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Authors: Melissa Simonson

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BOOK: Snuff
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FORTY-ONE

 

“You had to do it.  It wasn’t your fault.  You’d still be there if you hadn’t.  You and the baby would be dead.”

“So that makes it okay?”

Jack looks at me for one hell of an endless minute and chooses his words carefully.  “It makes it forgivable.  She was in so much pain.  What do you do when you see an animal in that much pain?”

I give him my
what?
face.

“You put it out of its misery.”

“She wasn’t a fucking animal.”  I sound more and more like Sergeant Lisette with each hour.  “She was a person—a good person—and she’s dead because I whacked her in the head with a hammer.  You guys keep acting like it was fine or some perfectly reasonable thing to do.”

“You know I didn’t mean she was an animal.  It was supposed to be a metaphor.”  He sighs, the heaviest one I’ve heard him give yet.  “And she would have died anyway.  You limited her suffering, at most.  Nobody survives burns like those.  It was a miracle she lasted as long as you said she did.”

“What kind of person burns someone over and over and laughs?”

He looks at me like I’m being rhetorical. 

“You’ve done psych rotations.  What is he?  I want to know.  Because that guy in there wasn’t crazy.  He was evil.  And they’re completely separate things.”

“I can’t diagnose someone I’ve never seen.  Oncology is a long way from psychiatry, and I’ve only done a few psych rotations.” 

I slap my hand on the bedrail.  “You’re a doctor, for God’s sake.  You have to have an idea.”

He runs his hand through his hair and covers his face with it.  “A psychopathic sadist.”

I cross my arms over my hospital gown.  “Didn’t seem that hard to put a name to it.”

“Do you think I want to imagine my pregnant girlfriend being holed up with someone like that?  Jesus, Brooke.”

We’re silent again.  He’s back to holding my hands in one of his, so he can’t be too angry—but I am.

Denial, exit stage left.  Anger, you’re up.

I can’t spend one more minute in the hospital.  There’s nothing wrong with me, and I don’t plan on killing myself, so why am I being held captive?  Again?  If I was going to go crazy, wouldn’t it have happened by now?

“I want to get out of here.”

He raises his eyebrow.

“This room is suffocating,” I say. I don’t want to stay here and let people scrutinize and dissect my every move.  I’ve been watched enough. “I want to go home.  Can’t you tell them you need to take me home?”

He clenches my hand, his grip as tight as the smile he wears. “I’ll talk to the doctor making rounds.  I don’t know if he’ll release you, though.  You’ve been here less than two days.”

I lean back into the pillows, cinching my eyes shut so I don’t have to look at the claustrophobic white walls.  I’m sick of breathing this antiseptic oxygen.  “They can’t keep me here forever.  I’m not sick.  I’m not a danger to myself or others.  The baby’s fine.  They’ve given me prenatal vitamins.  What more do they want?”

“They may want to observe you a little longer.  Run more tests.”

“No more tests.”  My veins have been poked and prodded enough.  The thought of another needle in my arm makes my pitch spike.  “I’m done with this place.  I can’t breathe in here.”

“I’ll see what he says.  He might release you if I’m home to watch you.”

“I’m not a child,” I snap.  “I don’t need to be babysat.”

He’s not perplexed by my harshness, and it makes me feel worse.  I shouldn’t take frustration out on him.  It’s not his fault. “How are you able to be here right now?  What about work?”

“Brooke.”  He shakes his head, the
expression on his face almost fond.  “They know what’s happened.  They don’t expect me to come to work a day after you were found.”

“What about the bills?”  We have so many.  I haven’t thought about them in three weeks, but the enormity of them crashes over my head.  There’s a baby to think about now.  We can’t feed a baby leftover Ramen and Diet Coke, which is all we had in the fridge last I looked. There’s only—I do the math—seven months left to get everything in shape. 

“I can defer on student loans.  It’ll free up more money, and we have enough in savings to get by for a few months, at least.  Until you get back on your feet.” 

We’re going to be in over our heads, I can feel it already.  “Please, just get me out of here.”

He studies me for a moment and stands.  “I’ll hunt someone down and ask when you can be discharged.”

