Perhaps what’s in plain view? Her behavior’s in plain view. Her drinking’s in plain view. Why? Did something happen?”
“The tournament in Charleston,” Captain Poma says to Scarpetta. “Where you have your private practice. What is it they call it? The Lowcountry? What is Lowcountry, exactly?” He slowly swirls his wine, his eyes on her.
“Almost sea level, literally low country.”
“And your local police have no interest in this case? Since she played a tournament there just maybe two days before she was murdered?”
“Curious, I’m sure – ” Scarpetta starts to say.
“Her murder has nothing to do with the Charleston police,” Benton interrupts. “They have no jurisdiction.”
Scarpetta gives him a look, and the captain watches both of them. He’s been watching their tense interaction all day.
“No jurisdiction hasn’t stopped anybody from showing up and flashing their badges,” Captain Poma says.
“If you’re alluding to the FBI again, you’ve made your point,” says Benton. “If you’re alluding to my being former FBI again, you’ve definitely made your point. If you’re alluding to Dr. Scarpetta and me – we were invited by you. We didn’t just show up, Otto. Since you’ve asked us to call you that.”
“Is it me or is this not perfect?” The captain holds up his glass of wine as if it is a flawed diamond.
Benton picked the wine. Scarpetta knows more about Italian wines than he does, but tonight he finds it necessary to assert his dominance, as if he has just plummeted fifty rungs on the evolutionary ladder. She feels Captain Poma’s interest in her as she looks at another photograph, grateful the waiter doesn’t seem inclined to come their way. He’s busy with the table of loud Americans.
“Close-up of her legs,” she says. “Bruising around her ankles.”
“Fresh bruises,” Captain Poma says. “He grabbed her, maybe.”
“Possibly. They aren’t from ligatures.”
She wishes Captain Poma wouldn’t sit so close to her, but there’s no where else for her to move unless she pushes her chair into the wall. She wishes he wouldn’t brush against her when he reaches for photographs.
“Her legs are recently shaven,” she goes on. “I would say shaven within twenty-four hours of her death. Barely any stubble. She cared about how she looked even when she was traveling with friends. That might be important. Was she hoping to meet someone?”
“Of course. Three young women looking for young men,” Captain Poma says.
Scarpetta watches Benton motion for the waiter to bring another bottle of wine.
She says, “Drew was a celebrity. From what I’ve been told, she was careful about strangers, didn’t like to be bothered.”
“Her drinking doesn’t make much sense,” Benton says.
“Chronic drinking doesn’t,” Scarpetta says. “You can look at these photographs and see she was extremely fit, lean, superb muscle development. If she’d become a heavy drinker, it would appear it hadn’t been going on long, and her recent success would indicate that as well. Again, we have to wonder if something recently had happened. Some emotional upheaval?”
“Depressed. Unstable. Abusing alcohol,” Benton says. “All making the person more vulnerable to a predator.”
“And that’s what I think happened,” Captain Poma says. “Randomness. An easy target. Alone at the Piazza di Spagna, where she encountered the gold-painted mime.”
The gold-painted mime performed as mimes do, and Drew dropped another coin into his cup, and he performed once more to her delight.
She refused to leave with her friends. The last thing she ever said to them was, “Beneath all that gold paint is a very handsome Italian.” The last thing her friends