Jamie laughed.
“Oh, I know what you’re capable of, Jerry.”
The stocky man’s face flashed with panic, and he sprang from his seat, preparing to flee. Nicholas stepped quickly in front of him, shaking his head.
“You should sit back down, Jerry,” said Jamie. “You definitely don’t want
us
to make a scene.”
Jerry froze, searching for an exit.
“You’re not that fast,” Jamie noted, still facing the bar. “We’re not the cops. Look around. There’s no one watching us, no one waiting for a signal. It’s only us three. You really should sit down. We have a proposition for you.”
Jerry cautiously sat back down, never taking his eyes off Nicholas. Then the gentleman who blocked his path sat on the other stool next to him, so that Jerry was flanked on both sides.
“How did you find me?”
“We’ll get to that later,” said Nicholas. “For now, you only need know that you’re running out of time. The police have tied you to the murders around the country, and there’s a manhunt under way.”
“Which means,” said Jamie, “that you probably have only one murder left before you’re either caught, or you have to stop completely, and disappear. We’re offering you that final kill—one that will cement your status as one of the top serial killers of our time. You can, of course, decline, walk out of here, and take your chances. If, however, you accept, we’ll personally guarantee that you won’t go to jail.”
“Where is she?” asked Jerry.
“Not far,” said Jamie.
“What makes you think I’d be interested?”
“Because you and I have things in common, Jerry,” Jamie said with a hint of glee. “We’ve both committed, what’s that called, Nicholas?”
“Matricide,” he responded.
“I’ve also killed my sister,” said Jerry, with a hint of pride.
“No, you didn’t,” Jamie said. “I did.”
Jerry gave a look of shock that he had let one live. He turned, looked at Nicholas, then back at Jamie.
“Okay,” he said. “I accept.”
“Get up slowly,” said Jamie, “and follow us.”
A half-hour later, Jerry entered a darkened room, the only sound being the whimpering of a woman hidden from the light of the outside. A switch flipped behind him, and the center of the room lit up. The winding passageways and multiple rooms culminated in this spot. The young woman sat in the middle of the open floor, tied to a chair, her face and mouth uncovered. The pair from the bar obviously weren’t concerned with her being heard by any outsiders. Jerry carried with him his usual tools: a knife, stereo, an oldies CD, and a dress. He looked at Paige, admiring her beauty.
“She’s perfect,” he said.
“You may do what you want with her, but only after our guest arrives,” said Nicholas.
“Please,” cried Paige, “where are my kids?”
“Kids?” asked Jerry. “She has kids? I don’t kill kids.”
“Not your concern,” said Nicholas.
Jamie quickly put together the purpose of Jerry’s equipment and, looking at the CD, asked which song he typically used.
“The ladies really like ‘Mr. Lonely,’” he said. “I put it on, and we do a little dancing. I’m afraid I don’t like to share, though.”
“The acoustics in this place are astounding,” said Nicholas, taking the CD from Jamie and looking at the playlist. “When our guest arrives, I want you to play this one.” He pointed to the seventh song on the disc.
“Oh, sure, sure. That’s a great choice. May I ask why?”
“You’ll see,” said Nicholas.
Night had fallen on New York’s snow-covered streets when Landon and LillyAnna crossed the bridge into Manhattan. They were on the trail of a serial killer and Landon’s son, who had now killed an innocent woman. Add to that the presence of Nicholas, who had more years of experience than Landon, and there was a cocktail for trouble.
Landon parked the car down a slush-filled side street in Times Square. LillyAnna stepped out of the car and looked skyward, experiencing a slight case of vertigo at the sight of the skyscrapers. Landon put his hand to her back, helping her regain balance.
“Scared of heights?” he asked.
“Yeah. I get dizzy just thinking about it.”
He reached in his pocket and pulled out a folded piece of paper. Scrawled on the outside was his name in Jamie’s handwriting. Opening it, he reread the message that he’d read a hundred times already since finding it at Jerry’s home:
Times Square—black sedan
. He crumbled the note, and threw it on the white ground.
“Oh, I know you’re not going to litter,” said LillyAnna.
“Well, not anymore,” he said, bending over and picking up the trash.
They walked down the side street, keeping incredible balance on the ice-covered sidewalks even in human form, until they emerged from the alley. Times Square glistened and danced while the natives and tourists trafficked past in the winter cityscape.
The pair scanned the area for a black sedan, seeing there were several parked around them. They split up, walking past each one, looking through the windows and inspecting the contents. Some had to have snow brushed away to see inside. They weren’t even sure what they were looking for—or who they were looking for. They only knew that the note was left at Jerry’s house knowing that Landon would be there to get it. They had examined the entire home, burning his scent into their minds. Now they were looking for a specific car, simply because they were told to in a note.
“We’re wasting our time,” said LillyAnna, meeting back up with Landon. “We could be hunting Jerry; instead, we look like some couple car shopping.”
Landon agreed. He started to call off the search and head toward a club when he spotted a sedan that wasn’t parked like the others. This one was parked illegally with numerous tickets placed on its windshield.
The car was clean, inside and out, without even a dusting of snow, looking like it had just rolled off the showroom floor. Landon grabbed the front passenger handle, pulling slightly to see if it was locked. The door came ajar. He and LillyAnna looked at each other. He reached his arm to the back door, unlocking it. LillyAnna got in the back seat and searched for another note, clue, something that would indicate that they weren’t on a wild goose chase. Landon unlocked the trunk, walked to the rear of the car, and standing back a couple of feet, opened the lid. Empty. He slammed it shut and joined LillyAnna in the back seat.
“I don’t get it,” he said. “Why want me to find this car if there’s nothing in it? I’m not picking up anything unusual.”
