I know. You swear you won’t let them hurt me?
I’ve always looked out for you. Haven’t I?
You should have looked out for yourself.
(Was his subconscious telling her to look out for herself now?)
You would have lived a better life.
(Look out for herself if she wanted to live?)
You wouldn’t have been trapped in that old house with those old bones.
(Look out for herself or be trapped like those victims from long ago?)
That’s all in the past
, she wrote.
We have to work together now. Will you come to the house?
I’ll come. 10 PM.
She checked her watch. It was after nine already.
I’ll be there
, she wrote.
Just you.
Just me.
There were no more messages. She slipped the phone into her pocket and stood thinking.
Yes, she might feel guilty. Maybe she had good reason to feel that way. But she couldn’t let guilt skew her judgment or stifle her intuition.
If anyone but her brother had sent that message, she would have read it as a threat, a trap. That was how she had to read it now. After what he’d done to Maura, she could give him no benefit of the doubt.
She found Casey in a corner of the squad room studying a map of the division. He glanced up as she approached.
“No news,” he said. “We’ve got every unit looking for him, and additional squad cars redeployed from other areas. We’re working the streets, beaches—everywhere. It’s only a matter of time.”
“I was just in contact with him.”
“What?”
“He texted me on my cell. Says he wants to give himself up. Wants to meet me alone at my house at ten PM.”
“No way. That’s not going to happen.”
“I know it’s not. But if we send a platoon of cops, he’ll never go through with it. It has to be handled differently.”
“Handled how?”
“I want
you
to arrest him.”
“I’ll supervise.”
“No. Just you.”
“I can’t do it alone, Jennifer. Maybe...if we bring in Draper...”
“No.”
“Why the hell not?”
“I don’t trust him to handle the situation so Richard doesn’t get hurt.”
“Because of what I told you about the civilian complaints?”
“And the domestic abuse.” And what she’d seen when she was with him today.
“Roy’s a good cop. Forget what I said. I was just blowing off steam.”
“I can’t forget. If we’re doing this, we’re going to make sure Richard doesn’t get hurt.”
“It’s impossible to guarantee that.”
“I trust you to try your best. I trust
you
,” she stressed. “And only you.”
“I don’t know,” Casey kept his voice low. “It’s not exactly standard procedure.”
“Screw standard procedure.” Her own vehemence surprised her. “Standard procedure is what you tried at the hotel. We can’t let him run again. We may not have another opportunity like this.”
He thought it over. “Okay,” he said finally. “I’ll take care of it. But you’re not coming. That’s nonnegotiable. If you insist on tagging along, the deal’s off.”
She’d expected as much. “I understand.”
“You’re staying here in the station until I get back. And you have to keep your mouth shut about what’s going on. We’re looking at some serious blowback unless this is handled just right.”
“Got it.” She handed over her house keys. “These will let you in. You might want to use the back door so nobody sees you enter. The smallest key fits the lock on the gate to the backyard.”
Casey pocketed the keys. “Sit tight. With any luck, this’ll all be over soon.”
She watched him walk away. She gave him five minutes to get into his car and drive off.
Then she walked out of the squad room and down the hall to the rear door that led to the parking lot. Her car was still parked where she’d left it after driving over from the library. And though she’d given Casey her house keys, she’d retained the car key, which she kept on a separate ring.
She got into the Prius and started the engine.
Of course she wasn’t going to sit around until Richard was in custody. He had been there for her when she needed him most, and she would be there for him now, whatever the risk. It might be guilt that was motivating her, or it might be love.
thirty-six
At quarter to ten Jennifer pulled into her garage. By now Casey must be in the house, though the curtains over the front windows were closed and she could see only a faint light from within.
Richard might be here as well. She was acutely aware of the possibility of an ambush. She didn’t relax until the garage door had lowered behind her.
She got out of the car. Before she could knock on the door to the kitchen, it swung open and Casey confronted her, red-faced.
“Was there some ambiguity in my instructions?”
“No, you made yourself very clear.”
“God damn it, I ought to abort this operation right now.”
“But you won’t.”
“No. I won’t. Come on in.”
She followed him into the kitchen. “I noticed you closed the curtains.”
“Your brother may scope out the house. I don’t want him seeing any cops inside—or any cop cars on this street. I parked two blocks away.”
“Good idea.”
“We may only get one chance at this. When it goes down, you have to swear to me—I mean seriously
swear to me
—that you will stay out of the way. No matter what happens.”
“I’m not going to interfere.”
“You’re interfering already, just by showing up.”
She tilted her head. “Are you still mad at me for the other day?”
He paused, considering the question. “No, I guess I’m just pissed off in general. I don’t like seeing a person butchered like that. It rubs me the wrong way.”
She thought of the mortuary photos from the nineteenth century. “At least now we know how people felt in 1888.”
“Is that when Jack the Ripper was on the prowl?”
“A hundred twenty years ago. Five murders that year, and two more in the following years. Then he came to America. It’s all in the diary.”
“Yeah, the diary. I need to take that.”
“I hid it in the pantry.”
She opened the cabinet and moved the cleaning supplies out of the way, revealing the tin. Carefully she lifted it off the shelf. Casey pulled a large plastic evidence bag from his pocket and put the metal box inside the bag. He sealed the bag and labeled it with a felt-tip marker from the kitchen.
