Authors: Rita Herron
He ran his hand over her quivering stomach and her
past flashed like candid shots in her mind. Of her dressed in the
pink-dotted Swiss Easter dress her mother had sewn for her when she was
five. Then later, the dorky Christmas photo they'd taken every year. Her
mother had insisted they all wear red and white. Then the fights with her
parents when she was a teenager. Her mother's sad eyes. Her brother pleading
with her not to leave. Her fatherâ¦His shouts that if she left, she was not
to come back.
God,
she'd been such a brat. If she could take it all back. The pain and grief
she'd caused them, the hateful words she'd said. Things she hadn't
meant.
She'd get a
real job, apologize, prove she wasn't trash.
Another horrific pain tightened her muscles and
twisted her insides. She was being ripped apart. The condomâ¦the stuff he'd
sprinkled on it. What was it? Some kind of poison?
Noâ¦no! She didn't want to die. He'd promised if
she said she loved him that he'd save her!
But her body spasmed again, her limbs useless and
heavy. The world grew darker, as black as the bottom of the Mississippi.
With one last gulp of air, she sank her nails into his arm, hoping to leave
some DNA behind. Then maybe the police could make this man pay for what he'd
done.
Finally death
whispered her name. She closed her eyes and welcomed the unknown. Anything
to be free of the agony. Still, she prayed again, this time that there would
be a white light where she was going. That death would take her away from
hell, not plunge her into its darkness.
And that someone would find her body before the
gators destroyed anything that was left.
T
WENTY-FOUR HOURS
since the second woman had gone missing.
Britta had to do something.
Maybe she could help figure out the woman's identity. If they knew her name, they could talk to her friends, search her apartment, maybe find a clue.
The night sounds of the city and bayou whispered to her, pleading and insistent. It was Saturdayâthe biggest night for partying. Drinking. Hooking up.
Jean-Paul Dubois had left her claiming he was going to join one of the teams and search for the second possible victim.
Now, it was midnight. Tendrils of fear slithered through Britta, reminding her of the dangers in Black Bayou. Had he found the girl yet? Was she still alive? Or had she already given into death and joined Elvira?
Dressing again to play the part, she dolled up her hair, donned a lacy bustier in bronze and a tight leather skirt with snakeskin knee-high boots. A little perfume behind her ears and between her breasts, then off with the wire-rim glasses and she'd cloaked herself with an aura of confidence. She'd done this before, she could do it again. And she would survive. She'd learned to fight. Of course, she always took a knife with her, as did all the street girls in case one of their customers got nasty.
Although she considered herself a good judge of character, men often masked their true identities just as the girls disguised themselves and offered phony names and telephone numbers.
She glanced at the miniature doll she'd bought, then down at her outfit and embarrassment flooded her cheeks. What in the world was she doing buying dolls? She'd never played with them when she was little and certainly didn't plan to marry or have a daughter to pass them on to.
Not like Jean-Paul's family. Not like Catherine and Chrissy.
Irritated with herself for forgetting her origins for even a moment, she opened the drawer of the corner desk and placed the doll inside. Other similar dollsâsome baby dolls, some porcelain, some fairy-book story charactersâlay side by side on a white blanket.
She shoved the drawer shut, putting the nonsense out of her mind as she closed the door to her apartment and hurried down the steps. Her heels clicked on the pavement as she wove her way down Bourbon Street, the raucous laughter, zydeco music and partying pounding in her ears. The pungent scent of cheap beer, urine and vomit permeated the dark alleys, and drunken patrons danced in the street, made out on benches and shouted obscenities. She parked herself on the corner, removed a cigarette and lit up. Cars honked their horns, while the people inside waved beads and Mardi Gras flags through their opened windows.
The sultry air hinted at impending rain, resurrecting memories of the floods that had destroyed so many homes and businesses after the hurricane. The stench of raw sewage, disease and vermin still haunted her. And then the looting.
Some of New Orleans' own had turned on their brothers and sisters in their bleakest hour. Yet heroes had also risen through the masses. Jean-Paul Dubois most certainly had been one of them.
Her gaze skimmed the crowd and streets, the skin at the base of her neck prickling. A dark sedan rolled to a stop in front of her and she braced herself for action.
