Read The Butcher's Theatre Online
Authors: Jonathan Kellerman
Tags: #Fiction, #Crime, #Mystery & Detective, #General
“Printout didn’t say that either. There are streams in Griffith Parkin March they could still be full from the rains. Let me see what else I’ve got… Shehadeh was an addict and prostitute. I racked my brains to see if I could remember her case but I couldn’t. I was working Southwest Division back then, clear across town. To be honest, a single hooker-cutting wouldn’t get much notice. I just got off the phone with a buddy in Hollywood Division, asked him to dig up the file, call me back and dictate the details.”
“Thank you, Lieutenant Brooker.”
“Onward: Number two occurred over two years later, July of ‘73, in New Orleans. Another prostitute, named Angelique Breau, drugged outthis time with Demeroland cut identically to Shehadeh. Traces of soap and shampoo: Dial and Prellhe’s not strict about his brands. The body was killed somewhere else, but found in a crypt in the St. Louis cemeterywhich is kind of cavelike, wouldn’t you say? And she and Shehadeh fit your genital destruction-removal sequenceShehadeh’s vaginal vault was cut up; Breau’s ovaries were removed. She’s listed as a female Cauc, black and brown, nineteen years old, but New Orleans is famous for race-mixing. If you put Caucasian on your driver’s license application, no one’s going to argue with you. Name like Breau she could be lily-white Parisian, swamp-rat Cajun, Creole mulatto, or any mixture thereof.”
“Dark. Mediterranean-looking,” said Daniel.
“Good chance of it.”
“She could have been an Arab, too, Gene. Some of themMoroccans, Algerianshave French names.”
“Hmm. Maybe. But the next two are definitely not Arab, so it appears the killer’s going after a certain look, not nationality.”
Dark women, thought Daniel. The streets of any Levantine, Mediterranean, or Latin American city were teeming with them. Yet the killerif it was the killerhad come to Jerusalem.
It had to be more than a look that he was after …
“The third one took place April of ‘75, twenty-one months after Breau,” said Gene. “Northeast Arizona, desert area outside of Phoenix. Victim’s name: Shawnee Scoggins, female Native AmericanIndian. Eighteen years, black and brown. Ovaries and kidneys removed. Murdered somewhere else, but the body was found off the highway near one of the Indian reservations. Reservation police handled the case. Girl had a history of delinquency, drug problems. Fresh needle marks in her arm, heroin OD, no fiber traces, no mention of soap. But this is the one that doesn’t list multiple weapons either, so we could be talking about a failure on the part of the locals to report all the facts, poor investigatory procedure, or a slipshod autopsy. Everything else fits. I’d suggest you include her.”
“All right.”
“After Scoggins there’s a thirty-two-month lapse until December of ‘77. Back in California again, but up north near San Francisco. This one I remember: nude dancer named Maria Mendoza, twenty-one, black and brown, history of prostitution and narcotics convictions. What was left of her was discovered near a cave up in Mount Tamalpais.”
“Not in the cave?”
“I asked McGuire about that. Printout said neardidn’t say how near. Hard to understand why they put some data in, leave other stuff out.”
“Was she killed up there?”
“No. Somewhere else, site unidentified. This one was very messy, Danny. All the internal organs were removedshe was literally skin and bones. San Francisco police had been dealing with a bunch of unsolved homicides attributed to some crazy who wrote letters to the papers calling himself Zodiac. The last suspected Zodiac killing was in October of ‘75, farther east, in Sacramento. San Francisco thought he’d come back to haunt them. Reason I remember the case is that one of the primary Zodiac suspects moved down to L. A. shortly after Mendoza’s body was found, and we were alerted. We watched himit came to nothing.”
“What was his name?”
“Karl Witik. Weirdo biology student. White guy but rented a house in Watts, had squirrels and mice running wild inside the place. But don’t worryhe’s not your man. He blew
his brains out in early ‘78. Two more possible Zodiacs went down in ‘79 and ‘81, so he probably wasn’t San Francisco’s man either.”
“Eight,” said Daniel, looking at his notes. “Four more.”
