Authors: Bradley Convissar
He just couldn’t explain any of it.
Jamie looked in the mirror, saw nothing but the wall and toilet behind him. He considered peeking behind the shower curtain again, just to make sure. But he didn’t. Because he didn’t know what he would find.
As Jamie left the bathroom, flicking the lights off as he went, his grandmother’s ominous words echoed in his head, making his entire body tingle:
I won’t let him have you.
The easiest way to know exactly when
each episode is released is to go to my Amazon author page (http://www.amazon.com/Bradley-Convissar/e/B0049E1IIG) and sign up in the upper right hand corner where it says “Stay Up to Date”. They will e-mail you the moment it is released.
If you can’t wait for Brutalization to come out and want something else to pass the time, feel free to sample
Blood, Smoke and Ashes
, Brad’s supernatural thriller. The prologue and part 1 follow the “About the Author” section.
Other Works by Bradley Convissar
Novels
Blood, Smoke and Ashes: A Supernatural Thriller
Short Stories
Pandora’s Children: The Complete Nightmares Book 1
(A collection of 11 short stories, 90K words)
Pandora’s Children: The Complete Nightmares Book 2
(A collection of short stories, 90K words)
Las Dance of a Black Widow (always free)
Novellas
Reflecting on Midnight (collects 4 novellas above in one volume)
Brad Convissar is a dentist by day, a writer of dark fiction at ni
ght, and a father and husband all the time.
He is the author of several dozen short stories, four novellas, and the supernatural thriller Blood, Smoke and Ashes
He was born in Georgia, but moved to southern New Jersey before he could be forced to be an Atlanta Braves fan. He spent his formative years living outside of Philadelphia where he latched on to the Philly sports teams and was promptly disappointed for almost twenty years. He spent his college years in New Orleans, where he earned his bachelor's degree in evolutionary biology at Tulane University, then relocated to lovely Newark, New Jersey, where he earned his DMD.
Once he finished with school, Brad finally settled down back in south Jersey, only miles from the house he grew up in. He is happily married and the proud father of two children.
When not filling cavities or performing root canals or extracting teeth or fabricating dentures, or writing, he spends his time playing with his kids, playing video games, reading comic books, reading non-illustrated books, and rooting on his beloved Philadelphia Phillies and less than beloved Philadelphia Eagles.
His favorite authors are (but not limited to) Stephen King, Dean Koontz, Clive Barker, Richard Matheson, Peter Straub, Neil Gaiman, Douglas Preston, Lincoln Child, Simon Green, Jim Butcher, and Jeffery Deaver. He likes to think he learned something of the art of writing from each of these wonderful authors.
Prologue
“So that is the infamous Jane the Ripper,” Jack Shaw said to Detective Laura Goodspeed. “Scourge of men looking for a casual night of paid sex. Hardly looks the type, don’t you think?” The FBI agent sipped coffee from a Styrofoam cup as he watched the medics heave the gurney holding the unconscious girl into the back of a waiting ambulance. If she felt any of the violent jostling as she was moved, she offered no sign.
Laura nodded. “She can’t be more than five-foot-four, a hundred and twenty pounds. Hardly seems possible that she killed four men almost twice her weight. But she did. There’s no question about it. We’ve already matched her fingerprints to those found at the other crime scenes. We don’t have an ID yet, but it’s her.”
It was two-thirty in the morning, the night clear and muggy, a full moon hovering low above the entrance to the alley where a circus was slowly assembling. Two ambulances, four marked police cars, two unmarked cars, and Shaw’s Expedition already clogged the street. Two news vans were just coming into view and a small congregation of people had begun to gather around the black and yellow police tape, the spectators whispering in hushed tones and pointing. If this had happened even three hours ago, the circus would have been in high gear already. But in the middle of the night, it took the news outlets more time to mobilize, giving the authorities more time to deal with the situation unmolested.
“I guess when you’re dealing with drunk men with their pants around their ankles, even a small girl can take down Goliath,” Shaw said, turning back to his Miami connection. “How was she caught?”
Laura shrugged.
“Some guy wanting to be a hero. His name is James Wilson. Big guy, a little over six feet. And heavy. Told me he’s basically wandered the streets every night since the first murder two weeks ago, pretending to be drunk. Wanted to be the one to finally catch her. When he knocked her out, he called 9-1-1. They called me, I called you.”
Shaw stood a respectable six-foot-two, thin and wiry in build. Like always, he wore a suit that fit his body so well, followed his movements so
perfectly, it may as well have been a second skin. That evening it was a charcoal gray affair with white pinstripes, a white shirt and a fuchsia tie that adorned him. Combined with his perfectly coifed salt-and-pepper hair, piercing blue eyes that commanded respect, and a rugged, tan face with just enough wrinkles to say that he had been around the block a time or two, he practically oozed authority.