He’s halfway at the door when turns on his heel and comes back.  He cups my face in both his hands and presses his forehead into mine. “I love you.”

“I love you too.”  Shoveling those words out of my throat takes effort. 

“We’ll be fine.  I’m always going to take care of you.”

He leaves on his quest to find someone in a lab coat, and I wonder if Abby’s husband ever told her the same thing.

FORTY-TWO

 

“Very odd, the pattern of threes.”  John leaned back in the spare chair across the desk from Lisette, staring at the popcorn ceiling.  “They could mean everything. Or they could mean nothing.”

He could be sticking to a theme of threes to lend false importance to the number.
  Throw off investigations, make authorities chase their tales trying to force unconnected puzzle pieces together.

She glanced up from the keyboard she’d been poundi
ng, typing the Heckles reports.  “I was thinking the same shit.  Doesn’t seem like coincidence since it’s looking like a recurring theme.  He holds the captives three weeks, dumps them at three a.m., waits three days before he kidnaps another set.”  She snapped the notebook closed and dug through her desk drawers.  “He must stick to a stringent schedule for a reason.”

Three a.m.—devil’s hour; the inverse of Jesus’s hour, three p.m.—

A drawer slammed closed, and his dark eyes flashed to Lisette as she tore through stacks of files with quick fingers.  “He could have OCD or something.  Needs to incorporate threes.  Only then wouldn’t he want to abduct three girls?  Do you remember Heckles’s booking number?  I always lose the goddamned paperwork.”

“0019875.”

She keyed in the number.  A few second later, her printer puffed to life. 

Would a man with OCD keep women in such squalid conditions? 
Many sufferers were obsessive about keeping germs at bay—constant hand-washing, fanatical cleaning routines.

He didn’t have OCD, but he did have a set ritual he wouldn’t or couldn’t deviate from.   

Lisette’s eyeballs rolled up as she propped her Timberlands on her desk, staring off into space.  “Threes could have to do with a Christian trinity—the father, the son, and the holy ghost.  Only it having anything to do with God seems off.  It’s not like God condones kidnapping and torture.  Unless he thinks God is speaking to him.  But if he were delusional he wouldn’t take precautions like giving the survivors burner cells and strategically abducting women in lots with no security cameras. Crazy people can’t think that rationally….” her voice bled into background music beneath John’s internal narrative.

What did he know about the meaning of three?

Too much.

The number three was considered to be feminine and introverted, connected to the planet Jupiter.  The Tarot card representative of the three energy was The Empress.

Also related to Mars, Tuesday, and the color yellow.

Three, the number of personal completeness.  Linked to God—God was three in one and one in three.

Jesus was tempted three times; had been resurrected on the third day.  He prayed in the garden three times, asked Peter if he loved him three times. 

Jonah was in the belly of the fish three days. 

Restoration of Israel connected with the numeral three.

In geometry, two lines don’t make a
closed figure, rendering two an incomplete number—making three the first complete number.

Number three—significant because it’s the fundamental of all pattern and geometry. There must be three of something in order to form a pattern. 

Debunked theories like the homicidal triad circled the number three.  It was once thought a killer had to have committed three murders to be considered serial.

Three signified life in feng shui.

A snapped expletive jarred him back to present, wrapped in Lisette’s office, mauve walls pressing in all on sides.

“She what?” She pushed back from the desk and stood, her swivel chair coasting into a bank of file cabinets behind her.  “No, I’m on my way.”  She stabbed the phone’s screen and disconnected, throwing her purse over her shoulder.

John watched her tear her fingers through layers of gold hair and twist them into a knot at the back of her head. “Problem?”

“Yeah.  Apparently Brooke’s hankering to go home.  As if that’s going to fucking happen.”  She stomped to the door, calling over her shoulder.  “I’ll be back. 
Call me if anything happens.”

FORTY-THREE

 

Lisette stomps into the room I’ve been sequestered in.  Jack trails her, flicking through a wad of paperwork, speaking with a nurse in pink scrubs.  

She doesn’t lead with pleasantries, crossing her arms as her lips thin.  “I don’t think it’s a good idea for you to go home so soon.”

“I’m not going to kill myself.”

