“What have you got so far?” she asked crisply, snapping on a pair of latex gloves.
“Advanced putrefaction and seventeen-millimeter maggots. This guy’s been here for a while.”
She wrinkled her nose. “We can tell that from the smell. Can you be a little more specific?”
“Best guess, four to five days, but in this humidity…” Tony shrugged. “We’ll know more when we get him on the slab.”
“Cause of death?”
His eyes twinkled. “Oh, you’re going to love this.”
They moved in unison to the body and squatted.
With his gloved hands, Tony turned the corpse’s head so they could see the right side of his face, which was severely swollen and discolored.
Extracting a pen from his pocket, he pointed to a spot near the jawline.
“What are we looking at?” Mitchell asked curiously.
“Puncture wounds. Skin necrosis is pretty severe so you have to look hard to spot them. See here?”
“What made them?” Forgetting about her previous wariness around Tony, Evangeline moved in closer to get a better look.
He gave her a sidelong glance when her shoulder brushed against his. “Would you believe, fangs?”
He laughed at her reaction. “No need to sharpen the wooden stakes just yet. I don’t think we’re dealing with a vampire. See this dried crusty stuff on his skin? I’m pretty sure that’s venom, probably mixed in with a little pus.”
A thrill of foreboding raced up Evangeline’s spine. She had a bad feeling she knew what was coming next. And for her, dealing with the undead would have been infinitely preferable.
“Holy shit.” Mitchell stared at the body in awe.
“You saying this guy died from a snakebite?”
“Jesus.”
A wave of nausea rolled through Evangeline’s stomach, and her skin started to crawl. She didn’t like snakes.
Evangeline was pretty sure her almost pathologi-cal loathing could be traced back to a specific incident in her childhood, while she’d been visiting her grandmother in the country. They’d been fishing from the bank of a bayou, and Evangeline had been so intent on the bobble of her little cork floater among the lily pads, she hadn’t noticed the huge cottonmouth that had crawled out from underneath the rotting log she’d perched on.
“Evie, honey, don’t you move a muscle. You hear me?” her grandmother had said in a hushed tone.
Evangeline had started to ask why, but then she froze when she saw the look on her grandmother’s face. She glanced down to find a thick, ropey body coiling around her ankle.
She’d seen snakes before, plenty of them. Her brother used to catch garter snakes in the yard and keep them in a cage in his bedroom.
But a cottonmouth was a far cry from a harmless garter snake.
The power of those sinewy muscles as they bunched around her leg both terrified and repulsed her. As she watched in horrified fascination, the snake lifted its black, leathery head and, tongue flicking, stared back at her.
For what seemed an eternity, Evangeline had sat there motionless, barely breathing. Finally, just as her grandmother arrived with a garden hoe, the snake unwound itself from her leg and glided to the water where it swam, head up, into a patch of cypress stumps.
But for the rest of the day, Evangeline couldn’t get the image of that serpent out of her head. She imagined it crawling back up out of the swamp and following her home.
Even safely inside her grandmother’s house, she saw that thick, patterned body everywhere—draped over a chair, coiled in a doorway, slithering underneath the covers of her bed. The hallucinations had gone on for weeks.
She shuddered now as she stared down at the dead man.
“I found bites on both ankles,” Tony said. “And two on his right hand. When we get him stripped, we may find even more. This guy was a veritable snake magnet.”
“Boy howdy.” Mitchell’s tone was grim, but Evangeline could detect an undercurrent of excitement in his voice. This was something different from their normal caseload of stabbings and shootings.
She wished she could share his enthusiasm, but
Mitchell shifted his weight, balancing himself on the balls of his feet. “Poor bastard must have died in agony.”
“No doubt,” Tony agreed. “Probably suffered heart failure.”
“No chance this was an accident?”
Tony shook his head. “Not likely. Do you know how rare it is for someone to die of a snakebite in this country? There’re only about a hundred and fifty cases a year.”