Color Blind (2 page)

Read Color Blind Online

Authors: Colby Marshall

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #United States, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Women Sleuths, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Psychological Thrillers, #Suspense, #Thrillers, #Psychological

BOOK: Color Blind
5.99Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

Chapter 34

Chapter 35

Chapter 36

Chapter 37

Chapter 38

Chapter 39

Chapter 40

Chapter 41

Chapter 42

Chapter 43

Chapter 44

Chapter 45

Chapter 46

Chapter 47

Chapter 48

Chapter 49

Chapter 50

Chapter 51

Chapter 52

Chapter 53

Chapter 54

Chapter 55

Chapter 56

Chapter 57

Chapter 58

Chapter 59

Chapter 60

Chapter 61

Chapter 62

Chapter 63

Chapter 64

Chapter 65

Chapter 66

Chapter 67

Chapter 68

Chapter 69

Chapter 70

Chapter 71

Prologue

I
saac Keaton shifted the scope of his M16 from the five-year-old tripping on his own shoelaces to a forty-year-old guy ten paces to the side of the boy outside the Futureland Chow Station. Kid might grow up to be stupid and pathetic like the man Isaac was about to gun down, but hell, he might’ve spared the next great. Kid might grow up to be just like Isaac, hoping and praying someone would take out his parents with two quick shots. Isaac laughed.

Idiots, all of them. Treat kids like they need to be protected from these kinds of valuable experiences. Teach ’em tolerance, make sure they know it’s okay to cry. Media screamed for a national campaign to stop school bullying after those two kids lit up that high school in Colorado. Parents freaked out about what kind of music their teens listened to, whether or not a trench coat hung in someone’s closet. Morons didn’t realize that if those two kids hadn’t shot up the school and then themselves, they’d have had a lot worse on their hands a couple decades later.

They’d have had someone like
him
.

The guy in Isaac’s crosshairs licked at his ice cream cone, which dripped over his grubby fingers. Maybe coincidence. Could be fate. Either way, this dude happened to be sitting right in Isaac’s line of vision under the cable that carried the little fairy from the top castle turret over the park of wide-eyed, middle-class imbeciles every night. He glanced at his stopwatch. Thirty seconds. Twenty. Ten.

Time to fly.

He squeezed off round one, and a hundred faces pinched and looked in his direction. He watched the ice cream guy slam away from him into the bench he was sitting on.

No time to think. Anyone obviously over thirty equals goner. The grayer the head, the easier the mark. He took down three more: a tall, slim black woman in faded jeans, dude with a lip ring, fat Indian chick. The crowd ran in different directions, some into each other, others ducking. Then they all scattered, screamed. Isaac’s head was quiet. His scope slipped over two kids, up to the dad holding one’s hand, urging the kid to run.
Bang.

The dad dropped. Isaac coursed over the crowd. Old Asian man, brunette with a fanny pack. A ginger-haired theme park worker yelling into his walkie-talkie. One by fucking one.

When he had fewer fresh targets than people he’d already hit, he finally heard them coming. He laid the M16 on the ground, turned around to face them, hands in the air. They wouldn’t understand, of course. Give them time.

“Freeze!” the lead cop yelled, gun trained on Isaac’s chest. Guy had probably never shot a man in his life.

Isaac ducked his head. “Don’t shoot!”

His hands were twisted behind his back, his face pressed into the floor. He had the right to remain silent . . .

But he didn’t want to remain silent. These half-wits had no idea.

The fun was just beginning.

“D
ad! Have you seen my keys?”

Jenna Ramey turned over couch cushions, squatted to look under the baby’s playpen. “Dad!”

Her father appeared in the hallway, holding Ayana on his hip. Jenna’s towheaded daughter held her pacifier in one hand and Jenna’s ring of keys in the other. In her thirty years of life before her daughter, Jenna had never once lost her keys. Now they found their way out of her purse daily.

“Whoever thought to make giant key rings into toys, I’d like to see,” Vern said.

Jenna smiled and pecked her father’s cheek. “Ayana, can Mommy have those?”

Her little girl plugged her paci in her mouth but stretched the keys toward Jenna.

“Thank you, miss,” Jenna said, and she kissed Ayana’s forehead. Then, to her father, “I’ll be back in a few hours, I hope. Don’t know the damage yet.”

“Must be bad if they’re calling in a bigwig like you.”

Jenna pressed her middle finger against her thumb and flicked her dad in the arm. “I was an FBI profiler, Dad. I can detect sarcasm.”

“Go get ’em, El Tigre.”

•   •   •

T
he sun shined in Jenna’s eyes the whole drive to the Orlando Police Department. Her duct tape job held the visor on but didn’t allow her to fold the thing down. So helpful.

While en route, she’d talked to Supervisory Special Agent Hank Ellis, the man she’d reported to and worked with every day back when she was with the FBI’s Behavioral Analysis Unit.

“Let me get this straight, Hank. You guys
caught
a serial killer operating in mid-Florida this morning, and
now
you’re inviting me in? No offense, but what for?”

“Oh, boy,” Hank replied, his frustration seeping through. “Thought they’d told you more when they called you from the OPD. Shit.”

“Hank, I’d love to rant with you about the incompetent lackey who called me, but I’d rather know what I’m walking into.”

“Right. You’re right. I apologize. Yes, we caught a serial, but not one only operating in Florida. They’ve been up and down the East Coast. You already know about them.”

“Them?” Jenna couldn’t hold in her surprise. “You can’t mean what I think you mean.”

She pulled into the OPD parking lot.

