The Broken Souls (Carson Ryder, Book 3) Page 14
Sally gave me a so-what look. “They were the least of her injuries.”
“Can I meet her, Sal? Talk to her?”
“She’s recovering from horror, Carson. I’m not sure she should relive those moments. Why?”
“I’ve got a dead girl who had broken fingers, torture, probably. Maybe it’s the same perp.”
“Can you wait a bit? Let my victim get home, return to familiar surroundings, familiar routine?”
“The perp’s a psycho. If he’s on the road I think he is, there’s another woman in his sights right now.”
Sal closed her eyes and shook her head.
“Carson …”
“We’ve got no leads, Sal. The guy’s a cipher.”
Sally frowned. Fumbled through her purse for her phone.
“Let me make a call.”
A half-hour later we were sitting beside the bed of Karen Fairchild. She was petite and Caucasian, dark-haired, with a voice still husky from screaming and being choked. Her face was swathed in white bandages tinted pink at the edges with antibiotic cream. Despite her travails, she greeted me without apprehension, and I gathered Sally had both explained the reason for my visit and presented me in a kindly light.
One of Ms Fairchild’s hands was contained in a soft brace, the fingers supported. On the other hand, several fingertips were bandaged from nails tearing off as she’d defended herself. No traces of the perp’s blood or skin had been found beneath Ms Fairchild’s nails, or anywhere on her body, and Forensics had determined Ms Fairchild had been thoroughly bathed before being dropped – literally – at the hospital.
Like the trip to the hospital, the bathing was anomalous, a moment of careful thought and organization in what the victim recalled as a night of psychotic mania in a barn.
“It wasn’t a horse or cow barn,” she said, answering one of several questions I’d asked. “It was probably an equipment barn.”
“You can tell?” I asked.
“It was part of my training at blind school, Detective Ryder. The teachers would bring us samples of dirt from an animal barn, and we’d have to differentiate it from a barn used for storing equipment.”
“What’s that supposed to teach you?” I asked, amazed.
The white ball of swaths and dressings laughed through the exposed mouth, jiggling the tubes tracking into her arm. I looked at Sal. She held a laugh tucked behind her hand.
“Ouch, my leg,” I said.
The pile of bandages smiled through lips still bruised and puffy from stitches.
“Sorry, Detective. I grew up on a farm west of Movella, Mississippi, know a bit about them. I smelled grease, fertilizer, plain old dirt. Hay was around. But I didn’t smell any animals nearby. They have a strong odor, even from a distance. The more I think about it, I suspect the barn hadn’t been used in a while, years maybe. There was a smell of mold and decay, like the hay was old.”
“And you don’t know how long you were held at the barn?”
The laugh disappeared. “Time didn’t have any meaning that night.”
“Do you remember when your fingers were broken?”
“It was very painful. It was when he was …on top of me. He had my hand clenched in his. While he was pushing he kept ordering me to say I loved him. I wasn’t saying it loud enough, and he kept bending my fingers further and further backward until I was screaming the words. I finally passed out.”
“What do you remember about his voice?”
“A loud whisper, like he was hiding his real voice. Even so, it was an incredibly angry voice.”
“You woke up at the hospital.”
“When I realized I was alive, I was amazed. He kept telling me I was going to die. Laughing as he said it.” She turned her head in my direction. “I’m not complaining, Detective Ryder. You’re excellent company. But aren’t you a homicide detective?”
“My partner and I are also part of a special team, the Psychopathological and Sociopathological Investigative Team. We deal with disturbed minds. I know it’s tough to tell us these things, but, trust me, we learn from each story. It adds to our store of knowledge about such criminals.”
“Crazy people,” the bandages said, sorrow beneath the voice. “Not just a little crazy, but like from another world.”
“Yes.”
She looked straight at me as if she had perfect vision and her eyes weren’t covered in gauze.
“Then you’ve smelled it, Detective Ryder.”
“I’m sorry. I’m not sure what you mean.”
“Smelled insanity.”
“I never knew you could smell insanity.”