“This corner is taken, baby. Don't you know that?”
She winked at the pony-tailed man with the spectrum of earrings running down his ear. “Ahh, surely there's room for one more, sugar.”
His smile said he liked what he saw. “You have to talk to Shack. He owns the girls in this part of town.”
Exactly. She batted her fake lashes and leaned forward, making sure he caught sight of her cleavage spilling out. “Then take me to him.”
Britta's bracelets jangled, mimicking her rattled nerves, but she blew him a kiss anyway and climbed in the backseat. Her knees knocked together as he sped off, but she forced herself to remain calm.
Shack would be pissed as hell to see her. He hadn't liked what she'd done to him a few years ago. And he detested the fact that she'd been stealing his girls away from him. He knew she had her own agenda, and it conflicted completely with his.
Of course, he might rough her up a little before he finally listened. But a girl had to do what a girl had to do. And she couldn't change what she'd become.
No use trying, not for a man like Jean-Paul Dubois, a hero. A man who'd never understand.
She only hoped he found the missing woman tonight, before the swamp devil claimed another life.
* * *
T
WO O
'
CLOCK
. And they still hadn't found the woman.
She couldn't die tonight.
Jean-Paul would not allow it.
He and his team had been searching the bayou for hours, their legs and backs breaking, but he refused to quit. Bugs, weeds, swamp water clung to their clothes and skin as if they'd been bathed in the murk. Mosquitoes fed on their arms and faces, buzzing through the air ready to feed.
It was always like this in Black Bayou. More stories of ghosts and supernatural creatures originated from this stretch than any other part. Here, night never ended. The thick trees and silvery-gray moss created a cavern that reminded him of an ancient burial ground from medieval times. It was a dark, lost place where legends touted that any human who entered never emerged alive. A place where voodoo priestesses and witchdoctors had been born, where the lowest humans were condemned to lie with the night stalkers. A place where mutant creatures existed, living in the shadows, moving along the whispery darkness like ghosts banned from the other side.
Sweat streamed down the rescue workers' faces as they hacked their way through the weeds and brush choking the water.
“We might as well call it a night,” his brother Antwaun said. “All the men are exhausted.”
“But she's out here.” Jean-Paul turned to survey the backwoods. “She needs us.”
Antwaun frowned. “Listen, Jean-Paul, I know this is getting to you. I understand why you're so driven. Lucinda should have stood by youâ”
“I don't want to talk about her,” Jean-Paul snapped. Or Britta, the woman he had been thinking about instead of his dead wife.
“Stop blaming yourself. You can't save them allâ”
“I can't stop trying, either.”
Antwaun's expression turned solemn.
“Just a little longer,” Jean-Paul muttered. “We're close, I can feel itâ¦.”
Jean-Paul moved his flashlight along the weeds, aware of the gators floating like tree trunks in the water. Silent. Waiting. Ready to pounce any second.
He turned to their right, heading deeper into the shadows. Five minutes later, he spotted a rotting shanty practically floating in the mud and water. Jean-Paul eased onto the wooden slatted porch, then waved for the men to wait. His own need for vengeance surfaced.
This killer deserved to die.
He braced himself to fire. Antwaun moved up behind him, his own gun raised for back-up. Jean-Paul peeked through the dirt-fogged window. Although his eyes had adjusted to the darkness, the room was steeped in shadows. He couldn't make out anything except the outline of metal bedposts.
Slowly, he eased open the door to the cabin, pointed his gun, then swept the room with the flashlight.
The killer was gone.
But he'd left his handiwork behind.
The poor woman lay in a pool of blood and sweat in the middle of the rumpled bed, tied down as if she was an animal.
Rage pumped through Jean-Paul's stomach. She was naked just like their first victim, bloodsoaked and wide-eyed with terror. The stench had drawn the flies and bugs, making her look even more helpless and degraded.
He rushed forward to check for a pulse, but visible signs indicated that she was dead. The heat had started rigor, but she wasn't completely stiff yet.
Antwaun radioed for a crime-scene unit and medical examiner, then searched the room. Within minutes, both teams rushed in to process the scene.
