Color Blind (21 page)

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Authors: Jonathan Santlofer

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Thrillers, #Suspense

BOOK: Color Blind
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She laughs. “Wow, what lashes you’ve got. Too bad you’re not a girl.”

He’s heard that before, doesn’t much care for it, but he won’t let it upset him, not now. He sets the shades back in place, asks, “How much?”

“Depends on what you want.”

“Well…”He peers over the sunglasses and offers another 007 wink. “If you’ve got a place, I’d sure like to go there.”

“It’ll cost you.”

“I’ve got a hundred.”

“Fine,” she says, “but I need it up front.”

He reaches for the bills folded in his coverall pocket.

“What’s that?”

“Oh. This?” He tugs out a paintbrush. “I’m an artist.”

“Really?” she says, without much enthusiasm.

“Maybe I’ll paint you someday. I mean, with your carnation-pink skin and goldenrod hair, you like, inspire me.”

“Yeah, sure,” she says, laughing. “But for the record? My hair color? It’s called Frost. Platinum, you know. But what the fuck, you like goldenrod, goldenrod it is.”

“Yeah, I like goldenrod. A lot. I also like sunglow and laser lemon.”

“Wow. You really are an artist, huh?” She touches her bleached-out hair. “But I guess I should tell you now so you won’t be disappointed. I’m not a natural blonde.”

“I guess that means I get two colors for the price of one—goldenrod
and
chestnut. That’s grrrrrrrrrreat!”

The girl trills a laugh.

F
loyd Brown raced down the station house corridor. “Call Perlmutter,” he shouted to a uniform attempting to keep pace with him. “And tell him to meet me.”

Outside, the sky was gray, threatening rain.

Brown slammed the beacon onto the hood of his car and turned the ignition key.
Damn.
A year past retirement, chief of Manhattan’s Special Homicide Squad, and still dragging his ass up to the Bronx, his old stomping ground, a place he had never wanted to be in the first place.

Brown backed the Impala out of its angled spot, switched on the siren, adrenaline coursing through his veins almost as fast as he was feeding gas into the engine.

Another murder. Another painting. That’s what McNally had said.

There was no getting around it now. This would do it for sure. Full-scale mobilization. More cops. More agents. More pressure from the mayor’s office. Brown was certain Tapell would be holding a press conference. She was probably writing her speech right now.

 

K
ate sat beside Perlmutter as he raced the Crown Victoria up to the scene, cars on either side of them blurring while bits and pieces of old cases played in her mind’s eye like fragments of a silent movie: Ruby Pringle, her very last case, heels crunching in the gravel around the dumpster, the young girl’s discarded body, blue eyes with flat black irises staring up at her; Ruby’s face replaced by those sweet blond boys in Long Island City, bound and gagged, bruises on their naked flesh morphing into the autopsy scar peeking out of a stark white sheet covering Richard’s body, until the whiteness went gray and Kate realized she was staring blindly at the clouds through the windshield and there were tears on her cheeks, which she swiped away, but not before Perlmutter had seen them.

“You okay?”

“I’m fine.” Kate readjusted her vision, regarded the boats in the Hudson, quick studies, sketches, really, blurring past the window.

 

I
t was just getting dark when Perlmutter pulled the Crown Victoria beside a couple of Crime Scene vans. It had begun to drizzle and the street lamps painted the rain a sour lemony hue; every few seconds the police car beacons sprayed the street, tenements, and crowd of bystanders bright red; shrill screeching sirens provided the sound track. A scene of almost cinematic beauty. Life imitating art.

“How do they always know?” Perlmutter said to Kate as they passed a couple of newsmen setting up cameras and lights.

Floyd Brown was standing outside the building; Marty Grange, nearby, huddled with Sobieski and Marcusa.

“What’s it look like?” asked Perlmutter.

“Our boy, for sure,” said Brown.

Marty Grange, skin cast in citrus-yellow from the street-lights, glanced over at Kate, then Brown, a look on his face that said:
What the hell is she doing here?

“Freeman’s inside,” said Brown. “Wanted to see one of the crime scenes firsthand, thought maybe it’d help him narrow the profile. Tapell’s here too.” He sighed. “Go have a look.”

