Read Deadly Dreams Online

Authors: Kylie Brant

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Suspense, #General

Deadly Dreams (22 page)

BOOK: Deadly Dreams
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He flipped the pages again to look at the numbers, dates, and times she’d highlighted. The calls had only occurred once in the last thirty days, as she’d noted. “I need to go back further,” he muttered. “See if this is a onetime thing or if it occurs regularly. If it shows up in other months . . .” Looking up, he gave her grin. “Good catch, Chandler.”
The smile she graced him with hit him like a fast left jab to the solar plexus. Jesus, her smile should be outlawed. With effort, he hauled a bit more oxygen into his lungs and cleared his throat. The slim hip and thigh perched perilously close to his arm were encased in navy today. There was nothing remotely sexy about the no-nonsense suit she wore, although he couldn’t say the same about the red top beneath it. It hinted at cleavage and the curves that might lurk beneath the tailoring.
He jerked his gaze back to stare blindly at the pages in front of him.
“What’s with the map?”
Welcoming the change of subject, he unrolled it again. “Got a blow-up of the area around the convenience store where we think Christiansen was snatched. This line”—he traced the yellow highlighting—“is one possible route that would have skirted any traffic cameras on the way to the Wakeshead Park. The pink highlighting shows another path. The only other routes take him miles and miles out of his way, which would have slowed him down considerably.”
“Not to mention upping his risk.”
“Exactly. With the estimated time of death, we can be reasonably certain one of these two routes were chosen. I have Hoy and Mendall going door-to-door on both routes, checking for any businesses along the way that might have security cameras pointing toward the street. ATMs. Anything that may have caught the vehicle as it went by.”
“And the phone books?”
“Shroot caught that assignment.” Something inside him lightened at the memory. “He . . . uh . . . expressed his undying gratitude in advance.”
“I’ll bet.”
To his relief she gathered up her binder and removed her shapely ass from his work space. He made a mental note to have that corner of the desk bronzed. “I swung by Nora Parker’s house, Roland’s widow, on the way to work. She ID’d him as the man in the still IT got us from that old video segment.”
She turned and gave him a sharp look. “And the other?”
Somehow he’d known that question had been coming. “She didn’t recognize the other one in the video. The one they called Johnny. I also ran the names by her that Bonnie Christiansen recalled as being part of her husband’s card club. Struck out there, too.”
“Roland didn’t happen to belong to a card club, did he?”
“She said no. She also said he didn’t have a second job.” He hesitated, feeling a stab of guilt for what he was about to say. “I think she’s lying.”
Risa reached for her coffee again. In college he’d faced all-American linebackers intent on mowing him down on the field, but she appeared to be made of far stronger stuff than he was. One swallow had been more than enough for him.
“About . . .”
“The extra job.” He watched her sip, felt slightly better about himself when she winced a little as she swallowed. “She didn’t want to talk about it. But the tells were there. I’m having the captain make a case to the brass for a warrant on the three victims’ financials. With Christiansen’s widow acknowledging that he worked somewhere, although she was vague with the details, we should be able to present an argument that the intersection for the three victims might lie in something they were working off the job, rather than on it.” He didn’t envy Morales his task of selling it to the administration, but with the bars came the responsibility.
“I don’t suppose you had time to go through the ViCAP reports while you weren’t sleeping last night,” he said, joking.
To his shock, she nodded. “I did. Didn’t see anything that jumped out at me, though.”
“Wow, you really didn’t sleep.” His attention drifted back to the unrolled map once again. “Got a full day’s work in before most people woke up.”
“I’d like to go to the first two crime scenes. Get a feel for them.”
“You’ve got all the pictures.”
“I want to see them,” she said stubbornly. “You don’t have to go along. I know my way around Philly.”
He sat back, vaguely annoyed. “I do have to go. You won’t get past the officer stationed at them otherwise.” Pushing back from his desk, he shrugged into his beige suit jacket. “Okay. Afterward we’ll hit the area surrounding the convenience store, look for a spot the offender could have stashed his car.”
“Sounds like a lot of driving,” she observed.
He nodded unenthusiastically. Philadelphia recently had been named the tenth-worst congested city in the nation in terms of traffic. Opening up a desk drawer, he took out a new supply of gum and pain reliever for the headache that was sure to result.
“If we’re going to be on the road that much”—she set her cup down and picked up her purse—“you can stop somewhere for better coffee.”
The warehouse Nate parked in front of was at the end of a street, flanked by the Schuylkill River on one side and a couple empty lots on the other. An occasional truck rumbled down the road toward them, but all turned off before reaching midway down the block.
Risa slammed the car door behind her and tilted her head up at the building. Windows had been covered with plywood and painted a dark brown. There had once been huge matching doors on the front of the structure, large enough to swing inside and allow semis to unload. But what was left of the doors hung useless on their hinges now, yellow police tape crisscrossing the gaping opening.
