics in the song, but not very well. She overexaggerated any subtlety the song had, telegraphing her gestures as if she wanted them to be seen several miles away. Her make-up matched her actions. Like a Kabuki or Noh actor. Not like a genuine woman. Not like his doll.
He smiled to himself. Oh yes. He knew Kabuki, he knew Noh. He wasn't thick. He was an educated man. Educated.
There was nothing the drag queen had that he wanted. He checked the others at the bar. Men made up as women. He stared at them. Imagined his doll in their place. Imagined doing to them what he had done to his doll. Getting them alone, loving them for what they were, then showing them how they could be so much more. Giving them their dream. Taking out his knives and sculpting them into real women. He imagined doing that to all of them. Each and every one. Just standing there, staring. His hand in his pocket caressing the doll, his other hand sculpting with a non-existent knife.
That was what they all wanted, he told himself. The Arcadian to work his magic on them. That was what they were all there for, why they had come out for the night. Secretly they wanted to meet him, have him take them home. Make them into the best they could be. And maybe they didn't realise it. Maybe he had to show them. Give them what they wanted, what was best for them. Even if he had to subdue them, tie them up in order to do it. They would thank him for doing it. All of them.
He had stared at them so long, his imagination working all the while, that he zoned out again. When he blinked himself back to reality he was aware that the drags weren't looking at him any more. In fact they were looking anywhere but at him. He became aware of his hand in his pocket pressed against the doll, the doll rubbing his erection through his trousers. That must have been the reason why. He didn't care. But he couldn't stay there. So he had left the bar, gone home.
And that was when he thought of the idea of his own doll's house.
Now he sat, curtains closed against the harsh winter daylight, staring at his doll's house. It was perfect. The doll, the house, everything. He was amazed he hadn't thought of it earlier. Small and controllable, yet also noticeable. But something about that wasn't right. Something didn't fit. He stared again at the house, trying to work out what it was. And then he had it. So obvious he didn't know how he hadn't thought of it earlier.
There was only one doll.
She was lonely. She needed company. Someone to talk to. Someone for him to talk to. He had to plan ahead. Work out who she would like to live with her. The house could become a diary. Each doll a memento of his work. Yet more than that: a repository for the butterfly. A home for souls. With him all the time. He could talk to them, listen to them. Live with them.
He sighed, crossed his legs. Pondered.
What to do about it, what to do
â¦
Â
He could go back to the bars again, like he had done last night. Entice a drag home and set to work.
Maybe. But that didn't appeal so much. Part of the fun in creating the doll had been the build-up, the anticipation. The preparation. He was ready to do another one, no doubt. But he would have to do it right. Picking up someone random held too many variables. All he could see was the ways it could go wrong.
No. He had to do it better than that.
He thought some more.
The answer came to him. So simple. So perfect.
He looked at the doll in her house and smiled. âNot long now,' he said. âYou're going to have some companyâ¦'
T
he body on the stainless-steel table was almost unrecognisable from the one Phil had seen in the house the night before. It had been wiped clean of make-up, the nail varnish removed from the fingers and toes. The face held none of its previous doll-like features. It had bloated up purple, the eyes and tongue protruding. The bloating was spreading to the rest of the body.
âI had to start quickly,' Esme said. âThe house was so cold â on purpose, I expect â that it had preserved the body to a degree. But as soon as we moved it and a change of air hit it, it began to putrefy. Stage two now. We've managed to stabilise it in here, but the damage has been done, I'm afraid.'
âWhat have you got, then?' asked Phil. âTime of death?'
âDifficult to say because of the cold. The body's decomposition has been deliberately slowed.'
âWhy?' asked Sperring.
âEither to stop us guessing when it was done,' said Phil. âOrâ¦'
âOr what?' said Sperring.
âOr there's another reason we haven't discovered yet.'
âWell,' said Esme, âthat's your job. I'd put time of death â and remember, this is only a guess â at somewhere in the last two weeks.'
âYou can't be more specific than that?'
âI can run some more tests, see what shows up, but it'll take time. The cold's stopped the decomposition.'
âIf we trace the victim's movements, come back with a timeline, could you fit it around that?'
âI should think so.'
âGood. What else have you got?'
âWell.' Esme shook her head, continued speaking with an enthusiasm Phil found slightly disturbing. âThere is so much going on here that you could give this body to trainees and students. If they spotted everything they'd all get A stars.' Another smile. âLucky for you boys I
did
get an A star.'
They waited for her to go on.
âWhere to start? Lividity. Good a place as any. He died in the chair we found him in. But the injuries leading to his death were done elsewhere.'
âAnd the body was moved,' said Sperring.
âIndeed. And judging by the fact that there is no evidence of shifting lividity âthe blood hadn't started to gather anywhere in his body before he sat down â I'd say he was still alive when he got to the chair. But his blood levels are well down.'