Her voice tightened with the memory. “It’s a foul, ugly smell. I couldn’t smell it at first, when he was just talking to me, pleasant, almost reasonable. Then he started getting angry for no reason. That’s when I noticed the smell. It got stronger as he …handled his needs. Like smoke getting thicker.”
“What’s it smell like?” Sal asked, her voice a whisper. “Insanity?”
Karen Fairchild shook her head.
“There aren’t any words for it. You have to be there.”
CHAPTER 25
Lucas lay on the floor of his office, blinds drawn, absentmindedly watching his new television. He’d also bought a chair and desk at Staples. The TV sat on the desk with the volume low. The blonde woman with the dead eyes and paste-on smile was gesturing at letters. It seemed she’d been gesturing at the stupid letters most of Lucas’s life. He wondered what she’d be like to fuck, figured it would be some kind of appliance, like a toaster.
“Bend over, hon, I need to set you on medium dark.”
Lucas chuckled to himself and studied the televised puzzle. The answer on the board was a place name. Someone yapped about buying a letter, a consonant. Lights flashed, letters turned. Four words, Lucas mused, letters numbering three, four, five and eight.
N00 0000
00000 0X000N00
Lucas yawned, mumbled, “New York Stock Exchange.” The contestant didn’t see it, her mouth open like a cow.
“Moronic bitch!” Lucas yelled. “Retard.”
He caught himself. Closed his eyes. Saw a man with a button nose and lopsided grin running through a peaceful woods.
Mumbled, “Sorry, Freddy.”
Lucas drowsed through the other channels, wishing he had cable, but that took more complete identity. They’d be watching carefully for him to create identity.
Lucas paused on a group of half-naked people shooting flaming arrows at a coconut, a commercial for another television show. He’d seen the show, people with various personality deficiencies dropped in a jungle and trying to out-think another group of the similarly afflicted.
Everything was so stupid. But some of the women were hotties, one in particular, a blonde who wore a leather thong around her neck, like a collar. She always looked wet and sticky, like she was sweating honey.
I’ll make you sweat, hon…
Lucas masturbated into yesterday’s underwear, then stretched out on his sleeping bag, crossing his arms behind his head. He’d gone to a sporting goods store and bought a sleeping bag and an inflatable mattress. If, for some reason, he had to vacate quickly, the bag would be useful beneath a bridge or wherever he would hide.
It couldn’t come to that. This was his game and he had to avoid mistakes. Like attending that damn funeral. But there were protocols to be observed. The Ritual of Condolence. The respect due one who has passed away.
He owed her. She was an innocent.
Lucas owed Dr Rudolnick for many things, but not his life. The psychiatrist hadn’t blundered into the fire, but made it his choice. Granted, he’d not had much latitude in his choices. That was the way it had always worked.
Lucas felt anger rising from deep in his groin, heating his belly. Felt his jaw clench, hands ball into fists.
“The clouds, Lucas,” Rudolnick said from just behind Lucas’s ear. “Let the anger drift away on the clouds.”
Lucas let the calm
wash through him for several minutes. He stood and took his position behind his most important purchase, a Celestron C5 with the 1.25 inch, 10mm eyepiece, the best spotter’s scope in the sporting goods store, an optical marvel. It was dark in Racine Kincannon’s office, the lights off, a silver flask of whiskey on his desk. Lucas cranked the lens to a higher power. Saw a TV monitor on a credenza, a woman giving a guy head. A porn flick, Racine Kincannon at work.
Crandell would be out on the streets, searching. A humiliated Crandell, not a pleasant thought. It might not be good to go out in the day, but Lucas crept down the back steps, got in his car, a simple Subaru Outback, two years old, bought for cash. He would have loved to keep one of the machines delivered to the Hooleys – or another from the fine selection in the Quonset hut – but the Subaru was anonymous. It had dealer tags; two more weeks before they expired.
Lucas drove to a phone on the outside wall of a convenience store, hoping Racine had finished his business. Probably on the underside of his desk.
“Hello, Race, long time no see.”
Silence. Lucas smiled and wished he could make some reference to the porn flick.
