Friday, April 15, 2005
10:30 a.m.
A
lice and her aunt were staying in a suite at the Hilton Hotel at the Riverwalk. Stacy had been in contact with the pair, had told the woman she planned to visit, so Grace wasn’t surprised when she saw her.
Smiling, the woman swung the door open. “Stacy, how nice of you to come by.”
“With one of her favorites.” She held up the frozen moccaccino. “Super-size.”
“She’ll like that,” Grace murmured. “She’s hardly left the suite. Just for meals and when the maids come.” The woman’s eyes filled with tears. “It’s horrible. She must feel so alone. And so betrayed.”
Stacy would describe her emotion more as self-satisfied and elated, but she kept it to herself. For now.
“I hate leaving her,” Grace said, “but I’m trying to get all of Leo’s things packed up and—”
Her throat closed over the words. Stacy felt pity for the woman: she had lost her only sibling.
And was about to learn that his daughter was the one who had killed him.
“She’s having a bad morning,” Grace added. “I don’t know how to make it better.”
Stacy squeezed the woman’s hand, fighting the anger that surged through her. It was all one big game to Alice. People, their emotions. Their very lives. One big competition to be won.
The woman went to Alice’s bedroom door and tapped on it. “Alice, sweetheart, Stacy Killian is here to see you.”
After a moment, the girl emerged from her room. She looked like she had been to hell and back, her face so ravaged Stacy experienced a moment of doubt.
Could she be wrong about this? Could Leo’s laptop have been new? Could Alice simply have not known, made a mistake?
No. She wasn’t wrong. Alice had orchestrated this, had cold-bloodedly planned her parents’ deaths.
Stacy forced a concerned smile. “How are you?”
“Hanging in there.”
“I brought you a moccaccino.”
“Thanks.”
“Alice, honey, I’m going to meet the movers. Will you be okay for an hour or two?”
“I’ll stay with her, Grace,” Stacy said. “Don’t you worry about a thing.”
The woman waited for confirmation from Alice, who nodded.
Grace exited and Stacy kept things chatty for several moments, until she felt confident Grace wouldn’t unexpectedly return.
Then she faced Alice. “Let’s cut the shit, shall we? It’s just you and me now.”
The teenager’s eyes widened. “What are you talking about, Stacy?”
She leaned forward. “
I know, Alice.
It was your plan. You’re the one.”
She started to deny it; Stacy cut her off. “You’re brilliant. They were holding you back. Treating you like a baby. You must have thought ‘How dare they?’ After all, you were smarter than both of them. Weren’t you? Or did you just make that up?”
“Yeah,” she said softly, “I’m smarter than they both were. Too smart to be fooled by this.”
“By what?”
“Your pathetic attempt to trap me. Toss me your cell phone.”
“My cell. But why?” she asked, though Stacy knew she’d used an open cell call to trap the man who’d tried to kill Jane.
“Because I know everything about you, that’s why. Everything you’ve ever done. I do my homework.”
Stacy tossed the girl the phone.
She caught the device, looked at it and met Stacy’s gaze. “Smart. But not smart enough.”
She hit the end button and tossed it back. “Who was on the other end of that open call? Spencer Malone and his chubby partner?”
Stacy kept up the facade. “How did you know?”
“You’ve used that little trick before. When your partner tried to kill your sister. Like I said, I did my homework.”
“Fine by me. It really is just you and me now.”
Alice smiled. “You’ve asked me, now it’s my turn. What gave me away?”
“You lied. About your dad’s computer. He had an Apple laptop.”
She nodded. “I regretted that lie the moment it passed my lips. I wondered if you’d catch it.”
“And now I have.”
She shrugged. “Big deal. It’s not going to do you any good. Wouldn’t it have been better to go on thinking you saved the day?”
“Truth is always better than a lie.”
Alice laughed, her expression transforming. “Mom was supposed to die that night at Belle Chere. As were you. Your buddy Malone screwed that up.”
“Lucky me.”
“I tried to get rid of him several times, but he was either too stupid, or too lucky, to back off.”
“Get rid of him? How?”
“Anonymous calls to the NOPD. About his involving a civilian in an official investigation.”
“Aren’t you just the smart little cookie. All brain, no heart or soul. Just like a character from White Rabbit.”
She bristled. “I needed my freedom. I deserved it. It was ridiculous the way they tried to control me. I should have controlled them.”
“And why’s that? They were the adults, you their child.”
“But they weren’t my equal. I could think rings around both of them.”
“So you formulated a plan, carefully piecing it together into a flawless scenario.”
“Thank you.” She gave a small bow. “You see? I should have been at university three years ago. But
he
wouldn’t let me go. And
she
sided with him. She always did, even after they divorced. So they stuck me with these lame tutors.”
“Like Clark.”
She laughed. “Clark was the first piece of the puzzle. I discovered who he was not long after he was hired.”
“How?”
“Searched his room. Found a receipt for a local storage locker. Lifted the key one afternoon and ta-da, the real Clark Dunbar was revealed.”
She was resourceful, Stacy’d give her that. Evil but resourceful.
“He’d kept all sorts of stuff from his past. Pictures. Letters. Diplomas and papers. Interesting that he’d been unable to let those things go. I could have.”
“No doubt. After all, you were able to murder your parents without so much as a sniffle.”
“Except for Mom, I didn’t actually kill anybody.”
“Troy did.”
“The second piece of the plan.”
“Where’d you find him?”
“Online. An RPG chat room.”
Stacy glanced toward the painting on the far wall, a nondescript landscape. “How’d you get him to join up with you?”
“Easy. Troy liked his women young. And he liked money. A lot.”
The girl’s words sickened her. She continued. “Troy was lazy and stupid. But useful. He was good at following orders, at keeping his eyes on the prize. He wanted that carrot.”
