Out of the Shadows tbscus-3 Read online

Page 15


  "Okay," Miranda said. "But my question stands. Why, as far as he's concerned, may his killings not be sexual or viewed as sexual even by himself? Why is that so important to him?"

  "My guess is that he's trying to protect the light side of his life — and the woman or women there. To keep that separate and apart. If what he's doing becomes overtly sexual, then he'll begin to want to do these things to women he's attracted to in the light, sane side of his life. The darkness will spill over, out of his control."

  "If this is him in control," Tony said, "I really don't want to be around to see him out of control."

  They were all silent for a few moments, then Alex stirred and said, "Speaking of dark, it's getting there. Either we start wrapping this up for the day or else break out the big lights."

  Bishop looked at Miranda. "I'll check with Sharon and find out how much more time she needs."

  She nodded slightly and watched him walk back to the mill house.

  "Supposed to snow tonight."

  Miranda was startled to find Alex looking at her intently. She hadn't felt it. She hadn't felt it. "I haven't seen a weather report," she said.

  "Well, the weather people are being fairly cagey, but last I heard, the best we could hope for was two or three inches. Worst is a blizzard."

  "Great. That's just dandy." She thought it might at least give the townspeople something else to worry about. But bad weather would also threaten potential problems with electricity, and would demand that most of her deputies be out and about helping people rather than in the office chasing down information that might prove helpful to the investigation.

  They weren't moving very fast anyway, but a storm could stop them in their tracks.

  "Is that cast going to be helpful?" Alex asked, as Tony tested the plaster.

  "After all this work, I certainly hope so. But we'll see. It'll take time to run down the right brand of tire, and more time to match up sales of that brand with cars registered in the area, and then . .. Well, it'll take time. But maybe it'll give us something in the end."

  Miranda noticed the heavy clouds rolling in and hoped they'd have time.

  "Here, wait a second and I'll give you a hand." Alex bent to help lift the plaster cast.

  "Thanks."

  Miranda watched them carry the cast toward the vehicles parked several yards away. She felt the tingle on the nape of her neck, and didn't have to look to know Bishop was approaching her.

  "Is she about done in there?" It gave her a certain amount of satisfaction to know that it bugged Bishop when she did that, especially since it had become patently obvious that she could sneak up on him without his awareness — spider-sense notwithstanding. She was glad to know she could shake his composure at least a bit. Even more, she preferred to have him annoyed rather than thinking too much about how she was able to do it.

  "Another half hour," Bishop replied, sounding faintly distracted. "She said not to bother rigging the big lights, and that she'd have a preliminary report for us in a few minutes."

  "In the meantime," Miranda said, "we'd better take a last look around. Alex says snow's in the forecast. Whatever clue or evidence we leave out here is likely to be buried, at least for a while."

  She felt a light touch on her arm, and was confident enough of her shield that she was able to look at Bishop calmly without jerking from his grasp.

  "Are you all right?" he asked.

  "Oh, sure. I'm getting used to finding dead kids." She was able to keep her voice dry and unemotional, but it required more of an effort than she had expected. And it shook her to realize that what she really wanted to do was confide that she was unutterably weary, and that it tore at her soul to have to discuss with professional detachment the unspeakable evil being committed in her town.. To confide that she had nightmares when she could sleep at all, that she was desperately worried about her sister, worried about what was still to come. Worried that she had misread what she'd seen or misunderstood what she was meant to do. Worried that she wouldn't have the strength when the time came.

  She wanted to confide all that. In him.

  He was frowning slightly. He did not release her arm.

  "I'm fine, Bishop." It was, of course, the only thing she could say, the only answer she could give him. She still didn't try to pull away. Even with her shield firmly in place — or perhaps because of that — she knew that he was being true to his word and not trying to read her.

  "You're not fine," he argued, keeping his voice low. "You're too pale and your pupils are dilated. And don't you think I can tell you've shut off your defenses? Christ, Miranda, I'm the only one who couldn't sneak up and blindside you."

  For just an instant, she was tempted to snap that since only he posed a threat to her, her defenses were still in good working order. Instead, she said calmly, "Since nobody's after me, it hardly matters, does it?"

  "That's naive and we both know it. You're the sheriff investigating a series of brutal murders, and that sure as hell makes you a threat to the killer."

  "I can take care of myself."

  "I'm beginning to wonder about that."

  "You can stop wondering."

  He was silent for a moment, then said, "Your pulse is racing."

  Miranda only just stopped herself from jerking her arm away. "You're imagining things. Now, if you don't mind, I'd like to do one last walk-through of the scene before it gets too dark to see anything."

  Bishop had the grim face of a man who wasn't finished arguing, but he finally released her. "I want another look around the waterwheel. Something about it is bothering me."

  She didn't move immediately but watched him walk away, and it wasn't until she turned herself that she realized Alex was standing several yards away looking at her. That he was there at all startled her, but his expression made her feel decidedly wary, and not only because of her failing defenses. Since he fell into the sixty percent of people she couldn't read, she had never sensed any more of his thoughts than those he was willing to share, but she knew him well enough to be certain something was disturbing him.

