Each time I saw the sequence repeated, I felt a different way. The first few times, there was a tension, a voyeuristic sensation, itself almost sexual. And then later, I felt progressively more detached, more analytical. As if I was drifting away, moving back from the monitor. And finally, the entire sequence seemed to break down before my eyes, the bodies losing their human identities altogether, becoming abstractions, elements of design, shifting and moving in dark space.
Theresa said, "This girl is sick."
"It looks that way."
"She is not a victim. Not this one."
"Maybe not."
We watched it again. But I no longer knew why we were watching. Finally I said, "Let's go forward, Theresa."
We had been running the sequence to a certain point on the tape counter, and then going back to run again. So we had seen a part of the tape again and again, but we hadn't gone farther. Almost immediately as we went forward, something remarkable happened. The man stopped pacing and looked sharply off to one side as if he had seen something, or heard something.
"The other man?" I said.
"Perhaps." She pointed to the monitors. "This is the area in the tapes where the shadows do not seem to match up. Now, we know why."
"Something was erased?"
She ran the tape backward. On the side monitor view, we could see the man look up, in the direction of the exit. He gave every appearance that he had seen someone. But he did not appear frightened or guilty.
She zoomed in. The man was just a silhouette. "You can't see anything, can you?"
"Profile."
"What about it?"
"I am looking at the jaw line. Yes. See? The jaw is moving. He is talking."
"Talking to the other man?"
"Or to himself. But he is certainly looking off. And now see? He has sudden new energy."
The man was moving around the conference room. His behavior purposeful. I remembered how confusing this part had been, when I saw it the night before at the police station. But with five cameras, it was clear. We could see exactly what he was doing. He picked up the panties from the floor.
And then he bent over the dead girl, and removed her watch.
"No kidding," I said. "He took her watch."
I could only think of one reason why: the watch must have an inscription. The man put the panties and the watch in his pocket, and was turning to go, when the image froze again. Theresa had stopped it.
"What is it?" I said.
She pointed to one of the five monitors. "There," she said.
She was looking at the side view, from the overall camera. It showed the conference room as seen from the atrium. I saw the silhouette of the girl on the table, and the man inside the conference room.
"Yeah? So?"
"There," she said, pointing. "They forgot to erase that one." In the corner of the screen, I saw a ghostly form. The angle and the lighting were just right to enable us to see him. It was a man.
The third man.
He had come forward, and now was standing in the middle of the atrium, looking toward the killer, inside the conference room. The image of the third man was complete, reflected in the glass. But it was faint.
"Can you get that? Can you make it out?"
"I can try," she said.
The zooms began. She punched in, saw the image decompose. She sharpened it, heightened contrast. The image streaked, and went dull, flat. She coaxed it back, reconstituted it. She moved closer, enlarging it. It was tantalizing. We could almost make an identification.
Almost, but not quite.
"Frame advance," she said.
Now, one by one, the frames clicked ahead. The image of the man was alternately sharper, blurred, sharp.
And then at last, we saw the waiting man clearly.
"No shit," I said.
"You know who he is?"
"Yes," I said. "It's Eddie Sakamura."
Chapter 21
After that, we made swift progress. We knew, without a doubt, that the tapes had been altered and the identity of the killer had been changed. We watched as the killer came out of the room, and moved toward the exit, with a regretful look back at the dead girl.
I said, "How could they change the killer's face in just a few hours?"
"They have very sophisticated mapping software," she said. "It's by far the most advanced in the world. The Japanese are becoming much better in software. Soon they will surpass the Americans in that, as they already have in computers."
"So they did it with better software?"
"Even with the best software it would be daring to try it. And the Japanese are not daring. So I suspect this particular job was not so hard. Because the killer spends most of his time kissing the girl, or in shadow, so you can't see his face. I am guessing they had the idea very late, as an afterthought, to make a change of identity. Because they saw that they only had to change this part coming up... . There, where he passes the mirror."
In the mirror, I saw the face of Eddie Sakamura, clearly. His hand brushing the wall, showing the scar.
"You see," she said, "if they changed that, the rest of the tape could pass. In all the cameras. It was a golden opportunity, and they took it. That is what I think."
On the monitors, Eddie Sakamura went past the mirror, into shadow. She ran it back. "Let's look."
She put up the reflection in the mirror, and step-zoomed in to the face until it broke into blocks. "Ah," she said. "You see the pixels. You see the regularity. Someone has done some retouching here. Here, on the cheekbone, where there is a shadow beneath his eye. Normally you get some irregularity at the edge between two gray scales. Here, the line is cleaned up. It has been repaired. And let me see - "
The image spun laterally.
"Yes. Here, too."
More blocks. I couldn't tell what she was looking at. "What is it?"
"His right hand. Where the scar is. You see, the scar has been added, you can tell from the way the pixels configure."
I couldn't see it, but I took her word for it. "Then who was the actual killer?"
She shook her head. "It will be difficult to determine. We have searched the reflections and we have not found it. There is a final procedure which I did not try, because it is the easiest of all, but it is also the easiest to change. That is to search the shadow detail."
"Shadow detail?"
"Yes, We can try to do image intensification in the black areas of the picture, in the shadows and the silhouettes. There may be a place where there is enough ambient light to enable us to derive a recognizable face. We can try."
She didn't sound enthusiastic about the prospects.
"You don't think it will work?"
She shrugged. "No. But we might as well try. It is all that is left."
"Okay," I said. "Let's do it."
She started to run the tape in reverse, walking Eddie Sakamura backward from the mirror toward the conference room, "Wait a minute," I said. "What happens after the mirror? We haven't looked at that part."
"I looked earlier. He goes under an overhang, and moves away, toward the staircase."
"Let's see it anyway."
"All right."