When the BAU plane landed at Sea-Tac, the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, a heavy rain was streaking across the windows. Riley looked at her watch. It was about two in the afternoon at home now, but it was eleven in the morning here. That would give them time to get something done on this case today.
As she and Bill moved toward the exit, the pilot came out of his cabin and handed each of them an umbrella.
“You’ll need these,” he said with a grin. “Winter is the worse time to be in this corner of the country.”
When they stood at the top of the stairs, Riley had to agree. She was glad they had umbrellas, but she wished she had dressed warmer. It was cold as well as rainy.
An SUV pulled up at the edge of the tarmac. Two men in raincoats hurried out of the vehicle toward their plane. They introduced themselves as Agents Havens and Trafford of the FBI field office in Seattle.
“We’re taking you to the medical examiner’s office,” Agent Havens said. “The team leader on this investigation is waiting for you there.”
Bill and Riley got into the car, and Agent Trafford started to drive through the drenching rain. Riley could make barely out the usual airport hotels along the way, and that was all. She knew there was a vital city out there, but it was practically invisible.
She wondered if she was ever going to see Seattle while she was here.
The minute Riley and Bill sat down in the conference room in Seattle’s medical examiner’s building, she sensed that trouble was brewing. She exchanged glances with Bill, and she could tell that he was feeling the tension too.
Team Leader Maynard Sanderson was a big-chested, big-jawed man with a presence that struck Riley as falling somewhere between a military officer and an evangelical preacher.
Sanderson was glowering at a portly man whose thick walrus mustache gave his face what seemed to be a permanent scowl. He had been introduced as Perry McCade, Seattle’s Chief of Police.
The body language of the two men and the places they had taken at the table spoke volumes to Riley. For whatever reason, the last thing they wanted was to be in the same room together. And she also felt sure that both men especially hated having Riley and Bill here.
She remembered what Brent Meredith had said before they left Quantico.
“Don’t expect a cozy welcome. Neither the cops nor the Feds will be happy to see you.”
Riley wondered what kind of minefield she and Bill had walked into.
A complex power struggle was going on, without a word being spoken. And in just a few minutes, she knew it was going to start getting verbal.
By contrast, Chief Medical Examiner Prisha Shankar looked comfortable and unconcerned. The dark-skinned, black-haired woman was about Riley’s age and appeared to be stoic and imperturbable.
She’s on her own turf, after all, Riley figured.
Agent Sanderson took the liberty of getting the meeting underway.
“Agents Paige and Jeffreys,” he said to Riley and Bill, “I’m pleased that you could make it all the way from Quantico.”
His icy voice told Riley that the opposite was true.
“Glad to be of service,” Bill said, not sounding very sure of himself.
Riley just smiled and nodded.
“Gentlemen,” Sanderson said, ignoring the presence of two women, “we’re all here to investigate two murders. A serial killer might be getting started here in the Seattle area. It’s up to us to stop him before he kills again.”
Police Chief McCade growled audibly.
“Would you like to comment, McCade?” Sanderson asked dryly.
“It’s not a serial,” McCade grumbled. “And it’s not an FBI case. My cops have got this under control.”
Riley was starting to get the picture. She remembered how Meredith had said that the local authorities were floundering with this case. And now she could see why. Nobody was on the same page, and nobody agreed on anything.
Police Chief McCade was angry that the FBI was muscling in on a local murder case. And Sanderson was fuming that the FBI had sent Bill and Riley from Quantico to straighten everybody out.
The perfect storm, Riley thought.
Sanderson turned toward the chief medical examiner and said, “Dr. Shankar, perhaps you’d like to summarize what we currently know.”
Seemingly aloof from the underlying tensions, Dr. Shankar clicked a remote to bring up an image on the wall screen. It was a driver’s license photo of a rather plain-looking woman with straight hair of a dullish brown color.
Shankar said, “A month and a half ago, a woman named Margaret Jewell died at home in her sleep of what appeared to be a heart attack. She’d been complaining the day before of joint pains, but according to her spouse, that wasn’t unusual. She suffered from fibromyalgia.”
Shankar clicked the remote again and brought up another driver’s license photo. It showed a middle-aged man with a kindly but melancholy face.
She said, “A couple of days ago, Cody Woods admitted himself to the South Hill Hospital, complaining of chest pains. He also complained of joint pain, but again that wasn’t surprising. He’d had some arthritis, and he’d had knee replacement surgery a week before. Within hours of being admitted to the hospital, he, too, died of what appeared to be a heart attack.”
“Totally unconnected deaths,” McCade muttered.
“So now are you saying that neither one of these deaths was murder?” Sanderson said.
“Margaret Jewell, probably,” McCade said. “Cody Woods, certainly not. We’re letting him be a distraction. We’re muddying the waters. If you’d just leave it to my boys and me, we’d solve this case in no time.”
