“For as long as I live, I’ll never forget it,” Kim started. “At first we thought it was a joke. When you see something like this, it makes you appreciate what’s important. It was just so horrible. I mean, neighbourhood kids play in that park.”
“I hope they catch the monster who did it,” Helen said. “I’m calling my home-security company to make sure they keep an eye on my house.”
“Can you walk us through how you found her?” Gannon asked.
“We take a regular morning walk in that area and spotted it. Her,” Kim said. “At first she looked like a mannequin, entangled in shrubs and small trees. We didn’t get too close once we realized what it was.”
“Can you tell me exactly what you saw?” Gannon asked.
“We’d heard stories about what happens in there at night, which I never believed until now. We saw condoms and hypodermic needles,” Kim said.
“She was in a shallow grave,” Helen said. “We saw dark hair, an arm bent over a head in a swimmer’s posture, like she was breaking the surface of the earth.”
After they finished, Gannon dropped Brandy off at the scene to keep vigil until they removed the body.
He had to get back to the newsroom.
This was shaping up to be a grisly homicide, he thought, settling in at his desk. While eating a club sandwich from the cafeteria, he checked regional and state missing-person cases posted online, using the detective’s description of a white or Native American woman in her twenties as his guide.
So many of them fit the general description, he thought, wondering if there was any chance this was linked to that tip he wanted to chase about a missing woman from Vermont or Connecticut. He stared into their faces, reading their information.
Was he staring at the unidentified victim near Ellicott Creek? Who was she? And how did her life come to an end there? She was someone’s daughter, maybe someone’s wife or sister?
He was pierced by a memory of his sister, Cora.
And what became of her life?
He couldn’t dwell on that now and forced himself back to his story.
“Do we have any idea who she is?” Tim Derrick, the assignment editor, had a habit of sneaking up behind reporters and reading over their shoulders.
“Not yet.”
Gannon clicked onto the latest news release from the investigators. He touched his pen to the words “unidentified female, in her twenties.”
“She was sort of half buried in a shallow grave,” Gannon said.
“Cripes,” Derrick said. “Well, we’ve got strong art from the air and the walkers. Front will take your story. Give us about twenty-five inches or so. Make sure the Web people get it.”
“Sure.”
Derrick patted Gannon’s shoulder.
“And nice work.”
“Hey, Tim. Anything more to the rumors going around about more cuts?”
Derrick stuck out his bottom lip, shook his head.
“The way things are in this business, those rumors never go away.”
A few hours later, as Gannon was giving his story a final read through, polishing here and there, his line rang.
“Hi, Jack, it’s Brandy.”
“How you doing there?”
“The medical examiner just moved the body. I got some good shots and sent them in to the photo desk.”
“Thanks, I’ll have a look.”
After he’d finished his story Gannon joined the night editor at the photo desk where he was reviewing the news pictures with Paul Benning, the night photo editor.
“It’s all strong.” Benning clicked through the best frames as he worked on finishing a milk shake.
Here was the sharp overview showing a brilliant yellow tarp isolated like a flag of alarm amid an all-consuming forest, Gannon thought.
Here was the medical examiner’s team, grim-faced with a black body bag strapped to a stretcher, loading it into a van.
Here were Helen Dodd and Kim Landon, tight head shots, shock etched in their faces. Here was Kim, looking off, eyes filled with worry.
“Go back to the aerial,” Gannon said.
Benning sucked the remnants of his shake through a plastic straw.
“You see something?
“Maybe. Can you blow it up?”
Benning enlarged it.
Click after click drew them closer to the tarp and a fleck of white near the left edge. Click after click and the fleck grew, coming into focus as a hand.
The woman’s hand, reaching from the tarp.
Reaching from her grave, as if seizing him in a death plea to tell the world who did this.
Before they did it again.
4
Some thirty-six hours after it had been removed from its shallow grave, the body was autopsied at the Erie County Medical Center, on Grider Street off the Martin Luther King Expressway.
Death was classified a homicide.
Using fingerprints and dental records, the dead woman’s identity was confirmed as being Bernice Tina Hogan, aged twenty-three, of Buffalo, New York. The facts of her death were summarized in a few sentences in a police news release.
Nothing about the pain of her life, Gannon thought as he worked on a long feature about her. After her name had been released, some of her former classmates had contacted him at the paper.