Summary;
Joan Adams died last night as she had lived, in agony. She was six
years old. No one heard her screams for help, no one who cared. Now
she lies in her body-bag on Davies' autopsy slab in the Boston
Morgue. Will anyone hear her now?
Rating; Very definitely R. No
violence, no sex but gore aplenty and implied child-abuse and incest.
If you've never actually seen an autopsy this is as close as I can
make it without letting you smell the bile. And believe me they're
a lot different from the pristine crap you see on CSI etc.
Show;
Tru Calling
Timeframe; Not relevant
Distribution; as you like
it, more the merrier. I think you'll work out why I wrote this and
why I want to share it.
Disclaimer; all these characters belong to
CBS-Fox and not me and this is purely a non-profit fic.
Feedback;
Echoes
It was kid.
Probably a female.
She could always
tell by the way they handled the body. A big guy, a cadaver that made
the coroner's guys sweat, got all the sensitivity of a pile of
bricks. An ordinary sized guy was treated like a bag of shopping,
gently enough but workaday.
Women were always given more care.
Screw equality. She'd seen it time and time again in both male and
female. Guys who shot themselves tended to shoot themselves in the
head, their brains spurted out of the top of their skulls looking for
all the world like pureed cabbage soaked in tomato ketchup. Tru had
seen eyeballs blasted clean out of their sockets by the force of the
muzzle blast, able to look up through them and see the soft neon
lights of the lab through the fist sized hole smashed in the top of
the head.
Women didn't. Women who shot themselves always shot
themselves in the heart. Even in death they couldn't break the
social programming they'd received from the moment they'd been
wrapped in the pink blanket rather than the blue. Even in death they
couldn't bear to mess up their pretty faces.
This body didn't
even fill the dull black plastic bag, looked almost lost in it. It
was as though Ramirez could almost tuck it under his arms as though
it was a piece of carry-on luggage at the airport. It had to be
either a kid or a midget.
It wasn't a midget.
Not judging by
the way he laid it on the table. Cradling it in his arms then placing
the bag down carefully with his hands left deliberately underneath
it, almost as though he was lowering his lover down onto their bed.
He gently slid them out, the plastic creaking slightly as it settled
on the cool stainless steel surface.
He nodded to Tru then he was
gone. No small talk, no wisecrack, no smile. His face a mask of
placid calm. His feelings unreachable.
Definitely a kid. Probably
a girl.
"Ok lets get started" Davies was all business. He and
Tru donned their gear. Facemasks, hairnets, gloves, clear plastic
aprons that always reminded her of the deli counter people down at
the supermarket. Davies slightly spoiled the illusion by adding the
helmet and faceguard he wore when using the bonesaw. Well, if you
liked your salami REALLY chewy…
"Time of autopsy 1953hrs,
subject Joan Adams, d, o, b 24/10/1997, subject is a Caucasian female
found by the police concealed in a dumpster…" He read off the
sheet, calmly, softly, his tone neutral. At moments like this she
loved him with all of her heart. Sometimes she thought she simply
loved him.
It would be a bad one. She knew that now. Some bodies
looked almost peaceful. Some people died in their sleep with an
almost beatific smile on their lips. Some were caught in extremes of
agony Edward Munch could never hope to capture. Most just looked a
little shocked, as though they couldn't comprehend the suddeness,
that they were surprised by the reality of their own passing.
"In
a dumpster" she thought. "Like someone thought she was so much
trash" Unbelievable
This one would be bad. She knew that.
Somewhere out there were a bunch of hardbitten police officers, many
military veterans, some muscle bound body-builders or expert martial
artists, all festooned under layers of Kevlar body armour and a huge
variety of deadly weapons who were nevertheless wounded and aching
beneath their gallows humour and stoic facade. Tonight they would go
off duty and drink themselves into a stupor. Or hug their families
into mute puzzlement. Or brood until the next smartass punk on the
street talked clever to them and found himself wondering why he was
scrabbling for his own teeth in the gutter with his shattered
fingers.
Davies gave her the briefest of looks. Ready? it
asked.
Tru gave him the slightest of nods in reply. Lets's do
it.
He unzipped the bag, getting the tip of his latex gloves
caught in the teeth as he did so. Tru helped him free it and he gave
her a grateful smile. It never ceased to amaze her how a man who was
such a klutz could do such delicate work with such precision and
skill.
The smell always got to you first. The acrid reek of
faecal matter that seeped through the white gauze of her facemask
mixed with the sharp tang of urine. There was no dignity in death,
when you died your muscles just gave up, you inevitably soiled
yourself. There was another smell too, something metallic mixed with
what resembled overripe fruit or vegetables. She realised that was
probably exactly what it was, if she'd been found in a dumpster
that's what they stank of.
