Psychobyte (21 page)

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Authors: Cat Connor

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BOOK: Psychobyte
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Forty minutes later we were back at the Hoover Building and I handed him a folder of photos to look at. No bodies included, just photos of the contents of the bathrooms.

Sasha Petrovovich sat at my desk and pored over the photos and notes I’d made regarding scent. Kurt insisted I sit on the couch and let him play doctor. Not as much fun as it sounds. After a close inspection of my hand and rather more pain than I appreciated, he declared the possibility of fractured knuckles on the fourth and fifth metacarpal. The bruises and grazes weren’t very attractive either. On the plus side, I’d suffered no displacement.

“I’m taping your fingers. But this needs X-raying.” Kurt took strapping tape, scissors, iodine and gauze squares from his backpack and set it all on the table in front of him. He cleaned my hand with iodine. It stung but I’ve had worse. He strapped my pinky and ring finger together then taped them to my middle finger. No birds would be flying from my right hand anytime soon.

“That’ll do until we can get that checked,” Kurt said. “Try not to use that hand. Keep it elevated as much as possible and let me know if you lose feeling in those fingers.”

“Feels a bit better,” I said with a small smile. “Thanks.”

“Just doing my job,” Kurt said. “Don’t hit anyone else.”

“No promises.”

Owen sprang to mind. If the thought of Owen ramped up my blood pressure, no telling what would happen if the Evil Troll Queen appeared before me.

Kurt packed away his medical stuff and picked up his laptop. I wandered into the corridor outside my office in search of coffee or water. Four paces down the hall I knew it was water I wanted.

Footsteps ran toward me; I spun around. Sandra running in the halls of the FBI. Really? We don’t run.

“Ellie!” she called, waving a manila folder.

“Problem?”

Stopping abruptly and puffing, Sandra thrust the file at me. “New victim.”

“You could’ve called me,” I replied, taking the folder.

“Check your cell. I’ve been calling. Where were you?”

I tucked the folder under my right arm and hooked my phone from my pocket. Six missed calls. All from Sandra.

“Sorry.”

“I was worried,” Sandra said, her breathing returning to normal. She focused on my right hand. “Looks like I had reason to worry.”

“I tripped,” I replied, brushing off her inquisitive look.

A cloud of disbelief crossed her face but she let it go. “Kurt wasn’t answering either. Sam and Lee are following up a lead.”

And somehow this week Sandra had become camp leader?

“Kurt was with me. He was driving. We picked up a perfumer from the airport. Kurt is with him in my office.”

I opened the file. A DMV photo and crime scene report from local police. Ashley Stewart, twenty-six years old, slim, blonde, attractive. A Middle school teacher in Fairfax. The next fifteen photos weren’t so pretty.

“You all right?” Sandra asked.

“Sure. Kurt and I will head over to the crime scene as soon as we can. Have police secure the scene and wait for us.”

Sandra nodded. “You’re worrying me. Never have I seen you look so pale.” Her gaze hardened, scrutinizing me. I wanted to hide or leave. “And now the broken fingers?”

“Possible fractured knuckles. It’s nothing. I’m tired is all.”

“Heard you’ve been ill. Some sort of stomach flu?”

“Probably. I’m okay now.”

“Funny no one else has had it. Maybe food poisoning?”

Don’t push it.

“Maybe.”

“You’re still very pale. Take it easy, Ellie. Let the team pick up any slack.” She paused and smiled. “Wedding soon, what is it, eight days?”

“Yep.”

“Mitch will want you to be able to enjoy your honeymoon.”

So much concern for my well-being. I felt like a fish caught on a hook. Didn’t matter how much I squirmed and pulled, I wasn’t breaking free.

“I’d better go,” I said.

“Before I forget, Emilio Herrera from HR has called a few times wanting to know how the case is progressing.”

“Emilio … ah, Jane Daughtry’s carpool pal,” I replied. Why did I get the feeling Herrera was buddies with the Evil Troll Queen Owen? I shrugged it off. Just because she breathed her rank stench down my neck doesn’t mean she’s pals with Herrera.

“Do you want to talk to him yourself?”

“No. Just give him the standard line about us doing everything we can to find the person or persons responsible and to bring closure to the families.”

“I’ll let him know. You sure you’re feeling all right?”

“Thanks, Sandra, and yeah, I’m okay.” I turned and tried for a casual stroll back to my office but suspect it came off like a panicked escape and I knew Sandra still watched me.