“Four more,” said Gene. “And they keep getting nastier. Mendoza’s the last intact body on the list. The rest are all dismemberments: August 1978 in Miami, Florida; July 1980, Sun Valley, Idaho; March ‘82, Crater Lake, Oregon; January ‘84, Hana, Hawaii. Young, dark women, no fiber or prints, soap traces, heroin residue in the tissue, bone rills indicating multiple knives, body parts tossed in wooded or desert areas. Three of the victims have never been identified, including one whose head was never recovered. The one from Crater Lake was ID’d as Sherry Blumenthal, seventeen-year-old runaway from Seattle. Same old song: drug history, prostitution busts. ‘Remains found in state of advanced decomposition on the north bank of the lake.’”
Gene paused. “Sounds like your guy, doesn’t it?”
“The modus is identical,” said Daniel. His sweaty hands made wet marks on the desk. “A traveling killer.”
“Beast of the highway,” said Gene. “The more we coordinate our interstate records, the more we keep turning up. Looks like this one traveled far.”
Daniel scanned his notes again. “Two murders took place in California. Perhaps that’s his home base.”
“Same state, but L. A. and San Francisco are four hundred miles apart,” said Gene. “Maybe he just likes the weather.”
Daniel examined the list of murder sites again. “All these places have good weather, don’t they?”
“Hmm, let me see: Oregon, Louisianayou get your rain and chill there, but yes, generally they’re mild.”
“Places to visit on holiday?”
“I suppose so. Why?”
“The time lapse between the murders averages almost two years,” said Daniel. “Perhaps the killer lives normally for a while, goes out on holiday to murder.”
“Let me take a look at the dates,” said Gene. He grew silent for several moments, then: “No, I don’t think so. January in Hawaii is the off-season, cloudy and rainy. New Orleans and Miami are hot and sticky in Julyfolks fly down there in
the winter. Anyway, there are plenty of guys who don’t need a vacation to travel: drifters, truckersanyone with a job that puts him on the road. And don’t depend too much on the time lapse. He may have killed plenty of others in betweenFBI estimates six undiscovered victims for every one in the file.”
Five hundred eighty-seven by six. “Over three thousand undiscovered murders,” said Daniel. “How can that be?”
“Runaways, throwaways, orphans, missing persons who remain missing. Big country, big messit’s not like over here, Danny.”
Daniel put the numbers out of his head, returned to his notes. “The first murder was fourteen years ago, which tells us something about his age. The youngest he could have been at the time would be, whatfourteen?”
“I’ve heard of sex murders committed by kids,” said Gene, “but they’re usually a lot more impulsive-looking. Sloppy. From the care taken on thesecleaning up the evidence, using dope to knock them outmy guess is they were committed by an adult. Eighteen, nineteen at the youngest, probably early twenties.”
“Okay, let’s be cautious and say sixteen,” said Daniel. “That would make him at least thirty today, most likely older.”
“If Shehadeh was his first.”
“If she wasn’t, he could be much older. But not much younger.”
“I can buy that,” said Gene.
“Thirties or older”Daniel thought out loud“an American, or one who travels to America frequently.” Thinking to himself: if he’s not an American, all those trips to the U.S. will show up on his passport.
“Hundred to one, he’s American,” said Gene. “He knew the terrain, knew where to kill, where to dump. Some of those dump spots are out of the way. Americans are suspicious of foreigners. If one was lurking around, you’d expect it to surface in at least some of the investigations. Unless,” he added, “you’ve got Interpol suggesting otherwise.”
“No, I’m still waiting for Interpol. A question, Gene: In America, he’s a traveling killer, goes from city to city. Here, he stays in Jerusalem. Why didn’t he murder one girl-in Jerusalem, another in Tel Aviv, move on to Haifa?”
“Maybe Jerusalem’s got some special meaning for him. Defiling the holiness or something.”
“Maybe,” said Daniel. But his mind was racing:
Defiling the holiness of three faiths. Defiling women. Dark women. Arabs. A Mexican stripper. An Indian girl. Maybe a Louisiana mixed-blood. Maybe a Jewthe Blumenthal girl from Oregon could be Jewish.
Every identified victim a member of a racial or ethnic minority.
But here, only Arabs. The main ethnic minority.
A racist killer?
A Jewish killer? Kaganism justified by the Bible and carried to bloody extreme?
Or blood libel, as Shmeltzer insisted. Someone blaming it on the Jews?
Whoever had sent that note to Wilbur had defiled the Bible, too. Cutting the text out and pasting it up like some ransom note. What observant Jew would do that, when the sentences could just as easily be copied?
Unless you didn’t know Hebrew.
Addressing the envelope in English block letters.
He didn’t know Hebrew. A foreigner.
