Psychobyte (34 page)

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Authors: Cat Connor

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BOOK: Psychobyte
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“Yep.” I closed my eyes and braced myself.

I shuddered as the first blast of cold water hit me, sticking my clothes to my frame. After that, it didn’t matter. It’s not like I could walk through the building dripping biohazardous material from my person. By the time he turned off the water, I no longer smelled like puke. For that I was grateful. I did a quick look around the area. No one about.

“Give me a hand?” I asked Kurt.

“With?” he replied, placing the hose on the ground.

“I can’t undo my jeans, need to take them off and wring out some of the water before we go upstairs.”

He smiled, walked over and undid the button then the zip. “Hold onto my shoulders. You won’t be able to get wet jeans down with that hand.”

I placed my hands on his shoulders. Kurt tugged my jeans down making sure my underwear stayed in place. I stepped out of the jeans steadying myself against the car. He picked them up and wrung them out a few times then handed them back.

I struggled to get them back on. If it weren’t so frustrating, it’d be funny. Exasperation voiced itself as a hiss as I tugged one side up then the other.

“Conway … let me.”

Kurt pulled up my jeans and refastened the button and zip making me feel like a three-year-old.

“Thanks.”

“Anytime,” he said with a grin and rolled the hose back onto the reel.

My wet shirt and jeans stuck to me. Hands and feet frozen and water ran from my hair in icy streams down my back. I pulled as much of my hair to one side as I could and squeezed it with my good hand. Water dribbled down the front of my shirt and dripped onto the concrete.

“Okay?” Kurt asked rolling the hose back onto the reel.

“Sure.”

Saturated clothing is not super comfortable. Shivering, I picked up my boots and squelched my way up the stairs. On the plus side, I no longer felt ill breathing stairwell air. Not sure I ever wanted to get back in Kurt’s car, though. I heard him on his phone as he followed my wet footprints.

“My car needs cleaning before it’s used again. Tell the detailing company to wear gloves and protective clothing when they pick it up.” He hung up.

“You’re making me sound like I have the Croatoan virus,” I said as I reached the landing for our floor.

“The what-now, Conway?”

“Croatoan … never mind.
Supernatural
thing.”

Kurt opened the door for me. “Croatoan … I’ve heard of it.”

“Tell me it’s not real.”

“Plenty of real viruses are horrific but that’s not a real one,” he said as we walked down the hallway. “I’ve watched
Supernatural
.”

Who knew?

I took my go-bag from the closet in my office. It conained everything I needed to be human once again.

“Won’t be long,” I said to Kurt.

“I’m going to locate Troy Fallon and check where Mallory Stevens is. We’ll pick them up once you’re ready.”

I nodded and hurried down to the women’s bathroom. It didn’t matter how many women were drained in showers, hot water and soap held great appeal.

Fifteen minutes later I felt clean and warm. I shoved my saturated clothing into a plastic bag and then into the trash. The odds of the stains coming out seemed slim and I didn’t need the reminders. Before putting on a fresh shirt, I blasted my hair with the wall-mounted hairdryer. Red in the mirror caught my eye. The cut on my upper right arm, now bleeding again, needed attention. It didn’t look too bad. I took a clean dressing from my bag and stuck it to the wound with some paper tape. Kurt would do what needed doing. I pulled on a clean shirt and fastened the buttons. That’d be easier without broken knuckles.

Dry, and feeling as okay I could expect to feel, I headed back to my office.

Inside, I kicked the door shut and dropped the bag on my desk, ready to take home and restock.

“How you feeling?” Kurt asked from the couch.

“Not too bad. Arm needs stitching, I think.”

“Yeah, thought it would. Come over here and sit down.” I spotted his medical pack by his feet. He lay it on the couch next to him and unzipped it. “Take your shirt off, please.”

“Because you asked so nicely,” I said, avoiding his eyes.

I removed my shirt and sat on the coffee table in front of him while he took off the dressing and had a closer look at the cut.

“I’ve seen worse,” he said with a smile. “Definitely stitching … local?”

Didn’t usually give me a choice.

“Yeah, local.”

While Kurt took out his gear and prepped the wound site, I had time to think. My mind skirted the perimeter of waking up on a cold floor and zeroed in on the men and the art.

Art.