 

K
ate and Perlmutter exchanged their shoes for gauze booties, then slipped into lab gowns and plastic gloves. Gold shield in front of his face, Perlmutter made his way past a ring of uniforms and detectives into a tiny foyer, where one of the Crime Scene crew was dusting and a photographer was shooting pictures of bloody handprints on the wall, Kate just behind him. They followed the handprints down a hallway where more techies were dusting and bagging.

Perlmutter was moving faster than Kate, who had slowed down, studying the blood on the wall and floors, reconstructing the scene in her mind, her heart pumping. She turned the corner into the living room. Detectives, couple of uniforms, the tech team, Perlmutter across the room now with Bronx Chief McNally, who was leaning toward Chief of Police Tapell, all of them whispering as if they were in church.

Mitch Freeman was crouched beside them, alternating peeks at the body and the painting—another still life, set up on a cheap metal folding chair. The way he was squinting and swallowing every few seconds, Kate thought he looked like he was fighting hard not to be sick.

Perlmutter seemed to sense it, leaned over, patted the FBI shrink’s shoulder.

Near the center of the room lay a woman—or what was left of her—naked except for torn fishnets down around her ankles and bangle bracelets on her wrists. Kate had difficulty identifying much else about her, torso and abdomen split open, an almost perfect circle of dark blood surrounding the body, as if it were floating in black-cherry aspic.

Every few seconds the photographer’s strobe bleached the scene a stark shocking white and Kate flinched.

“Looks like this one gave him a run for his money,” said Perlmutter, coming across the room. “Crime Scene says she was probably attacked just inside the door, stabbed, but fought, made a run down the hall and was killed in here.”

“Yes,” said Kate. She had been picturing it from the first bloody handprint she’d seen, every move, the horror movie playing in her mind, the hunter and his prey, that buzzing sensation in the back of her mind humming along.

“Not a break-in,” said Brown. “Vic either let him in or brought him home.”

A medical examiner hovering over the dead body pulled a thermometer out of a wound while another technician scraped under the victim’s fingernails.

Kate turned away. She’d seen more than enough.

Brown nodded solemnly at her, then to one of the Crime Scene guys, who had been huddled over the body. “Any ID?” he asked.

“Name’s Mona Johnson. Obvious street pros.” The guy handed over a driver’s license. One set of gloved fingers to another. “Wallet was on the floor,” he said. “Empty except for the Pennsylvania driver’s permit.”

Brown glanced at the tiny photo, a sweet young face, nothing like the broken painted doll lying on the floor. He noted the birth date, did the math: seventeen.

“No cash in the wallet,” said the cop. “Or on the vic. ME is guestimating this went down sometime last night, late, probably toward morning.”

Chief of Police Tapell signaled Brown over. “I’ve scheduled a press conference,” she said. Her deep brown skin had lost a little color, was edging toward gray.

“From the look of it, the press have already gotten the story,” said Brown.

Tapell pulled at the flesh of her neck. “At least I can reassure the citizens of Manhattan and Queens. The psycho seems to favor the Bronx.”

“For now,” said Brown.

“Don’t even say that.” Tapell shot him a look with tired eyes. “You finish up here. We’ll speak later. I’ve gotta talk to the mayor.”

Kate avoided looking at the dead girl, her eyes focused on the painting, a still life, nothing spectacular, no shrill color this time.

Behind her, the body was being bagged and tagged for the morgue.

“Look at this,” said Kate, signaling Brown and the others over. She pointed at the lower right corner of the painting. “Initials. M.L.”

“Jesus,” said Brown. “The psycho is signing them?”

“Someone signed it,” said Kate. “But not our psycho. This isn’t one of his paintings. It’s totally different—on a stretcher, no pencil border, and the color is totally normal.”

“Could it be another one of Martini’s paintings?” asked Grange.

“This is nothing like Martini’s work. This one’s strictly academic.”

“Didn’t Dr. Ernst say that was what our unsub was striving for—a good academic painting?” asked Perlmutter.

“Yes. But he hasn’t pulled it off before, and I don’t think he suddenly could,” said Kate. “This painting has been built up slowly, not like Martini, who painted thin, or our Bronx unsub, who paints heavy and directly.”

“Meaning?” asked Grange.