She cast her mind back to before she
had done this for a living. She had never thought of this. In all the
films and TV she had watched, the men in the white coats had put the
body into a black bag and the detective had got on with the case and
she had never given a moments thought as to what happened to it next.
Quincy was the only one who spent time with the bodies but he
actually argued with his boss or drank at the bar more than did any
actual work.
After a full minute she stopped wincing. The urge to
heave would always be there but she buried it deep down inside her.
She was glad as Davies brought over his instruments, the
reassuring aroma of the surgical spirit masking the other smells.
Clean, crisp, cool metal contrasted with soft, messy, vulnerable
flesh.
The girls face was frozen. Frozen in a mute scream. But
there was something else there to.
Hopelessness.
The scream
was purely perfunctory, just a reflex action, like a person falling
to there death flailing their legs, trying to crawl back up on pure
air, knowing it was no good but unable to overcome instinct with
reason in their terror.
She knew no one would hear her. For no one
ever had.
They waited together for a moment in expectation. Waited
with their guilty secret in the hope that this frail form in front of
them on the table would inexplicably open her eyes and turn to them,
ask for help in defiance of all the science they both immersed their
lives in. Hoped against hope that the magic that they had now come to
accept as everyday would once again allow them to achieve the
impossible and turn back time.
Turn back death.
It didn't
happen.
He looked at her. She shook her head. Not this time.
Naked. Her face was grubby, old before it's time. Her hair
matted and listless. The scars and bruises covered her body. Welts,
still vivid and red all over. Bruises, maybe fingermarks but here and
there what looked like a ring mark. Older injuries mixed with the new
that told her more than anything that this wasn't some blitz attack
but a way of life, that she had known nothing but pain in her entire
existence. Now there was no more pain. Now there was just the
terrible waste of a life that might have been.
"A series of
bruises all over the upper part of the body…." Davies recorded
everything into the tape in the same quiet monotone, noting every
injury in turn Tru helped him take pictures of them, easily shifting
the dead weight of the body around to allow him access everywhere.
Her first touch was tentative. Then it was merely practical, the
taboo of touching dead human flesh long since having worn off.
She
was skin and bone, her ribs protruding awkwardly through her pasty,
mottled skin. The body felt almost rubbery through the latex of Tru's
gloves, like a life jacket ducked in cold water.
"What appear
to be a series of cigarette burns up both arms…"
"How could
they?" Tru thought. "How could anyone?" She wouldn't have
done that to the man who killed her mother, the man who had robbed
her of the person she loved most in all the world. Not even to him.
What sin could this little girl have committed to make anyone think
she deserved that?
Davies' took samples. Hair, skin, blood, nail
clippings. Her nails were ragged, broken and discoloured through
malnutrition but there was no foreign flesh under them. She hadn't
fought.
She'd given up fighting a long time ago.
"Appears
to be bruising around the vaginal area…" He took intimate
samples. He hated it, they both did but it had to be done. Tru forced
herself to watch as he swabbed the tiny lips of her labia with a
sample tissue on the end of a probe. He held it up under the
ultraviolet light and inspected it closely.
"Appears positive
for semen…"
"SHE'S ONLY SIX!" Tru shouted. She regretted
the words as soon as she had uttered them. It wasn't Davies fault,
the tragedy of Joan Adams life wasn't his responsibility. The
evidence of the monstrous, obscene crime he held in his hands was not
of his making. What he was doing gave a chance of justice and
retribution against the perpetrator of this dreadful, unnatural act.
But she needed to shout. She needed to say something, to voice her
outrage, to show whomever was listening that she gave a damn, to give
vent to the nauseous agony she felt in her lower stomach, to say that
this wasn't right, that this was obscene and she knew it…
"I've
seen younger" Davies sahe whe words without any hint of
patronisation, without any bravado. He wasn't being condescending,
he was just giving voice to his own pain. It worked. Tru forgot hers'
knowing his was worse. She went from self-pity to sympathy in a
nanosecond.
She reached out and touched his forearm. It struck
her this was the most physically intimate they'd ever been
together.
"You know…" he began.
"I'll stay" she
cut him off. "Because I have to see this through" she added in
her mind "And because I don't want you to have to go through this
alone"
She took the forceps and opened the lips of the vagina
allowing him to probe inside with a new swab. It struck it that this
was all the sexual experience she'd ever know. She would never grow
to adolescence, never know those first tentative stirrings of
attraction to another, the uncertain sweetness of the first kiss and
embrace from a school sweetheart. Never be an adult and know the
passionate fury of a lover's touch. Never know the miracle of
giving life to another from within her and cradle that baby in her
arms, knowing absolute love and feeling it returned in kind.
