“Ralph! The woods!”
I had no shot. Not from here. Not with these trees, not at this distance.
Sirens told me that backup was on its way, but they weren’t close enough to do any good right now.
The forest stretched about the length of a football field and ended at an empty parking lot in a low-income neighborhood full of crack houses, dark alleys, and abandoned buildings. If the shooter made it that far, there’d be a hundred places to hide. The guy was really moving and I could tell that if I took the time to run to the opening in the fence, he’d make it to the neighborhood and be gone for good.
Only one other option.
“West Reagan Street,” I yelled to Ralph as I sprinted toward the fence. “Call it in!”
I holstered my gun and tugged off my jacket.
Don’t do this, Pat. You’re going to regret it.
Yeah, maybe, but I was gonna do it anyway.
As soon as I reached the fence, I flipped the coat up across the razor wire above me and, without giving myself time for second guesses, I climbed. At the top, using the jacket to pad my hands from the curling, bladed wire, I pulled myself up, but even through the fabric, the metal barbs slivered into my hands. My palms screamed at me and, hastily, trying to keep from toppling backward, I scrunched up the leather beneath my hands and managed-barely-to hold on.
I scrambled my legs up, collected myself for what was to come, then brought them to the top, doing my best to keep my balance and not let the razor wire catch on my pants legs. But as I was bridging the fence, the fabric by my heel caught on the wire, and when I tugged to get it free, I lost my balance and the momentum pitched me forward, over to the other side. I hit the frozen ground hard and off balance, rolled, came up with my gun in my hand. The Maglite had dropped out of my belt, though, on the far side of the fence.
You really do need a smaller flash-
Go!
Leaving the jacket behind, I raced after the suspect through the shadow-riddled forest.
37
Branches flicked past my face. There was hardly enough light to see where the suspect was going, but I was just able to make out his outline moving swiftly through the woods on the fringe of the night.
I leapt over a fallen log, rushed past a pile of garbage and a rusted shopping cart that’d somehow found its way in here.
Just past the tree line, streetlights had blinked on. The shooter emerged from the trees, dashed through the circle of light cast down by one of them, and disappeared somewhere beyond it.
A sprawling, boarded-up building squatted on the other side of the street and blocked a direct path through the neighborhood. I couldn’t tell which direction the runner had gone to avoid it-right or left.
I bolted forward, ducked to miss another branch, and, a handful of seconds later, burst through the edge of the trees and stood by the curb.
No sign of the man I was chasing.
Right or left?
No idea.
He held his gun in his right hand.
Hurry!
I made a choice.
Right.
All things being equal, if he fired with his right hand, he’d be right-handed. I recalled Dr. Werjonic’s research, his writings on cognitive maps and fleeing suspects: “Right-handed people typically turn right upon entering a novel environment.”
I dashed toward a row of cramped low-income apartments.
When I came to the intersection, I saw no sign of the shooter.
I ran forward, checked an alley, then gazed down the block.
Nothing.
No cars were moving. No pedestrians. Admittedly, this wasn’t the kind of neighborhood where people typically take casual strolls in the twilight, but tonight the streets seemed uncharacteristically deserted.
Another hurried search through another alley and I came up empty again. In frustration I let my foot find a nearby trash can. If it hadn’t been chained to a telephone pole, it would have cleared the street. As it was, I left a sizable dent in the side that I might have been proud of any other time.
Immediately, curtains in the nearest apartment building fluttered open and in the porch light I saw a young African-American boy, maybe four or five years old, peering out at me. I was already hurrying back toward the streetlight where the suspect had disappeared, but I didn’t want to frighten the boy, so I hid my gun, continued on casually, and then the curtain closed, and he slipped from view and was gone once again.
When I got to the spot where the suspect had exited the woods, I heard Ralph hurtling through the darkness toward me, the light from his flashlight marking his path. “Anything?” he called as he burst through the edge of the forest.
“No.”
He cursed loudly.
Just as we started scouring the street in the other direction, a patrol car came peeling around the corner.
“Let ’em sweep the area,” I told Ralph. “I want to get back to the train yard and make sure there aren’t any more victims.”
He pulled out his radio. “Or suspects.”
“Yeah.” I was already heading into the forest. “Or suspects.”
38
Joshua made it to his car, which he’d parked four blocks from the train yard. The Ford Taurus he’d left behind wasn’t his, of course. He’d stolen it a few days ago so there wouldn’t be any chance that his own vehicle would be identified at the scene of any of the crimes. It seemed like a slim possibility anyway, but it wasn’t a chance he was willing to take.
He’d planned on torching the Taurus when all of this was done, but now it looked like that wasn’t going to happen.
How did they find you?
Joshua had no idea.
Once inside the car, he snapped on the scanner and listened to the chatter back and forth between the squads.
And thought of last night.
The squads.
The sirens.
The abduction of Colleen Hayes.
Joshua was a fan of true crime books and three weeks ago he’d finished Heather Isle’s newest book about David Spanbauer, a rapist and child murderer in Wisconsin earlier in the decade. The story had intrigued him so much that he’d looked up the true crime expert the author had cited numerous times-a “collector of memorabilia,” as Isle put it, Timothy Griffin.
Eventually, that led Joshua to find out about the products Griffin offered through his direct-sales business.
Which had naturally intrigued him.
It took a little work, but Joshua tracked down the guy’s home address.
He waited until one evening when both Griffin and his young girlfriend were out, and then, just as he’d done with Dahmer’s apartment before it was destroyed, he took his camera into Griffin’s home and captured footage of the place’s interior. He even got footage of the basement and the cache of items beneath the stairwell, the collectibles without price tags on them. The ones that, apparently, were not for sale.
The special items, Joshua. You know all about those.
Checking the boxes of receipts in the bedroom closet, Joshua had found one for a pair of handcuffs from the Oswald case, which ended up being perfect for what he had in mind.
The Oswald case.
The one that mirrored, in so many dark ways, his own.
Because of his special connection with their story, he’d wanted to save their crimes for the climax. And this discovery, in a way, would help him do just that.
According to the receipt, a woman named Colleen Hayes had purchased the specific cuffs. So, rather than leave a pair of his own that might be able to be traced, he decided to let her husband use their own pair when he was forced to abduct the African-American man.
That way, it helped Joshua by turning the spotlight of the investigation onto the husband.