Authors: Michael Prescott
Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #General, #Crime
Mercado shrugged. “Doesn’t that undercut the credibility of the call even further?”
“Not necessarily. Not if there were break-ins in other cases.”
Marty
Kroft
looked at the ceiling. “We’re back to this again.”
“She said there were others,” Shepherd went on implacably. “Others Cray had killed.”
“Oh, Christ,” Rivera said, “she’s your frigging soul mate. No wonder you believe her.”
Shepherd clamped down on a spasm of anger. “I’m just saying her version of things might turn out to be pretty close to the truth.”
“Close to your idea of the truth,” Stern said. “Your theory.” He put a dismissive emphasis on the word.
“Yeah, my theory. Let’s just say I’m right about my theory. Let’s say Sharon Andrews was not an isolated incident. Let’s say this psycho has been in the game for a while, and we never knew about it because none of the earlier victims turned up anywhere. There are plenty of unsolved missing-persons cases—”
“You can’t go pinning every unsolved juvenile runaway on the
White Mountains
freak,”
Kroft
said.
“I’m not talking just runaways. I’m talking kidnappings too. Break-ins, and the woman of the house gone, never found again. There have been six I’ve turned up so far—”
“All in different localities,” Rivera interrupted, “Not just different neighborhoods, I mean different counties.”
“The man travels. Most serial killers do.”
“Never the same MO. Method of entry, time of day, choice of victim—no similarities.”
“He varies his methods. He’s smart. He doesn’t leave an obvious trail.”
“Time span of roughly a decade, as I recall. That’s a lot of dead girls, man.”
“He’s not constantly active. The urges follow a cycle. You know about that.”
A serial killer—if that was indeed what Shepherd was dealing with—tended to operate in a long, rhythmic pattern. The killing phase was followed by a period of dormancy. Then the urges would resume, and the killer would begin fantasizing, then stalking, and finally he would kill.
The length of the cycle’s inactive phase varied significantly. Often the killings became more frequent as the urges intensified or earlier caution was abandoned.
It had been five months since Sharon Andrews’ disappearance. She had been murdered within hours of her disappearance; that day’s lunch was found in her stomach at the autopsy.
Five months—and now the female caller claimed the killer was ready to strike again. The time fit Shepherd’s profile.
Actually,
profile
was too technical a term. He wasn’t a psychologist, and he had no training in behavioral science. But he’d been a cop for a long time. He had an intuitive sense of the man he was looking for.
That man would be sadistic, obsessive, capable of animalistic violence—yet self-controlled, careful, intelligent. He would know the danger in striking too often or too recklessly. He would moderate his urges, suppress or divert them for as long as possible, draw out the period of dormancy until he could restrain himself no longer.
A month was too little time; a year—probably too long.
“One kill about every six months is what I’m guessing,” Shepherd said. “If so, the body count wouldn’t be unrealistically high, not for a guy like this. He could go on doing it for ten years or even longer, assuming he’s good enough.”
Rivera brushed this aside. “No one’s that good.”
“It’s been known to happen.”
“In the movies. Look,
Roy
. You’re dealing with a bunch of completely unrelated cases with absolutely nothing to link them to the
White Mountains
thing or to one another. There’s no pattern, except the one you want to see.”
Shepherd considered a counterargument. He knew several he could use. But the effort would be wasted.
Kroft
, Rivera, and Stern were hostile to the very idea of connecting the Sharon Andrews case to any earlier crime. The others in the room had no opinion. And Brookings would sway with any majority, never holding firm.
“You may be right,” Shepherd said, spreading his hands. “On the other hand, this man Cray just might be the son of a bitch we’re looking for. We’ll have to check it out, that’s all.”
Brookings speared him with his gaze.
“You’ll
have to. Thanks for volunteering.”
“Wouldn’t have it any other way.”
“Of course,” Alvarez ventured, “it might help to find out if there really is anybody named John Cray in the Safford area.”
The captain nodded. “Might save
Shep
a long drive. Hey,
Kroft
—don’t you know a guy over at Graham County Sheriff’s?”
Kroft
shrugged. “Chuck
Wheelihan
, yeah. Met him a couple years ago when I was working vice. There was a
meth
crew operating out of Safford, hauling the shit into
Tucson
to sell on the street.”
“Why don’t you give him a call, see if he can find out anything about this Cray.”
“What the hell. My caseload’s empty. I got nothing but time to waste.”
He left the room, and the meeting proceeded to the issue of Baxter Payton, a salesman at the auto dealership who, according to several employees, had aggressively pursued Sharon Andrews, only to be repeatedly rebuffed. Brookings felt Payton was a strong candidate for the role of suspect.
It’s an
O.J
. thing,
he had argued to Shepherd in the earliest stages of the case.
This Payton guy, he was obsessed with her, and if he couldn’t have her, no one could.
Shepherd had interviewed Payton and come away with the impression that the man was a loser, obnoxious and insecure and intensely dislikable, but no murderer. Still, after the body turned up, Brookings had pushed hard for a second look. Shepherd had foisted the job on Lou Mercado and Steve Call, two younger detectives who had just made rank.