This
was all she'd ever know. Only pain and terror.
They repeated
the process with the anus and mouth.
All positive.
They
packaged the positive samples in separate evidence tubes to avoid
cross-contamination. More than one rapist or murderer had escaped
conviction due to poor evidential procedures. Each would be submitted
to police forensics lab for comparison with DNA samples from suspects
and the national DNA database.
"Dear god please let it be a
stranger" she prayed, "Please not a family member, please". She
hadn't been to church in a long time but she understood entirely
why people embraced the concept in extremis. You had to believe in
something more when the material world was so ugly. How she hoped it
was a stranger, that that last bond of familial trust remained
unbroken, one last vestige of love intact.
He checked the nose
taking a skin sample from each nostril. "Lack of nose hair suggests
possible narcotic abuse, we'll have to wait for the blood tests to
be certain"
She wanted to protest again but this time bit her
tongue. "Thank you Meredith" she thought closing her eyes. "Thank
you for being so, so, strong and raising Harrison and I as you did,
it must have been so hard when you were falling apart inside
yourself. No wonder you turned to drugs, you fell because you'd
spent so much effort in making sure we didn't". She would phone
her tonight, her and Harrison. She needed to, needed to hear their
voices, to feel the way she always did when she spoke to them.
Did
Joan Adams have a family, she wondered? Did she have a brother or
sister, a mother and father? Surely someone, somewhere must have held
in their arms and loved her, just once.
Just once.
They
finished packaging. Davies walked over and got them both a cup of
water from the cooler. They stood together and sipped
quietly.
"What's the worst you ever saw?" she regretted the
words the moment they were out of her mouth but the question was
bubbling up inside her until she felt it would make her burst. She
wanted him to say this was it, that there had never been anything
worse. But she suspected that wasn't the case.
Davies took a
moment. He wasn't searching for the answer, he knew the answer. He
was just wondering how to say it.
"The Great Dane"
"A
dog?" she almost laughed.
He nodded "The police let the vet
kill the dog but didn't think it was fair to let him cut it open.
So I did"
"Why?" she was genuinely baffled.
"I had to
reassemble the baby…."
She felt the tears well up in her eyes.
He was in her arms before she shed them. They stayed there together
for a long time.
"The detective who stayed with me quit the
force. I met him again at the trial, he sells insurance now"
"Good"
she felt him nod in agreement.
"We should get on"
He
sliced through the skin. It was like pastry, leathery, almost
translucent pastry. He sawed through the bones of the ribcage and
split it open with a crack that echoed around the room. Some bone
fragments showered over his visor and she wiped them off for him with
a tissue. People always said children's bones reminded them of
kindling but Tru never thought that. It always reminded her of icing,
thick, thick icing like that which you'd find on top of a wedding
cake, but springy, more malleable.
He cut through the internal
organs, snipping through arteries and blood vessels, neatly cutting
around fat and cartilage as though he was a gardener pruning a hedge.
Tru removed each in turn, weighed them and took minute samples of
tissues which she packaged for the lab. You had to be careful, Islam
and some branches of Judaism and Christian sects were vehemently
opposed to anything being removed from the body before burial. She
wondered if Joan Adams had any sort of religion, wondered if she was
old enough to comprehend the concept of god or an afterlife. Wondered
if she was with him now?
What sort of funeral would she have? Who
would go? Maybe, she wouldn't be alone, maybe some of those people
who had failed her in life would turn up for the camera's in death.
Politicians, journalists, social workers, community leaders. They
might make pretty speeches and well-intentioned promises. And mean
them. But you couldn't save everyone. Tomorrow there would be a new
front page, a new area of concern for the populace. The problem with
people was they were only human.
She didn't look human. Not
anymore. They never did. Tru was unsure of soul or anything of the
sort, even after the inexplicable events of the last few months but
whatever it was, that spark, that trace of life, once it was gone
they never looked human any more. They looked like waxworks, waxworks
with a gaping hole in the centre that had been scraped out, the flesh
peeled back and held open by various clamps and retractors scattered
around the raw aperture fashioned in human viscera. The stainless
steel surface of the autopsy table was covered in a thick layer of
blood like some rich claret based sauce. It reminded her for all the
world of preparing a Sunday roast. The body paled even more as it
drained from her.
She didn't look like a waxwork anymore. She
was so small she looked like a little china doll.