“How ya doin’, Lucas?” Racine finally said, a theatrical drawl in his voice covering his bewilderment. Just like Racine Kincannon, Lucas thought, always playing the good ol’ boy that somehow got stuck in a two-thousand-dollar suit.
“I’m fine, Racine. Nice out here.”
“Y’know, Lucas, you still got some treatment coming before you should, uh, be out and running around.”
Racine pretending Lucas had a bad case of bronchitis. “Another week of antibiotics and you’ll kick that little problem, son.“
“Gee, I don’t believe parts of that, Race. The getting-out part especially.”
“This is hard on all of us, Lucas. We should talk. Meet somewhere.”
“I saw Crandell recently, you know.”
The silence told Lucas that Racine hadn’t heard of the event at the funeral parlor. Excellent. Crandell didn’t boast of his failures, which was helpful to Lucas’s plan.
“When was that, Lucas?” Racine said, a lousy rendition of blasé in his voice.
“Within a day, Race. We spoke for a bit. He’s added a couple pounds, cut a couple inches off his hair, changed his cologne to something heavier. But it was the Crandell of old.”
Silence. The weight, hair, and cologne information would verify that Lucas had indeed met Crandell. Lucas could almost hear the gears turning in Racine Kincannon’s head. Slowly, as if coated with rust, but grinding nonetheless.
Lucas said, “I guess the next question is, Why am I still here? You know Crandell’s success rate. I was asking myself that question. You know what I came up with, Racine?”
“I got an idea or two,” Racine said, defensive.
No you don’t Race, Lucas thought. You’ve never had an idea in your life.
“What are your ideas, Race?”
“Why don’t you tell me yours?” Racine Kincannon suggested. “See if we’re on the same page.”
Lucas gave it a moment of dramatic pause. “I think I’ve got you to thank, Racine. I think you maybe came to a realization. You always were the thinker.”
Racine was blindsided. The silence again. Lucas said, “Did you hear me, Race? I said, thanks. If you were a part of things, that is.”
Finally, Racine Kincannon said, “We really should talk, Lucas. Maybe it doesn’t have to be like this. Sometimes things that look good one day don’t look so good the next, you got me?”
“A lot of things look different out here, Racine. Maybe Crandell just screwed up. There were people around. But one second his hand is moving me to the car, the next minute I’m walking away. Coincidence, maybe. But if not, thanks, Racine. I’m thinking maybe you know the potency of a good alliance. Of course, the best alliance is where each partner is a specialist, right? Two talented people taking something to new heights.”
“You said two partners, Lucas.”
“Dos.”
“Huh?”
“Nothing. I’ll call later.”
“Listen, Lucas, how about –”
Lucas hung up the phone. That would do for now. He jumped in the Subaru and drove back to his insecurities business, slow and careful, don’t want the police to enter the equation. He sat at the desk and aimed the Celestron at the office building. The worst thing he could see would be a meeting of all the brothers, Crandell included. That would be a disaster.
Instead, he saw Racine Kincannon at his desk, door closed, pouring a drink from his ever-present flask. Lucas cranked the power up a notch and it was like looking into a flattened version of Racine Kincannon’s face from three feet away. Lucas saw indecision, which he’d expected, and fear, which he had hoped for. Then, after ten minutes, he saw a touch of a smile, Racine Kincannon grinding his way to a decision.
“Thank you,” Lucas whispered to the man upstairs.
CHAPTER 26
A ringing. I could actually see the sound, like a train bearing down on me. Just before being slammed I opened my eyes and grabbed the bedside phone, fumbled it to my face, turned it right-side up.
“Nmh?”
“Carson, it’s Clair Peltier.”
“Mmph?”
“You’re not awake, I take it?”
I stifled a yawn, shook my head. “What time is it?”
“Six-twenty. Since you’re obviously not at work, how about you stop by the morgue on your way in? I’ve dredged up some interesting information. Bring Harry, too.”
I blinked at the clock on the opposite bedside table as it blinked from 6.20 to 6.21.