She scowls.  “I fucking know that, Brooke.  That’s not what I’m concerned about.”

I throw the heavy blankets off.  “Then what?”

“You’ve just walked away from a very traumatic situation. It would be best to stay put for a least a few days.”

Does she think I’ve managed to forget the traumatic situation? “My boyfriend’s a doctor.  He can take care of me.  I just want to go home and sleep in my own bed, with my things
, and my cat.  I’ll go crazy if I stay here any longer.”

She narrows her eyes for a moment before turning her glare on Jack. I can tell he’s trying not to smile.  Lisette doesn’t wear
forbidding
well—it’s more amusing than scary.  “You’ll take time off to stay with her?”

“The hospital’s aware of what happened.”  Jack hands the nurse her clipboard, and she takes her leave.  “They said take as much time as I need.”

She wags her index finger at us as the door shuts behind the nurse.  “You really shouldn’t be staying in your apartment.  We don’t know if this freakshow’s got your address.  We never located your driver’s license, and chances are good he’s got it.  If you insist, we’re going to have to increase the number of patrol officers watching your place.  One’s been watching from the parking lot.”

I don’t care if a second pair of goons bunk on cots in the living room.  “I won’t mind if you send people to hang out inside the apartment until you find the guy.  I just don’t want to be
here
.”

Jack pipes up from the door.  “They let me check her charts. She’s fine.  There’s no reason she needs to stay, for observation or otherwise.  I’ll bring her in if something happens.”

She chews on the inside of her cheek.  “I’m going to check on you every day, morning and evening.  I might call in between, so you’d better answer.  Got it?”

I nod.  She shoots me another one of her quasi-glares, then turns on her heel. 

“Take good care of her,” are her exasperated parting words—they sound more like a threat—before she leaves, long blonde ponytail swaying behind her.

FORTY-FOUR

 

Stacy called not long after Lisette
left, when John had taken up residence in her office.

“I’ve been looking into possible prior victims, but I can’t decide which fits this guy’s MO best.  I went back three yea
rs.  I’ve got a couple unsolveds in the general area, but they seem like dead ends.”

He abandoned the notepad he’d been scrawling onto. 
“Walk me through the list.”

“Okay.  A woman’s house was broken into in the middle of the night.  The guy went in through a window, made himself a sandwich, and then went into her bedroom to rape her.  He pulled her nightgown over her face, held a curling iron to her head, and told her it was a gun.  She surprised him, fought back, so he roughed her up.  She didn’t have any major injuries,
and they never caught the guy.”

The man John was looking for wouldn’t substitute a gun for a curling iron, nor waste time fixing a sandwich when a
n unsuspecting sleeping woman was nearby.  Highly unlikely he’d plot an attack on someone else’s turf.  He wanted to spend time with his victims, revel in their pain.

“Next.”

“All right, there’s a guy who made a fake profile on match.com.  He’d message women to set up meetings, but they always thought he stood them up, because he never showed.  Only he did show, and followed them home, or so police think.  Seven raped women had the same story.  He’s taken the profile down.  All cases are open.  No DNA, he used condoms.”

Too preferential—he found the hunt thrilling, not just the rapes.  That man was patient,
carefully selecting victims, while John’s faceless perpetrator wasn’t. 

Lisette’s desk chair groaned
when he leaned back.  “I don’t think this guy would bother with phony profiles and stalking, since he didn’t seem to do so with this case.  The man I’m looking for isn’t patient.  He doesn’t take pleasure in the hunt, he wants to get down to business quickly.  The injuries on the women would be extensive, and I doubt they’d be left alive.”

“You’re killing me, smalls.  Okay.  Unidentified teenage girl—cops think she was a prostitute—found in a suitcase in a dumpster outside a motel. 
Seems like an isolated incident since it never happened again.  Police think she may have pissed off the wrong john.  It doesn’t seem like she was sexually assaulted, but there were multiple injuries.  Stab wounds, cigarette burns, and ligature marks.  Official cause of death was strangulation.  Fibers in the throat, so she’d probably been gagged.  I guess she’d have to be, if the dude did this in a motel with people in other rooms.  Coroner opened up her stomach during autopsy and found urine and traces of blood.  And can I just say, ew.  She died not long after ingesting that crap.”

