arteries, one after the other.
“That’s Mary,” said Sissy, trying to stop her voice from trembling. “The one in the middle, with the eyeglasses. Is she still alive?”
Detective Kunzel felt for Mary’s pulse a second time, but then he shook his head. “They’re all deceased, all three of them. I’m sorry.”
“Just before she passed over, do you know what Mary told me? She said that she didn’t want to die in the dark.”
Molly put her arm around Sissy’s shoulders and gave her a sympathetic squeeze. “At least you found them.”
Detective Kunzel stood up. “I don’t know how you did that, Mrs. Sawyer, but I have to admit that I’m impressed.”
“If only I’d heard her sooner.”
“By the look of her injuries, Mrs. Sawyer, I don’t think she could have survived, even if you had.”
Detective Bellman was clearly upset and kept blowing out his cheeks. “Guy’s a total maniac. I never saw anybody with so many stab wounds, ever.”
“You know what nice people these were?” said Mr. Kraussman. “Always smiling. Always got time for laughing. What kind of person would want to hurt them so bad?”
“You were right about one thing, Mrs. Sawyer,” said Detective Kunzel. “Red Mask
“I just wish I could sense where he went,” said Sissy. “I’ve tried and I’ve tried — but nothing.”
“Come on, Sissy,” Molly told her. “You’re in shock. We all are. Why don’t you let the officer drive you home? Make yourself some of that chamomile tea.”
Sissy nodded. She was more frustrated than distressed. Usually, she could feel where somebody had gone, because everybody left a psychic wake behind them — a shivering in the air, a refraction in the daylight — in the same way that everybody left their scent or their footprints behind them. Sometimes, if a person was very angry, or agitated, they left a trembling in the air that could persist for hours.
But Red Mask had vanished without a trace, as if he had stepped out of the world altogether and closed the door behind him. No emotion, no afterimage, no distortion in the daylight. Not even the faintest of distant echoes.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
The Voice of Unreason
Sissy and Molly were about to push their way through the revolving door when three paramedics came bustling through, so they had to step back. As they did so, Detective Kunzel’s cell phone played “Hang On Sloopy.”
Detective Kunzel said “Kunzel.” Then, “Who?” Then, “Who is this?” Then he lifted his hand and called out, “Molly! Mrs. Sawyer! Hold up a moment!”
Reluctantly, they returned. The paramedics were already kneeling by the bodies in the elevator, double- checking that none of the three victims showed any signs of life. Sissy looked away, but not before she noticed Mary’s upswept eyeglasses, with congealing blood on the lenses, lying on the floor.
Detective Kunzel had switched his phone to speaker. A grating voice was saying,
“It’s him,” mouthed Detective Kunzel.
Sissy said nothing, but stood closer so that she could hear the voice more clearly.
“What do you want?” asked Detective Kunzel. “If we knew what you wanted, maybe we could come to some kind of compromise.”
“So what do you believe is due to you? I’m pretty sure that we could work something out, if only I knew what it was.”
“So what are you trying to tell me? That you’ve taken the lives of five innocent people, just because your ego took a bruising? That doesn’t sound like checks and balances to me.”
“Red Mask? That’s the name that
“How about a first name? I can’t call you Red Mask all the time, can I?”
“Listen to me — ” Detective Kunzel began, but then they heard a sharp click, followed by a buzzing noise.
“Hey — are you still there?” Detective Kunzel demanded. “Red Mask? Are you still there?”
“I think he’s said all he needs to say to us,” Sissy put in. “For the time being, anyhow.”
Detective Kunzel said, “You guessed that he was going to call me, didn’t you?”
“I didn’t
“I don’t suppose the cards told you his home address? Hey — sorry. I didn’t mean to be sarcastic.”
“Actually, no, you don’t have to apologize. The cards often give me a strong sense of where people live. Which neighborhood, anyhow — which general locality — even if they don’t actually give me a street number. But for Red Mask they’ve given me nothing. Not even which side of the river he comes from. And they haven’t explained his motive. They’ve told me
Detective Kunzel turned to the officers who were gathered all around him. “Anybody pick up anything from that conversation? Accent? Speech mannerisms? Anything at all?”
“Sounded local to me,” said Detective Bellman. “But he’s kind of sissy for a serial killer, don’t you think? All that stuff about losing his happiness. ‘I lost
“He’s educated,” said one of the uniformed cops. “He’s trying to talk tough and streetwise, but I’d lay bets that he’s been through college. It’s the words he uses. And he didn’t cuss once.”
“Age?”
“Difficult to say, but I think he’s younger than he’s trying to make out. Mid to late twenties, maybe. He’s straining his voice to make it sound gruff.”
“This I do not like at all,” said Detective Kunzel. “I prefer mad-dog psychos to educated misfits. Remember the Lincoln Penny Killer? Never caught him. Smartest serial murderer we ever had to deal with.”