said quietly. âWe need to get her body down so the techs can finish up in here. And the new lieutenant is around somewhere. He might kick up a fuss that youâve come.â
Baldwin nodded. He still hadnât spoken, was simply processing. Thatâs what she liked about him. There was no extraneous bullshit, no posturing. Just an incessant curiosity about what made people do bad things. That was something they shared, a core desire to figure out the why behind the crimes.
She escorted him over to the body, then stepped away and let him assess the scene.
His lips were set in a tight, thin line, and she could see the dark circles under his eyes. He was exhausted. Working a case always did that to him. His job as the head of the Behavioral Analysis Unit, BAU Two, was to guide the various profilers who worked for him, and to give the various law enforcement entities requesting help a thorough rundown of what they were dealing with. Taylor knew that it went deeper for him. He wanted to do more than look at crime-scene photos and pump out a report. He liked to get in the field, to smell the scene, see the crime in situ. Well, she was giving him his heartâs desire with this one.
Baldwin broke his verbal fast. âWhereâs the blood?â he asked.
Taylor smiled. âI said the same thing. Thereâs something else totally bizarre. There was a classical piece from DvoÅák playing on the houseâs intercom system.â
âReally? Hmm.â
âThe owner of the house is allegedly out of town. There was a piece of glass cut out of the back door so our suspect could turn the lock. The next-door neighbor is caring for the catâshe came over and found the body. She couldnât say if the music was on or off when she arrivedâshe wasnât paying attention. We included the CD in the evidence gathering. The lack of blood, the music, the position of the bodyâI canât help but think this is a ritual. Thatâs why I wanted you to see it.â
He ignored her for a moment, moving back and forth between the wall and the column. He spoke absently. âThe suspect could have been playing the music to cover any noise he might have been making. Taylor, step over here with me a second. Look at the wide view.â
She went as far back as the house allowed, to the bay window on the west side of the kitchen. He went with her, standing quietly while she looked. She had taken a picture earlier from this angle, a wide shot of the room face-on to the body.
âOkay. What am I missing?â
âLook at the painting on the wall by the door, in the left upper quadrant, line-of-sight to the column.â
That was it. The strange sense that something wasnât right, the feeling that she was missing something. It was there in front of her the whole time.
âSon of a bitch. Sheâs posed just like the painting. Who is that, Picasso?â
âYes. Demoiselles dâAvignon . The victimâs arms are up over her head, a perfect imitation of the center of the painting. And this was Picassoâs most famous piece fromhis African Period. Your victim is black. Heâs accurately mirrored the painting. Thereâs no blood. But the raceâ¦â
He drifted off.
âWhat is it?â she asked.
âTaylor, you donât want to hear what I have to say. Iâm having a hard time believing it myself.â
âItâs too early to surmise that we might have a serial on our hands.â
âItâs not that. Actually, itâs much worse.â
âWhat then?â
âI think you may have my serial on your hands.â
Four
B aldwin waited for Taylorâs mind to register what heâd told her. Hell, he needed it to register in his mind.
âWhat are you talking about?â she asked.
He spoke quietly. âHow much do you remember about a killer named II Macellaio?â
âI donât. Not that much. Only what