Pulaski asked, ‘You seen The Big Lebowski ?’
‘Oh, man.’ Gordon grinned and punched a fist Pulaski’s way. The rookie reciprocated.
Rhyme wondered: Maybe Tarantino.
The pictures appeared on the largest monitor in the room. They were extremely high definition images of the tattoo on Chloe Moore’s abdomen. TT Gordon gave one blink of shock at the worried skin, the welts, the discoloration. ‘Worse than I thought, the poisoning and everything. Like he created his own hot zone.’
‘What’s that?’
Gordon explained that tattoo parlors were divided into zones, hot and cold. The cold zone was where there was no risk of contamination by one customer’s blood getting into another’s. No unsterilized needles or machine parts or chairs, for instance. Hot, obviously, was the opposite, where the tattoo machine and needles were tainted by customers’ blood and body fluids. ‘We do everything we can to keep the two separate. But here, this dude did the opposite – intentionally infected, well, poisoned her. Man. Fucked up.’
But then the artist settled into an analytic mode that Rhyme found encouraging. Gordon eyed a computer. ‘Can I?’
‘Sure,’ Cooper said.
The artist hit keys and scrolled through the images, enlarging some.
Rhyme asked, ‘TT, are the words “the second” significant in any way in the tattoo world?’
‘No. Has no meaning that I know about and I’ve been inking for nearly twenty years. Guess it’s something significant to the dude who killed her. Or maybe the victim.’
‘Probably the perp,’ Amelia Sachs explained to Gordon. ‘There’s no evidence that he knew Chloe before he killed her.’
‘Oh. She was Chloe.’ Gordon said this softly. He touched his beard. Then scrolled once more. ‘Well, it’s weird for a client to make up a phrase or a passage for a modding. Sometimes I’ll ink a poem they’ve written. I’ll tell you, mostly they suck, big time. Usually, though, if somebody wants text, it’s a passage from something like their favorite book. The Bible. Or a famous quote. Or a saying, you know. “Live Free or Die.” “Born to Ride.” Things like that.’ Then he frowned. ‘Hm. Okay.’
‘What?’
‘Could be a splitter.’
‘And that is?’ Rhyme asked.
‘Some clients split their mods. They get half a word on one arm, the other half on another. Sometimes they’ll get part of the tat inked on their body, and their girlfriend or boyfriend get the other part on theirs.’
‘Why?’ Pulaski asked.
‘Why?’ Gordon seemed perplexed by the question. ‘Tats connect people. That’s one of the whole points of getting inked. Even if you’ve got unique works, you’re still part of the ink world. You got something in common, you know. That connects you, see, dude?’
Sachs said, ‘You seem to’ve done some thinking about all this.’
Gordon laughed. ‘Oh, I could be a shrink, I tell you.’
‘Freud,’ Sellitto said.
‘Dude,’ Gordon responded with a grin. That fist again. Sellitto didn’t take the offer.
Sachs asked, ‘And can you tell us anything concrete about him?’
Sellitto added, ‘We’re not going to quote you. Or get you on the witness stand. We just want to know who this guy is. Get into his head.’
Gordon was looking at the equipment, hesitating.
‘Well, okay. First, he’s a natural, a total talent as an artist, not just a technician. A lot of inkers are paint by numbers guys. They slap on a stencil somebody else did and fill it in. But’ – a nod at the picture – ‘there’s no evidence of a stencil there. He used a bloodline.’
‘Which is what?’ Rhyme asked.
‘If they’re not using a stencil, most artists draw an outline of the work on the skin first. Some draw freehand with a pen – water soluble ink. But there’s no sign of that here. Your guy didn’t do that. He just turned on his tattoo machine and used a lining needle for the outline, so instead of ink you have a line of blood that’s the outer perimeter of your design. So, bloodline. Only the best tat artists do that.’
Pulaski asked, ‘A pro then?’
‘Oh, yeah, dude’d have to be a pro. Like I told him.’ A nod at Sellitto. ‘Or was at some point. That level of skill? He could open his own shop in a blind second. And probably he’s a real artist too – I mean like with paint and pen and ink and everything. And I don’t think he’s from here. For one thing, I probably would’ve heard. Not from the tristate area, either. Doing this in fifteen minutes? Man, that’s lightning. His name’d get around. Then, look at the typeface.’
Rhyme’s, and everyone else’s, eyes slipped to the screen.
‘It’s Old English, or some Gothic variation. You don’t see that much now around here. I’d guess he’s got rural roots: redneck, shit kicker, biker, meth cooker. On the other hand, maybe born again, righteous, upstanding. But definitely a country boy.’
‘The typeface tells you that?’ Sachs asked.
‘Oh, yeah. Here, if somebody wants words, they’ll go for some kind of flowery script or thick sans serif. At least that’s current now. Man, for a few years everybody wanted this Elvish crap.’
‘Elvis Presley?’ Sellitto asked.
‘No, Elvish. Lord of the Rings .’
‘So country,’ Rhyme said. ‘Any particular region?’
‘Not really. There’s city inking and country inking. All I can say is this smells like country. Now, look at the border. The scallops. The technique is scarification. Or cicatrization is the official name for it. That’s important.’
He looked up and tapped the scallops surrounding the words ‘the second’.
‘What’s significant is that usually people scar to draw attention to an image. It’s important for this dude to make that design more prominent. It would’ve been easier just to ink a border. But, no, he wanted cicatrization. There’s a reason for it, I’m guessing. No clue what. But there it is.
‘Now, there’s one other thing. I was thinking about it. I brought show and tell.’ Gordon reached into his canvas shoulder bag and lifted out a plastic sack containing a number of metal parts. Rhyme recognized the transparent container as the sort in which surgical and forensic instruments are sterilized in an autoclave. ‘These are part of a tattoo machine – you don’t call them guns, by the way.’ Gordon smiled. ‘Whatever you hear on TV.’
He took a small Swiss Army knife from his pocket and cut open the bag. In a moment he’d assembled a tattoo gun – well, machine. ‘Here’s what it looks like put together and ready to ink.’ The tattoo artist walked closer to the others. ‘These’re the coils that move the needle up and down. This’s the tube for the ink and here’s the needle itself, coming out the end.’
Rhyme could see it, very small.
‘Needles have to go into the dermis – the layer of skin just below the outermost layer.’
‘Which is the epidermis,’ Rhyme said.
Nodding, Gordon disassembled the device and lifted out the needle, displaying it to everyone. Resembling a thin shish kebab skewer, about three inches long, it had a ring on one end. The other end contained a cluster of tiny metal rods soldered or welded together. They ended in sharp points.
‘See how they’re joined together, in a star shaped pattern? I make ’em myself. Most serious artists do. But we have to buy blanks and combine ’em. There’re two types of needles: those for lining – outlining the image – and then those for filling or shading. The dude needed to get a lot of poison into her body fast. That means he had to use filling needles after he was done with the bloodline. But these wouldn’t work, I don’t think. They wouldn’t go deep enough. But this kind of needle would.’ He reached into his bag once more and extracted a small plastic jar. He shook out two rods of metal, similar to his needles but longer. ‘They’re from an old time rotary machine – the new ones, like mine, are two coil, oscillation models. Was it a portable machine?’
‘Had to be. There was no electric source,’ Sachs told him.
Pulaski said, ‘I’ve been looking for portable guns … machines. But there’re a lot of them.’