Sand City Murders (38 page)

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Authors: MK Alexander

BOOK: Sand City Murders
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“What the hell?”

“Now!” Adams yelled. Joey got a pat down and the officer took out handcuffs. Clearly this was an over reaction. I got the same treatment.

“We found a dog,” I said, as the plastic cuffs went around my wrists.

“What?” He shoved me unnecessarily.

“A dog, we found one of the loose dogs.”

“Where?”

“In my car.”

“Alright. Go get it.”

“How? You just handcuffed me.”

Officer Adams found the dog and led her into the backseat of his cruiser with Joey and I. He sat up front and hit the radio, “Got a ten-thirteen, please advise.”

The reply was garbled, unintelligible to me at least. Maybe Joey knew. I looked over at him and whispered, “Ten-thirteen?”

“Tow truck, I think,” he whispered back.

“Fuck, that’s all I need.”

 Adams slammed his car into reverse and skidded out of the sandy track. He hit Beach Road and went north. I could guess where we were going and it wasn’t the station.

“Where’s he taking us?” Joey asked quietly and a look of dread crossed his face.

“Driving our new friend back home.”

Ten minutes later we were at the animal shelter and sharply told to sit and wait. It was an unearthly scene through the window. I’ve never seen so many flashing lights, every cruiser in Sand City was there, every ambulance and every fire truck. The woods looked like an outdoor discotheque bathed in strobing flashes of red, yellow, white and blue. I could see uniforms running across the paths, bad dancers all.

Ten minutes later a shadowy figure walked up to the police car. The door opened.

“Okay, out, both of you.”

It was Durbin. I was happier to see him than Adams.

“What the fuck are you guys doing?”

“Rounding up dogs,” I said. Our new friend, sitting between us, was panting by now. She looked up at the detective and barked. I awkwardly exited the cruiser, hands behind my back still. Our new friend jumped out as well, sniffed the air and took off into the woods.

“Crap,” Durbin said and I half expected him to chase the dog down. Instead, he helped Joey out of the car. He turned to me. “Wanna tell me what the fuck you two were doing out in the woods tonight?”

“Us?”

“Yeah?”

“Can’t tell you,” Joey said.

“What the hell?”

Durbin’s tone of voice made me change my mind instantly. “Okay. Burying treasure.”

“Really...” Durbin gave me the evil eye. “Not dead dogs or weapons?”

“What?” Joey and I said more or less in tandem.

“You both had shovels. You were seen burying something in the woods… I want to know what that was,” Durbin shouted.

“Really, it was a treasure chest. You know, the annual contest for the Chamber of Commerce.”

Durbin hardly seemed like he was listening. “What would I find if I dug this up?”

“You can’t,” Joey stammered.

“What do you mean, I can’t?”

“It’s the contest. Nobody’s supposed to know,” Joey answered, and I reckoned he was close to panic.

“You can if you want,” I said instead, “but it will make you ineligible.”

“Ineligible? For what?”

“The grand prize.”

Durbin snorted and shook his head. “You guys are idiots.” The detective finally cut us free from the plastic cuffs. “Where’s Fynn tonight?”

“I don’t know… last I saw him was at Partners.”

“Partners? When was that?”

“A couple of hours ago.” I paused. “What’s going on here anyway?”

“I can’t tell you.”

“What do you mean, Durbin? You can’t tell me?”

“Alright…” He rubbed his brow. “It’s a fucking mess… I’ve never seen anything this bad. We got two more dead girls.”

“You’re kidding.”

“Wish I was.” The detective gave us both a grim look.

I glanced over at Joey. He wasn’t smiling. A look of anguish crossed his face. He realized immediately who Durbin meant.

“You’re talking about Alyson and Emma?” I asked.

Durbin nodded. “Did you know them?”

“Of course I do… I mean, I dated Alyson for a while.” I looked over at Joey. “You’re kind of sweet on Emma, right?”

“That’s pretty tasteless, Patrick.”

“Sorry Joey, I didn’t mean it like that.”

“Where were you guys before? Like two hours ago?”

“What, are we suspects?”

“Just answer.”

“Well, I was at Partners…”

“I was at my Mom’s.”

“Was she there too?”

“Of course.” Joey grinned but this was a nervous one.

“Okay, I have to ask… that’s my job.”

“Can you tell us what happened?”

“I’m still trying to make sense of it.”

“Can I see for myself?”