  "Alex?"

  He closed the space between them, speaking before she could ask the half-formed question in her mind. "Greg just called from the office. Word's out, Randy."

  "How the hell did that happen? I was at least hoping I could break the news to his parents before somebody else told them."

  Alex sighed. "I don't know how, but it might not be the worst of it. Apparently, when her parents came to get her, Amy Fowler was pretty hysterical, and before Dr. Daniels could sedate her again, she was babbling on about Ouija boards and contacting spirits who told her where Steve's body could be found — and claiming Bonnie is a medium. A couple of nurses overheard. You can guess the rest."

  "Oh, shit," Miranda said.

  Panic was not an emotion he was accustomed to. His life had always been completely under his control; that was what he worked for and planned for. He hated surprises.

  Finding cops crawling all over the old mill house was a distinct and unpleasant shock.

  He racked his brains to remember if he'd left anything incriminating behind. He couldn't think of anything; he was always careful. Always.

  But they'd found poor Steve before he was ready for them to, and that wasn't good. That wasn't good at all.

  The question was . . . how had they found him?

  "Death wasn't quite as recent as it appears," Sharon Edwards said briskly. "I may have a closer estimate for you later, but for now you can say time of death was last night between midnight and six A.M."

  "Twelve or more hours ago? The blood's still dripping," Miranda said.

  "My guess is that he gave the boy — either orally or by injection — an anticoagulant to prevent the blood from clotting."

  Miranda frowned as she watched two of her deputies gingerly carrying the black-bagged body toward the hearse. "He didn't do that to the others, right?"

  "No."

  "Why this time? Because he was . . . awa
y from home and didn't have his equipment handy? Because using a drug was the fastest and simplest way to drain the body of blood?"

  "Maybe."

  Alex asked, "Where would he have gotten the drug?"

  Sharon sighed. "With what's available on the Internet now? If he knew what to ask for — and practically any physician's or pharmacology reference book would have told him — he could have ordered the stuff from any one of a thousand places. If we find him, we may be able to backtrack from his own computer, but otherwise ..."

  Tony said, "That does argue a certain amount of forethought and planning. It isn't something you'd have on hand unless you needed it yourself. But my guess is this guy's too smart to use anything that could be traced back to him."

  "So he had to know or at least believe he'd need it," Miranda mused. "For the others? Did he think he might need help in draining the bodies, only to find he was able to do it without drugs? And then used the drugs on Steve because he had no other choice?"

  "Well," Sharon said, "here's something else to throw into the pot. He took at least some of the blood with him. There's a depression in the trench where a bucket or pail was placed underneath the body. It's difficult to tell how much is missing, though I'd guess not more than a pint or two."

  "What else is missing from the body?" Miranda asked. She was aware that Bishop gave her a sharp look, but kept her eyes on the doctor.

  Sharon's brows rose. "I'm surprised you caught that, Sheriff. I didn't see it until I examined the body. His tongue is missing, neatly removed with a sharp knife or razor."

  "Oh, Christ," Alex muttered.

  Slowly, Bishop said, "Lynet Grainger might have seen him, seen his temptation, so he took her eyes. He took Steve Penman's tongue because the boy might have spoken .. . might have told someone something dangerous to him."

  "I'd think killing the boy removed that threat," Tony said.

  "Maybe he didn't think so," Miranda said carefully. "Maybe we have a ... superstitious killer here. Maybe he believes in ghosts."

  Surprisingly, it was Alex who said, "If that were true, wouldn't he have done the same thing to the others? I mean, they all had to see him at some point, right, if only when he grabbed them? They all probably knew who he was. So if he believed in ghosts, he had to believe any one of them could have — have named him as their killer."

  "That makes sense," Miranda admitted.

  Bishop said, "The simplest reason is probably the right one. Punishment. He took Lynet's eyes as punishment because she saw his temptation. He took Steve's tongue as punishment because he would have talked."

  "And the blood he took from all of them?" Alex asked.

  "He needed it."

  Alex sighed. "Great. Sooner or later, that little item is going to get out. Anybody want to bet as to how soon this bastard is nicknamed the vampire killer?"

  Bishop was brooding and didn't respond; Tony shook his head solemnly; Miranda returned her attention to the doctor with a question.

  "How was Steve subdued?"

  "Blow to the head, probably with a bat or something else made of wood. A solid blow. The skull is fractured, and I doubt very seriously if the boy ever regained consciousness."

  "There's consciousness," Tony murmured, "and then there's consciousness."

  Alex seemed about to ask something, so Miranda spoke quickly. "What was the immediate cause of death?"

  "Loss of blood."

  "Any signs of torture?"

  "No, none. There isn't so much as a bruise or cut anywhere on the body except for the throat and the tongue. Even the ropes around the ankles were no tighter than necessary. It's as if he was very careful not to damage the boy any more than he had to."

  "Or," Miranda said, "very careful not to display too great an interest in Steve." She looked at Bishop. "So we wouldn't think it was sexual?"

