feet and ankles (which were probably made by the bodyâs being dragged through the briar of the lot), the fact that the wrists were not lacerated, nor the throat. Caleb ticked off the meaning of these things methodically.
âSo, from the look of it,â he concluded, âIâd say the lab boys will have to put a label on this one. Wasnât shot, stabbed or strangled. Surely wasnât beaten up.â He took a draw on his pipe. âWhat do you think, Frank? Poison?â He tapped his shoe against the ground. âToo hard for footprints.â
Frank allowed his eyes to peruse the body head to foot. Summer winds had blown away most of the dust and debris with which someone had hastily covered it. He could make out the facial features quite easily. Her hair was blonde, her eyes blue, her skin pale, almost chalky. She had a full mouth with rather thick lips, and Frank could even make out that her teeth, at least the lower set, were perfectly even. She wore a light blue, shortsleeve blouse and a dark blue skirt with a white belt and gold buckle. There was a leather sandal strapped loosely to one foot, but the other was bare. She was of medium build and medium height. Frank guessed her at about five-four and one hundred ten pounds.
âWhat do you think, around sixteen?â Caleb asked.
âAbout that,â Frank said.
The photo crew were all around him now, taking shots from all directions. Frank and Caleb stepped back slightly to give them the angles they demanded.
Caleb tapped the pipe against the heel of his shoe, spilling the rest of the tobacco onto the ground.
âTheyâll find that damn tobacco and bag it as evidence, Caleb,â Frank said.
âNaw, they wonât,â Caleb said, with an old-pro smile, âbecause Iâll tell them itâs Prince Albert from my own bowl.â He glanced about, taking in the few structures which stood in the vicinity. âNo bedroom window for some sleepless bastard to be standing at last night when the body was dropped.â He placed the pipe in his jacket pocket. âTheyâll canvass their asses off, but it wonât do any good. Just for looks, thatâs why theyâll do it.â He smiled. â âCause we fucked up that child-murders thing.â He looked at Frank. âEverything by the book from now on. But it wonât make a goddamn bit of difference, and itâll waste a hell of a lot of time.â He lifted his head slightly and called to one of the patrolmen. âHey, tell the boys from the lab crew that this tobacco down here belongs to Caleb Stone.â
The patrolman nodded, then gave him the thumbs-up sign.
Caleb turned back to Frank. âThat ought to cover my ass.â He slapped his behind. âAnd this old ass needs a lot of covering.â
He ambled away then, tramping through the waist-high brush until he had made it back to his car.
Frank watched him as he drove away. Caleb was one of the few men in the department whom he either liked or respected. He wasnât very bright, but he was full of a kind of noble doggedness. He did his job well, and kept his troubles to himself. He had never asked about Sarah or the divorce, never pried into Frankâs private life or opened up about his own. Even after years in the city, he had held to that backwoods silence in which Frank himself had been reared, and which he still admired, almost as a lovely artifact; it was a rare individual in modern, bustling Atlanta who still possessed it.
âWeâll be through in a moment, Lieutenant,â Charlie Morton, the police photographer, said.
âTake your time,â Frank said casually. âDo it right.â
Charlie stepped to his side and took a shot. âLooks like she just laid down and died,â he said. He stepped around to the other side of the body, bent forward and snapped another picture. âJust walked out here and found herself a little spot of ground and