God. Art from human blood. Spatter patterns. Maybe vampire wasn’t too far off the mark. Some people are sick. They defy reason with the things they do. I imagined the media frenzy that would follow the breaking of this story. The pieces already sold would sky-rocket in value. That revolted me.

“All right?” Kurt asked, tying off the suture.

“Yep.” No, I wasn’t. “No.”

“Conway … what?”

“Fentanyl. That’s how they got me.” I paused. Not liking voicing my concerns. “Fentanyl. Will that harm the space invaders?”

“While you were in the shower I looked up the Federal Drug Administration guidelines for Fentanyl use in pregnancy.”

“And?”

“It’s an FDA category C drug. That means animal reproduction studies have shown adverse effects on fetuses and there are no adequate and well-controlled studies in humans.”

“That doesn’t sound reassuring.”

“Category C also states that the benefits from the drug may outweigh the potential risk.”

“I’m not encouraged, Kurt.”

“I dug a bit further. I think the space invaders will be just fine. I’ll let your specialist know and he can monitor you as well. Trust me, Conway, I don’t think you have anything to worry about from a single inhalation of fentanyl.”

“Okay.”

Maybe. Pressing thoughts of drugs to the back of my mind. “I need to check something. I can’t see the connection between everything I think is connected.”

“All right. Do what you need to do, just take it easy.”

“I’m planning on using the computer not running a marathon.”

All the things I’d come across regarding the case converged. Somewhere everyone involved met. I needed to find that place. It wasn’t prison but Hank was the key.

I opened a search engine designed to work within the Darknet. Sure, possible they all met because of a Craig’s List classified ad, but I doubted it. I could feel Kurt’s presence as he sat in my office, waiting.

My conversation with Christine surfaced. I thought about the expression on her face when I asked if she’d seen Lette’s artwork. Unimpressed. I had a feeling she’d be horrified when she found out the truth. Perfect Storm, she said he called it.

I typed Perfect Storm into the search engine. Up came a photo of a piece of art, colored wool on black canvas. Exactly as Christine described it.

Winning.

I had a feeling the image wasn’t just an image but a link to a web meeting place. I called Sandra and asked her to come to my office.

Seconds later she bounced into the room. “You summoned me, O Esteemed Leader.”

“I need your skill and I need it now, I want you to hack into this site.”

I beckoned her to my desk and showed her the screen. I moved so she could take my chair.

Sandra sat and moved my laptop to a better position for her. “Darknet. I hate it in here,” she said. “Murky and monsters hide in the depths.”

“Yes, they do. As soon as you get in, call me, I need to know what you find straightaway.”

“Yes, O Holder of the Flashlight.”

It was hard not to smile. Sandra never ran out of unique ways to address me.

“We’re all done. You ready to go pick up Fallon?” Kurt asked.

“Yeah.” The sound of fingers typing followed me to the door.

“Where’s Stevens?” I asked. “We have her, yes?”

“Oh yeah, we have her. She’s in custody.”

“She sewed the pieces, she created those atrocities.”

Kurt nodded. “Yes, she did. Sam and Lee found the studio where she worked. We think Lette designed and she sewed.”

Who first? Lette or Fallon? I deemed Fallon more of a flight risk simply because she was a cop.

“Let’s go get Detective Fallon.” Paused by my desk. My brain stopped.

“Conway?”

“Where’s my weapon?”

“Hasn’t been recovered yet as far as I know.”

Annoying. With my left hand, I reached into the third drawer down and withdrew my backup weapon and holster.

“Badge?” I asked, looking at Kurt while I fastened the holster to my belt.

“That I do have,” he replied, flipping a black object through the air at me.

I caught it with my left hand. My badge wallet.

“It’s clean … “

“Yeah, and your phone’s okay too, they were in the younger male’s pockets.”

I shoved the wallet into the pocket of my jeans. Kurt passed me my phone. I looked at it for a moment as my mind rolled over the possible outcomes regarding Fallon. I didn’t for one moment think it would go well.

“We good now?” he asked.

“Just about.” I woke my phone and called SWAT.

Andrews answered his phone on the third ring. “Conway, how can we help?”

“We have an arrest to make and I’d like SWAT along for the ride.”

“Send the address,” he said. “You’re clean now, right?”