“You know what? You don’t want to see,” Durbin said. It was hard to read him. His tone of voice gave away a mix of frustration and disgust.

“What went down?”

“Looks like the two girls might have been protecting the dogs.”

“From what?”

“Might be from who… You sure you got the stomach for this?”

“No...”

“Alright, follow me if you really want to.”

Joey declined to come and simply sat on the curb all hunched up, and very quiet.

 

***

 

“Samuels’ office was broken into first… ransacked, I’d say,” Durbin explained as we walked towards the shelter.

“What were they looking for?”

“Who says they were looking for anything? They just trashed the place… out of spite maybe,” he theorized, but I wasn’t buying it. He led me into the shelter and we passed a few crime scene techs who seemed to be packing up. “Someone was systematically killing the dogs.”

We walked back to a long corridor lined with kennels on either side. I could see harsh fluorescent lights up ahead. I turned the corner completely unready for what I saw: blood. It was everywhere, spattered against the white-tile walls, smeared across the wire-meshed pens, and still dripping in some places. On the floor there was a confusion of red paw prints, large and small, scuffled red smears, and a clear set of shoe prints. I stopped to look at a curious red imprint, about the size of a quarter, a pattern stamped in red. I guessed it was the tip of a cane. I was positive. It meant nothing to Durbin but I pointed it out anyway.

“Yeah, we saw that. Not sure what it is yet.”

All this told a story. I could see where several dogs had fallen, perhaps on their sides; not a corpse remained though, thanks to the techs. I was overcome by the sight. My knees buckled. Durbin steadied me. The first set of pens were still closed but covered with blood from top to bottom. It had sprayed out against the walls and floor. Some of the other cage doors were still open, each at a slightly different angle. Inside, I could just make out dark shapes, a tangle of fur and gouged flesh, motionless in the shadows. I tried to look away. I could feel my face screw up into an expression of revulsion.

“Started here in the front. Went cage by cage,” Durbin explained. “I think some of the dogs tried to bite this guy.”

“Him?”

Durbin looked at me. I knew he was right. This wasn’t something a woman would do.

“Were the cages locked?” I managed to stammer.

“Of course. I’m thinking he used a long knife, or a spear even… Then up there… that’s where we found Emma. Best I can figure, it looks like she started opening the cages, letting the dogs loose to save them.”

At the far end of the corridor, I could see where Emma had been. There was an outline drawn by the crime scene techs, and above that there was a silhouette against the wall, the only part of the tiles free from red splatter. If I had to guess, it looked like she was struck down while opening a cage. Her arm had been up and her hand was near the latch.

“Alyson was there…” Durbin pointed. “On the other side. She was probably opening the cages too.”

“Oh my fucking god…” I was muttering to myself. “Alyson, Emma… why? The poor girls… it doesn’t make sense…”

“They were brave girls, compadre,” Durbin said quietly.

“Who could do this?”

“A real fucking psycho.”

“How did they… how did they die?”

“Blunt force, multiple injuries.”

“Just can’t believe…” I felt woozy again. Durbin grabbed me and led me from the scene. Outside, he lit a cigarette and offered me one. I don’t smoke but did then.

“How many dead dogs?”

“Seven… twenty or so are still on the loose.” Durbin took a deep drag. I had to call in the county on this.”

“For the murders?”

“That too, but I’m thinking about all the wild dogs.”

“Why would someone do this? It doesn’t make any sense.”

“Someone out to get Samuels?” Durbin said rather than asked.

“Still? What’s the point? He’s dead already.”

“Exactly. Somebody’s anger has not been satisfied.” Durbin rubbed his brow from weariness. “I guess I’ll track down pissed-off clients… you know, a beloved pet dies and you gotta blame somebody...”

“The shoe prints... Italian shoes? Can you match them to Sunset Park, to Samuels’ basement?”

“What the fuck, Jardel?”

“Well, it can’t be Hector then.”

“Hector? Diaz?”

“He’s in county lock up, right?”

Durbin gave me a face. “Yeah…”

There was some commotion up the road at the entrance of the Samuels compound. A car had pulled up and there was a man, yelling, complaining, making a general nuisance of himself. A bunch of uniforms started jogging in that direction.

“Trouble,” Durbin said and snubbed out his cigarette.

“What?”

“It’s goddamn Leaning. The
Times
. How the hell did he get here so fast?”

Durbin turned to me with a look.

