Read Six Degrees of Lust Online
Authors: Taylor V. Donovan
Tags: #MLR Press LLC, #Print ISBN#978-1-60820-414-4, #Ebook ISBN# 978-1-60820-415-1
mouth. He pulled up his swim trunks and gave another look at
the two tangled bodies inside the cabana.
He knew there was no point in staying now. The little lamb
wouldn’t be coming out anytime soon and even if he did, the
wolf would be with him.
He didn’t want to talk to the wolf. He’d be destroyed soon
enough.
Not him, though. The lamb was going to be saved, no matter
how long it took… no matter how many sacrifices had to be
made.
After one more look in their direction he turned and ran.
April 21, 2009
New York City
It was cold. Thanks to the freak front that had just passed,
the temperature was in the low twenties. It was windy and it
looked like it would start snowing again any second, making the
recovery process slower than it would have been under normal
weather conditions. Those NYPD divers currently braving the
murky, freezing water of the Hudson River in search of possible
clues or evidence had Sam’s deepest sympathy.
The tourists on the other hand were royally pissing him off.
Battery Park was usually a busy area. Not only was the US Coast
Guard building at one end, but several ferries departed to a
number of touristic destinations as well. Add the Staten Island
Ferry Terminal at the other end and chaos was to be expected.
But not on a Tuesday at almost six o’clock in the evening; not
when it was this cold and all waterfront tours had been suspended
a good three hours ago, due to police investigation.
But there they were, every single one holding a digital or cell
phone camera, recording what they most likely hoped would be
the next viral sensation. Why they thought a body being recovered
from the Hudson was worth their time was beyond him. After all,
the poor guy was already dead. The locals certainly didn’t give a
shit. They just went about their business as usual. But the tourists
didn’t. Did they think the NYPD would bring the body over to
them for closer inspection if only they waited long enough?
Samuel Shaughnessy turned away and gave his full attention
to the body once again. Blond, Caucasian, slim build, five foot
six max, maybe late twenties. He was naked; his belly button was
pierced, a little sparkling numeral eight resting on his abs. The
admissions stamp to Tangerine, a very popular gay club located
8 Taylor V. Donovan
in the South Street area, was faint but still visible on his left hand.
The stamp was the reason why the NYPD had contacted
Sam. It pretty much identified the victim as gay, and the uniforms
on the scene had been smart enough to put a halt to the NYPD/
FBI pissing contest as soon as they saw it.
“This will do for now.” After taking one last picture of the
victim, Bobbie Simmons reached for her case and put the camera
away. “Looks like Lev didn’t take it easy on this one.”
Lev was the name Sam’s team had given to the serial killer of
young gay men with a penchant for Bible passages condemning
homosexuality. The book of Leviticus appeared to be a favorite
of his.
Sam nodded. “Going by what we’ve seen in the reports, he
seems to have the most physical trauma so far.”
So far actually meant out of seven victims over a six month
period. One in Jersey, one in Pennsylvania, one in Connecticut,
and four in NYC.
“So all the victims are NYC residents, Caucasian, male, blond,
short, slim, and in their twenties,” Sam said, focusing on the
guy’s lower back. “Four…five, if our guess is correct, have been
physically abused. And all of them were openly gay.”
He took a closer look at the canvas in which the victim had
been wrapped and stared at the details painted on it. His team had
been on the case for only two days. They were working nonstop,
but Sam had yet to form a concrete theory based on what little
evidence they had seen.
Other than sexual orientation, a sparkly belly button ring in
the shape of a numeral eight that was obviously courtesy of Lev,
a painting on a small canvas, and a Bible verse, all found on or
near the victims, the team really didn’t have much to go on. They
had studied the evidence from the previous crime scenes at least
four times, but had not been able to connect the victims through
their jobs, friends, hobbies…nothing.
“This is significant.” Sam tugged the canvas. “The sparkly
numeral eight is the same he left on all the other victims, but the
six DegRees of Lust
9
other pieces of canvas were as big as a napkin. Take a look at this
one. It’s huge.”
“He left a different Bible passage as well,” Bobbie said.
“Which means the message he’s sending is different this
time.” Duncan Kowalski, Sam’s second in command, observed.
Duncan was one of the smartest men Sam had ever met. His
knowledge on about every possible subject was mind-boggling
sometimes. “Looks like the divers are coming out.”
“Might as well,” Sam said. “I highly doubt they’ll be able to
find anything else.”
“Lev’s been extremely careful thus far,” Bobbie agreed.
“Whatever he wanted us to find, the victim had it on him.”
“Like this huge canvas,” added Duncan. “You’re right,
Sam. We have to figure out what the killer’s trying to say.”
“Something’s definitely changed.” Sam took his cell phone
out of his pocket and hit speed dial, getting an immediate answer.
“Are we good to go?”
“Yeah. We’ll meet with the M.E. in the morning. How are
things by you?”
“Normal chaos, courtesy of three hundred tourists and
their cameras,” Logan Brandenburg, the team’s primary human
behavior analyst, said. “I’m pretty sure they got several close ups
of you, Bobbie, and Duncan. Some of those babies are state of
the art with very powerful zooming lenses. No suspicious activity
otherwise.” He sounded so disappointed it made Sam smile. “I
assume the divers didn’t find anything else?”
“Your assumption is correct, my friend. Bobbie and Duncan
are bagging the evidence now. We’ll be at the pier in ten minutes
and we’re freezing, so hook us up.
“You got it.”
He disconnected the call and walked over to the detective in
charge of the crime scene, a clown with a big mouth that Sam
had known since his days with the NYPD.
10 Taylor V. Donovan
“Shaughnessy.”
“Wilson.”
