“It’s terrible,” Sammy said. “Poor Bobbie, eh? You know how strong a guy would have to be to put a hatchet through the clavicle and three ribs?”
“Damn strong,” Pookie said. “Probably as strong as you’d have to be to rip someone’s arm off.”
Sammy thought, then nodded. “You guys thinking this is the same perp who took out Oscar Woody? He’d have to be like a pro football player or a bodybuilder or something.”
Pookie pointed to the many drawings of the brown-haired muscle boy. “That kid looks like a bodybuilder.”
“
Bryan looked at the photo. It was clearly the muscle-boy sketched in the drawings, only much skinnier, much smaller, and much dorkier. Something about that face … familiar? Bryan hadn’t dreamed of this kid. Or had he? He found himself waiting for some kind of reaction to the photo, but the image did nothing.
“We have to find this kid,” Bryan said. “He’s our man.”
Pookie took the picture and studied it. “Our
Sammy nodded.
“Cool,” Pookie said. “We also need some DNA from this Rex kid. He had run-ins with Woody and the BoyCo gang.”
“Kid lived here, DNA is all over the house,” Sammy said. He held up the bag. “But I got you covered with this.”
Pookie leaned in, squinted. “What’s that? Snot rag?”
“Better,” Sammy said. “Jizz. Still wet, even.”
Pookie leaned back. “That’s nasty, Sammy. Nasty.”
Sammy shrugged. “If it’s from Rex, it’s what you wanted, eh? Listen, I’ll get it to Robin, but how about you guys clear out? I’ve got work to do.”
Bryan and Pookie walked out into the hall and carefully stepped over the body once again. Seconds later they were out of the house, heading for Pookie’s car.
Bryan couldn’t quit thinking about that smell. At a level he didn’t understand, he now knew his dream-hate, his lust for hunting those boys, it all came from Rex Deprovdechuk — a boy that Bryan had never met, never even known existed until just a few hours ago. What had the scrawny thirteen-year-old done to bring about the deaths of Oscar Woody and Jay Parlar? Was he sending out thoughts or something? Was he telepathic? That was completely impossible, and yet there was no question that Bryan Clauser was somehow bonded to this boy.
They got into the Buick. Pookie had just started the car when a man leaned into the open driver’s-side window.
“Shut it off,” said Sean Robertson.
Pookie turned off the engine, then sat back so Robertson could see both him and Bryan. Robertson pushed his glasses higher up his nose. “What the fuck are you guys doing here?”
“Our jobs,” Pookie said. “Officer down, we responded.”
“It’s Verde’s case,” Robertson said. “You were told to stay out of it.”
Bryan suddenly wanted to smack those glasses right off his face. A cop had been hacked to death, yet Robertson was going to keep playing this game?
“Birdman is dead,” Bryan said. “Verde’s a mess. You gotta put us back on it.”
“I
This was madness. What the hell was wrong with Robertson and Zou?
“Assistant Chief, listen to us,” Pookie said. “Rex Deprovdechuck had the same symbol in his room that was found at the Woody and Parlar murders. This is all connected. You can’t just ignore this.”
Robertson nodded slowly. He seemed like he was trying to balance understanding against authority. “We’re not ignoring anything. There’s a BOLO out for Rex. The entire force is looking for him. We’ll get him.”
Bryan leaned over in his seat to get closer to Robertson. “There’s a BOLO out on Alex Panos and Issac Moses. Has the
Robertson’s lips pressed into a thin line. “Not yet, but that’s not your concern. You’re both fresh out of warnings. I see you anywhere near this case — and that includes anything involving symbols, Oscar Woody, Jay Parlar, Bobby Pigeon, Rich Verde, Rex Deprovdechuk or this house — and I’ll suspend you on the spot. Now get lost.”
Robertson stood and walked toward the house.
Bryan tried to control his anger. Robertson was part of it — whatever
“Pooks, get us out of here.”
“Where to?”
Bryan shrugged.
“I could go for a beer,” Pookie said. “The Bigfoot?”
Leave it to Pookie to find just the thing. They’d been shut out of every angle involving this case — a beer sounded good.
“The Bigfoot,” Bryan said.
Pookie started the Buick and drove away from the scene.
The Long Night
The cold rain poured down, soaking sweatshirts, jeans, shoes and even socks — it made Alex Panos miserable.
Alex and Issac walked north on Hyde Street, their sweatshirt hoods up and their heads down. They were careful not to bump into anyone. The Federal Building rose up on their right, part of a world Alex didn’t understand and didn’t care about.
What he did care about was staying alive. To do that, he had to start taking some chances.
“Alex,” Issac said, “I don’t wanna do this.”
Alex’s lip curled up. “You should shut up now, Issac.”
Of all the people to be stuck with, he had that whiney bitch Issac. Issac should have been the one to fall to his death, not Jay.
“This rain
Cops like Bryan Clauser? No way Alex would go to the police. No way.
Without the Boston College gear, Alex and Issac were just two more teenagers walking the streets. They’d found places to sleep, but they had been careful not to break in anywhere or to do anything that would attract attention.
Because someone wanted them dead.
“Come
Alex stopped and turned. Issac stopped, too, wide-eyed with the instant knowledge he’d pushed it too far.
“You’re not going home,” Alex said. Issac was a big kid, but Alex had a good three inches and at least twenty pounds on him. They’d scrapped once. After the beating Alex had dished out, Issac wasn’t going to try it again.
“We stay together,” Alex said. “We’re going to my mom’s because we need the money.”
“You spent like five hundred bucks on that gun,” Issac said. “That was all we had. And I don’t even get to carry it.”
Alex nodded. No, Issac didn’t get to carry it. That was the breaks. Alex reached behind his back, patted the