A fresh-faced uniformed officer posted at the door straightened at their arrival. When Nate badged him, he relaxed visibly. “How’s it going?”
“Been quiet here, detective. This street doesn’t see a lot of traffic.”
Nate bent to pick up a couple hard hats left inside the doorway, handed one to Risa. “We’re going to look around.”
“Yes, sir.”
Donning the hard hat, Risa gingerly stepped inside the shadowy building. Her eyes were drawn immediately to the center of the space, where a large blackened circle stained the dirt floor.
“The offender went to a little trouble finding this place.” Nate’s voice was impassive. “We think he used that hoist chain to keep the victim upright before the fire was started.”
Risa looked at the massive rusted chain and hook hanging down from one metal beam overhead. A chill broke out over her skin. The chain was blackened but the beam appeared untouched.
Turning back toward the double doors, she frowned. “Doesn’t make sense. There’s no fuel to keep the fire spreading . . . oh-h.”
“Yeah, before he left he must have sprayed more of the gasoline mixture toward the front doors. Probably broke in the back door and exited the same way.” He nodded toward the doorway in the rear, which had a yellow X of tape crossing it.
Silent now, she moved into the center of the blackened area. There would have been no one to hear the victim’s screams. Even if the warehouses farther up the street employed watchmen, little sound would have escaped the brick and mortar building. Glass was a noise conductor, but the windows had been replaced with wood long ago. The structure’s distance from the other buildings gave it an air of seclusion. There would have been no hope of rescue.
She moved across the area to peer out the back entrance. A rutted path—alley would be too generous—was worn into the weedy ground outside the structure. The land did a gradual roll into the river, about half a block away. “He pulled up here, all the way to the door. Left the vehicle out back. Who’s going to see it? Walked Parker through this door. Shut it behind him.” And with that door swinging shut, the victim’s hope for help had vanished.
Turning, she was surprised to find Nate on her heels. She nearly ran into him. “Where did you find the ID? And the badge?”
“His ID was just inside the back entrance. The badge was over there.” He gestured to the opposite shadowy corner. “No trace evidence, other than the body and the fuel residue the lab identified on it. The offender took the fuel container with him.”
“After he left a fuel path for the fire to follow to the entrance. He needed for the body to be found,” she mused aloud. “A place like this, the fire could have burned itself out. No telling how long before the body was discovered. He wants immediate attention. Why does he need it? Thumbing his nose at the force in general? Doesn’t feel right.” Turning on her heel, she surveyed the blackened circle again. And the heavy hoist chain and hook. “He needs the attention but not necessarily from us. He wants to generate unease. Fear.”
Nate frowned. “From who?”
“From his future victims.”
There was less to see at the next scene. It wasn’t as well chosen as the first or third spots had been. The offender had secured Tull to a tree to keep him upright. The spreading fire had torched that tree and those around it.
Risa scanned the charred remains of the wooded area. It looked like a forest fire had raged a crooked path through the space, leaving devastation in its wake.
“Once the trees torched, I understand the fire could be seen for miles. It probably drew the quickest response of the three.”
“And he left the badge and ID over there, right?” She pointed toward the clearing several hundred yards away. Nate made a sound of agreement. “Took a chance that they wouldn’t be found, that far away from the victim. But he wanted to be sure they didn’t get destroyed in the fire. That wouldn’t have suited his purpose at all.”
Nate’s cell rang. While he answered it, she moved closer to the clearing, turning to get a different angle. Neither scene was familiar to her. She hadn’t dreamt of any but the third one. It was useless to wonder why. There had never been any rhyme or reason to the visions. What they showed or what remained hidden. Little about them was clear at first. If the same one repeated, sometimes more was revealed with each recurrence. Sometimes not.
Much remained open to interpretation. Some showed scenes from the past, others dealt with future events. They couldn’t be summoned by force of will, and the details from the scene couldn’t be sharpened. They were tortuous in every way. Hideous visions of agony that haunted her sleeping hours. Nebulous intangibles that spoke more to emotion than logic.
But she’d spent her career trying to make sense of them. Trying, finally, to put them to use. Because otherwise they existed only to torment.
“Change of plans.”
She jerked a little at Nate’s words. Looked up to see him striding toward her. “We’ll have to put off our next stops until later. Shroot came up with some possibilities for the location where that tape segment might have been shot.”
As he headed back toward the center of town, Risa had his phone and was talking to the detective. “Z’s Place? Spell that, please.” She jotted it down with the rest of the possibilities on the notepad she’d pulled from her purse. “Ah. Zee’s Place. Address?” She scribbled down his answer. “What year phone book is that in? Is it in the current one? When did it stop appearing?”
BOOK: Deadly Dreams
3.13Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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