Kate slipped her reading glasses on for a closer look. “It’s been built up from an underpainting, an old-fashioned technique, one the Italian painters used for centuries. The painter covers the entire canvas with a wash, pigment mixed with a lot of turpentine, usually a burnt sienna or burnt umber—which leaves a stain on the canvas that can be drawn into with a darker sienna or umber, and wiped out with a rag dipped in more turp to create the light areas.”

“Sounds complicated,” said Perlmutter, inspecting the canvas.

“Just slow. Once the light and darks are dry, the painter simply adds the color on top. Look here.” Everyone leaned in. “There are several places where it’s still just brownish underpainting—where the artist hasn’t put on any real color yet.”

“So it’s unfinished?” asked Perlmutter.

“Could be,” said Kate.

“M.L.,” said Brown. “Those initials mean anything to you?”

Kate tried to run them through her art-historical-Rolodex-brain, but came up blank. “No, nothing. But I’m tired.”

“So, where do we find the people who teach this underpainting technique?” asked Grange.

“The more traditional art schools.” Kate thought a minute. “Parsons, the Studio School, maybe the Art Students League on Fifty-seventh Street. That place has been around since the beginning of time.”

M
ichelle Lawrence, School of Visual Arts.

Marilyn Lincoln, the Studio School.

Mark Landau, the Art Students League.

Michelle Lawrence and Marilyn Lincoln were questioned by detectives who interrupted art classes, leading each of the young women into similar hallways reeking of turpentine and linseed oil.

Neither of them had recently given away or sold a painting, nor did they recognize the painting left at the latest crime scene the detectives showed them, nor was either of the young women considered a real suspect, as the cops were fairly certain they were looking for a man.

When questioned about boyfriends, Michelle Lawrence started to cry about a recent breakup from her Advanced Painting instructor, Harvey Blittenberg, a man more than three times her age, who was subsequently queried but released when he produced his teaching schedule (mostly night classes), none of which he had missed except when he was in the sack with Michelle and, more recently, after their breakup, in bed with yet another young woman student, who vouched for him. One of the detectives asked what the hell a man of sixty-plus was doing carrying on with his twenty-year-old students, and Blittenberg answered, “Why not?” adding, “God bless Viagra.” As Harvey Blittenberg was overweight and balding, the detectives didn’t get it; but then, neither detective had ever been a young woman art student in thrall to an older artist teacher—despite the fact that the guy’s art career had been pronounced DOA nearly two decades earlier.

According to Mario Fiorelli, the Oil Techniques instructor at the Art Students League, Mark Landau had missed his last two classes. Fiorelli, a seventy-four-year-old native of Orvieto, Italy, trained in the age-old technique of Florentine underpainting—which he had been proudly passing on to his students—was surprised that Landau had not shown up or called, as Landau was, in his words, “a conscientious
studente
and a very pleasant and quiet young man.”

Fiorelli identified the painting from the Mona Johnson crime scene as almost certainly a painting made in his class, and very probably the work of Mark Landau.

Within hours, troops were assembled, a squadron of SWAT-trained cops decked out in Kevlar vests and polystyrene hoods. The police were not taking any chances. If Mark Landau was their man, they had to act fast—shock and awe the prescription of the day.

Now, with guns and clubs and Mace and gas, the cops went into formation—three cops at the front entrance, three at the rear fire escape, weapons ready—while the SWAT team leader, a short burly man with iron-heeled combat boots, kicked down the door of Mark Landau’s East Village apartment.

 

A
moon landing, that’s what it reminded Kate of.

Landau’s body was on a slab at the morgue, and Crime Scene had already gone over his place. The Special Crime Scene Unit had been dispatched, and though Brown’s murder squad was exhausted, they were all hanging around to see what, if anything, might turn up.

Now Kate and the squad were huddled in the hallway outside of Landau’s apartment, all of them crowding around a monitor, angling for a view of the small screen.

Inside, technicians in protective suits and hoods to guard against the UV light from the cathode-ray camera were scoping out the place in search of human fluids that neither the eye nor the normal crime scene chemicals might detect, the camera transmitting its findings directly to the monitor in the hall, its blue light floating over floors and walls, every so often sending up a white flare that would alert one of the suited technicians to scrape a sample for the lab.