“Yep,” Hank said. “The Gemini. But we only caught one of the pair, and he says he’ll
only
talk to you.”

O
fficer Mel Nelson met Jenna at the door and led her through the halls toward the interrogation room. “So cool to meet you in person, Dr. Ramey. Heard all about you, of course.”

If only her reputation wouldn’t precede her quite so fast. “Thanks. Catch me up, will you? I know next to nothing.”

Hank had told her enough, but getting it from different sides helped. Someone might throw in a crucial detail.

Nelson straightened, seemed to shake off the starstruck. His short steps quickened, stocky frame moving faster to impress. “Right. Suspect apprehended at the top of the castle. Had already put down his weapon, hands up. The gun was an M16, standard. Twenty dead, seven more wounded. Suspect is Isaac Keaton of Norton, Virginia. Still trying to run backgrounds, but not much on the guy. Asked for you almost right off, didn’t say why. They said you were coming with the BAU. I thought you weren’t with the BAU anymore. Thought you were in a private practice now.”

Typical.
Someone reads about you in a textbook, they think you’re as good as best friends, or at least next-door neighbors.

“I’m not,” Jenna said. “And I am.”

They’d come to a closed door, which Nelson put his hand to. “You gonna do that color thing on him?”

Grapheme-color synesthesia—Jenna’s ticket to the spotlight for better or for worse. Since she could remember, she’d associated everything—letters, days, numbers, people—with colors.

“It doesn’t work like that,” she said and nodded toward the door.

Nelson twisted the handle. Inside, the man standing in front of the one-way window turned to them.

“Detective Arnold Richards, this is Dr. Jenna Ramey,” Nelson said.

The hulking bald figure stretched out his palm. “Dr. Ramey. Good of you to come. BAU team is in the air. They’ll be here within the hour, but we thought it best to bring you in right away. I’m the head of the task force for the park shootings.”

Chin lifted, smile that didn’t extend to his cheeks. That extra note of authority in his voice telling her she was only there because it was
his
idea.

The man gave Jenna a curt nod, and Jenna nodded back.

Richards turned to Officer Nelson. “Thank you, Moose.”

Nelson backed out and closed the door. Richards’s eyes followed him, then cut to Jenna. “He’s Canadian.”

He focused on the two-way mirror, and Jenna did the same. Aside from his hunched shoulders and the bags under his eyes, the man sitting in interrogation on the other side of the glass might’ve walked straight out of an Abercrombie & Fitch catalog. His fawn hair was cut in a trendy style that was shaggy but still neat, maybe even highlighted. Clean-shaven, strong jaw. Fit.

“Do you mind if I ask what color you see him as?” Richards asked.

“No, I don’t mind,” Jenna replied, “but I can’t answer that. I haven’t met him yet.”

“Your interviews said it didn’t have anything to do with what you felt about a person.”

Isaac Keaton rocked back and forth in his metal chair, his palms flat against his dark trousers. Interesting. Jenna closed her eyes, then reopened them to look again, specifically attempting to gauge color. Nothing.

“It doesn’t. Anything on the other shooter?”

Detective Richards’s hands went to his pockets, jingled his keys. “Ballistics not back yet, but looks like a Magnum .308. Six dead.”

Jenna blinked a few times as she tried to compute. “Wait a second. Officer Nelson said twenty dead, seven wounded. That by him”—she nodded toward Keaton—“or is that total?”

“Total,” Richards replied. “Fourteen dead and three wounded near the castle, six more on the other side of the park, DOA. Four wounded there. Near the ferry.”

Jenna filed away the information about the second shooter and returned her attention to Keaton. “And what of the interaction with the suspect?”

Richards’s brows creased. “Arresting officer said he’d already ceased fire, dropped his gun. He went easy.”

“Too easy,” Jenna mumbled. This guy either
really
didn’t want to die, or he
really
wanted to be caught. Or both. “And they recovered Keaton’s weapon?”

“Mm-hm. M16, standard issue. Stolen, probably. We’re on it. Recovered one slug at the ferry site, hopefully others from the victims. For twins, their gun choices pack a different punch.”

Thirty rounds, and Keaton squeezed off a good many of them. Still, it’d take some time for police to hear the shooting, react, and find where it was coming from. In theory, firing an automatic rifle—even in single fire mode—he should’ve managed to fire many more.

Jenna was speaking before she realized the words were coming out. “The newspapers might’ve nicknamed them the Gemini, but don’t be fooled. Chances are they’ll be two entirely different beasts.”

“Meaning?” Richards asked.

Jenna stared one last time at Isaac Keaton from behind the glass, where she could view him as a completely objective party. Then she stepped toward the door to the interrogation room. She might not still be with the branch of the FBI that was called in to analyze the behavioral patterns of mass murderers, kidnappers, and serial rapists, but once you’d studied these monsters, you didn’t forget how they worked. To get into their heads and discover their motivations took some part of your humanity, not because you became them, but because you had to understand why they would possibly do what they did. “In serial pairs, one will always be dominant. The other is the follower, submissive. In other words, one is the soldier, the other the general. Before we do anything else, we have to figure out which one we have.”

Other books

Smoke in Mirrors by Jayne Ann Krentz
The Center of the World by Thomas van Essen
Murder in Ballyhasset by Noreen Mayer
Cogling by Jordan Elizabeth
Against the Tide by Nikki Groom
Girl In The Woods by Rose, Aileen
It Had to Be You by Susan Elizabeth Phillips
Mary Ann and Miss Mozart by Ann Turnbull
Beautiful Lies by Jessica Warman