An outsider.
Fomenting hatred, setting Jew against Arab? Semite against Semite?
A genuine anti-Semite.
A racist American maniac. Amira Nasser’s story about the crazy-eyed foreigner was sounding better and better: crazy eyes, strange smile … Dammit, where were the Mossad hotshots when you needed them?
“… still only general, we need specifics,” Gene was saying. “Best thing is to take a look at the original police files, or at least get the important details over the phone. I can help you with San Francisco and New Orleans. The rest I’ve got no personal contacts with but they may cooperate, one American cop to another.”
“You’ve done more than enough, my friend. I’ll call them myself. Do you have the addresses and phone numbers?”
Gene dictated them, then said, “It’s no problem my calling them, Danny. It’ll go faster, believe me.”
“You’ve only got four days left in Jerusalem, Gene. I don’t want to take up the remainder of your holiday.”
The line went silent.
“Listen,” said Gene, “if you need me, I can postpone leaving.”
“Gene, Rome is a beautiful”
“Danny, Rome is more churches. Bigger ones. Shrines and murals. Murals on ceilings always give me a stiff neck.”
Daniel laughed.
“However,” said the black man, “I think there’re still a few holy places around here that Lu hasn’t seen. Just this morning she was complaining about a missing a lecture series on ancient pottery whosits or something. So there’s a chance I can persuade her to modify our itinerary if you need me. Have to know soon, though, or we run into problems with changing the tickets.”
“I need you, Gene.”
“Nice to hear. You can tell me again at dinner tonight. Meantime, let me get going on those calls. Bye.”
Daniel put the phone down, thought more about the traveling killer.
America to Israel.
Europe in between?
He phoned Friedman in Bonn, knowing it was barely morning in Germany and not caring if the Interpol man got yanked out of sweet dreams.
The same detached secretary’s voice came on the line. Reciting a recorded message.
He slammed the phone down, studied his notes, let his mind run with the facts, expand them. Kept returning to one thought:
A racist killer.
Calculating. Careful.
Manipulative.
He remembered the phrase that had come to him while reading the books and monographs on psychopathic killers:
Street-corner Mengeles.
He thought, again, of the disgusting paperbacks in Ben David’s office. The Black Book of Fascist Horror.
Read the chapter on “Murder for Profit,” the psychologist had said. The surgical experiments.
I found myself thinking about them in Nazi terms …
You see, you don’t need me. Your unconscious is guiding you in the right direction.
His unconscious. It had been languishing, sick with frustration, withering from disuse. But the data on the FBI listthe linkhad breathed new life into it. Now, an image of the killer had been sculpted in his minda soft sculpture, to be sure, a wax outline, gross features melting in the glare of uncertainty. But an image nonetheless.
He was certain he was right.
The killer was no Jew, no Arab.
An American with strange eyes, a diseased mind, and a racist scheme. A beast of the highway stalking the herd.
Americans, thousands of them living and visiting here, but the only ones under surveillance were Roselli and Wilbur. Not very promising; The reporter was unethical, but no killer; the monk s big secret was that he wanted to be a Jew.
Which made him intriguing, but no suspect.
Unless he had more than one big secret.
From what Daoud had overheard, the monk knew he was under suspicion. Was the move to the yeshiva a means of covering something up?
Daniel had instructed Daoud to stay on Roselli. The Arab’s “Yes, Pakad” had been reflexive but strained. Poor guy was probably cross-eyed with boredom by now. If nothing came up soon, Daniel resolved to put his talents to better use. Any further observation of Roselli could be carried out by one of Harel’s Latam boys, wrapped in robes and kafftyah.
He thought about Roselli again. From monk to yeshiva student.
A spiritual quest? Or just another impulsive shift for an unbalanced mind?
Another crazy American. With crazy eyes?
Thousands of Americans walking the streets of Jerusalemfind the one with the crazy eyes. Like sifting granules of gold for a single speck of dross.
Big mess, but small country. An outsider couldn’t submerge himself indefinitely.
He took pen in hand, outlined his plan.
Airline cross-checks, page-by-page reviews of tens of thousands of uncomputerized passport recordsthe tedium the Chinaman had dreaded out loud but which was the surest way to fine-carve the sculpture. Canvasses of hotels, pensiones, hostels, dormitories, housing agents and automobile rental firms, travel and tour companies, kibbutzim and moshavim that took on foreign volunteers.