“I don’t know,” said LillyAnna, looking around the car.
“Let’s get outta here,” he said. “You were right. This is a huge waste of time. The only thing I learned is that they’re playing some kind of game with us, and we fell for it.”
“I don’t know,” LillyAnna repeated, this time more to herself than her partner.
Landon gently tugged on her arm, and she slid across the seat and out of the car, joining him on the sidewalk. He closed both car doors as LillyAnna stood there staring at the vehicle. Turning to her, he finally noticed her curious infatuation with the car.
“You okay?”
“Yes. No. I don’t know,” she answered. “There’s something here. I just can’t figure out what it is.”
“You wanna take another look inside?”
“No. It’ll come to me. Let’s move on. Where are we going first?”
“Well, since we didn’t get a chance to talk to Jenny, we’re going to have to do it the old-fashioned way. We pick a direction, and walk. We’ll try to pick up the scent as we go.”
They walked down the avenue, making it a block when she suddenly stopped, turning back toward the car.
“Wait here,” she said. “I need to check one more time. I think I know what it is.”
“What?” he asked.
“Let me check it again, just to be sure before I say anything. I’ll only be a minute.”
She ran back to the black sedan, opened the door, and sat inside. She closed her eyes, smelling the interior. There it was. She was right. She hadn’t smelled it in a couple of weeks, but there was no mistaking it. She got out, shut the door, and began walking back toward Landon when she heard her name called from around the corner.
LillyAnna turned, taking cautious steps toward the edge of the building. Reaching the end of the sidewalk, she looked down the alley, and saw the car that she and Landon drove. A figure leaned against it in the shadows, his breath exposed in the cold air. She looked back at Landon, who was talking to a guy running a newspaper stand. She glanced back down the side street—the figure was still there. She walked toward the car.
“Hello?” she called.
No answer. The figure simply stood there, looking at her. Even if she couldn’t see the eyes, she knew he was looking at her. As she moved nearer, the figure stood erect, casually moving into the light.
“Hello, LillyAnna.”
“Scott,” she said, gasping, though not with full surprise. “I thought I smelled your cologne.”
“My cologne? Don’t you mean my scent?”
She looked at him almost in disbelief. Did he know what she was?
“What do you mean?” she asked, trying her best to feign ignorance.
“Come here. I want to show you something,” he said.
He led her farther down the street to another alley, directly behind the building. She realized she was moving farther from Landon who, as of yet, hadn’t come looking for her. The memory of the last time she and Scott saw each other forced her to consider that perhaps she had pushed him into something that only extended his previous downward spiral.
“I’m sorry,” she said.
“Sorry for what?” he asked, turning to face her. “Sorry for trying to get me to kill you? Sorry for pushing me to drink again?”
She suddenly realized he had circled her so that she now stood between him and a dead-end. He covered the only exit.
“I’m sorry for all of it,” she said.
“Well, that’s okay. I forgive you.” He took a few steps back. “But I thought that, since we were both here, I’d finish what I started.”
LillyAnna stepped back into the wall behind her as Scott suddenly transformed into a werewolf. His large right claw ripped through her shoulder while his left caught in her thigh. He lifted her over his head and, wobbling, threw her against the wall. Her body cracked against the brick, and fell limp to the cold ground.
Scott wobbled again, seemingly off balance. LillyAnna, realizing what just happened, came to her senses enough to induce a quick change. She jumped to her feet, growling. Then she suddenly felt like she’d been drinking.
A full moon
, she thought. The two werewolves stood, facing each other, circling in the snow. Suddenly, Scott jumped forward, soaring above her head, and clung to the wall behind her. His sharp claws stuck into the brick as he made his way to the top of the building. LillyAnna chased after.
“Oh, yeah, I know a lot about this city,” said the newspaper vendor. “Is there someplace specific you’re looking for?”
“Well, my girlfriend and I were kinda in the mood for an authentic New York underground club scene. Something along the lines of goth. Any ideas?”
“Sure. There are a few clubs like that. There’s Albion, and Batcave on West Thirtieth; there’s Contempt on East Sixth; and there’s The Black Abbey located on Avenue B. Those are the most popular.”
“You don’t seem like the kind of person who would go to those places,” said Landon.
“I don’t,” said the vendor. “I just keep myself informed for my customers, who are mostly out-of-towners.”
As he stood there talking to the man, Landon realized that LillyAnna had been gone for several minutes. By the time he focused his hearing to scan the immediate vicinity, the people around him began gasping at the sight of two large animals running atop the buildings that lined Times Square. He watched, baffled, at the sight of LillyAnna and
another
werewolf leaping from rooftop to rooftop, their now white claws flying through the air, making their way across 42
nd
Street to 41
st
Street and continuing on.
Within a couple of minutes, Scott led LillyAnna over several blocks to 34
th
Street where he leapt from the roof of one building to the side of the Empire State Building. He was somewhere around the twentieth floor when he began scaling the skyscraper. LillyAnna closed in fast, vertigo not posing a problem as long as she stayed in werewolf form. Up the side of the tower they climbed, at times leaping over a floor or two, latching on to the next, other times slipping as they struggled to maintain a clear head and control over their physical actions.
The moon was rising higher. Shards of glass and slivers of concrete and ice fell to the street below. Landon had reached 39
th
Street by the time they passed the halfway point in their ascent. He also succumbed to the drunken feeling, falling at times on the rooftops as he ran.
The full moon shone brightly as Scott and LillyAnna approached the observation deck. He tore through the protective fence that had been put in place to keep people from falling off the ledge. Never would the designers have dreamed that it would one day be compromised from the outside. Snow fell again.