I scooped up my laptop from my desk with one hand and sat in one of the large armchairs opposite Kurt. Setting the laptop on the coffee table between us, I checked the alerts on my phone. Texts from Holly, my sister-in-law, and two from Mitch’s mom. Voicemail. Two Voxer messages from my brother. Several dozen emails. I answered the texts as best I could. Holly and Joan wanted to catch up for coffee. That wasn’t going to happen until the case was closed. Aidan wanted to know if he’d be looking after my cat while we were on honeymoon; his next Voxer message suggested he should just keep the cat. I answered him and told him he should. Shrek liked him more than he liked me anyway.

Voicemail was next. Dad, touching base. The last thing he said was, ‘Stay frosty.’ I knew he’d spoken to Gerrard. Dad trained Gerrard so maybe he’d decided to confide in someone he could trust. I hoped that’s what happened and moved on. I put my phone down and checked the emails on my laptop, mostly requests from other divisions or police for information regarding various Delta operations. I forwarded a lot of them to agents who could better answer the queries. The last email wasn’t from law enforcement.

The subject line read ‘Psycho.’

I opened it. As I read the contents, my blood cooled. Slowly at first then faster and colder. My bones ached as the cold took over. I read the contents four times.

A partial poem, signed Kristopher Lette.

I was right about the crime scene memos. But the email contained another line, one we hadn’t seen.

“Kurt …” My eyes stayed fixed on the screen in front of me.

“Conway? Whatcha got there?”

“Part of a poem.”

“Yours?”

“No.”

He crouched next to my chair and read the email.

“God,” he said. “You think it’s Lette?”

“He’d have to be pretty stupid to sign it and send it from his email address.”

He’d signed it and the email address appeared to be his. I copied the source information into a little program we liked to use that gave us the ISP emails were sent from and then the physical address of the sender. Our cyber division kept us up to date with the latest developments.

 

Don’t take it personally

It wasn’t easy

Just listen

I broke when you looked at me

Life cracked wide open

 

I reached forward and picked up my phone. Kurt went back to the couch. Dad answered on the sixth ring.

“It’s me. Have you met Rosanne’s son yet?”

“No. I was supposed to meet him the other day. Rosanne invited him to lunch with us but he didn’t show.”

“You’ve been seeing Rosanne for a while and have never met the son?”

“That’s right. He’s a strange lad by all accounts.”

No kidding.

“He’s an artist?”

“Yes, I believe so. Is there a problem, El?”

Ignoring Dad’s question I continued, “What sort of artist?”

“Fiber, whatever that means. I’ve never seen anything he created. Rosanne hasn’t talked about exhibitions or anything. Maybe his artistic endeavors are fledging.”

“Does he write as well?”

“I don’t know, love. What’s going on?”

“Just need some background information is all. What do you suppose a fiber artist does?”

“Something with fabric or yarn … I really don’t know.”

“A knitter?” Knitting might have started with fishermen back in the day but not what I expected in this instance. A knitting vampire. Large diameter wooden needles became stakes and rammed into his soulless heart.

“I don’t know if he knits, Ellie, but fiber art could be anything. He might weave, or sew, or throw paint at fabric.”

“Does Rosanne talk about him much?”

I wanted to ask if he knew she had a brain tumor and what the hell he thought he was doing. Dating the nearly-dead didn’t seem like a good life choice. Instead, I stuck to questions about Kristopher. Safer ground.

“We’ve only been seeing each other about six months, El, and she’s a private person.”

Private or secretive? There is a difference. Six months and he hadn’t met the son. A little light went on in my head. She hadn’t met me, officially, either. And by Aidan’s reaction at the family dinner, he hadn’t met her either. Dad could be pretty secretive himself.

My silence filled the airways. I could hear Dad thinking. I knew what was coming.

His voice changed, his wording quiet and deliberate, “What has this got to do with the case you’re working on?”

To lie or spill the beans?

Maybe partial truth; I was getting good at that. Before I had time to form my partial truth Dad said, “Just tell me, Ellie. I know your silence and don’t need sugar coatings or partial truths. Just tell me.”

A sigh escaped. I looked over my shoulder at Petrovovich sitting at my desk. Not here. Standing, I left the room.