When the technicians emerged a half hour later, Kate’s eyes were stinging from staring at the screen.

The technician pulled off his hood and goggles. “Plenty of samples,” he said. “Might all belong to the vic. But if we’re lucky, your unsub is a secretor. We’ll freeze ’em up and see what we get, but it’ll take a few days.”

“We’ll need those results to go to Quantico,” said Grange, pulling on gloves, and bagging his shoes. He turned to his agents, Marcusa and Sobieski. “Follow up on that.”

They nodded in unison.

Kate pulled on gloves too, as did Brown and Perlmutter.

Grange turned toward Kate but spoke to Brown. “Why is she here?”

Kate looked past Grange, at Brown, and answered the question: “
She
is here to examine the victim’s paintings.”

Grange scowled and thumped into the apartment.

 

L
andau’s small apartment was dark, dust motes dancing drunkenly in the air, walls crowded with paintings, more stacked against baseboards, one on an easel.

Kate took in the half-finished still life on the easel. “There’s the same kind of underpainting here as in the crime scene painting,” she said to Brown. “Let’s bag one to be sure.”

The room was warm, but Kate was shivering. She moved from one painting to another, careful to step around dark bloodstains on the floor.

They had all viewed photos of the crime scene, the butchery performed on Mark Landau’s body. But it was his face that lingered in Kate’s mind, sweet, young, like so many runaways she’d chased after back in Astoria. She was thinking that right now what she wanted most was to find the creep who had done this and do him some damage. Funny, she thought, what it took to galvanize her; what it took to make her want to catch this creep as much as she wanted to find the person responsible for Richard’s murder—an equation she hadn’t ever thought possible. A kid. That’s what it took. It was always the kids that got to her.

“Have Landau’s classmates at the Art Students League been checked out?” asked Perlmutter.

“Doubtful he’d hunt someone so close,” said Grange. “Doesn’t jibe with the MO. More likely, the killer’s a stranger who ingratiated himself with the victim. Came back with him to his apartment, killed him, took the painting.”

“Detectives from General have been interviewing every kid and instructor,” said Brown. “One girl from Landau’s class says she talked to a guy who was outside the building that day, sketching. Girl says the guy wasn’t a regular. She’d never seen him before.”

“Description?” asked Perlmutter.

Brown referred to his notes. “Twenties. good-looking. Her exact words: ‘So cute.’ ” Brown frowned. “They put her together with a sketch artist, but she couldn’t decide if his face was long or round, and no distinguishing characteristics, except that he was wearing sunglasses.”

“Anyone else see this guy?”

“So far, no,” said Brown.

Kate said: “So the killer steals one of Landau’s paintings to use at one of his crime scenes and to throw us off.”

“Almost worked—and it certainly wasted our time. Means our unsub is aware of us now, playing with us.” Gloom clouded Brown’s features. “The really sick ones always like an audience.”

“But why kill the kid?” asked Kate, trying to keep the emotion out of her voice. “Couldn’t he have gotten a painting without killing him?”

“Sure, he could,” said Brown. “But he likes the killing part. Needs it too.”

Kate thought about that, an idea forming.

“According to the coroner’s prelims”—Perlmutter referred to his notes—“time of death is sometime after Landau’s last class at the League. So it’s a good guess the killer picked him up near the school.”


Chose
him, more likely,” said Brown. “He got himself a victim and a painting all rolled into a neat package.”

“Poor kid,” said Perlmutter.

Agent Sobieski shrugged his cocky shoulders, and said, “One less faggot.”

Brown trained his eyes on him, said, “That was inappropriate.” He glanced at Perlmutter, then quickly away. But Kate caught it.

“Sort of reduces your chances for a date this Saturday night, doesn’t it, Sobieski?” she said.

The guy’s face turned red, but he didn’t say anything.

Nicky Perlmutter stripped off his latex gloves as though he’d been contaminated by the scene, and stalked out of the room.

 

W
hy would she do that? Try to hurt him?

Come on, baby, make it hurt so good…

Didn’t she understand that he needed to know? Maybe he should have waited until they were in bed and she was more vulnerable. But he couldn’t. The walk to her place had gotten him too excited.