“Yeah, I’m clean,” I said with a laugh. “Thanks for that.”

Andrews’ laughter stopped abruptly when I hung up. I looked at Kurt and waited, he knew what I wanted. He gave me the address for Fallon and I texted it to Andrews.

“Now?” Kurt asked.

I nodded.

“Yeah. Now.”

Thirty-Nine

Under My Thumb

It took forty minutes to get to Detective Fallon’s home. As we entered her street, we passed a police car parked on the side of the road. Another one waited about fifty yards up the street from Fallon’s home. A black truck rolled in behind us. SWAT.

“Our doing?” I asked, nodding to the police cars.

“Yes.”

“How badly will this go, do you think?”

“Not smooth,” Kurt replied. “I’ve had her under surveillance since you disappeared. She’s at home.”

He pulled a wad of papers from his inside jacket pocket and handed them to me.

“A warrant to arrest and a search warrant,” I said as I opened the paperwork and ran my eyes over the legalese. “Good work.”

Kurt’s right eyebrow rose. “Obtained mostly on your gut feeling, so I hope you find something to corroborate what you think you know.”

We needed records for the support groups she ran. Attendance records or notations telling us who was at each meeting. Something solid that connected her to our victims and then to the whole mess. Better still, the files and victim reports I was sure existed but weren’t in the system.

If I were in her position, I would’ve been busy shredding and burning.

But then I wouldn’t be in her position because I’m not fucking stupid.

“Right, so we go knock on the door with SWAT and get this evil bitch off the streets.”

Kurt swung his door open and got out.

I didn’t move. I wanted to but I didn’t. Kurt ducked his head and looked into the car. “You joining me?”

“Yeah.” I reached across my body and opened the door with my left hand. Dread built so fast it almost swamped me. I pushed it down and climbed out of the car.

“Conway, something bothering you?” Kurt asked from the sidewalk.

“There’s something wrong here,” I replied, looking at the house. “We should’ve moved on her earlier.”

That’s what it was. Death.

Andrews appeared beside me. “Let’s do this.”

Jerry and Tom were next to Kurt. Every time those two teamed up, I ended up with a cartoon running in my head.

We approached with caution. Jerry and Tom first, then Kurt carrying the paperwork and me, with Andrews and two other men in the rear. The two men behind Andrews peeled off and went around the back.

Kurt knocked on the front door.

My heart pounded as the seconds ticked away.

He knocked again.

Tom and Jerry peered through windows near the door.

“You sure she’s home?” Jerry asked over his shoulder. He moved to another window, listening. His expression changed. “Talbot says the shower is running.”

Guess he was one of the guys who’d gone round the back.

Shower. That can’t be good. Hair on the back of my neck stood up.

Andrews touched my arm. I jumped. “What is it?”

“Something’s wrong.”

There’s nothing good in that house. “Let’s get in there,” I said.

Tom and Jerry acknowledged me with a nod.

My gut said we were too late and Fallon was dead.

Tom tried the door. It opened. Not a good sign.

He and Jerry went in first. We followed behind with Andrews as they cleared rooms and located the bathroom. Tom banged on the bathroom door.

No answer.

He looked at me. My heart pounded in my chest as I nodded. He turned the handle and the door swung open. Running water. No steam. Clothes folded neatly in a pile on a chair by the vanity. Folded clothes, not missing clothes as at the crime scenes.

“Hello!” Tom called.

Nothing.

“Tom,” I said looking past him. “The shower.”

The black shower curtain was closed. A cloying metallic smell roiled my gut. Blood ‒ different from every crime scene I’d been to lately. This one hadn’t been cleaned.

Tom flicked the edge and then ripped it back. Red streaked the white walls. I followed the blood spurts up the walls. Noting how it’d run back down. Looked like several of the pieces I’d seen in the gallery.

Arterial more than artistic.

Away from the water at the back of the tub lay the bloodied naked body of Troy Fallon. Kurt stepped around me and bent down, his gloved fingers checking her pulse. Habit. Her cloudy eyes said she was long gone. The shower head pointed downward with most of the water going straight down the drain. He reached up and turned off the shower. Instant silence.

“There’s a knife in here,” Kurt said. “Deep gashes severing arteries on both wrists.”

“Suicide?” I asked, looking at the mess up the walls and all over her.

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