“You’ve had a month and a half on the Jewell case,” Sanderson said.
Dr. Shankar smiled rather mysteriously as McCade and Sanderson continued to bicker. Then she clicked the remote again. Two more photos came up.
The room fell quiet, and Riley felt a jolt of surprise.
The men in both photos looked Middle Eastern. Riley didn’t recognize one of them. But she sure did recognize the other.
It was Saddam Hussein.
Riley stared at the image on the wall screen. Where could the chief medical examiner possibly be going with a photo of Saddam Hussein? The deposed leader of Iraq had been executed in 2006 for crimes against humanity. What was his connection with a possible serial killer in Seattle?
After letting the effect of the photos settle in, Dr. Shankar spoke again.
“I’m sure we all recognize the man on the left. The man on the right was Majidi Jehad, a Shia dissident against Saddam’s regime. In May 1980, Jehad was granted permission to travel to London. When he stopped at a Baghdad police station to pick up his passport, he was treated to a glass of orange juice. He left Iraq, apparently safe and sound. He died soon after he got to London.”
Dr. Shankar brought up pictures of many more Middle Eastern faces.
“All of these men met similar fates. Saddam liquidated hundreds of dissidents in much the same way. When some of them were released from prison, they were offered congratulatory drinks to toast their freedom. None of them lived very long.”
Chief McCade nodded with understanding.
“Thallium poisoning,” he said.
“That’s right,” Dr. Shankar said. “Thallium is a chemical element that can be turned into a colorless, odorless, and tasteless soluble powder. It was Saddam Hussein’s poison of choice. But he hardly invented the idea of assassinating his enemies with it. It is sometimes called the ‘poisoner’s poison’ because it acts slowly and produces symptoms that can result in mistaken causes of death.”
She clicked the remote, and a few more faces appeared, including that of Cuban dictator Fidel Castro.
She said, “In 1960, the French secret service used thallium to kill the Cameroon rebel leader Félix-Roland Moumié. And it is widely believed that the CIA tried to use thallium in one of its many failed attempts to assassinate Fidel Castro. The plan was to put thallium powder in Castro’s shoes. If the CIA had succeeded in that particular method, Castro’s death would have been humiliating as well as slow and painful. That iconic beard of his would have fallen out before he died.”
She clicked the remote, and the faces of Margaret Jewell and Cody Woods appeared again.
“I’m telling you all this so that you’ll understand that we’re dealing with a very sophisticated murderer,” Dr. Shankar said. “I found traces of thallium in the bodies of both Margaret Jewell and Cody Woods. There’s no doubt in my mind that they were both poisoned to death by the same killer.”
Dr. Shankar looked around at everybody in the room.
“Any comments so far?” she asked.
“Yeah,” Chief McCade said. “I still don’t think the deaths are connected.”
Riley was startled by the comment. But Dr. Shankar didn’t look surprised.
“Why not, Chief McCade?” she asked.
“Cody Woods was a plumber,” McCade said. “Wouldn’t it have been possible for him to have been exposed to thallium as an occupational hazard?”
“It’s possible,” Dr. Shankar said. “Plumbers have to be careful to avoid lots of hazardous substances, including asbestos and heavy metals such as arsenic and thallium. But I don’t think this was what happened in Cody Woods’ case.”
Riley was becoming more and more intrigued.
“Why not?” she asked.
Dr. Shankar clicked the remote, and toxicology reports appeared.
“These killings seem to be thallium poisoning with a difference,” she said. “Neither victim showed certain classic symptoms – hair loss, fever, vomiting, abdominal pain. As I said before, there was some joint pain, but little else. Death came quite suddenly, looking much like an ordinary heart attack. There was no lingering at all. If my staff hadn’t been on their toes, they might not have even noticed that these were cases of thallium poisoning.”
Bill seemed to be sharing Riley’s fascination.
“So we’re dealing with what – designer thallium?” he asked.
“Something like that,” Dr. Shankar said. “My staff is still untangling the chemical makeup of the cocktail. But one of the ingredients is definitely potassium ferrocyanide – a chemical that you might be familiar with as the dye Prussian blue. That’s strange, because Prussian blue happens to be the only known antidote to thallium poisoning.”
Chief McCade’s large mustache was twitching.
“That doesn’t make sense,” he growled. “Why would a poisoner administer an antidote along with the poison?”
Riley hazarded a guess.
“Might it have been to disguise the symptoms of thallium poisoning?”
Dr. Shankar nodded in agreement.
“That’s my working theory. The other chemicals we found would have interacted with thallium in a complex way that we don’t yet understand. But they probably helped control the nature of the symptoms. Whoever concocted the mixture knew what they were doing. They had a pretty keen knowledge of both pharmacology and chemistry.”