“Plastic isn’t the ideal environment for an old document,” she said. “Especially when it’s sealed.”
“It won’t be in plastic very long. It’s going straight to the crime lab. We have people there who know all about document handling.”
“I hope they know about
old
documents. This one is fragile. It’s a miracle it’s held up as well as it has.”
“You’re not the only expert,” he said grouchily. “They know what they’re doing. You said something about a note you received?”
“What?”
“A note on your windshield, something about the diary?”
“Oh, yes.” It had been part of her statement. “It’s in my study, at the back of the house.”
“I’ll get it. You wait here. If there’s a knock on the door, you come get me.”
“The note’s in the drawer of my desk,” she told him as he headed down the hall with the tin under one arm.
She returned to the living room, where she noticed that a light on her message machine was blinking. Could someone from the media have found out about her involvement in the case so soon? She pressed Play, her hand poised over the Erase button.
But the voice over the speakers didn’t belong to a reporter. It was a voice she thought she would never hear again.
“Hey, kiddo. Tried your cell, but you didn’t pick up. I’m on my way back from downtown. Told you I’d make amends for getting you mixed up with Harrison. Spent the afternoon going through the city archives. Those women all disappeared between 1908 and 1911, and guess what? Your great-grandpappy didn’t take possession of the house till 1912. So you’re in the clear. The original owner was a Mr. Henry Parkinson. He designed the place and built it, and I guess he made sure there was a cellar...”
The message continued, but Jennifer didn’t hear it.
Mr. Henry Parkinson. The man who built this house. A man who shared his last name with the medical examiner who’d inspected the bones
in situ
. Who’d come in to do it, even though it was his day off. Who’d been interested in her family history...and in Richard.
Parkinson, with his legs weakened by MS. Yet he could walk, climb the cellar stairs, maybe even run—with the awkward loping gait of the figure in the sweatshirt.
“No,” she whispered. “Impossible.”
“You’d think so, wouldn’t you?”
She looked up and he was there, at the entrance to the hallway, with a gun in one hand and the metal box in the other. Standing erect, no braces on his legs.
The expression on his face was like nothing she’d ever seen before, a mask of glee and hatred.
“You,” she said, feeling stupid and confused.
“Me,” he agreed, much too cheerfully.
“But it can’t be...”
“Why not? Because I’m a cripple? You’d be surprised what a crip can do. Anyway, MS comes and goes. It’s in remission now. For the past few weeks I haven’t even needed the leg braces. I wore them for effect. To avoid any possible suspicion. Now I want you to reach into your pocket and take out your cell phone.”
“My phone?” She still couldn’t quite grasp it, couldn’t understand.
“Come on, Doctor. Take it out.”
The gun was trained on her. She couldn’t refuse. Fumbling in her pocket, she found the phone.
“Now toss it away. You won’t be needing it. There’ll be no more text messages from Abberline.”
“You’re Abberline,” she said, her mind working with molasses slowness as she tried to put it together.
“Of course I’m Abberline. I’ve been fascinated by the Ripper case my whole life. I participate in many online forums, and when I saw the new thread about Edward Hare, I knew you had posted it. Now
throw the goddamned phone away
.”
He was still smiling, always smiling, his face a frozen mask.
She pitched the phone into a corner, heard its distant clatter.
“Where’s Casey?” she asked.
“Unconscious. I brained him with that UV lamp of yours.”
Absurdly she thought she’d just replaced the lighting element and now it was probably broken again.
“I hid in the study,” he went on, “after I gained entrance to your house via the window. You really ought to fix that latch.”
“Yes. Yes, I should.” She was staring at the gun in his hand. Casey’s gun, she realized.
“Okay, now we’re going down into the cellar.”
“Why?”
“Because I like it down there. I think of it as a shrine to Henry Parkinson, formerly known as Edward Hare.”
She thought about running, but she could never get out of the room in time. He might not be a great shot, but at this range he wouldn’t miss.
“Why are you doing this?” she asked as she approached the pantry and the trapdoor.
“I told you, I like the cellar. It’s a sacred place to me.”
“I don’t mean that. I mean, why Maura? And the others? Just...why?”
“Open the trapdoor.”
“You won’t tell me?”
“Some things are too precious to be shared.”
She knelt and lifted the door, exposing the flight of stairs that descended into the dark.
“The light bulb’s dead,” she said, then wished she had used some other word.
“I have a flashlight. Go down. I’ll be right behind you.”
Yes, she would go down. But he wouldn’t be behind her. If she let him follow her into the dark, she would never come up again. She would be left with the skeletons, just another cadaver under the stairs.
She lowered herself onto the staircase and took a step. Parkinson moved closer, still standing in the pantry. She descended two more steps and heard him shift his stance to follow.
Before his foot could find the top step, she pivoted and shoved out at him with both arms.
She caught him by surprise and knocked him backwards. His disease might be in remission, but his legs weren’t strong. They folded under him and he hit the floor with a yell. The gun came up, and she ducked, flinging the trapdoor shut.
She heard him throw himself across the floor, his fingers scrabbling at the trapdoor’s handle, but before he could open it, she slammed the dead bolt into place.