Stirred (18 page)

Read Stirred Online

Authors: J.A. Konrath,Blake Crouch

BOOK: Stirred
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“He was onto you, D. Nothing I could do about it.”

“We gotta come up with a better plan for next time.”

“Don’t need to. While he was busy with you, I helped myself.”

“Food?” Donaldson’s mouth began to water at the thought of it.

“Better.”

“Cash?”

“Register was locked, but I got these.” Lucy reached into her dress, pulled out a long, accordion string of cards.

Scratch-off lottery tickets.

“Goddamn it, girl, no one ever wins at those things. Why didn’t you grab something we could actually use?”

Then Lucy did something that Donaldson hadn’t seen in all the time they’d been institutionalized.

She began to cry.

Donaldson didn’t know how to react.
Once upon a time, he’d tried his damnedest to kill this girl. And she’d returned the favor
. But these last few years, rehabilitating, plotting, planning their revenge, Donaldson realized he’d formed a relationship with Lucy that was as intimate as any he’d ever had. Looking at her, so obviously distressed, he felt bad for his comment.

They climbed painfully into the front seats of the Monte Carlo, and Donaldson gave her one of the car keys.

“Look. Let’s scratch these babies off. Maybe we’ll win the lottery after all.”

After spending ten excruciating minutes scratching off all seventeen cards, they’d only won a single free ticket.

“I hate you,” Donaldson told Lucy.

It grew cold, and with no money for a motel, they were forced to sleep in the car, the situation only compounded by the fact that Lucy had lost the Ativan, the drug that helped them to sleep. Without it, it would be damn near impossible to drift off.

Donaldson didn’t believe in karma, but when he considered the many people he’d ruthlessly murdered, he wondered if sitting there shivering, hungry, and in terrible pain might actually be what he deserved.

April 1, 7:30 A.M.

I
didn’t have any seizures that night, because I didn’t sleep.

Too much on my mind.

Insomnia and I were old, familiar enemies.

Even though Phin was still angry, he’d insisted on staying in my room and had only fallen asleep an hour before dawn. Now, as the sun came up, he was still sleeping in the easy chair, Duffy at his feet.

I read Andrew Z. Thomas long into the morning.

The Scorcher
was a violent little potboiler that had surprisingly held my interest, despite the fact that it had no hero to root for. But having read it, I still wasn’t sure what it was supposed to teach me. When I’d finished
The Scorcher
, I dove into
The Divine Comedy
, and the only thing I learned from that one was that Dante was nuts. Thinking up tortures for sinners and then writing an epic poem about it struck me as the ultimate in poor taste. That so many religions and people took what Dante said about hell as a universal truth was a scary proposition.

After the reading binge, I walked Duffy in the backyard.

When he finally pooped, I stared at the pile, wondering what my next course of action should be. Arriving at no pleasant way to solve the problem, I put on a latex glove and played pinch and squish, which was every bit as revolting as it sounded, the smell so bad I actually took off my sports bra and tied it over my nose and mouth. After a thorough examination, I deemed the ring wasn’t there. It had been a disgusting waste of time.

On the plus side, it was so terrible, I didn’t see how changing a baby’s diaper could be any worse.

When I walked back inside, Phin was up.

“Let’s take your blood pressure,” he said, sleep still pulling on his voice.

“Later.”

“Now.”

I was too tired to fight with him, so I took a seat while he pumped and calculated.

“One sixty-five over one ten. It’s gotten worse.”

“I feel fine.”

“We need to take you to the ER, Jack. This is a serious—”

“Feel.”

“What?”

I grabbed his hand, placed it on my belly. “Feel. She hears your voice, and she’s saying good morning.”

Phin held his palm there, our child’s little feet tapping against him. For that brief, crystal moment, I could picture being married to him, and the white picket fence fantasy hit me full force. No more chasing killers or carrying guns. Just the three of us, being stupidly, happily domestic.

Phin pulled his hand away. “I’m calling the doctor, asking him what to do about your blood pressure.”

“Can you just sit with me a little, first?”

He left, and I felt a pang of guilt dead center in my chest, questioning yet again why I simply hadn’t said yes to his proposal.

Waddling back to my office, I plopped down behind my desk and stared at my computer. I considered opening up Notepad to jot some things down, but instead went analogue and took out a piece of paper and a pen.

I made a list of data points on the first murder.

Vic Name: Jessica Shedd

Location where body found: Kinzie Street railroad bridge, hanging over the water

Time of Death: March 31, approx 1:30–2:30
A.M.

Cause of Death: blood loss, with extensive premortem mutilation

Found 6:40
A.M.
by jogger

Book found in plastic bag wired to ribcage

Writing on bag: For Jack D—This one was a real swinger—LK

Book: The Scorcher by Andrew Z. Thomas

1 page dog-eared: page 102

1st letter “p” on the page circled

Dante line: A little spark is followed by a great flame.