Chief McCade was drumming his fingers on the table.
“I don’t buy it,” he said. “Your results for the second victim must have been skewed by your results for the first. You found what you were looking for.”
For the first time, Dr. Shankar’s face showed a trace of surprise. Riley, too, was taken aback by the police chief’s audacity in questioning Shankar’s expertise.
“What makes you say that?” Dr. Shankar asked.
“Because we have a surefire suspect for Margaret Jewell’s killing,” he said. “She was married to another woman, name of Barbara Bradley – calls herself Barb. The couple’s friends and neighbors say the two were having problems, loud fights that woke up the neighbors. Bradley actually has a past record for criminal assault. Folks say she has a hair-trigger temper. She did it. We’re all but sure of it.”
“Why haven’t you brought her in?” Agent Sanderson demanded.
Chief McCade’s eyes darted about defensively.
“We’ve questioned her, at home,” he said. “But she’s a sly character, and we still haven’t got enough evidence to bring her in. We’re building a case. It’s taking some time.”
Agent Sanderson smirked and grunted.
He said, “Well, while you’ve been building your case, it seems that your ‘surefire’ suspect has gone right ahead and killed somebody else. You’d better pick up the pace. She might be getting ready to do it again right now.”
Chief McCade’s face was getting red with anger.
“You’re dead wrong,” he said. “I’m telling you, Margaret Jewell’s killing was an isolated incident. Barb Bradley didn’t have any motive to kill Cody Woods, or anybody else as far as we know.”
“As far as you know,” Sanderson added in a scoffing tone.
Riley could feel the underlying tensions coming to the surface. She hoped the meeting would end without a knockdown, drag-out fight.
Meanwhile, her brain was clicking away, trying to make sense of what little she knew so far.
She asked Chief McCade, “How financially well off were Jewell and Bradley?”
“Not well off at all,” he said. “Lower middle-class. In fact, we’re thinking that financial strain might have been part of the motive.”
“What does Barb Bradley do for a living?”
“She makes deliveries for a linen service,” McCade said.
Riley felt a hunch forming in her mind. She thought that a killer who used poison was likely to be a woman. And as a delivery person, this one could have had access to various health facilities. This was definitely someone she’d like to talk to.
“I’d like to have Barb Bradley’s home address,” she said. “Agent Jeffreys and I should go and interview her.”
Chief McCade looked at her as if she were out of her mind.
“I just told you, we’ve done that already,” he said.
Not well enough, apparently, Riley thought.
But she stifled the urge to say so aloud.
Bill put in, “I agree with Agent Paige. We should go check Barb Bradley out for ourselves.”
Chief McCade obviously felt insulted.
“I won’t allow it,” he said.
Riley knew that the FBI team leader, Agent Sanderson, could overrule McCade if he chose to. But when she looked to Sanderson for support, he was staring daggers at her.
Her heart sank. She instantly understood the situation. Although Sanderson and McCade hated each other, they were allies in their resentment of Riley and Bill. As far as both of them were concerned, agents from Quantico had no business being here on their turf. Whether they realized it or not, their egos were more important than the case itself.
How are Bill and I going to get anything done? she wondered.
By contrast, Dr. Shankar seemed as cool and collected as ever.
She said, “I’d like to know why it’s such a bad idea for Jeffreys and Paige to interview Barb Bradley.”
Riley was surprised at Dr. Shankar’s audacity in speaking up. After all, even as the chief medical examiner, she was brazenly overstepping her bounds.
“Because I’ve got my own investigation going!” McCade said, almost shouting now. “They’re liable to make a mess of it!”
Dr. Shankar smiled that inscrutable smile of hers.
“Chief McCade, are you actually questioning the competence of two agents from Quantico?”
Then, turning toward the FBI team leader, she added, “Agent Sanderson, what do you have to say about this?”
McCade and Sanderson both stared at Dr. Shankar in open-mouthed silence.
Riley noticed that Dr. Shankar was smiling at her. Riley couldn’t help smiling back at her in admiration. Here in her own building, Shankar knew how to project an authoritative presence. It didn’t matter who else thought they were in charge. She was one tough customer.
Chief McCade shook his head with resignation.
“OK,” he said. “If you want the address, you’ve got it.”
Agent Sanderson quickly added, “But I want some of my people to go with you.”
“That sounds fair,” Riley said.
McCade scribbled down the address and handed it to Bill.
Sanderson called the meeting to a close.
“Jesus, did you ever see such a pair of arrogant jerks in your life?” Bill asked as Riley walked with him to their car. “How the hell are we going to get anything done?”
Riley didn’t reply. The truth was, she didn’t know. She sensed that this case was going to be tough enough without having to deal with local power politics. She and Bill had to get their job done quickly before anyone else died.
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