“I know, I know… not a word…” I forced a smile.

“Thanks, Jardel.”

I tried to turn my mind back to the gruesome scene. I didn’t want to but I had to. I looked inside the cages again… the fur, the blood, the lifeless shapes… Still, no sign of Roxy, none of the dogs seemed to be him. I found Joey at the side of Bedrock Road sitting on the curb. Everyone seemed to have forgotten about him. I held out my hand and hoisted him upright. “C’mon Joey, let me take you home.”

 

It’s hard to say exactly how this affected me. Far worse than anything, ever. I felt numb. Tears welled up and filled my eyes. I could feel them streaming down my face. At that moment I believed I would never speak, never utter another word, though I knew I had to. Nor could I ever laugh again, or smile, or make a joke, or a light remark. A darkness came over me. Life would never be the same. A profound sense of loss filled me. Not like Alyson was the love of my life, but she was a person I knew well, a person I cared about. Now she was dead. It was unreal. We had laughed together, made love, smiled and kissed. She was gone now, nonexistent. It hardly seemed possible. Speaking of which, my mind also went back to Partners. Tractus Fynn had leapt into thin air and vanished. That hardly seemed possible either.

 

 

chapter 25

marsh mission

 

I was still reeling from Friday night and I’m sure I wasn’t alone. Sand City had never seen anything as brutal as this. Two sweet girls who had never been anything but kind, struck down for no apparent reason. It was a tragedy, totally senseless and incomprehensible. Joey took it especially hard, texting me weird questions that I couldn’t possibly answer, and desperately searching for some reason behind the killings. I had nothing for him. All I could guess was that Roxy seemed to be at the center of it, and this mysterious Mortimer guy. But I had no actual evidence, just the few things Fynn had alluded to. And where the hell was he? Not a good time to disappear, I thought. I also blamed him in some respects.
I could have taken this little dog anywhere but I chose to bring him here…
These words echoed in my mind. I could feel some anger building. It might not have been his fault directly, but he must’ve known something bad might happen. Time traveler or not, he certainly failed to predict this future.

I guess it was just the shock of it all. I felt dazed, completely off kilter. I couldn’t sleep, not the next day at least. I just lay there on my futon half awake, half dreaming, thinking about Alyson and Emma… thinking about Fynn… Nothing seemed real to me now. For a while I mindlessly surfed the net, trying to stay occupied, trying to keep my mind off everything. Zachary wasn’t much comfort either. He bolted outside when I came in, and was gone for the whole day. He came crawling back that evening; I fed him and he curled up on the floor to sleep, oblivious to all other events. I wasn’t so lucky. The price of awareness and memory. Saturday night was much the same. I dozed, I browsed, I thought in circles. I got nowhere. I found no meaning in anything at all. Even anything Chamblis could have ever done paled in comparison. In the end, the only thing I could do was update the
Chronicle’s
website. I tread very carefully but reported the facts the best I could. It seemed important to tell this story. I headlined it:
Shelter Girls, Profiles In Courage
.

 

***

 

Durbin called me very early Sunday morning, like the crack of dawn, and told me to meet him up by the Marina.

“Bring your camera.”

“My camera? Why?”

“You’ll see… oh yeah, and wear a pair of jeans and a long sleeve shirt.”

That was an odd thing to say. It was already hot, maybe eighty degrees, and a rare windless day in Sand City. “Why?”

“Trust me…”

When I asked whereabouts on Long Neck Road, he said I’d know. I didn’t. It wasn’t obvious at all. Along the way I got stuck behind an SUV towing a huge boat, maybe a cabin cruiser, about twenty-feet long and under blue shrink wrap. They were driving very slowly and that ended up being a good thing. Otherwise I might have sailed right past the two police cruisers parked in between Ralph’s Rafts and the Sand City Surf Shop. No flashing lights.

Neither place was open yet. Ralph’s was usually filled with giant inflatable things, colorful things, animals, tubes, rubber boats, air mattresses and alike. If you could blow it up, you’d find it at Ralph’s. Every time you drove by it was a sure reminder that summer was in full swing. Not today. I pulled up next to Durbin’s dark gray Charger, in the place normally reserved for the bikers. That was a summer thing too. Bikers loved to hang at Ralph’s for some unknown reason, and I mean the kind who ride Harleys. I found Durbin across the road, sitting on an ATV, the two-seater. He beckoned to me, then tossed over a can of bug spray.

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