hell is going on here.”

“Her insight will just be a lot of might this and maybe that,” Manette said. “Won’t do us no good. See where it got us?”

“We don’t know anything till we look everything over,” Robby said. “Let’s not jump to any conclusions. We can’t have any biases.”

Manette leaned back. “You been spending too much time with Kari, I think. You beginning to sound just like her.”

Bledsoe frowned, then opened the front door. They filed in slowly, eyes roaming every square inch of the entry area and hallway. Looking for signs of a struggle—scrapes on the walls, broken glass on the ground, and blood . . . just about anywhere.

But there was nothing.

They continued through the house, clearing room by room until they reached the one at the end of the hall. The door was partially closed and obscured the view of the bed. Bledsoe glanced at Robby, then turned back to the door, squared his shoulders, and nudged it with his shoe.

It swung open with a creak.

And before them lay a young woman, brutalized in a way that had become all too familiar to them. They took a few steps into the room and stood there staring at the body. Bledsoe bent over and barfed into his bag. Blood was everywhere . . . pooling on the bed, dripping to the floor. Smeared on the walls. But not painted.

“There’s no message,” Robby said.

“Maybe he’s already made his point. We know what it means, so there’s nothing left to say.”

Just then, a noise down the hallway pricked their ears. Bledsoe instinctively drew his SIG Sauer nine millimeter. Then he heard the deep voice of Sinclair and the heavy footfalls of Del Monaco, and his heart slowed toward a more normal rate.

Sinclair’s eyes found the body. “Holy Jesus.”

“Fuck,” Del Monaco said.

Bledsoe found himself agreeing with Del Monaco. A simple four-letter word, but the emotions it conveyed in this particular instance just about summed it up.

“Okay, Frank. Tell me what you see. Tell me what you think. Karen’s not coming, so you’re it.”

Del Monaco swallowed hard, took a few seconds to compose himself. “It appears to be the same offender, but there are some key elements missing. Hand isn’t severed, there’s no message, and the blood isn’t painted on the wall. It’s kind of smeared.”

“Yeah, we can see all that. When I told you to tell me what you see, I didn’t mean literally. I meant, you know, what do you see that we don’t?”

“I know, I know what you meant.” He dragged a hand across the sweat on his brow, then took a step closer to Laura Mackey. “Key is focusing on the ritualistic behaviors we didn’t make public. We didn’t release anything about the hand, right?”

“Right.”

“And the hand isn’t severed. So maybe that indicates copycat.”

“Here we go with the maybes again.”

“Give me a break, Manette. You think this is easy? I’m flying by the seat of my pants here. You got anything better to offer than smart alec remarks?”

“Let’s take it down a notch.” Bledsoe said. “Go on, Frank.”

Del Monaco swallowed and turned back to the body. After a few seconds of observation, he said, “Knives driven through the eyes. That would also go in the copycat column. Same with the smeared blood. But the knives . . . I’d want to know if there are similar knives in the kitchen. Dead Eyes always used the vic’s own knives. That wasn’t released to the press.”

Bledsoe nodded to Sinclair, who left the room in search of the answer.

Del Monaco continued. “Body left in the vic’s bed. No significant signs of struggle. Copycat or not, this guy knew what he was doing. There’s confidence in this scene. He’s organized, methodical. He’s killed before. This isn’t the work of a beginner.”

The forensics team arrived and immediately began setting up their halogen lights in the bedroom to take their photos and collect their evidence.

Sinclair returned holding a steak knife. He held it beside the victim’s body and compared the handles. “Looks the same.”

The task force members were lost in thought as the technicians set up their equipment. Finally, Robby stepped beside Del Monaco and said, “I thought smeared blood, blood all over the crime scene, could indicate disorganization.”

“Yes, it can,” Del Monaco said. “But this guy got this woman into her bedroom without much of a struggle. I don’t even see head trauma. Won’t know for sure till they shave her head, but if I’m right, he probably used verbal means to con his way in. That indicates intelligence and planning. There may be some disorganization in the postmortem behavior, but this guy is high IQ.”

“None of this makes any sense. Dead Eyes is dead,” Bledsoe said.

“There is another explanation,” Del Monaco said. “Someone on the inside.”

“On the inside?” Manette asked. “What drug you on?”

“It’s happened before. Could be a forensic tech, too. Someone who’s been at the crime scenes, who knows what we’d expect to find. Or a lab tech who’s worked on processing one of the vics.”

Sinclair shook his head. “Let’s not go off half-cocked here—”

“Half-cocked. Hancock.”

Everyone turned to Bledsoe. He had said it softly, but the word caught their attention.

“Hancock,” Del Monaco said. “Yeah, it’s possible. Let’s bring him in for another chat.”

“Wish we could, but we pulled the tail off him a couple days ago once we had Farwell. I tried reaching him about Linwood, just to ride him a bit, but couldn’t find him.”

“And now this.”

Robby squinted at something that caught his attention. “What the hell is that?” Something white, illuminated by one of the halogen lights. He moved toward the body and peered between the legs of Laura Mackey. “Tweezers?”

“Chuck, pair of tweezers,” Bledsoe called to the head technician.

Chuck walked into the bedroom and handed them to Robby, who deftly held them near the victim’s vagina and extracted a tightly rolled piece of paper.

“How the hell did you see that?” Manette asked.

“Caught the light.” Robby unrolled it, then unfolded it into a full size sheet of paper. “Holy shit.” He turned to Bledsoe. “What the hell does this mean?”

Bledsoe came up alongside him and looked at the document. He turned to Robby, his jaw clenched. “Oh, man. This is bad.”

Robby pulled his cell phone from his pocket and punched in a number. “Come on, Karen, answer the damn phone.”

“What’s the deal?” Sinclair asked. He crossed the room with Manette and Del Monaco to look at the paper.

“She’s not answering,” Robby said, his voice rough and tentative.

“Let’s go,” Bledsoe said, then started to run out. “Call all available units,” he shouted over his shoulder. “Have them report immediately to Karen’s house. Hurry!”

eighty

Vail watched the minutes tick by. Angry at her body for betraying her when she needed it, frustrated that she had to remain behind. Concerned they may have made a grave mistake.

As her cold pasta sat in the pot in front of her, she stared at the clock in a daze, running all the Dead Eyes facts through her mind. It all fit. It all made sense. So why was she filled with this sense of unease?

It was a copycat killing, it had to be. All they had was a beat cop’s first-on-the-scene impressions. He wasn’t

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