Laura Goodspeed, lead detective from the Miami Police Department, was Jack Shaw’s antithesis in most respects when it came to appearance. She was five-foot-eight and slender, the top of her head just coming up to Shaw’s chin. The navy pantsuit she wore was wrinkled in numerous places, as if she had recently slept in it. Her blonde hair was pulled back in a sloppy pony tail and her face was simply haggard from the many late nights she had recently pulled. All the make-up in her house couldn’t cover the bags that hung under her eyes like bruises. Though forty-three, she looked closer to fifty than forty these days. This case had put her through the proverbial wringer and she was ecstatic that it was finally over. She would take a week off, maybe go to a spa, and try to recover some of her lost youth. She envied Shaw, envied the way he made looking good—no, not good,
perfect
—appear so effortless, even after the stress of working for the FBI for so many years. She imagined he jumped out of bed every morning looking flawless. It wasn’t fair.
But life wasn’t fair, and she was old enough to not only know that, but accept it. So instead of punching the man who had treated her with nothing but the utmost respect and professionalism since he had arrived in town two weeks ago, she simply sighed slightly and turned her attention back to the topic at hand.
“Surprised no one else thought to do what he did over the past fifty years,” Laura said. “Dangerous and stupid but effective.”
“Who’s to say no one has tried? He may have been the first one to actually encounter her.
Or the only one to survive the encounter. It’s more serendipity than anything that he actually did. He was in the right place at the right time, and he was lucky enough to not get himself killed. He couldn’t have planned this. There are too many alleys and too many whores in this city, and there was no way for him to know where she would be.”
Neither Shaw nor Laura said anything for a moment, just watched as the forensics people and the uniformed officers swarmed around the scene, a deep dark alley between a bar frequented by locals and a bicycle shop. They watched as the paramedics closed the back doors of the ambulance that the newest Jane the Ripper copycat had been loaded into, then turned their attention to the second ambulance where James Wilson, hero of the night, was still being treated by another set of paramedics. Though he had subdued the girl, he had suffered his share of injuries during the struggle, including several superficial and glancing stab wounds. He would be taken to the hospital as well, but since his injuries weren’t life threatening, Laura had spoken to him here before his memories began to become hazy. Now that she was finished with him, the medics would transport him to St. Vincent’s for treatment.
“Do you want to talk to him?” Laura asked.
Shaw shook his head. “I’ll get to him tomorrow when the adrenaline is gone and he’s patched up. I’ll take a look at your notes, too.” He paused,
then asked, “Did he have any neck wounds?”
“He says she went for his throat but he was able to keep her away. He says she was strong. Stronger than a girl her size should be. And fast. But he managed to strike that lucky blow before she could gut him.” Another pause, then Laura asked, “Do you think this is the original Jane the Ripper?”
“The first? Molly Blackburn? She was caught and executed in fifty-five.”
“Not her. I mean the first after her.
The first copycat?”
“The one who killed the priest in Carson City?
That was fifty-six, only a year later. Even if the girl was twenty back then, she would be seventy now. And that girl was not seventy. Even if she looked good for her age, she couldn’t have been more than fifty. And that’s pushing it. She definitely looked like she was in her late twenties or early thirties.”
“I know, I know.
Stupid question. Just felt that I should ask. After all, you’re the expert.”
“There’s no such thing as an expert when it comes to the Jane the Ripper murders,” Shaw said. “You can’t have an expert when none of the murderers have been caught.” He sipped his coffee and sighed.
“So you think we’re dealing with a copycat of a copycat?”
He nodded.
“Or a copycat of a copycat of a copycat. We have no idea. Jane the Ripper has shown up five times since Molly Blackburn’s execution. Each time in a different city: Carson City, LA, St. Louis, Detroit and now here. The first three were never caught and their identities were never discovered. The fourth was identified but we never found her. She disappeared when she was finished. We don’t have prints from the previous murder sprees. So we may never know how many copycats there were. The only thing I can say with any certitude is that this is the only time we actually managed to stop her before she hit the magic mark of eleven bodies. She only got to four.”
“So we did
good.”
“I think if you asked Mr. Wilson’s opinion, he’d say that
he
did good, not us. And you know what? He may be right. Either way, Detective Goodspeed, after hunting Jane the Ripper for over thirty years, it will be nice to finally interview one of them.”
“Mr. Wilson, you really should come to the hospital with us and get checked out,” the medic said as he cleaned and bandaged the last of James’ half a dozen wounds.
James shook his head adamantly. “I’ll be fine, I’ll be fine. You bandaged me up nice and good. Just give me some antibiotics and Oxy and I’ll be on my way.”