  Bishop nodded. "I'm surprised he stripped the boy. Leaving him naked was taking the chance we might think he enjoyed looking at him that way."

  Miranda frowned. "Unless there was a greater risk in leaving the clothes on. Forensic evidence, maybe?"

  "Could be. He had to transport the boy here, and given where he was abducted, there was no opportunity at that end to guard against picking up fibers from whatever vehicle was used."

  Miranda looked back at Sharon. "The body was washed?"

  "Just like the Grainger girl's," Sharon confirmed. "I found traces of the same mild liquid soap."

  Bishop looked toward the mill house. "No running water inside, but—"

  "The waterwheel," Miranda said. "Something about it was bothering you."

  "The trough," he said slowly, realizing. "It was still damp. He put the boy in the trough to wash him. The wheel no longer turns, but he could dip water from the river with a bucket and use the trough as a tub."

  "Steve Penman was no lightweight," Miranda said. "And there are no signs the killer used anything but a car to transport his victim. Carrying him to and from the water wheel definitely took some muscle."

  "Or sheer determination," Bishop said.

  Miranda sighed, glanced around at the deepening twilight, then said to the doctor, "There's been no time to discuss it until now, but you said you had found something interesting about the bones of the first victim?"

  "You could say that. While he was still alive, the boy had been injected with a chemical compound that leached all the nutrients from his system and forced his bones to appear to age much more rapidly than normal."

  Miranda stared at her for a moment. "Why?"

  "If I had to guess, knowing what little we do about this killer, I'd say he did it just to see what would happen. I have no doubt the process would have been agonizing for the victim, and if he gets his kicks by causing pain ..."

  "A lab experiment," Alex said incredulously. "A goddamned lab experiment."

  Miranda felt too sickened to speak, and it was Bishop who said, "Is there any other reason he might have done it? Anything he could have gained?"

  Sharon pursed her lips. "Well, maybe one thing, though I'm damned if I know why. One result of the chemical process would have been to ... enrich the blood. All the nutrients leached from the bones and organs would have been deposited in the bloodstream. So if he exsanguinated that body — and I believe he did — the blood he got as a result would have been much higher in minerals and nutrients than normal."

  After a long silence, Alex said, "Am I the only one starting to believe in vampires?"

  "No," Miranda said. "Let's get the hell out of here."

  Liz hadn't been thinking much about the weather, but when the flow of customers to the cafe and bookstore increased dramatically in the late afternoon she knew something was up. People tended to make last-minute runs to the grocery story and — depending on their tastes — either a bookstore or a video store whenever bad weather was expected. Nobody wanted to be stuck at home without food or entertainment.

  And in this case, Liz soon realized, they also wanted a last chance to linger in the relative safety of a public place and explore the latest gossip. Word had spread that Steve Penman's body had been discovered, and the mood of those Liz talked to seemed evenly divided between frightened and furious. They wanted the killings to stop, wanted this madman caught and punished, and they wanted it now.

  Which was why when Alex came in just after six o'clock, three of Liz's customers pounced on him and demanded to know what the Sheriff's Department was doing to make the streets of Gladstone safe again.

  "Everything we can," Alex told them patiently.

  "Like what? It's getting very scary out there, Alex," Scott Sherman told him, waving his copy of the latest thriller in unconscious irony.

  "Then don't be out there, Scott. Go home. There's a storm coming, or haven't you heard?"

  "Of course I've heard. Why do you think I'm here looking for a few good books? Alex, I voted for Sheriff Knight, and I really hope she doesn't make me regret it."

  "Then leave her alone to do her job — and help he
r by getting off the streets so we can all put our energy where it needs to go."

  "But, Alex," Linda Bolton said anxiously, "if Steve Penman can be taken off Main Street in the middle of the afternoon, how can we expect our kids to be safe even at home?"

  "Keep them inside and lock the doors." Alex sighed. "Look, I know it's a nervous time, but there's no sense in imagining a boogeyman around every corner. This killer is being hunted and knows it — and chances are he'll stay inside during bad weather just like the rest of us. So buy a few books and a jigsaw puzzle or two, and wait for the storm to blow over, okay?"

  "But what if—"

  Liz rescued him, waving the others back to their shopping or coffee and taking Alex to the counter, where he could sit and have a cup of coffee himself. She fixed his favorite and set it before him. "I don't have to ask if it's been a bad day. We heard you'd found Steve."

  "Yeah."

  Determined not to allow either of them to remember the last time they'd spoken, Liz kept her voice matter-of-fact. "Was there anything out there that might tell you who killed him?"

  "Hell, I don't know." Alex sipped his coffee.

  Liz hesitated. "I heard something about Steve coming back from the dead to tell his girlfriend where his body could be found."

  Alex scowled. "So that's the latest garbled version? Shit. Not but what it's probably for the best that the story is getting outrageous. If we're lucky, nobody'll believe whatever they hear."

  Grave, Liz said, "How did you know his body was out there?"

  Sourly, Alex said, "How else? Randy got an anonymous tip."

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