While they went to work, Antwaun and two other officers canvassed the parameter, but the Mississippi had already washed away any footprints. Inside the cabin, the killer had wiped everything down, everything but the blood and grime on his victim. Jean-Paul forced himself into the head of the killer. The swamp devil wanted them to see the woman naked and exposed for the dirty girl he deemed her to be.
The mask of Sobek had been hung from the ceiling, which meant the girl had been forced to look at it while she'd been raped and murdered. Had the killer prayed over her body, offered her as sacrifice to the gods as the medieval Egyptians had done?
And why? Where the hell had he adopted that sick practice?
Time of death: midnight. Dammit, just about the time he'd left Britta. Three hours earlier and they could have saved this woman.
But once again, he'd been too late. And she'd sufferedâ¦.
What about Britta? Where was she now?
Was she safe or had the swamp devil contacted her again to brag about his latest victim?
* * *
A
FRISSON OF ALARM
rippled up Britta's spine as Shack's buddies surrounded her. Three giant men with tree-trunk bodies, scarred black faces and fists the size of grapefruits. They could kill her with one punch if they chose.
Shack puffed on a cigar, glaring down at her with his pithy eyes. His hair looked as black as soot, his skin so pale it resembled the white flaky skin of an albino crocodile. Though they were rare, she'd seen one in the bayou the night she'd run away. The creature had actually pounced in front of another gator as if to save her.
Just as Shack had.
But he'd had another plan. Just as the albino gator probably had.
He'd intended to eat her himself.
“Why are you here, Britta? You know I'd like to strangle you.”
“Let it go, Shack. I came to give you a warning.”
Laughter boomed from his big body. “You're warning me? That's rich.”
The silent implication of his words sent a shudder through her. Shack thought he owned his girls. Leaving wasn't an option. He'd told her that when she'd skipped. Every day she walked a tightrope knowing he might send someone back to force her to return to him, to the life. Why he hadn't done so yet, she didn't know.
She licked her parched lips, remembering her reason for braving this visit. “You need to watch out for your girls.”
“What are you talking about, Britta?”
“Elvira Erickson, the girl who was murdered. Was she one of yours?”
He blew a ring of smoke into the air, and watched it curl upward. “I was recruiting her, yeah.”
Britta crossed her leg, vying for calm. “The killer is targeting the street girls.
Your
girls.”
Shack's eyelids turned to mere slits as he studied her. “So you want me to call my girls off the streets?” Sarcasm edged his voice. “I can't do that. I'd lose too much business.”
Damn. She knew he'd say that. “Are any of your girls missing now?”
Shack sent one of the beefy men a questioning look but the man shrugged.
“Check and see,” Britta said. “If you do, we can tell the police and maybe they can save her.”
Shack drummed his diamond-clad fingers on his leg. “I'm not working with the cops, so don't even start with that shit.”
“Then send word to me and I'll pass on a name. This guy's a real sicko, Shack. He ties up the girls, poisons them with a condom, then has sex with them. As if the pain from the poison isn't enough, he sinks a lancet into their hearts and leaves them as bait for the crocodiles.”
“Jesus.”
Britta forced herself to continue, “He leaves them in a ritualistic manner, as if he's sacrificing them to Sobek.”
His features tightened, nostrils flaring. “That is some scary shit.”
“He also leaves a mask of Sobek with the victim. Do you know any groups still honoring the medieval practices?”
The men behind Shack shifted uncomfortably. Shack leaned forward and lowered his voice, his diamonds sparkling against the dark. “There's a new clan sprung upâout in Black Bayouâmight be doing some of that weird stuff you're talking about.”
An icy cold numbness speared Britta. She'd thought the clans had disbanded. But at least one had resurfaced.
It was too much of a coincidence to ignore.
Shack stood, buttoned his gold double-breasted jacket and stared down at her, his eyes blazing. “Now, you listen to my warning. Interfere with my business again, mess with my girls and we're gonna have to talk. And trust me, Britta.” He raked a nail across her cheek. “It won't be pretty.”
* * *
“D
AMON
,
IT'S
J
EAN
-P
AUL
.”
“What's up, brother?”
“We have a serial killer.” Jean-Paul relayed the past few days' events, the MO of the murderer, Britta Berger's connection and their current location.