“What’d you promise him?”
“A million bucks.”
A million dollars. The cost of all those lives. Enough to entice a man such as Troy to murder.
Alice curled up on the couch, like a satisfied cat. She sipped her coffee drink. “Would you believe Mom let me do
the
background check on Troy? It was all I needed to see. I knew he was perfect.”
“When did you get the idea to create a White Rabbit scenario?”
“When I knew who Clark really was. He was the perfect fall guy.”
Stacy nodded. “You could plant clues to lead the police to his real identity. Once they uncovered it, they would look no further.”
“The way you did,” she said, expression smug. “I thought of everything.”
“And once your mom and dad were dead, you’d be free.”
“And rich. Very, very rich.”
“And all those people in between? Their deaths were just a means to an end?”
She shrugged. “Basically. Their deaths served a higher purpose.”
“But I came along and mucked it up.”
“Don’t give yourself too much credit. A kink, that’s all. I like thinking on my feet. Keeps me sharp.”
Stacy longed to wipe the smug expression from the teenager’s face. “And Cassie?” she asked.
“Wrong place, wrong time. I was in Café Noir, she looked over my shoulder and saw the game. Asked me about it. She became a loose end. Sorry.”
She didn’t sound sorry, not at all. Stacy balled her hands into fists.
“So, you told her you’d hook her up with a Supreme White Rabbit.”
“Yes.”
“Troy?”
“Yes, again.”
“You’re not going to get away with this.”
“You’re too average to outthink me. That’s a fact.”
“It doesn’t bother you that I know the whole truth?”
“Should it?” She sucked more of the frozen beverage through the straw. “Go to the police, they won’t believe you. You don’t have any proof. No evidence, no case.”
“Define
evidence.
”
“Please. We both know what evidence is. And how much you’d need to try a case like this one.”
“Okay.” Stacy smiled. “Don’t define
evidence.
How about a word you used earlier.
Kink?
As in the one I put in your plan.”
The girl stared at her. For the first time, an emotion other than self-satisfaction passed over her features. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“See that painting?”
Alice glanced at it. “Yeah.”
“Like it?”
“Not particularly.”
“Too bad. Because you’re going to spend the rest of your days thinking about it. Cursing it.”
The teenager made a sound of impatience. “And why would that be?”
“Because the police are on the other side of the wall, behind that painting. Because this morning, when you left for breakfast, the NOPD techs installed an audio-surveillance device. They’ve caught your entire confession on tape.”
Her face went slack with surprise and disbelief. Then with a howl of rage, she sprang from the couch and lunged at Stacy. She clawed and kicked. Stacy subdued her with relative ease, got her pinned, arms behind her back.
“You have the right to remain silent—”
The police burst though the door. Stacy continued reciting the Miranda rights, anyway, from memory. “Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law.
“You have the right to an attorney. Now and during all future questioning. If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be appointed to you, free of charge. Do you understand these rights as I have recited them to you?”
“Go to hell.”
“No,” Stacy murmured, “that would be
your
final destination.”
Only then did she look up. The entire group, including Spencer, Tony and the techs stood in the doorway.
“Killian,” Spencer murmured, “you’re not a cop anymore.”
She stood. “True. But I’m thinking I need to remedy that.”
The two uniforms crossed to Alice, helping her up though she cursed them.
“I see you still have a job?”
He opened his jacket, revealing his shoulder holster. “I live to serve another day.”
“And PID?”
“Rapped my knuckles pretty good over the way I handled the case. Asked lots of questions about you. Now we know from whom they got their suspicions.”
“Yo, Slick. What now?”
“Take care of the suspect. I’ll take Ms. Killian’s statement.”
Tony chuckled. Spencer held out his hand. “That okay with you, hero?”
She took his hand, lifted her face to his. “Did I tell you you’re not nearly as annoying as I first thought?”
“You didn’t have to, Killian. I got that.”
ISBN 1-55254-452-4
KILLER TAKES ALL
Copyright © 2005 by Erica Spindler.
All rights reserved. Except for use in any review, the reproduction or utilization of this work in whole or in part in any form by any electronic, mechanical or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including xerography, photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, is forbidden without the written permission of the publisher, MIRA Books, 225 Duncan Mill Road, Don Mills, Ontario, Canada M3B 3K9.
All characters in this book have no existence outside the imagination of the author and have no relation whatsoever to anyone bearing the same name or names. They are not even distantly inspired by any individual known or unknown to the author, and all incidents are pure invention.
MIRA and the Star Colophon are trademarks used under license and registered in Australia, New Zealand, Philippines, United States Patent and Trademark Office and in other countries.
Thanks to all who helped in the completion of
Killer Takes All,
giving generously and enthusiastically of their time and expertise. I’d especially like to acknowledge:
Michele Kraus, owner of Gamer’s Conclave, for making sense of the world of role-playing games. Your patience with this novice was astounding; thank you!
Judy Midgley, CRS Coldwell Banker Realty, Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, for taking an entire day to show me properties from Carmel-by-the-Sea to Monterey. It was as fun as it was informative! Thanks, Judy!
Warren “Pete” Poitras, Detective Sergeant, City of Carmel-by-the-Sea Police Department, for the time, tour and insights; all were highly appreciated.
Thanks also to Frank Minyard, M.D., Orleans Parish Coroner; Colonel Mary Baldwin Kennedy, Director of Communications, Orleans Parish Criminal Sheriff’s Office; NOPD Captain Roy Shakelford; Jason Blitz, Munchen Motors and John Lord, Jr., Arms Merchant, LLC.
In addition, thanks to those who make every day a good day: my agent Evan Marshall, my editor Dianne Moggy and the entire MIRA crew, my assistants Rajean Schulze and Kari Williams. And last but always first, my family and my God.
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