Talia Devine's POV
St. Paul Homicide Offices
Wednesday, October 6, 2021
Was it just me, or was it getting cold in here?
Something had changed with my partner. I was the expert in the office on David Hardin and his books. I should be in the room discussing Books 3 and 4, but I'm at my desk with a new assignment unrelated to the future victims. Anyone else could look up old cases, so why me?
My relationship with David. The Captain needed me there to keep David talking, but he didn't want me anywhere near him now. He didn't trust me anymore, and James didn't either. It was a bitter pill to swallow.
My phone beeped a few minutes later. Detective Maloney assigned three others to work with me on the research. The three gathered at my desk, and I filled them in. I ended up with Minneapolis, and Yvonne Garber took St. Paul. Jack Parker took the rest of Hennepin County, along with Rice, Anoka, and Carver counties. Va Yang had the east side, with the rest of Ramsey county, Washington, and the western Wisconsin counties of St. Croix and Pierce. Lakeville detectives would look at the south with Dakota and Scott counties.
With our job defined, we all got to work. I called up Ken Clark, one of the Minneapolis Homicide detectives James knew. He'd been in their office for a decade. "Ken, it's Talia Devine from St. Paul," I said. "I need some help."
"Promise me you'll keep that fucker out of my town, and I'll do whatever you want tonight, darling!"
I just shook my head. Ken was a nice guy, but he was twenty years older than me and his second wife left him after catching him in an affair. "Sorry, Romeo. Maybe he was already in your town?" I explained my assignment.
"Jesus, Talia, you don't make anything easy. We've got at least a hundred open cases going back two years since our clearance rate is only forty percent."
"Still struggling with staffing?"
"More struggling with witnesses. A lot more gang and drug-related murders, and no one wants to talk to us. None of my cases sound like it, but I can't rule anything out. There are eleven more Detectives in the office with their caseloads. If I start pulling a bunch of files for you, it takes me off my work. My Lieutenant will have to sign off on it."
I looked around, knowing the Captain and my partner would be coming out soon, and I'd have the uncomfortable looks again. "You know? Fuck it. What kind of coffee do you guys like?"
"Caribou. Get me a Depth Charge, and the Lieutenant likes Americano. Both black," he said.
"I'll see you in half an hour." I left a note for my partner, grabbed my jacket, and headed out to my car. The Minneapolis detectives had offices on the 8
th
floor of the Public Service Building downtown. That meant paying for parking in the attached garage PLUS our coffees. I would need help from the whole office, so I bought a bag of Caribou blend for their pot.
After clearing security on the ground floor, I took the elevator to the Violent Crimes Investigations Division. Minneapolis had separate offices for Robbery, Assault, and Homicide. One of the detectives saw me walking with coffee and got to the door first. "What are you doing over here, Talia?"
I'd worked with Ellen Dantzler when I was in Training division. "Begging for help," I said with a smile.
"Hence the coffee. Come on in."
I handed off the coffees and got an introduction to the Lieutenant and the Detectives in the office. I explained to the office what I was doing and why. The Lieutenant made things easy for me. "We need to catch this asshole and soon! Think about the cases in your backlog. If you have anything even close, bring her the file!"
They set me up with a computer and a spare desk, and then the fun started. There were more than a hundred cold cases, but like Ken said, most were gang or drug related. By focusing on unsolved female murders not involving firearms, I was up to thirteen files on my desk already. I called Detective Maloney and told him what I was up to. "Skip the meeting and keep working the pile," he told me. "Call me on the way home and let me know what you figure out."
"Works for me. I've got plenty to do," I told my partner. I'd stay here as long as they let me.
The breakthrough came when two detectives returned to the office and got filled in. "Yeah, I got one of those," Detective Molly Pierce said. "Hang on." A few minutes later, I had the case folder open as Molly briefed me. "Allison Decker, age 22. Her body was found naked in a dumpster behind a building on Lake Street that was a known prostitution location. The cause of death was asphyxiation, but the method is unknown. The autopsy showed no evidence of defensive wounds, no bruises on her wrists or ankles, and no evidence of drug or alcohol use. There was evidence of recent sexual activity with bruising in her anus and throat. The killer used lubricated condoms, leaving behind no traces of semen or DNA. The curious part of the autopsy report was that she had two cracked ribs. It's conjecture, but the coroner said it is consistent with injuries sometimes received during cardiopulmonary resuscitation."
"CPR? In a murder case?"
"It points me towards an accidental death. Maybe they panicked and dumped the body when they couldn't revive her."
I looked at the photographs in the file. Allison was young and healthy, with a large bust, flat stomach, and long legs. I didn't see tattoos or scars, but she did have piercings. I saw hoops through her nipples and another on her clit, plus a stud in her tongue. "Was she killed in the alley or dumped there?"
"Dumped. We didn't find drag marks, ground-in dirt, fibers, or hairs. It looks like she was cleaned up before they tossed her in the garbage."
"Anything from street cameras or local businesses?"
"Nothing, the alley wasn't lit."
It was intriguing. "What do you know about the victim?"
"She had no criminal record, and her fingerprints weren't in the system. We identified her using DNA matches to an online database."
That was surprising. "The victim's family didn't report her missing?"
"No surviving relatives. She lived alone in an apartment in Bloomington. No boyfriend anyone knew of, never married, and no suspects."
"What about her work?"
"She was a bartender at Diamond Dan's, not a dancer. The owner said she asked for that Saturday night off because of school." Diamond Dan's, also known as the Double D, was a popular gentleman's club on the fringe of downtown Minneapolis. "She was taking nursing classes at Normandale Community College during the week. Just another struggling college student who works at a strip club to pay the bills."
"And you think she was involved in prostitution?"