The lungs
bubbled up a black liquid as she handled them. She'd lived with a
smoker. The person who had burnt her arms? She wondered if all those
poets and songwriters who spoke of holding someone's heart in their
hands had ever done it for real. It was no big thrill, they just felt
spongy, nothing more. The blood didn't smell that bad, a little
bitter maybe, it reminded her of when she'd used to have nosebleeds
as a kid.
When they were finished Tru took the organs and placed
them in a bright yellow medical waste bag. She placed it back into
the opening and Davies sewed it up. Sometimes he let her practice her
stitching, not in the invasive procedures because that was evidential
and she wasn't qualified but no one cared about the closing.
Someday she might still be a doctor, she needed the experience. She'd
always dreamed about holding back death, she just never imagined
she'd do it in quite this way. She could never help but think of
Mrs Anderson, her sewing teacher at school. She gave an involuntary
shiver at the recollection of the sensation of the cane cracking off
her bare hips. Well, she'd be happy enough now, Tru could sew with
the best of them.
Not today though, today he'd do everything
himself.
It always made her laugh watching TV and movies where
the coroner carefully restored all the pieces into their proper
place. In reality you slung them into the bag and just put it away.
No one cared what was inside and organs from a suspicious death were
never used in transplants. She might believe in the supernatural but
she didn't believe in vampires. Any unexplained death would have
the heart cut out as a matter of routine.
They took another
break, sipping water, not speaking, lost in their own thoughts.
They
moved on to the head. Davies cut it open as though it were a coconut.
The top of the skull fell onto the table surface like a plate and
rocked back and forth for a few seconds like a spinning plate until
Tru grabbed and steadied it, smearing some cerebral fluid on her arm.
She wiped it off as Davies inspected the dull grey putty like
substance of her brain, checking for lesions or visible damage. They
took more minute samples, tiny slivers to mount on a microscope
slide.
"Was she clever?" Tru wondered. What gifts did she
have for the world that it would now be denied? Maybe she wasn't,
maybe she would just be an ordinary person with no special talents or
abilities. Maybe she'd have worked at McDonalds or cleaned floors
somewhere. But someone would have loved her.
He reattached the
scalp, fine, fine stitching, virtually invisible. A little makeup
from the mortician and you would never be able to tell.
They
closed her eyes, one each after examining them for any telltale signs
of haemoraghing. Little, blank blue marbles, drained of life and hope
and everything else.
"That's it" Davies announced.
"What
do you think killed her?" Tru asked as they began to strip off
their protective gear.
"Hard to say, could…"
"The short
version" her look told him.
"I think she just gave up"
She
nodded in agreement. They transferred her to the body storage unit,
ready to slide her into her own tiny tomb. Even it looked too big for
her. They stood there for a second in silence.
"Davies can you
give me a minute alone with her?"
He didn't question. Didn't
try to stop her. He just turned and walked away. She never ceased to
be surprised at the depth and subtlety of this remarkable man who had
entered her life.
She leaned over the body and cleared the few
strands of hair that lingered over Joan's forehead until it was
clear, brushing it backwards in an affectionate gesture. She leaned
down and planted a soft, soft kiss on her cold flesh. She leaned
close, whispering her words in the echoing stillness of the
morgue.
"I don't know if you can hear me. I want you to know
it's ok now, everything's ok. You don't have to be afraid
anymore. I'm with you now. You don't have to be brave, you've
been brave for long enough. Maybe you're in a better place and if
you are that's ok. But if you want to know life again, if you want
to see how beautiful and wonderful it can be, I want you to open your
eyes and speak to me. That's all you have to do, just say the
words, I'll do everything else. I promise, it can be better, it can
be so, so much better"
She waited. She had no idea for how long
she waited. But Joan didn't move. She just lay there on the slab,
still and cold. Her time was over.
"WAKE UP!" Tru screamed at
her, grabbing her by the shoulders and shaking her, "WAKE UP, BABY!
WAKE UP!". Her head lolled about her shoulders grotesquely. Tru
both heard and felt the stitches in her chest ripping. Instinctively
she let her go, the cadaver falling limply back on the metal tray
with an audible clang, Tru cringing as she cowered away, her hands
held to her mouth in guilt. Guilt for committing one more act of
violence against this tiny frail form that had seen so much.
She
reached out and gently readjusted the body back into a peaceful
pose.
"Please baby" she whispered. "Please wake up, for me.
Wake up"
She lay still.
Resignedly Tru went to shut the steel
door on her .
She opened her eyes.
She turned her head.
She
spoke the words.
"Tru, help me!"
"That's my girl!"
Tru sobbed, her tears just having enough time to strike Joan's
cheeks before the day rewound.