:50:04
I am here to investigate a murder
of a woman named Julia Lynn Niemeyer.
:50:11
You wouldn't know her, would you?
:50:14
No.
:50:16
I have reason to believe
the killer is interested in poetry.
:50:19
Possibly in this feminist poetry in particular.
:50:23
What led me to this is, I found
a bloodstained book at the crime scene.
:50:26
Rage in the Womb. Do you know the book?
:50:30
Of course.
:50:33
I'm sure it was her book.
She had this little feminist poetry section...
:50:38
on her desk, and there was a space
where the book was missing. I'm sure he...
:50:42
the killer, went through it.
:50:45
And that makes you think
he's interested in feminist poetry?
:50:48
That, and the fact that...
:50:52
he sent a poem to her post office box
a few days after he killed her.
:50:56
It was an original poem, and there was
a line in it that convinced me...
:50:59
that he's killed before and will,
no doubt, kill again.
:51:02
Look, Miss... Ms. McCan'thy...
:51:06
I don't want to tell you the condition in
which I found the Niemeyer woman.
:51:10
But I will tell you the poem
was written in human blood.
:51:13
God.
:51:14
His own, probably,
which gives you some idea...
:51:16
of the kind of psychopath
we're dealing with.
:51:19
What is it you want from me?
:51:22
I need...
:51:27
I need feedback on this Rage in the Womb.
What is it about? What kind of book is it?
:51:32
I need to know if you've had
strange men in your store...
:51:35
specifically men in their 30s...
:51:36
buying feminist literature, acting angry,
or furtive, or in any way out of the ordinary.
:51:44
Rage in the Womb is an angry book.
It's a polemic...
:51:47
a broadside against many things,
violence perpetuated on women in specific.
:51:52
I think I sold my last copy a month ago.
:51:55
To a man or a woman?
:51:57
I don't think I've ever sold a copy to a man.