She slipped into the cab and got settled, thinking for a moment. The one with the woman with the liquified organs was interesting but probably not appropriate before eating. Actually, quite a few of the very interesting autopsies might be a bit unsettling to somebody without a strong stomach. The suicides that weren't really suicides was a fascinating case for Sherlock and John, and she'd been intrigued when she'd read John's blog post about it, but her part in the case had been small. And then she had it.
"There was a man I had to autopsy who had seemingly died of natural causes," she said. "He came into my morgue fully clothed, and as I undressed him I saw that every inch of his body that was under clothing was covered in tattoos. I documented every one of them and I noticed they were all fresh. The oldest one was maybe three weeks old. Sherlock was called in and it turned out the killer had kept the man seated and tattooed his life history on the man before he killed him because he'd had a psychotic break. He was continuing on another victim when he was caught."