Something occurred to me. I grabbed my Kindle and found the corresponding page which had been earmarked. Then I backspaced until I came to the beginning of that chapter. Wrote it down.

Chapter 31

Relevance of excerpt…unknown.

Okay, next murder.

Vic Name: Reginald Marquette

Location where body found: Shedd Aquarium

Time of Death: March 31, approx 1:00–2:00
P.M.

I went online and logged into the Chicago PD database, checked the police report to see if the coroner had determined cause of death. Yep.

Cause of Death: potassium chloride poisoning, postmortem mutilation

Witnesses say body dropped in cardboard box at entrance to aquarium at approx. 2:00
P.M.

Book found in plastic bag in the stomach

Prints on bag belong to Luther Kite

Prints on book belong to Andrew Z. Thomas

Writing on bag: JD, He devoured this book in one sitting, LK

Book: The Killer and His Weaponby Andrew Z. Thomas

1 page dog-eared: page 151, in part 1

1st letter “p” on the page circled

Another Dante line: Remember tonight…for it is the beginning of always.

I studied the similarities first.

Obviously, a victim named Shedd and a crime scene at the Shedd Aquarium. Two Thomas books. Two Dante quotes. Two notes to me written on plastic bags. Fingerprints from both Kite and Thomas.

As for differences…

One younger, single woman; one older, married guy.

She was a claims adjuster; he was a professor.

She was tortured; he died relatively fast and painlessly.

I checked their birth dates and addresses, but didn’t notice anything that linked them.

I scribbled
Two different murderers?
on the pad, and then called up Phil Blasky at the county morgue.

“Phil, Jack Daniels.”

“Hey, Jack. How’s retirement treating you?”

“You’re bullshitting me, right?”

“Absolutely. Calling about these Kite murders?”

“Yeah. Style seems different. One was torture, one was poison.”

“You thinking two different killers?” he asked.

“Crossed my mind.”

“I can tell you the mutilations appear consistent. Same weapon used—a curved, serrated blade. The cutter was right-handed in both cases. Entry cut was at the same location, just above the belly button. The cutter has some knowledge of anatomy. No unnecessary damage to the internal organs.”

“A doctor? A butcher?”

“Possibly. Or could be someone who has simply gutted a whole lot of people.”

I crossed out my
Two different murderers?
note. “Thanks, Phil.”

He hung up.

I stared at my notes, my mind drifting, and wrote down:

Jessica.

Sara.

Amanda.

I scratched those out, and then wrote:

Maria.

Lisa.

Carla.

Carla Daniels.

Carla Daniels-Troutt.

But I hated the name Troutt. I didn’t much care for the name Daniels either. That was my ex-husband’s name, and I just kept it for professional reasons.

Though my maiden name, Streng, wasn’t much better.

Did I have to use my name or his name? Couldn’t I pick something entirely new?

I wrote:

Carla Einstein. Carla Aristotle. Carla Hemingway.

And I realized I hated the name Carla, too.

I heard Phin coming back, quickly turned the paper over.

“The doctor said to take you to the emergency room immediately.”

“Of course she said that. She could be sued otherwise.”

“Put your shoes on.”

I reached for his belt, tugged him closer. “I know something that can lower my blood pressure.”

“I’ll meet you in the car.”

He pulled away, rejection prickling me like a blush.

Which was probably how I’d made him feel yesterday.

I hoisted myself out of my desk chair and then went to find my shoes.

This was shaping up to be a really shitty day.

March 17, Fifteen Days Ago
Three Days After the Bus Incident

“N
ame?”

“Christine. Christine Agawa.”

“How much do you weigh, Christine?”

“What?”

“Did you not hear my question?”

“Yes, I just don’t understand—”

“Your understanding is not integral to this conversation. Answer the goddamn question.”

Her eyes lower. She stares into the table.

He can practically smell the shame and the self-hate radiating off of her.

“Three hundred and seventy pounds.”

“Is that accurate? Or are you keeping a few pounds from me?”

“I haven’t weighed myself in a while. I’m probably heavier.”

“Have you been heavy all your life?”

“Since I was…” She wipes a tear from the corner of her eye. “Since I was ten.”

“What prompted this?”

“I don’t know.”

“But it isn’t some thyroid condition or anything like that beyond your control?”

She shakes her head.

He slides his chair back and stands.

“Thank you, Christine.”

“Why am I here?” she asks as he reaches for the door. “Please.” Crying now. “I’m so worried.”

“It’s okay, Christine. Quite healthy in fact. But you shouldn’t be worried.” He smiles. “You should be terrified.”

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