He wore no mask this time.
I looked up at him. He had a light beard now, like Harrison Ford's at the start of The Fugitive. His brown hair was slicked straight back, longer now, and unruly. He was letting himself go a little bit. Was he mourning his best friend?
No mask. He wanted me to see who he was. His game had been destroyed, hadn't it.
Here was Casanova, finally.
I had been close with Davey Sikes. I felt sure it had to be someone connected with the Durham police force. I felt it was someone attached to the original golden couple murder case. He had covered every trace, though. He'd had alibis that made it impossible for him to be the killer.
He had figured everything out so beautifully. He was a genius that was why he had succeeded for such a long time.
I stared into the impassive face of Detective Nick Ruskin.
Ruskin was Casanova. Ruskin was the Beast. Ruskin! Ruskin! Ruskin! “I can do anything I want to do! Don't you forget that, Cross,” Ruskin said to me. He had been so perfect at his art. He had fit in, blended so well, created the best possible facade as a detective. The local star; the local hero. The one most above suspicion.
Ruskin stepped toward Kate as I lay helpless from the Tensor dart. “I missed you, Katie. Did you miss me?” He laughed easily as he spoke. There was madness in his eyes, though.
He had finally gone over the edge. Was it because his “twin” was dead?
What in hell did he want to do now?
“So, did you miss me?” he repeated as he came toward her with the powerful, incapacitating Tensor in hand.
Kate didn't answer the question. She went for him instead. She'd wanted this for so long.
An explosive kick to Casanova's right shoulder spun the gun from Nick Ruskin's outstretched hand. The kick was a beauty, perfectly delivered. Hit him again, then get out of there, I wanted to yell at Kate.
I couldn't speak yet. Nothing came out when I tried. I finally managed to get up on one elbow.
Kate was flowing the way she did when she practiced on the beach.
Casanova was a big man, powerful, but Kate's strength seemed to surge from a rage equal to his. He comes, we tangle, she had said once upon a time.
She was a blur, a perfect fighter. Even better than I had expected.
I didn't see the next punch. I was blocked by his body. I saw Nick Ruskin's head snap sharply to the side, and his long hair flew out in every direction. His legs wobbled badly. She'd hurt him.
Kate pivoted and hit him again. A lightning-quick punch caught the left side of his face. I wanted to cheer for her. The punch didn't stop him, though. Ruskin was relentless, but so was she.
He lunged at her and Kate hit him yet again. His left cheek appeared to collapse. It was a mismatch all the way.
She crunched a hard fist into his nose and he went down. He moaned loudly. He was beaten; he wasn't getting up again. Kate had won.
My heart was thundering inside my chest. I saw Ruskin reaching for his ankle holster. Casanova wasn't going to lose to a woman, or anyone else.
The gun appeared like some clever sleight-of-hand trick. It was a semiautomatic. Smith and Wesson. He was changing the rules of the fight.
“Nooo!” Kate shouted at him.
“Hey, asshole,” I said in a hoarse whisper. I was changing the rules, too.
Casanova turned. He saw me and pivoted the semiautomatic in my direction. I was holding the Clock with both hands. My arms were shaking some but I was able to sit up. I emptied almost a full clip into him. Drive a stake through his heart. That's what I did.
Casanova flew back hard against the wall of the house. His body thrashed. His legs didn't work. Numbness was already spreading through his body. The expression on his face was one of shock. He realized he was human, after all.
His eyeballs seemed to float upward and disappear into the top of his head. Only the whites of his eyes showed. His legs kicked, kicked again, then stopped. Casanova died almost instantly on the beach-house floor.
I stood up on rubbery legs. I noticed that I was glazed with sweat.
Icy cold. Unpleasant as hell. I struggled over to Kate, and we held on to each other for a long time. We were both trembling with fear, but also triumph. We had won. We had beaten Casanova.
“I hated him so much,” Kate whispered. “I never even understood the word before.” I telephoned the Cape Hatteras police. Then I called the FBI, and my kids and Nana in Washington. It was finally over.
Alex Cross 2 - Kiss the Girls
CHAPTER 123.