Drinking blood?  Well isn’t that delightfully biblical.  A whore drunk on the blood of the saints.
What a concept.

John was hesitant to think he was looking for a religious fanatic.  Forcing a girl to drink urine was cruel, not reminiscent of scripture.  “Did the coroner manage to get DNA from the blood?”

“It was too degraded, and there wasn’t enough for testing.”

The office door swung open
, and Lisette stormed inside.  She tossed her purse on the couch and tore the elastic band from her hair, massaging her scalp with her fingertips as she slumped onto the chair across from John.

“How long ago was this?”  he asked, gaze lingering on the slightly swollen curve of her reddened bottom lip.  It almost looked like she
’d been kissing someone, but he doubted that was the case.  Nobody looked that irritated afterward.  More likely she’d been biting her lips or pressing them together to keep from shouting at slow drivers on her way back to the station.

“Six months ago,” Stacy said.  “They had a few suspects, but none panned out.”

“Send me that file.”

“Already done.  Incidentally,
I’m going to need more office space just for your mail, Maxwell.  Remind me to never let you go on vacation again.”

“Anything interesting?”

“Not that I can see.”  Every other moment something thumped softly in the background, and he could imagine Stacy flicking through envelopes with tiger-striped nails.  “Junk, AT&T bill, letter from University of the District of Columbia, something from...” she paused.  “A prison.  Maine postmark.  Isn’t that where your mom lives?  The state, not the prison.”

John scarcely considered the sheer ridiculousness of the idea of his prim, perfect mother donning prison garb, and it wouldn’t have taken a genius to know who the sender was.  “Open it for me.”

“I—are you sure?”  Stacy was the type to press and pry, but only out of genuine friendly curiosity.  He knew she’d never rifle through his personal things without permission, but the fact she seemed hesitant to do so even with consent was laughable. 

“Yes.”  John doubted Seth Lowry would have written much Stacy would be able to decipher, since he’d never told her about his mother’s rape. 

“Okay.”  He heard her fumble with her cell.  “I’m slitting the tab.  I’m pulling out the letter.  It’s pretty short, for a letter.  Bad handwriting.  Who’s Seth Lowry?”

“What’s it say?”


Will I be seeing you on the twenty-third?

The impending
parole hearing.  John felt it went without saying he wouldn’t miss that for anything, but lying was easier than giving her an explanation.  “Throw it away.  It’s not important.  Someone I arrested ten years ago.  He never gets tired of being a pain in my ass.”

John had had a lot of experience with manipulative narcissists, and the most eloquent tactic was ignoring them. 

“Gotta go if I’m going to find this site anytime soon.”

“Thanks.  I’ll call you later.”

They said their goodbyes and disconnected.  John didn’t look up from the screen of his phone.  “Brooke’s headed home, then?”

Lisette
scowled.  “Yeah.  Traffic was a fucking nightmare.  The doctors can’t really hold her, since there’s nothing wrong and it’s been over twenty-four hours.  I guess it’s not that big of a deal.  Units are sitting on her apartment.”


I may have found another victim.” John accessed his Bureau email.  “Prostitute.  Makes sense he would start with high-risk prey.  You don’t need to blitz a hooker to get her into a car.”

“Hookers aren’t as stupid as you
’d think,” she said around the Chapstick she was applying. “Working in vice taught me that.  They carry weapons, have phones, won’t consent to being restrained.  Most johns are repeat customers.  It’s the new ones the girls are most careful with.”

“This was a teenager, not a seasoned pro.”

She crossed one denim-clad leg over the other.  “Or the john didn’t look threatening.  It’s hard to be scared of some short dope with thick glasses.  What department did the case pass through?  I haven’t heard of it, so it didn’t come through Homicide.”

John scrolled through the attachments in Stacy’s email.  “Sex Crimes. I guess it would be the obvious department, considering the victim was a hooker.”

She stood, locking her arms over her head in a stretch.  “Forward the email to me, and I’ll head downstairs.  My old partner’s in Sex Crimes, promoted to Lieutenant.  If he found anything, he’ll tell me.”  

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