Florence placed The San Francisco Star flat onthe table and sighed. Her reading glasses fell from her face, catching on herchain, and she massaged her temples. The kettle screamed to a boil. Feeling theweight of the world on her shoulders, she made a fresh cup of Earl Grey tea.What was she going to do? She had to do something. The faces of Tanita MarieDonner, Danny Becker, and Gabrielle Nunn beckoned from the paper. Buster, her budgie,chirped from his perch in his cage by the kitchen window.
“What should I do, Buster? I’ve called the policethree times and no one has come to see me.”
What had she done wrong? She had told the police sheheard Tanita Donner’s killer confess to God that he murdered her. She left hername and number. The last officer she talked to was like the others. He didn’tbelieve her, she could tell. He kept asking how old she was, did she livealone, and as a devout Catholic how often did she go to church, what kind ofmedication did she use? He thought she was an old kook. She knew. He doubtedher because she wouldn’t give him details or proof she heard the killerconfess.
Now she had proof.
Florence’s Royal Doulton teacup rattled on the sauceras she carried it to her book-lined living room. She found comfort in this roomwhere she enjoyed her crime books, but nothing in them had ever prepared herfor this. The real thing. She was scared.
Time to check it, once more. She could only stand tohear a little bit. Florence picked up the cassette recorder, and pushed theplay button. The tape hissed, then Father McCreeny cleared his throat.
“How long has it been since your last confession?” heurged the person in the confessional.
“It’s me again,” the killer said.
“Why haven’t you turned yourself in? I implore you.”
The killer said nothing.
“Are you also responsible for the kidnappings of DannyBecker and Gabrielle Nunn?”
Silence.
“I beseech you not to harm the children, turn yourselfin now.”
“Absolve me, priest.”
“I cannot.”
“You took an oath. You are bound. Absolve me.”
“You are not repentant. This is a perverted game foryou. I do not believe you are truly sorry. There can be no benediction.”
Silence. A long moment passed. When the killer spokeagain, his voice was softer. “Father, if I am truly repentant, will I receiveabsolution and the grace of Jesus?”
McCreeny said nothing.
“I need to know, Father. Please.”
Silence.
“Father, you do not understand. I had to kill her. Ihad to. She was an evil little prostitute. I had to do the things I did to herand the others. Their faces haunt me, but it is God’s work that I do. Franklinhelped me with Tanita. He was a Sunday school teacher. He knew the magnitude ofmy work. That’s why he helped me.”
“God does not condone your actions. You misinterpretHis message and that is what brought you here. Please, I beg you, surrenderyourself. The Lord Jesus Christ will help you conquer your sins and preparedyou for life everlasting.”
“We had to cleanse the little harlot of her impurities.We took her to a secret spot I know. Oh how she screamed. Then we-“
Florence snapped the machine off and clasped her handsin her lap. She couldn’t bear another word. She had heard every horrifyingdetail before. She knew what she had to do now.
She went to her clipping file and retrieved theyear-old article of Tanita Marie Donner’s case, staring at one of the newsphotos of SFPD Inspector Walt Sydowski. He was in the TV news footageyesterday, a member of the Yellow Ribbon Task Force. His face was warm,friendly, intelligent. He was a man who would understand. A man who knewTanita’s case, knew people. A man she could trust. She went to the phone andthis time, instead of calling the Task Force Hotline, she called the SanFrancisco Homicide Detail and asked for Sydowski.
“He’s out now. Like to leave a message?” some hurriedinspector told Florence, taking her name, address, and telephone number.
“Tell him I have crucial evidence in one of his majorcases.”
“Which case? What kind of evidence?”
“I will only talk to Inspector Sydowski.”
Florence enjoyed a measure of satisfaction at being incontrol of her information. At last, she was being taken seriously.
“He’ll get your message.”
She sat in her living room, staring at the tape andsipping her tea. Again, she studied the news pictures of the children, theircherub faces. Florence now understood the purpose of her life and no longerfelt alone.
FIFTY
“They are mine, just like Tanita is mine in paradise. My little NUMBER ONE.” Theprinted words bled in blue felt tip across a news feature on theNunn-Becker-Donner case torn from The San Francisco Star. “MY LITTLENUMBER TWO”, covered the article’s photo of Danny; “MY LITTLE NUMBER THREE”,obscured Gabrielle’s face. The note was signed “SON OF THE ZODIAC” and wasaccompanied by a Polaroid of Tanita Marie Donner on his lap. A picture no onehad seen before.
The items were sealed in a plastic evidence bag whichSpecial FBI Agent Merle Rust slid to Sydowski at the top of the emergency taskforce meeting at the Hall of Justice.
Sydowski slipped on his glasses; his stomach waschurning.
“It was intercepted this morning by U.S. PostalInspectors,” Rust said. “We just got word they caught an identical one forNunn’s parents an hour ago.”
“We’re lucky the families haven’t seen these,” Turgeonsaid.
“He send copies to the press?” Inspector Gord Mikelsonsaid.
“We suspect he hasn’t,” Special FBI Agent LonnieDitmire said. “No confirmation calls.”
Rust watched Sydowski crunch on a Tums tablet.
“What do you make of it, Walt? You know the file-is ithim?”
“It’s him.”
“What makes you certain?” Ditmire said.
“the hold-back is a neatly folded note in bluefelt-tip pen that he left in Tanita Marie Donner’s mouth. I told nobody aboutit.
“Gonna tell us what it said, Walt?” Rust opened hisnotebook.
“’My little number one.’”
Someone at the table muttered: “Fucking serial.”
“Any trace evidence on the note, Walt?” Rust asked.
The note was clean.
“Tanita Marie Donner’s mother got one of these Son ofZodiac things?” Lieutenant Leo Gonzales unwrapped a cigar.
“So far, no,” Ditmire said. “It was mailed three daysago at a box near the BART station at the Coliseum in Oakland.”
“Ain’t that a fucking coincidence?” Gonzales lit hiscigar.
“We’ll send this stuff to the lab for prints and saliva.”Rust tapped his Skoal canister on the table. “I would say it’s Virgil Shook.We’ve all read his Canadian file. His history gives him a pattern and hematches the profile. You agree, Walt?”
Sydowski nodded. The new Polaroid, the reference to“ MY LITTLE NUMBER ONE,” the article from the Star. It was Shook.
“Why haven’t we found him?” Nick Roselli, chief ofInspectors, closed his folder of Shook’s file.
“We’ve got people on that; we’re pushing streetsources hard. We’ll get him, Nick.” Gonzales clamped hard on his cigar.
“Better be goddamn now, Leo. The mayor’s office andthe commission are chewing new assholes for us.” Roselli’s gaze went round thetable. “If he grabs another kid before we have him, this city will neverforgive us.”
“Why don’t we splash him? Call a news conference andsplash Shook’s face to the world,” Ditmire suggested.
“He’ll disappear if we do that,” Sydowski said. “Hewants to play games like his hero. He’s going to stick around to see what wedo. If we can buy a few days, just a few days to find him-I’ve got a fewhopeful leads.”
Turgeon, already angry at Sydowski for not telling herabout the hold-back note, barely concealed her surprise.
“All right.” Roselli gritted his teeth. “We’ll give ita couple days and make a full court press on the street to find Shook. We’llfreeze every undercover operation possible and we’ll hammer the streets untilthe fucker pops up. But if he goes to the press with this shit”-he nodded tothe intercepted note-“we’re fucked.”