Now they had the unpleasant duty of informing their captain that there was no way, positively no way, that this creep Payton had done
Sharon
. They alternated in their presentation. Call leaning forward to tick off points on his blunt, meaty fingers, Mercado sitting ramrod-straight in a dignified courtroom pose.
“We checked out every angle,” Call began. “Day of her disappearance, Payton worked late, writing up a sale. We found the buyer, and he confirmed it. So Payton’s
alibied
. But we say, okay, even so, maybe he could get away for a minute, snatch her, stash her in his car.”
Mercado took over. “We asked him about it. He let us do a search. Forensics vacuumed his vehicle—trunk, backseat, everything. They turned up nothing they can tie to
Sharon
, no fibers from her clothes or her carpet at home, no blood, no hair. She wasn’t in there.”
“ ’Course,” Call said, anticipating an objection, “Payton had access to every vehicle on the lot. It’s a used-car shop, you know. Salesmen take cars home with them sometimes. But they keep a log of cars signed out, and he didn’t sign out anything that week.”
“So he’s
alibied
,” Mercado concluded, “and there’s no physical evidence, and he didn’t do it.”
Call wanted the last word. “Plus, the guy is a little weasel who wouldn’t have the balls to snuff a housefly.”
Brookings processed this information, then shrugged. “Yeah, I never figured it was him. Too obvious.”
Shepherd smothered a grin. That was just like Brookings. The captain was a certified specialist in covering his ass. He knew how to deflect blame and absorb credit, how to alienate nobody and be everyone’s best friend. Shepherd ought to hate him for it.
But hell,
CYA
was an art every cop had to learn—a survival skill, no less than proficiency with firearms. Cops were civil servants, and civil servants who flouted the rules and
dissed
their superiors were just begging for a dead-end career.
Anyway, he couldn’t dislike Paul Brookings, and not just because they’d gone fishing together more often than the other men in the squad needed to know.
Shepherd owed Brookings. He wasn’t sure he could have endured the past two years without the captain’s calm, steady support.
Kroft
returned, a peculiar look on his face. “Talked to
Wheelihan
. Hell, you know he’s made
undersheriff
now? When’s my promotion coming up, Captain?”
“When you tell me what the hell your pal said to you.”
“Well, there’s a John Cray in the Safford area, all right. Chuck didn’t even have to look it up. He knows the guy. Whole department knows him. Fact is, he’s sort of famous, at least locally.”
“Famous how?”
“Mainly ’cause he wrote a book that sold pretty well.
The Mask of Self—
that’s
the title.”
Shepherd had never heard of it, but the word
mask
pricked his interest. He thought of Sharon Andrews’ faceless corpse.
“Some kind of mystery novel?” he asked, his tone even.
“Nonfiction.”
Kroft
looked at him, and Shepherd tried to read his expression but failed. “About how who we think we are is only an illusion. ’Least, that’s how Chuck described it.”
“So he’s an author,” Brookings said, perturbed. “What does that tell us?”
Kroft
shrugged. “Nothing, I guess. That’s not how the local cops know him, anyway. They knew him a long time before he ever got into print. They work with him.”
Shepherd felt his optimism slipping away. “Do they?”
“Yeah.”
Then
Kroft’s
face reshaped itself in a huge, unfriendly smile, and Shepherd realized why his expression had been so oddly strained. He’d been holding back that smile, fighting it like a man warding off a sneeze.
“Dr. John Cray,”
Kroft
said, “is the director of the Hawk Ridge Institute for Psychiatric Care.”
Kroft
let a moment pass while this information registered.
“He runs a goddamned mental hospital,”
Kroft
finished, not trusting subtlety where this point was concerned. “He takes in all the loons who’ve
gotta
be held for observation. And,
Shep
—he’s made a lot of enemies, Chuck says.”
Enemies. Yes.
Every psychiatrist made enemies, and a man like Cray, a man who supervised a mental institution harboring scores of patients, would make more enemies than most.
Rivera laughed. “Man, I told you she’s a squirrel.”
Stern, at least, was polite enough not to say a word.
“Sounds like you were right,” Shepherd said without rancor. “On the other hand, just because he’s a shrink doesn’t mean he’s not a killer.”
This was, in part, bravado. But he couldn’t shake free of that word
mask.
It fit the case too well.
“You happen to ask if Cray drives a Lexus?” he added.
Kroft’s
smile slipped a little. “Yeah, I asked. He’s got one—an SUV, like the woman said. But any of his patients could know that. It doesn’t prove anything.”
“No,” Shepherd said. “It doesn’t.” He scraped back his chair and got up. “Better get moving. It’s still early. I might be able to catch him before he goes to lunch.”
Kroft
looked baffled. “You figure it’s even necessary to do a meet-and-greet? I mean, you could phone the guy, or I could have
Wheelihan
send some deputies to chat him up.”
“I can’t tell much from a phone call. And it sounds like the local deputies are a little too friendly with this guy.”
Stern spoke. “You don’t still think there’s anything to this?”
“I’ll know soon enough when I talk to Cray. And when I take a look at that Lexus of his.”
Brookings looked unhappy. “I’m betting it hasn’t got a scratch. Face it,
Shep
. The lady’s a head case.”