“We pulled the divers out.”
“I noticed,” Sam said, doing his best to resist a sudden, very
childish impulse to roll his eyes at the detective.
“They stayed down as long as they could,” Wilson told him.
“I don’t think having them freeze their asses off will help you
any. What are they going to find that your fine team hasn’t?” he
asked with the most annoying mocking laugh Sam had heard in
a while. “I mean, it’s been what? A year? It isn’t like you haven’t
had plenty of time to find some clues and leads.” He gave Sam
an obviously fake, “It happens sometimes” sympathetic look.
“Think you’ll catch the bastard? Looks to me you’re losing your
touch.”
Trust this idiot to leave out the fact that his team had only
been assigned the case days ago.
He really wanted to beat the smirk off the detective’s ugly
mug, but in the interest of professionalism Sam settled for
piercing the guy with his cobalt blue eyes.
His voice was firm and clear when he answered though; no
indication as to how much this smug asshole was getting on
his nerves. “Yes, we will catch him.” He stuck his hand out and
shook Wilson’s briefly. “We have everything we need. Can you
please arrange transport for us?”
Without waiting for an answer he went back to his teammates.
Five minutes later they were boarding one of the NYPD speed
boats used to patrol the Hudson and East Rivers. It only took
a few minutes to go from Ellis Island to the Battery Park pier
where the rest of his team was already waiting, along with the
damn tourists and their cameras.
“Here you go, boss.” Alexander Kostas—though everyone
called him Zane—offered him a cup.
“Thanks, man.” Sam took it and raised an eyebrow at the
sight of a familiar green logo.
six DegRees of Lust
11
Duncan reached for his own cup. “Oh, yes!”
“If I find flavored and foamy you’re dead,” Sam said, making
eye contact with Logan.
“Just plain ol’ black, no sugar,” Logan assured him. “Dark
and bitter to match your personality.”
“Bite me.”
“Not tonight, sunshine. I’m working late.”
“They wouldn’t get you anything else.” That came from
Bobbie, who was on permanent conciliatory mode since she had
become a mother five years ago. “They wouldn’t dare.”
“’Cause they know you’ve no appreciation for the finest
things in life,” Duncan finished with a laugh.
“There you go again, Kowalski, showing your roots.” Sam
teased him. “Only a Seattle native would think Starbucks’ pseudo-
coffee is fine.”
“Or that PC is better than Mac.” Emiko Takahashi, or Mik,
was their in-house computer expert and hacker extraordinaire.
“If you make such a false statement in my presence ever again, I
will hurt you.”
“Let me know if you want help, girl,” Zane volunteered.
“Starbucks is the best,” insisted Duncan, obviously with no
regard for his physical well being.
“You guys shouldn’t be drinking coffee anyway.” Logan
pointed at his own cup. “Chai tea latte is the way to go.”
A collective groan was heard as the team made their way to
the two black SUVs waiting for them.
Silence prevailed on the way back to Federal Plaza as everyone
gathered their thoughts. It continued once they were surrounded
by the controlled chaos that was their split-level squad room. Up
a short flight of stairs were the personal, individual offices they
hardly ever used, but the first floor was the place where the job
got done.
They had computers, assorted electronics, boards with
12 Taylor V. Donovan
pictures of victims, their files, evidence, theories, profiles, and
notes all over the place. There was a huge conference table,
snacks and drinks station, and a sleeping couch.
This room had been theirs from the moment Sam was given
the order to put a highly specialized team together for the Hate
Crimes Division of the FBI; a team that specifically dealt with
crimes of a religious nature or against the LGBT community.
Sam had personally handpicked his teammates six years ago,
and not once had he found reason to regret his choices. They
worked like a well oiled machine and had a perfect score solving
the cases that landed on their desks. Their most recent assignment
seemed to be a hard one to crack, but Sam was confident his
team would be able to make some significant progress, hopefully
before any more victims turned up.
Sam took off his jacket and rolled up his sleeves, getting
comfortable for at least an hour of brainstorming. He knew his
team well enough. They needed an idea of why, after six bodies,
all found naked, the perp had decided to wrap victim number
seven in a gigantic canvas with a new drawing and his preaching
stenciled all over it.
“So, even though this canvas is so big it could be used
for maritime purposes, I’m going to take a wild guess and say
it’ll match the ones Lev’s used before,” Sam said to no one in
particular.
“I agree,” Mik said. “Once I get the report from the lab and
confirm they’re the same I’ll trace its origin and speak with the
maker. Maybe they keep records of their buyers.” They all knew
canvases could be pretty generic, but Sam had no doubt she
would find the maker, at the very least.
“See if our victim has been reported missing,” he ordered
Bobbie.
“On it, boss.”
“That canvas was treated and stretched and definitely prepared
for paintings, not to cover a boat,” Logan said, glancing at Sam.
“I remember this from art class.”
six DegRees of Lust
13
“Lovely,” Sam muttered.
“What’s lovely?” asked Zane. “What am I missing?”
“Nothing.” The whole art thing hit a nerve or five on a very
personal level, but Sam wasn’t getting into it. “Our Lev has gone
Van Gogh on us.”
“Or he was Van Gogh and decided to go Ted Bundy at some
point,” added Duncan. “The canvas is not paint by numbers by
any stretch of the imagination. It’s a detailed work consistent with
Lev’s religious theme and although I’m not an art connoisseur,
I’m going to say he’s pretty damn good.”
“Mik, how are we doing with the footage collected from the
toll plazas? Do you have any suspicious vehicles yet?” Sam turned
around and addressed her back because, as usual, she was giving
her full attention to her computer screen.
“After watching hundreds of hours of footage I’ve narrowed