“Honey, please-”
“I’m moving in with you, Susan.”
“Now wait just a-”
“Don’t waste it. I should’ve never let you stay by yourself. That was stupid. I’ll pick you up at work and we’ll spend the evenings together.”
“I don’t need a damn babysitter.”
“You don’t know what you need. And you’ll start going to IOP at night, too, no matter how many crazed killers are on the prowl.”
“And supposing I don’t agree?”
Lisa sucked in her breath. “Dr. Coutant has been asked by Chief O’Bannon to report on your progress.”
“What?”
“So that O’Bannon can evaluate whether you’re ready for reinstatement. And I talk to Coutant. Often. So you see, Susan, if I give you a bad report-”
“You wouldn’t.”
“I sure as hell would.”
At this point in time, I think it would be fair to say I hated Lisa. She was my best friend and always had been-and I hated her. I knew that she was trying to help me, that everything she said was right. I knew how hard it was for her to play tough with me. But I still hated her.
“That sounds fun, Lisa. A sleepover. Maybe you can paint my toenails. We can braid each other’s hair.”
My sarcasm was wasted on her. “Clean yourself up and get dressed. I’ll drive you to work.”
“I have a car.”
“I’ll drive you to work.”
“Lisa, it’s eight o’clock in the morning. I wouldn’t-”
“I’ll drive you to work.”
I rolled out of bed, trying to pretend like I wasn’t hurting, thinking maybe I wouldn’t go into the office at all.
Then the phone rang.
I’d never expected this investigation to bring me back to the Transylvania. Thus far, the killer had been careful not to repeat himself. But I suppose he didn’t have much choice. She wasn’t coming to him. He had to take whatever chance he could get.
It wasn’t hard to figure out what had happened here. Both cars were still attached to one another. The parked car was particularly damaged. Anyone who had been in there must’ve been injured, maybe seriously. Blood was everywhere. Maybe it was just the fact that I’d drunk all my meals for several days running, but it was getting to me. I was sick in so many ways I couldn’t enumerate them all.
The press was there in force. Not surprising, given who the abductee was. The news was already blanketing the airwaves. This was now the biggest story anywhere, everywhere, all across the nation. Maybe even internationally. The reporters were demanding answers that we didn’t have, acting as if it was our fault that we didn’t. They shouted questions at me as I passed, which I ignored. O’Bannon was dealing with them, or trying. He looked like a drowning man facing a tsunami.
Lisa dropped me off at the outer perimeter of the crime scene, where Patrick was waiting to brief me.
“How did he find her?” I asked.
Patrick shrugged. “Everyone on earth knew she was at the Transylvania. It had been on the news. She even mentioned it on her show. She was doing live remotes from the ballroom. He may have known what car she was using. Possible that he scouted all the parking lots-including this private one for employees and VIPs-found her car, waited for his chance.”
“Why go after the guard? He’s never killed a man before.”
“It was necessary to get to Spencer.”
“And why did he want to do that so badly?”
“She practically put out a hit on him.”
“Yeah, but so what? He likes attention. He’s been craving a challenging opponent.” I shook my head. “It wasn’t the reward money. It was the character assassination.”
Patrick didn’t get it. “Is it possible to assassinate the character of a serial killer?”
“It is in his mind. Remember-he’s a proper southern gentleman doing some kind of respectable, perhaps even sacred work. And then this woman goes on television and suggests that he’s a pervert. It’s an affront to his honor.”
Chief O’Bannon walked between us, a grim expression on his face. “They’re demanding a press conference, people. What can we tell them?”
“Stall,” I advised. “We need more time.”
“They’re very insistent.”
“Tell them to cool their heels.”
“That won’t cut it. In their view, we’ve let a serial killer snatch one of America’s most beloved television personalities. One who recently suffered a great personal loss-thanks to the same killer. All the news reports have been critical of us.”
“Okay, then promise them a conference-later. After we’ve had more time to sift through the evidence.”
He grunted. “Can I at least tell them whether we think Spencer is still alive?”
“There’s no corpse,” Patrick said. “Why bother taking her if he’s going to kill her?”
“He’s killed all the others.”
“But not right away,” I insisted. “There’s no reason to believe this will be different.”
“So there’s still a chance. If we move quickly.”
“But I wouldn’t say that to the press,” Patrick quickly interjected. And we all knew why. Because we didn’t want to be blamed if we didn’t find the killer in time to save her. As things stood, we weren’t even close.
“We’ve got to do something,” O’Bannon growled. “You bring Darcy out today?”
“No… I thought it would be best not to.”
O’Bannon nodded curtly. “He seemed pretty upset last night. Had to give him something to get him to sleep. Haven’t seen him that anxious in a while. You take him to an espresso bar?”
“No. He… saw something that bothered him.”
To my surprise, O’Bannon didn’t ask any more questions. Sighing heavily, he headed back toward the press corral.
Over by the smashed Chevy, I heard a cry. Either pain or exultation, I couldn’t tell. But a few moments later, I saw Tony Crenshaw running toward me.
“What?” I wasn’t going to get my hopes up, but his eyes were like Christmas lights. “What have you got?”
“You are going to love me so much,” Tony said, obviously pleased with himself. “You are going to fall down on your knees and kiss my feet. Perhaps even some more sensitive spots.”
I saw Patrick giving me a sidewise glance. “Cut the fantasy and tell us what you’ve got already.”
But he wasn’t giving it up that easily. “Most forensics would’ve missed it, of course. You do the outside of the car, sure. The upholstery. But how many would’ve bothered to check the floor mats? Especially with a guy who has been so scrupulous in the past?”
I grabbed him by the lapels. “Prints? Are we talking about prints?”
“It’s possible…”
“I’m not your joytoy, Tony. Don’t play with me. Have you got a print?”
“There’s definitely something there. I’ll take the mat back to the lab and try vacuum metal deposition. It’s great for lifting prints off plastic. I’ll get something for you.”
I couldn’t restrain myself. I pulled him closer and smacked him a big one, right on the lips. “But that’s as far as it goes,” I cautioned.
“Looks like there was a tussle,” Tony explained. “We found a few drops of blood in there that didn’t come from Spencer. I think she hurt him. He fell forward, his hand went down on the mat, he forgot to clean up. Maybe didn’t have time. The rental company tells me those mats were washed just before Spencer rented it, so…”
I couldn’t help myself. I kissed him again.
He arched an eyebrow. “Could we take this somewhere?”
I released his lapels. “Yeah, back to the lab. Now.”
She must’ve heard him coming. The steps leading to the basement were wooden and creaked when he stepped on them.
“Who is that? Let me out of here!”
The basement was dark, but he liked it that way. When he first moved in, he had been down almost every day, oiling hinges, wiping the walls with mildew remover, but at some point he had realized that was futile and foolish. He was denying the basement its true nature, its essential basementness, so to speak. Certainly the prophet would not have approved. So these days, he let things be what they were. As a result, the basement had acquired a distinctive odor, not noisome, but a lovely evocative mustiness. The air seemed thick and earthy; the walls bore a thin filmy layer of green growth.