âCause of death?' asked Sperring.
Esme pointed to the mutilated area in the corpse's groin. Discoloration had given it the appearance of rancid mince. There was nothing left to identify it as human. It was almost desensitising to look at. Esme's words provided the right context. âThat. Mutilation. His genitals were removed. There's no evidence of cauterisation, so we can assume that the resulting blood loss would have led to his death.'
âSigns of sexual activity?' asked Phil.
Esme gestured to the mutilation. âBe my guest. If you think you can find anything. Whoever this was has done a very thorough job.'
âProfessional?'
Esme frowned. âI don't think so. But a very enthusiastic amateur.'
Phil glanced at Sperring. From the look on his face, he guessed the older copper was wishing he was still sitting down the corridor with his
Daily Mail
.
âWe had a look in the bathroom in the house,' said Phil. âThe CSIs are still checking it out but we think that's where the mutilation was done.'
Esme nodded. âVery probably. But that still throws up some questions.'
âWas the victim conscious when this was done to him?'
âThe first question. And a very good one, Ian.'
Phil glanced at Sperring once more and was surprised to find him blushing again.
âThe answer is yes. As far as I can make out, the victim was fully aware this was being done.'
âWhat about painkillers, anything like that?'
âWe won't get the tox reports back for a few days, so we won't know. But judging from the look of some of those internal organs, the shape of the liver, I'd say there was something in his body. Just not sure what yet.'
âSomething to induce paralysis?' said Phil. âIf the killer wanted him alive when this was done, as seems likely, then maybe look for traces of, I don't know, Rohypnol? Something like that. I'm not trying to tell you your job, Esme, I'm just attempting to get my head round this.'
âAs are we all. No offence taken. Obviously I've asked for that to be done.'
âThank you. We think that after the mutilation in the bathroom he was taken downstairs,' said Phil. âWe found cleaned-up blood on the floor.'
âThe perpetrator was strong, then. Must have had to carry him.'
âSo let's get this straight,' said Sperring. âHe was chopped about upstairs in the bathroom, then brought downstairs and sat at the dining room table. All when he was alive and dressed like aâ¦'
âDoll,' said Phil.
Sperring shook his head.
âThat's about the size of it,' said Esme.
âAnything else?' asked Sperring. Phil noticed he was turning as pale as the wall tiles.
Esme's eyes lit up. âOh yes.'
âI don't like the way you said that,' said Phil.
She laughed, slightly embarrassed. âI don't get out much. Please forgive me. When you mostly deal with drunks and car crash victims as I do, being given something like this is like Christmas.'
âLucky you,' said Phil, unsure if he was joking or not.
âIndeed.' She crossed over to a trolley behind them, returned holding a piece of wire.
âWhat's that?' asked Sperring, looking like he was dreading the answer.
âIt's what was in the victim's arm and hand,' said Esme. âIt's how he was able to hold the teacup for so long.'
Phil and Sperring exchanged glances. âSo,' said Phil slowly, gathering his thoughts as he spoke, âthe teacup was posed deliberately.'
âLooks that way,' said Esme. âThe wire was inserted post mortem, I'd say. Or at least after the mutilation had been done. The drug, I would think, was administered beforehand to induce paralysis.'
âButâ¦' Sperring stared at the wire. âWhy?'
âIt was a tableau,' said Phil.
Sperring shook his head. âStill haven't answered the question.'
âAnd there's a question neither of you have yet asked.' Esme had a gleam in her eye. Phil knew that to a member of the public her enthusiasm might have seemed inappropriate, but to someone else in the job it was a positive sign. It meant she was doing what she was paid to do. And taking pride in it.
âProbably for a reason,' said Sperring, with the look of a man who wished he could be anywhere else.
âYes. You boys might be squeamish about these things. And I can understand that.'
âWhat d'you mean?' asked Phil.
âThe mutilated genitals. Where are they?'
âOh God,' said Sperring.
âGood question,' said Phil. âWe assumed we just hadn't found them yet.'
âYou're right. You haven't found them yet. I have.'
Sperring and Phil shared a look. For the first time Phil felt united with his fellow officer.
âI did an analysis of stomach contents,' said Esme.
âHere we goâ¦' Sperring turned away. Phil waited.
âAnd there they were.'
Sperring turned back round. âYou mean⦠he's eaten his own cock?' He almost gagged on the words.
Esme nodded. âAnd there were no signs of trauma, no indication of force-feeding. So you know what that means? He did it willingly.'
âWhat?' said Phil. âAte his own genitals willingly? Or did everything willingly?'
âThe latter, I'd say.'
Phil said nothing. He could find nothing to say.
Sperring ran from the room, hand over his mouth.