“Answer me one question, Clair. When do you sleep?”
“I’ll sleep when I’m dead, Ryder. See you in a few.”
Harry and I walked into the morgue at half past seven, me jamming my shirttails into my pants, Harry in a sky-blue blazer and plum shirt, yellow pants anchoring the ensemble. Muted for the morgue.
Clair walked us to her office.
“It was four years ago. I didn’t do the post, Daugherty did. I was out of town, too, a symposium on temperature and humidity’s effect on epidermal degradation. Pretty good presentation.”
“Were you lead presenter?” I asked.
She smiled.
I asked, “What made you recall the victim, Clair?”
She tented slender fingers beneath full pink lips. “You, in a way. Talking about Carole Ann Hibney, the woman from the fire, got me thinking about torture. I recalled a conversation with Daugherty about broken fingers, checked with him. Bingo.”
We drew chairs before her desk. Clair opened a report, pulled some photographs from the file, slid them across the desk. Harry grabbed a half-dozen, I picked up the rest. Autopsy photos, a visual record of visible wounds. There were plenty of photos, but there was much to record.
“The damage looks damn familiar,” Harry said.
“Name’s Frederika Holtkamp,” Clair said. “The body was found by hunters in a shack up by Nenemoosha, at the edge of the Delta. Sixty-three years old. A retired teacher. Unmarried. Lived alone. No narcotics in the blood.”
“Look at her hands, Cars,” Harry said, handing me two of his photos.
“Broken digits, like with Franklin,” Clair said. “Nearly identical wounds and slashes, including the neck wounds.”
“When did you say this happened?” I asked, shuffling through the pictures.
“Four years ago.”
“The vic’s name again?” Harry asked. Clair spelled it out. Harry excused himself, pulled his cell, stepped to the hall to start gathering information.
Harry reappeared a minute later, dropping his phone into his pocket.
“It was a county case with help from the state boys. Unsolved. Never had a suspect.”
It was time to move toward Nenemoosha. We thanked Clair for her vigilance. Harry said he’d meet me in the lobby and headed to the restroom. I slipped on my jacket.
“Tough one?” Clair asked.
> “Lots of tentacles but no octopus.”
Her face softened into concern. She touched my arm. Her fingertips felt warm and dry.
“You feeling all right, Carson?”
“Sure.”
“Not coming down with anything?”
“I, ah…it’s personal stuff, Clair. Nothing major.”
I turned away but felt her gaze, as if the intense blue of her eyes had weight and volume. Words welled unbidden from my throat, burst across my lips. “My girlfriend and I are having big problems, Clair. I found out she’s seeing another man.”
Clair made a sound of sympathy and shook her head. She stepped forward and I found myself wrapped in her arms. Her hands were tight on my back and her breasts pressed warmth into my belly. I felt the beating of her heart. Her hair smelled like sunlight on peaches. She leaned back and our eyes stared into each other’s. They always left me breathless, and now was no exception.
“I’m sorry, Clair. It’s my business. I shouldn’t have…”
“Don’t apologize. I’m glad you told me.”
“It’s been a weird few days.”
“Do you want her to return, Carson?”
“I have a feeling I’m noncompetitive. The guy she’s seeing has money out his wazoo and looks like Adonis’s GQ brother.”
She brushed hair from my eyes with her palm.
“I worry about you, Carson. Please take care of yourself.”
I don’t know why, but I kissed her temple. I turned away and stumbled down the hall like a drunk.
Harry had called the County Sheriff’s Office to ask about the Frederika Holtkamp case, and was given Sergeant Cade Barlow. Surly on the phone, Barlow was worse in person, treating us like we’d urinated in his shoes.
“The State boys took the case over. You want to know more, ask them.”
Barlow stood in the entrance to his office, no invitation inside. He was a tall, bone-knuckled guy in his early fifties, weatherbeaten, bags under crinkle-corner eyes. The broken veins of a serious drinker threaded his nose and cheeks. His teeth were horsy and yellow.
Harry said, “We’d like to see where it happened, the scene.”
“It’s a distance.”