He stands in the small bathroom, stares into the cracked mirror above the small two-faucet sink, runs his fingers oh-so-tenderly over the scratches on his face. The mirror’s jagged fissure bisects his face—divides his forehead, zigzags through an eye, along the right side of his nose, over his lips—to create two faces from one.

He blinks at his fractured face, the diagonal scratches along his left cheekbone, which he imagines to be shocking pink or maybe wild strawberry, and begins to probe, pick at them with his fingernails, gouging deeper, opening wounds so that now slender rivulets of blood follow the contours of his face—down his cheek, rounding his jaw, splattering like ruby raindrops onto the chipped porcelain sink.

For a moment he actually saw it: a flash of maroon.
Oh, God! Yes!

But seconds later, when he looks again, the sink is merely covered with ebony droplets, his cheek streaked with gray. He turns the cold-water tap, stares as inky whirlpools swirl around the basin and down the drain.

Still, it was a sign.

He glances up at his bisected face in the cracked mirror, throws icy water on his bleeding cheek, which only now has begun to throb.

He replays the chase in his mind. No way she could escape him, not with the lights out. Her feebly groping her way down the hall, while he was fast and sure, his night vision sharp.

He flexes a muscle, checks it in the mirror, the swelling flesh, veins that run through it, thinks he can detect the slightest trace of apricot, or maybe a hint of tickle-me-pink just under the pale gray.

Oh yeah, things are changing.
Ch-ch-ch-ch-changes…

He thinks of the girl’s hair. Definitely goldenrod. Maybe he should have tried to paint her. But he did, in a way.

This time had been good. He saw. He learned. Had not forgotten. He checked the painting at the right moment and saw that he had remembered it perfectly—the mint-green vase on a navy-blue cloth with three razzmatazz-red apples. Exactly as he’d seen it the first time in the boy’s apartment.

Even now, when he gazes at the piece of canvas that he has tacked to the wall, his most recent painting, he swears there is a magenta hue just visible in the wild finger painting he had created with the girl’s blood—and it all began with her, the art
her-story-n,
Kate, with her chestnut hair and blue blue eyes.

The Donna-voice says, “I don’t think her eyes are blue. I think they’re green.”

“You’re wrong, Donna. They’re blue. They have to be.”

Are they? Aren’t they?
He tries to remember. He once knew, didn’t he?

Maybe he’s just tired. He lays his head onto the arm of the beat-up couch to rest, but a song clicks in.
Wake me up before you go-go…

No way he can sleep.

He needs to work awhile, paint, no matter how tired he is, because he wants to impress her.

He selects one of his older, recently finished paintings, a still life, checks to see if the paint has dried, then gets his pencils and sharpener ready and starts to write the familiar names over and over, Brenda, Brandon, Donna, Dylan, and Tony, and then, without even realizing he is doing it, he starts a new name—Katherine McKinnon Rothstein—a bit crudely at first, but soon it flows—
Katherine McKinnon Rothstein, Katherine McKinnon Rothstein, Katherine McKinnon Rothstein—
until, like the other names, it becomes nothing more than a scribble, a blur, written over and over itself, the pencil point wearing down often, the only time he stops is to sharpen it, while he writes her name again and again, creating a lovely graphite gray border for his painting. It makes sense that she should be part of the work, and while he scribbles, an idea comes to him—a way to let her know.
Yes. She has to know. Has to remember.

With his pencil he draws the tiniest pictures into the few open spaces in his painting, and puts it aside, certain now that Kate will know him.

After he finishes he switches on the TV, and is happy to see Ricki Lake and cheers along with her audience at some fat girl who is on stage with Ricki next to some hulking guy with pimples on his face, who is crying. But it starts to make him sad and he switches to cartoons.

His eyelids begin to droop, fatigue finally settling in. He folds himself into a corner of the couch, and there, spotlit in the tender luminescent glow of the TV screen, thumb in his mouth, legs curled under him, he looks like nothing more than a sad scared little boy with scarlet scratches on his cheek. He giggles at the cartoons, prays the miracle will happen again so that he can see them in color, thinks about Central Park and the famous landmark building, the San Remo. Soon he must see if he remembers correctly—if the art
her-story-n’
s eyes are blue or green.

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