“Sir, you were stabbed.
Six times.”
“Flesh wounds.”
“Any of them have the possibility of getting infected, sir. You should be on IV antibiotics at least overnight.”
“I’d prefer not to go to the hospital.”
Actually, he very much wanted to go to the hospital. Relax for the night and get some very nice pain meds pumped directly into his veins. The type he could control by pushing a red button. (He knew how it worked; he had had his appendix out a couple of years ago and the drugs were wonderful) The wounds he had suffered, they burned and they hurt and they fucking itched, and lord knew he didn’t want to get an infection. He remembered stepping on a nail at sleep-away camp when he was a kid. He hadn’t told anyone at first and the wound had gotten infected.
So bad that he spent two weeks in the hospital, missing the last week of camp. He didn’t know how dirty that crazy bitch’s knife had been, but he didn’t want to risk getting sick.
But he knew that if he went straight to the hospital now, if he surrendered his clothes to the hospital staff, they would find it. Find what he had taken off the girl’s body before the police had arrived. They would know it wasn’t his and someone would either confiscate it as evidence or take it and sell it, like he planned on doing. So there was no way he was going to the hospital where sticky fingers roamed until he went home first and got rid of what he had taken.
“How about I meet you halfway, boys,” James said. “I’ll come with you to the hospital if you let me swing by my house and get some stuff.”
The paramedic working on James looked at his partner, who was playing around in the back of the ambulance, then said, “You could always have someone bring your stuff to the hospital, Mr. Wilson.”
“I don’t have anyone to bring me my stuff,” James returned. He noticed that the paramedic sighed as he put the wrapper from the last piece of gauze into a small trash bag, a clear sign that the man just wanted to get this over with and get home to bed. So he pushed. “Please.”
“I’ll have to clear it with the police. One of them will probably want to come along for your own safety. If they say
it’s okay, I guess it’s okay. But it’s their decision.”
James smiled to the ground. Perfect.
* * * * *
Laura looked through the window as Shaw and another FBI agent talked to the girl, identified as twenty-eight-year-old Morgan Wright, in her hospital room. She still couldn’t believe that this woman, this wisp of a thing, was the one who had gripped the town of Miami in panic for the past two weeks. That this girl could be a Jane the Ripper copycat.
Like most people in Miami, Laura had not known about the Jane the Ripper murders until the first local body turned up pants-
less two weeks ago, the word PIG carved into his stomach (the medical examiner had told her the carving was done ante-mortem). But that one murder had brought the Feds scurrying into town, and with them came the story of Molly Blackburn.
It was a simple yet chilling tale. In 1955, a young wife named Molly Blackburn had gone crazy, killing her husband and ten other men during a month-long murder spree in Las Vegas. She would pose as a prostitute and seduce men, then kill them while they were vulnerable. She was apprehended by her potential twelfth victim and executed six months later. A year after that a copycat killer went on a similar spree in Carson City, Nevada; the first body turned up on the one year anniversary of Molly’s execution. She killed eleven men altogether, just like Molly, before disappearing. She was never identified or caught.
Before Morgan Wright, Jane the Ripper copycats had appeared three other times since that initial copycat in Carson City. Her calling card was very unique. Hard to miss. Impossible to misconstrue. She killed eleven men, never any more than that. She apparently posed as a prostitute near bars and seduced drunk men into alleys for a little something-something, then dispatched them with a sharp knife, always carving a word or two into their chests or stomachs as they bled to death. Los Angeles in ’67. St. Louis in ’77. Detroit in ‘96. And now in Miami. There was no rhyme or reason to the dates or the locations or the time periods between murder sprees. There was no pattern to be found. Nothing. For all they knew, the copycat in ’77 could have been the same from ’67 and ’56. Or they could all have been different. Unfortunately, as Shaw had said earlier, they would probably never know how many different murderers there had been. And just because they had caught this one did not mean that someone wouldn’t try again in the future. Urban myth was a powerful motivator, and if some crazed woman with an axe to grind against men wanted to see this ghastly tradition continue, they would go for it. Insanity knew no boundaries.
But for now, the FBI and Miami PD would bask in the glory and the accolades that were sure to come. They had, along with the help of some guy who desperately wanted to be a hero, saved the lives of seven men.
Shaw’s interview with the girl finally ended, and he and his partner left the small room where the girl was cuffed to her bed. Laura noted the concerned look on his face.
“So how did it go?” she asked as Shaw’s partner disappeared down the hallway.
“She says she doesn’t remember a thing,” Shaw said, hands tucked neatly in his pockets. “She says that the last thing she remembers was having sex with a guy she met a couple of hours earlier, our first victim, a Mr. Calvin Barclay, and then nothing until waking up in the hospital a couple of hours ago.”