She's a little old for him, but it's an intoxicating thought.
Will the lieutenant be a screamer? Will she beg?
Of course she will. Eventually, they all beg.
Since killing the cat as a child, Charles has felt superior to all humans. But here's one he feels a kinship with. Here's one who, by chasing him, is trying to be his equal.
In a way, it makes Jack endearing. Almost lovable.
Love is an emotion still alien to Charles. From years of murdering, he knows excitement, and fun, and pleasure, and disappointment and sadness when a victim dies too quickly. But love has been beyond his grasp. His marriage was for cover, for money, for convenience. But he hates the stuck-up slut more than anything. He hates her voice, he hates her personality, and he hates her goddamn face.
But Jack's face...
Thinking of it makes him smile. He wants to see it again. Wants to somehow get in touch with her. He knows Jack is being watched by the police, but there has to be a way.
There's always a way.
In the meantime, he has a schedule to keep. Girl #3. He wants to have her by tonight. He knows her route, knows he has two possible places to make the grab.
The syringe is in his pocket. He tries focusing on her face.
Instead he sees Jack's.
Chapter 27
IT WAS NICE TO GET AWAY from Harry. Sometimes the past should remain in the past.
I got to the station at a quarter past three, using the elevator so I didn't open up my wound again. Benedict was already in my office when I walked in, back from interviewing the boyfriend. The tired expression on his face probably mirrored my own.
'How'd you make out?' I asked.
'He cried from start to finish. If that wasn't enough, he also had an alibi. Out of town for a week until this morning. Business trip. It checks.'
'He have any ideas?'
'Everyone loved Theresa, him included. He wanted to get back with her. Admitted his affair was stupid. He couldn't think of any reason anyone would want to kill her. No reaction to the computer sketch, or the picture of the first Jane Doe. I got a list of some mutual friends, most of them the same ones Elisa gave us. We've got a lot of ground to cover. How about you?'
'Harry was hired by Theresa to confirm Johnny's cheating. He took pictures. But he said something interesting -- maybe the perp is punishing these women for something they did to him. It would help if we had an ID on the first Jane Doe. Somehow, they both managed to piss our man off. That's why he's leaving them out in public, rather than hiding the bodies. He's leaving them on display, as a message to others.'
Herb thought it over. 'Okay. We delve more deeply into Theresa Metcalf's life. Make a list of all the places she went to -- bars, shops, movies, et cetera. Then flash around pictures of the first Jane Doe, see if we get any hits.'
'The two women may not have known each other well, but maybe they've met. Like belonging to the same health club. They both did something, probably the same thing, to our man to set him off. Maybe something minor, like rejecting his advances, or laughing at him. Or maybe they both dated him in the past, and dumped him.'
'Lots of maybes.'
'Then let's narrow them down.'
We spent the next hour with the task force, delegating authority, giving assignments, following leads. Officer Fuller had done an admirable job gathering information on ice cream trucks, and the lists of possibles were divvied up to be checked out. News came that the semen found in the stab wounds had been typed as A positive. A DNA print was forthcoming, and would take several weeks.
'You look like hell, Jack.' Benedict eyed me when we'd finished our powwow. 'Maybe you should go home and rest.'
'Nonsense. I'm at the top of my ability.'
'Jack,' Herb said, startling me.
'Huh? What?'
'You just fell asleep sitting up. Go home.'
'Maybe you've got something there, Herb.'
'You need a ride?'
I shook away some cobwebs. 'No, thanks. The pain will wake me up.'
That it did. Hauling myself out of my chair was akin to getting cold water splashed in my face. By the time I'd made it downstairs to my car, sleep was the last thing on my mind.
On the way to my apartment I stopped at a neighborhood grocer, securing a frozen pizza guaranteed to rise in the oven, two cans of spray-on carpet cleaner, and some aspirin. Another hot night of adventure in the life of the swinging cop.
The pizza did rise, to about the thickness of an apple pie. I devoured half of it, along with two whiskey sours, trying to remember the last time I'd actually had a home-cooked meal. Once in a blue moon I'd fry up some burgers, or make spaghetti, but I couldn't recall when I'd last had a dinner where different food groups were represented by different dishes.
