“They worked together for years,” Frank went on. “There’s no telling exactly how long they knew each other, but one thing’s for sure, they were devoted to one another. I’m certain Kane’s burial site will attract the killer’s attention, and I’d be willing to bet it’s in the same area where the killings are taking place.”
Melissa closed her eyes and shook her head. Back in Frank’s apartment, she’d felt sorry for the man because she saw a good detective who had succumbed to an almost obsessive-compulsive need to prove the impossible. She’d heard of it before, about investigators who became so wrapped up in their work they refused to let it end, even when it had.
“So, tell me,” she said. “Where is Kane buried?”
“That’s the problem,” Frank replied. “I don’t know. After his death, his body was supposed to be released to his mother, Catharine. Unfortunately, she died almost two years before Kane came out of his coma. She’s buried in St. Paul, alongside Kane’s father.”
“So, what happened to Kale?”
Frank sighed with irritation. “It seems Catharine knew she might not live to see her son again, and that he might not make it out of his coma. She had a special condition added to her will that specified Kale’s burial site be kept off public record. I’ve spoken with her former attorney about it several times. I guess after all the carnage Kale committed she believed certain people might desecrate his grave. Her attorney oversaw all the burial arrangements. I managed to learn that Kane’s body was indeed interred, rather than cremated, but the attorney won’t disclose the cemetery’s whereabouts without a judicial order. All he told me was that they used an ‘old family plot’ and that everything was done in accordance to the law. The guy’s a weasely son-of-a-bitch, but he’s got powerful friends in the system, and he’s managed to stonewall me each time I’ve tried to get the location. And, believe me, the bastard takes great pride in being the keeper of that little secret. That’s why I called you.”
“What do you want me to do about it?”
“With your investigation, you can get a court order—”
“Hold up a second,” she cut in. “Frank, the thing is… I’ve been reading your book, and I’m afraid I can’t agree with your theories. I certainly appreciate your willingness to help—I really do—but I think I’ll proceed with this investigation based on the facts and make my own judgments to how they’re connected with the case.”
Frank had gone silent. Melissa read his frustration in the pause.
“I respect the work you’ve done,” she continued, “so I’ll definitely take your advice about checking into where Kane’s body is buried. At the moment, however, I’m caught up in trying to get all the information I can from the Andersons’ neighbors. Besides, if a seasoned investigator like you had trouble locating Kane’s grave, I doubt anyone else will have better luck.”
“Please, Melissa.”
“There were two homicides out in Corcoran,” she confirmed, “but it’s too early to tell if they’re connected with the Andersons’ disappearance. I’m having trouble getting in touch with their neighbors, which is why I really need to get going. I have a ton of calls to make yet. You understand, right?”
“Yes, of course,” he replied, his voice dry.
“Thanks again for your input,” she said, cringing at her inability to find a better way of letting him go.
Frank sped west on Highway 55, the night’s breath blowing against the Chevy’s windshield. He switched off his cell phone and tossed it onto the passenger seat.
“Damn,” he whispered.
Focusing on the road, he reminded himself that he couldn’t blame Melissa for not accepting his ideas. Not many rational people would. He knew he was on his own.
In his free hand he clutched a piece of paper with Judge Anderson’s home address on it. He held it up.
And saw a blood-soaked man run onto the road.
He cried out and slammed on the brakes, spinning the steering wheel to the left. The Blazer’s tires shrieked. He swerved into oncoming traffic, and the blinding glare of another vehicle’s headlights filled the windshield. A horn blared.
“Shit!”
He jerked the wheel right again and cut back into his lane, sliding to a stop half-off the road’s shoulder.
Frank pulled his gun and whirled around, aiming out the rear window.
Thirty feet behind him a tattered crimson tarp hung from an old road sign, one loose end fluttering in the wind.
Frank stared at it, chest heaving.
Slowly, he lowered his gun and faced forward again, taking a deep breath and closing his good eye. He touched the skin below his eye patch with his free hand, feeling the scar on his face. There was no time to stop and dwell on old demons.
He had to keep moving.
Frank opened his eye and holstered his weapon.
Beside him, on the passenger seat, an open laptop with GPS linkup displayed a mapped layout of the region, highlighting the directions that would lead him to the Judge’s neighborhood. If Melissa wouldn’t look into finding Kane’s resting-place, at least he could check the proximity of the two crime scenes. He’d gotten the name Patterson from an old contact at the same television station that aired the news announcement of the murders in Corcoran, and his Internet search turned up only one Patterson couple listed in that county.
He pulled back onto the road, giving the engine an extra burst of fuel to make up the lost time.
Oddly enough, every time he repeated the Judge’s directions to himself, the list of turns and road names triggered an unsettling bout of déjà vu, leading him to the same creepy conclusion.
He’d been there before.
In the living room, Melissa scooped up her phone and gave the Damerows’ home number another try, dialing the buttons by memory.
This time, the phone rang twice, and then nothing.
Melissa waited. It didn’t sound like the call had been answered, but she got the unsettling feeling the line had indeed connected, that someone was listening to her.
“Hello?” she asked.
Silence.
“My name is Melissa Humble.”
Still nothing.
“I’m a police detective investigating a murder. Two people were killed near your house, and I’m trying to find anyone who may know something about it. It’s probably nothing, but I had to check. Oh, hell, I guess I’m just wasting my time here. Actually, I know I’m wasting my time. I mean, let’s face it, for every scumbag I bust there’s fifty more to take his place. Isn’t that what humanity is, one big cesspool teeming with psychopaths? How the fuck can one cop change that? I can’t. There, I said it. Shit, I might as well put an end to this whole thing right n—”
Her pager went off, stopping her in mid-sentence.
“Wha-what was I…” She shook her head, unable to complete the thought.
She became aware of a strong buzzing in her ears and what sounded like whispering coming from the phone. Overpowered by dizziness, she staggered toward the couch but hit the wall instead. She dropped the phone. It clattered on the floor.
She slid to a sitting position as the room cantered around her for another few seconds, raising a hand to her forehead—
To discover that she now clutched her .40 Smith & Wesson in a white-knuckled fist.
She couldn’t recall crossing the room to her desk or pulling it from its holster.
“What the hell?”
The safety was off, a round in the chamber.
Setting the weapon on the coffee table, Melissa maneuvered herself to the couch. She looked to the phone on the floor, remembering the venomous sound of her own words and the volume at which she spoke them.