
Betrayal in the Morgue
Chapter 2
The fluorescent lights hummed overhead as I pushed the mop across the morgue floor, my movements methodical and precise. One week into my new role as janitor, and I'd already developed a routine—start with the examination rooms, then the offices, saving the hallway for last. The same thoroughness that once made me Seattle's most respected forensic pathologist now ensured that no speck of dust escaped my notice.
I paused at the threshold of what had been my examination room, watching as my replacement wheeled in a gurney. Angela's designer heels clicked against the tile as she directed two assistants with the confidence of someone who'd never actually performed a complex autopsy.
"Careful with the positioning," she instructed, her voice carrying that affected European lilt she'd adopted during her time abroad. "We need to maintain proper alignment for photographic documentation."
I gripped my mop tighter, noticing how she'd positioned the body incorrectly for initial measurements. In my mind, I was already dictating corrections—the kind of instinctive precision that came from years of actual practice rather than theoretical study.
"Dr. Martinez," one of the newer assistants whispered as he passed me in the hallway, "your... uh... cleaning technique is very thorough."
I offered him a neutral nod. "Just doing my job."
The irony wasn't lost on me—my hands that once held scalpels with surgical precision now gripped a mop handle. My eyes that once detected microscopic evidence now scanned for dirt tracks on linoleum.
From down the corridor, I heard laughter—Lawrence's deep chuckle intertwined with Angela's melodic giggle. They were coming from my former office.
"Your European approach to forensic pathology is exactly what this department needs," Lawrence was saying as I pushed my cart past the doorway. "Fresh perspective."
Angela's desk—my desk—was now adorned with framed diplomas and medical journals with unbroken spines. My degrees had been replaced with hers, my case photographs removed from the walls.
"Oh, Lawrence," she replied, her hand resting casually on his forearm, "I'm just so grateful for the opportunity."
I kept my expression neutral as I continued down the hall, though something twisted painfully in my chest.
---
Three days later, a second child victim arrived—a nine-year-old girl with injuries eerily similar to our first case. I learned about it from overhearing conversations in the break room while emptying trash bins.
"The bruising patterns are identical," an officer muttered to his partner. "Same distinctive shape."
"Dr. Tucker's handling it," came the reply. "Chief says she has specialized training."
I nearly dropped the garbage bag I was holding.
Later that afternoon, I watched through the observation window as Angela performed the autopsy, her movements hesitant and uncertain. She consulted reference materials multiple times, her brow furrowed in concentration as she struggled with basic procedures.
"The internal hemorrhaging suggests..." she paused, flipping pages in a textbook I recognized as an entry-level forensic pathology guide. "Possible traumatic impact."
Possible. As if there was any question.
I noticed her missing the subtle bone fracture visible on the x-ray displayed beside her—a fracture pattern I'd documented in at least fifteen previous cases.
By evening, Angela's preliminary report was circulating through the department. I caught glimpses of it when emptying office wastebaskets—incomplete documentation, missed evidence markers, and incorrect assessments of injury timing.
---
"Dr. Martinez?"
I looked up from my cleaning supplies in the janitor's closet to find my former assistant standing awkwardly in the doorway, a manila folder clutched to his chest.
"What are you doing here?" I asked, though I already knew.
"I need your help," he whispered, glancing nervously down the hallway before stepping inside and closing the door. "This is the second victim's file."
"James, you know I can't—"
"Please," he interrupted, his voice cracking slightly. "Dr. Tucker missed half the evidence. The bone fractures, the trace fiber analysis, the timestamp discrepancies—none of it's in her report."
I took the folder reluctantly, flipping through pages of inadequate documentation. Within minutes, I'd identified multiple critical oversights.
"The pattern of bruising on the lower extremities matches our first victim," I noted, pointing to a photograph. "And here—see this? That's not consistent with a single impact. Multiple perpetrators, possibly."
James nodded eagerly. "Just like you said about the first case."
I pulled a pen from my pocket and began making notes in the margins, my instincts taking over despite my current position. "These findings need to be properly documented before the official report goes out."
"I'll take care of it," he promised, then hesitated. "Dr. Martinez... be careful. If they find out you're still consulting on cases..."
"I know the risks," I replied, handing back the folder with my annotated notes. "And so do you."
As James slipped away with the improved documentation, I wondered how long we could continue this dangerous game—and what would happen when Lawrence discovered we were still working together behind his back.
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