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Keren nodded and stared into space, thinking about how desperately they needed to stop Caldwell.

Finally, O’Shea broke the silence. “So what’s the deal with you and the preacher?”

Keren threw her coffee cup at him. She wished it was stoneware full of boiling hot coffee instead of Styrofoam and empty.

Keren crawled out of the lousy cot in the police lounge the next morning around five. “I want my apartment back,” she growled to no one, because no one else was stupid enough to sleep here.

Except she didn’t want her apartment back. No way did she want to sleep in that room with her memory of Katrina Hardcastle and all those flies.

She showered at the station house. She’d brought half her wardrobe in by now, and when she got out to her desk, O’Shea was waiting for her like the specter of death.

“Another one?” Keren should have saved her breath. The answer was obvious.

“I just got the word that a body was dumped. I don’t have any details, just an address.” O’Shea headed for the door. “A half a block from the mission.”

“We’ve got cops all over that area! How is he getting in?”

O’Shea shrugged and kept moving.

Keren fell into step alongside him. “Why do you suppose he writes in Latin?”

O’Shea said, “Oh, I don’t know, maybe when we get him, we’ll find a connection in his twisted brain to explain it. Maybe, in the end, he’s just a loon.”

“Boils this time,” Keren remembered. “Pestus ex ulcus, isn’t that right? The plague of boils?”

O’Shea didn’t answer her, and she didn’t want him to.

“Should I call Morris?” O’Shea had his phone out of his pocket.

“Leave him for now.” Keren started jogging down the stairs. “It’s so early you might wake him up. If he’s sleeping for once, let him get another hour or two. There’s no rush. We can just walk over and talk to him from the dump site. There’s nothing he can do anyway.”

“Identify her.”

Keren sighed. She was all too sure Paul would be able to identify her.

Keren moved faster, but what she wanted to do was run away.

CHAPTER TWENTY–THREE

Throughout Egypt hail struck everything in the fieldsboth people and animals; it beat down everything growing in the fields and stripped every tree.

Pravus crooned to the woman in front of him, “I’ve got the perfect place for you. It’s going to be cold, but you won’t care for long.”

He was finding his work to be more of a chore. Eluding the police was heady, but the beast told him his victims were unworthy.

He didn’t even bother to call the preacher this time. Pravus hated to admit it, but he was becoming bored with his creations and living now only for the kill. He worked away, but he couldn’t put the love he needed into his art.

And then, like any true artist, he was inspired. He needed to pick a moment when the reverend was distracted, and he knew just how to do that—how to listen in on his room. Strike while the reverend slept.

He went to the window to look down on the mission, and the final piece of the next child he’d create came to him instantly, when he saw pretty little Rosita.

In spite of all the nickel-sized burn marks on her, Paul easily identified the schizophrenic Hispanic woman who came and went from the mission.

He had to fight back his rage when he stood over her, thrown away like garbage in an alley.

“I should be praying,” he said to O’Shea. “Or crying.”

O’Shea shrugged.

“If I look in a mirror, will my eyes be as detached and cool as yours?” Paul shoved his hands in his pockets to keep them from hitting something.

O’Shea looked away from the mutilated body. He stared at Paul but didn’t say anything.

Paul could feel his own cold-blooded cop personality oozing out of him. “Let’s get this over with.”

“The FBI just pulled Keren aside to ask her some questions. She’ll be back in a minute. She’ll want to hear your statement, maybe ask some questions.”

“I’m not waiting around.” He gave his statement, then he went straight back to the Lighthouse.

He went later to visit LaToya. She lay immobilized in the hospital bed. The beeping monitor was the only thing that proved she was alive.

Caldwell didn’t call.

The streets around the mission were so heavily patrolled that the vagrants and gangs were driven inside or underground. By the end of the day, there wasn’t a single person in the mission. No one showed up for the evening meal.

Paul ran down a list in his head of every woman he knew who lived on the streets. He tried to figure out a way to track them down and bring them inside for the night. Even thinking about it was a waste of time. He’d never find them, and if, by some fluke he did, they wouldn’t come with him unless he used force.

He considered using force—considered it hard. In the end he stayed inside and prayed.

His prayers seemed futile, and he thought about the gun permit he’d been issued when he left the force. He was tempted to get one. He was sorely tempted to walk a foot patrol up and down the South Side, hunting Caldwell. Make himself an easy target to see if he could draw this maniac out.

Pounding awakened Paul after only a couple hours of restless, nightmare-plagued sleep.

Coming instantly awake, something he’d learned on the force, he rolled off the mattress, got to his feet, and yanked the door open.

Higgins was in the hall. “We’ve got another one.” He jerked his head toward the stairway. “I’ll wait for you downstairs.”

“What is going on? Why didn’t he call? Why is there no sign delivered to me? Why no threats, no bombs?” Paul took the time to pull on his running shoes and was after Higgins in seconds, wearing the jogging suit he slept in.

Higgins led the way to a seedy bar a block from the mission.

Higgins pushed his way through a crowd, Paul right on his heels, until Paul saw the ghastly contents of the bar’s ice machine.

Paul saw the gaping eyes and the cold blue skin. “Talking Bertha.”

“One of yours?” Higgins asked.

“One of mine.” Paul analyzed the position of the body. The medical examiner, a young black man, fixed plastic bags over the woman’s hands, hoping to preserve evidence under her fingernails.

“Anything?”

“Nope, just routine.” The ME started loading equipment in a kit.

“Okay if I touch her?”

The ME dragged a pair of plastic gloves out of the kit and tossed them to Paul. “Go ahead. I’ve got everything I need. We’re ready to transport.”

“When’d you find her?” Paul glanced over his shoulder at Higgins as he pulled on the gloves.

“The bar has a silent alarm that went off at two a.m. Police response time was three minutes.” Higgins rapped out the details as the examiner left.

“So she was probably dead when he brought her in, not like the first two. Juanita was probably killed on-site, and he was planning to kill LaToya the same way.” Paul crouched down to pinch a clear plastic encased hand, hanging suspended from the wide door of the ice machine. “Those welts on her body look like burns.” Higgins snapped plastic gloves on his hands and ran a finger over the raised welts on Talking Bertha’s neck, just above the words EAMUS MEUS NATIO MEARE, painted on the white dress she wore.

“This is the plague of hail, right?” Higgins flipped open his notebook.

“Yeah, these are probably freeze burns. Liquid nitrogen, maybe.”

“How does she fit the profile?” Higgins lifted an eyelid over Talking Bertha’s slack, lifeless eyes.