
"What's her name?" I asked.
"Emily Anne Toussaint. She was on her way to dance class."
"Where?"
"Verdun." He tipped his head toward the adjoining room. "LaManche has begun the post."
I slipped past the detective into the autopsy room.
A photographer was taking pictures while the pathologist made notes and shot Polaroid backups.
I watched LalManche grasp a camera by its side handles, then raise and lower it above the body. As the lens moved in and out of focus a small dot blurred then condensed over one of the wounds in the child's forehead. When the perimeter of the dot grew sharp, LaManche depressed the shutter release. A white square slid out and he pulled it free and added it to a collection on the side counter.
Emily Anne's body bore evidence of the intensive effort to save her life. Her head was partly bandaged, but I could see a clear tube protruding from her scalp, inserted to monitor intracranial pressure. An endotracheal tube ran down her throat and into her trachea and esophagus, placed in order to oxygenate the lungs and to block regurgitation from the stomach. Catheters for IV infusion remained in her subclavian, inguinal, and femoral vessels, and the circular white patches for EKG electrodes were still pasted to her chest.
Such a frantic intervention, almost like an assault. I closed my eyes and felt tears burn the backs of my lids.
I dragged my eyes back to the small body. Emily Anne wore nothing but a plastic hospital bracelet. Next to her lay a pale green hospital gown, bundled clothing, a pink backpack, and a pair of high-top red sneakers.
The harsh fluorescent light. The shining steel and tile. The cold, sterile surgical instruments. A little girl did not belong here.
When I looked up, LaManche's sad eyes met mine. Though neither of us made reference to what lay on the stainless steel, I knew his thoughts. Another child. Another autopsy in this same room. Putting a choke hold on my emotions, I described the progress I was making with my own cases, reassembling the corpses of two bikers who'd been blown apart by their own folly, and asked when anternortem medical records would be available. LaManche told me that the files had been requested and should arrive on Monday.