“Just got an email containing part of a poem. It’s comprised of memos we found at the crime scenes but not entirely. The email is signed Kristopher Lette, it came from his email address, it tracked back to a fixed ISP belonging to Kristopher Lette.”

Having had someone send emails from my ISP not so long ago, I knew it was possible that Lette didn’t send the email but it really wasn’t looking good.

“I see.”

“Dad, I never mentioned the memos in the media briefing. Only people directly involved with the case know about the poetry.”

“Rosanne doesn’t know?”

“No one outside the investigation knows.”

“And this is my heads-up that all isn’t right?”

“Not exactly, Dad, I needed information … but …”

“I’ll let you know if I hear anything.”

“Thanks, Dad.”

I hung up and went back into the office. The email still sat on my screen. My gut said Lette didn’t send it because why would he send it to me unless he wanted to be caught? Wouldn’t be that unusual for a killer to almost cry out to be stopped. We needed to find him and bring him in.

Knitting? I didn’t think so. I called Sandra and asked for in-depth background on Lette. It was a simple request: get me everything.

Sasha Petrovovich coughed lightly from my desk attracting my attention. I moved chairs to sit in front of my own desk, facing Petrovovich.

“The person responsible for these crimes is layering fragrance. He’s collecting components from the crime scenes. When you layer, you start at the base. Body wash or soap, shampoo and conditioner, body lotions and finally perfume.”

“Do you know what the fragrance is that he’s drawn to?”

“I think you know, Agent. You’re looking for confirmation.”

Maybe I do. “Tell me, please.”

“Base notes of bergamot, pepper, neroli, tobacco, citrus and cedar.”

I nodded. I’d smelled all those at various crime scenes.

“And that matches?”

“Dolce & Gabbana pour Homme.”

“I think the Unsub wears that cologne,” I said. “I smelled it at one of the crime scenes. Residual scent in the air.”

Petrovovich smiled at me. “You have a sensitive nose.”

“I’m pretty good at identifying scents on people if I’ve smelled them before.” Even diluted by the wind in a tunnel at a concert. Scents change, they become individual as they warm on the skin, making identification easier for me.

“Can I see the bodies? This will sound bizarre but I’d like to see if I can detect perfume on their skin?”

“Yes. I want to see them again myself. We can do that. If you’re sure?”

“By the look of the products you say are missing, he’s building layers by taking particular items containing base notes he’s drawn to from the scenes. Therefore, the women should have that scent on them. If so, I can probably narrow down the brand of lotion or body wash. Would that be helpful?”

“Yes, it would.”

“When can we leave?”

Eager.

“We have a new crime scene, which I need to get to. Do you mind tagging along?”

“Not at all.”

“I will ask you to stay in the car unless I require your help within the crime scene.”

A civilian traipsing about a crime scene potentially contaminating evidence? Not on my watch.

“That will be acceptable.”

 

Twenty-Six

Painting Pictures Of You

I stood next to Kurt looking at Ashley Stewart in the shower. Obvious stab wounds. No blood. At first glance, her crumpled body told the same story as the previous victims; not getting any easier. Blonde, pretty, slim, dead.

“You want to do your thing before I start?” Kurt asked.

“Please …”

Kurt walked to the door. I didn’t need to look to know he was standing in the doorway watching me.

I knelt on one knee next to Ashley. She was twenty-six and a teacher. We’d have to get counselors into the school to help her students cope.

“I’m Ellie. I’m really sorry this happened to you.”

Talking to the dead again. It’s a skill. Or insane and I’m talking to myself. Jury’s still out.

Her head moved. I blinked and looked again. Nope, her head still rested on the bottom of the shower. I observed her head move again.

This isn’t at all insane.

Slowly, Ashley sat up and rubbed her eyes. I swallowed hard and forced myself to remain calm. I glanced at Kurt, who didn’t react. Pretty sure he’d react to reanimation. So whatever was happening was for me and not real. Ashley’s not a zombie. I felt for the weapon on my hip. Just in case.

Ashley looked right at me. Her hand reached out and grabbed mine. Iciness spread from her touch, freezing my hand. She pulled me into the shower and thrust a cake of soap into my hand. Water poured over me. Struggling to breathe I choked on the volume of water. Ashley spun me around until I faced the shower door. Steam fogged the glass. I shivered as cold shot through my body. Ashley stepped inside me. She didn’t pass through. She stayed. My eyes became hers. Her cold clammy hands grabbed my head and forced me to look toward the door.

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