Fear No Evil

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Fear No Evil Page 4

by Allison Brennan


  The “sample” ended. Kate slapped the tears off her cheeks. She had no right to cry. No right to suffer for the women who had died at his hands. The emotional pain she harbored was nothing compared to what they’d endured: the humiliation and torture. Their deaths were probably a relief.

  Consensual role-playing? Who did Trask think he was kidding?

  Unfortunately too many people. Including many of her superiors back then. Now they believed her, but only because Paige had died.

  If only Kate hadn’t acted so soon…

  If only she’d followed her instincts…

  If only Paige hadn’t lied to her…

  A lot of good all that did her now. And how could she blame Paige? Kate couldn’t very well yell at her partner about backup that never arrived. Because Paige was dead.

  If Kate saw Trask again, he would die.

  Even if she had to die along with him.

  His first kill had been an accident.

  It was early morning. Far too early for the sun, too early for the birds. The time he liked best, alone, to think.

  Remember…

  They’d been sixteen, two young lovers exploring as only eager amateurs could. Not really knowing what they were doing, but enjoying the thrill of being sexual, of tasting forbidden fruit.

  He’d wanted her forever, and he always got what he wanted. He was the son of wealth and power; few dared to say no. And Monique had loved being his girl. She had a mouth on her that wouldn’t quit, knew how to use it. He’d suspected she’d practiced giving blow jobs on other boys—or maybe men—because she was too good to be a novice. But in bed, she had been a virgin, her telltale blood marking his sheets.

  For six months they joyfully had intercourse, and were inseparable. But for him, it was never enough. He pushed Monique for more. Role-playing. Pain. Her pain. At first she was amicable. Anything to please him.

  “Not like that,” she told him that last time, panting. They were in the pool house at his family’s estate. He had her on all fours, wearing a leash. He wanted her from behind. Her ass was so firm, so round, so perfect.

  “You’ll like it.” He pushed her down.

  “No, I won’t.”

  Defiant. A bubble of anger surfaced. He would not let her say no.

  “Are you jerking me around?”

  “Of course not, I—”

  “If you don’t want to play, get out.”

  “You don’t mean that!” Monique’s voice quivered. She glanced over her shoulder, hurt, a little fear in her eyes. He stared, his entire body reacting to that faint panic on her face. He wanted more of that.

  “Please,” she whispered. “I love you.”

  “Bullshit. You don’t know what love is.”

  “Maybe you’re the one with the problem. Can’t you get off without stupid games?”

  How dare she talk to him like that! He had no problems getting off. She had liked the games, until they became too much for her, and then she had the nerve to say he had a problem?

  She stood up, naked but for the collar and leash. She looked around for her clothing.

  He slapped her. A red welt rose on her cheek. It didn’t surprise him that he’d hit her. What surprised him was that he felt no regret.

  “I’m sorry,” he said automatically. His penis was rock solid again.

  She glared. “Don’t ever do that again.”

  “I won’t. I promise.”

  He kissed her. Touched her where she liked. At first she protested feebly, but he knew what she wanted, knew the words that made her bend to his will, and soon she was all over him. He pushed her down to the floor and fucked her the way she asked for it. She moaned.

  “Just. Like. That,” she begged.

  His eyes fell to her smooth, white neck. He stared at the silky skin, a sheen of sweat glistening in the sunlight streaming through the windows. The dip in her throat, her muscles straining as her hips met his, working herself up to an orgasm, the sleek outline of her clavicle as she arched her back.

  “Don’t stop,” she panted.

  Her neck looked so good.

  His hands went behind her head and he kissed her. Then he moved them down, brought his thumbs around. Caressed that hollow of her neck.

  Slowly he squeezed. She didn’t know what he was doing at first, didn’t know until it was too late.

  She grabbed at his hands but couldn’t speak.

  The fear that had touched her face earlier now exploded, her terror real. He watched her eyes as his hands maintained the pressure. He continued fucking her, his orgasm building, her eyes panicked, her fists pounding on him.

  He held on too long. Later he had tried to tell himself that he didn’t do it on purpose, that it had been an accident. That he had just wanted to maximize his pleasure. And he had. He’d never experienced such a high. Every inch of his skin radiated with power, as if every cell orgasmed as one, his entire body immersed in a forbidden pleasure.

  She was convulsing beneath him when he finally let go, his body one with the universe. He saw everything with a clarity he knew he’d attempt to re-create. By then it was too late for Monique. He’d crushed the bone in her neck.

  He watched her die.

  Trask found it ironic that Monique’s death all those years ago had come around full circle. He’d enlisted the help of his friends to dispose of the body. He should have known Trevor Conrad was weak. He’d had to kill Trevor, too, but Trask couldn’t make Trevor disappear as easily as Monique.

  And now “Trevor” had brought Lucy to him. Lucy, who looked so much like Monique that Trask felt sixteen again.

  He couldn’t wait to relive the experience.

  FOUR

  DILLON PACED the small room the task force had set up to find Lucy. Special Agent Joseph Garcia was working with Patrick to pore through code on Lucy’s computer, as well as the feed that was coming in from an unknown server. The feed that showed Lucy in her bra and jeans, tied to the floor, terrified. Though he wanted to, Dillon couldn’t take his eyes off her.

  Connor had left the room immediately after Lucy’s shirt was ripped off. Carina went after him. That was nearly an hour ago. Time was not on their side.

  It was a countdown to murder.

  They had less than forty-five hours to find Lucy. Though saving her life was their number one priority, Dillon wanted to find her now, to save her from what was about to happen—what his sixth sense, his experience, told him would inevitably happen.

  Dillon turned when the door opened, expecting Connor and Carina to return. Instead a tall, lanky cop entered the room. Special Agent Quinn Peterson’s professional attire was rumpled and he carried a jacket over his shoulder and a thick file folder under one arm.

  Nick Thomas made the introductions. Nick had worked with Peterson on the Butcher investigation in Montana. It helped that Nick trusted the FBI agent, but Lucy was not their sister. They didn’t have to face Rosa and Pat Kincaid and tell them that their daughter was about to be raped in public for the sick pleasure of everyone who ponied up the money to watch.

  Peterson dumped his jacket and paperwork on the table and turned to Garcia. “Any developments?”

  Garcia shook his head. “Just what I told you on the phone. He raised the ante.”

  “Any headway on the feed?”

  “He has better security than the Pentagon. But Kincaid here is a pro.”

  Dillon spoke. “Agent Peterson, what do you know about the man who has my sister? You’ve obviously dealt with him in the past.”

  At that moment, Carina walked in with Connor, who saw Peterson and made a beeline for him. “What the hell is going on? Where’s my sister? Why was she taken?”

  Dillon tried to give his brother a look to steady his temper, but it failed. Connor was acting out what Dillon felt inside: a deep rage and sense of failure in protecting their youngest sister.

  “Sit down, Mr. Kincaid,” Peterson said, unfazed.

  “I’ll stand.” Connor crossed his arms.

>   Dillon sat, wanting answers. Peterson seated himself across from him. “You’re the forensic psychiatrist, right?” Peterson asked Dillon.

  “Correct.”

  “This is for you.” Quinn pushed over the file folder. “A copy of everything we have on Trask.”

  “Trask?”

  Peterson nodded. “That’s the name we know him by. He’s calling himself Trevor Conrad now. His name has changed a half dozen times that we know of, but his real identity remains a mystery. We have his prints from a case five years ago, but they haven’t matched anything on record. He’s not in the system.”

  “He’s been doing exactly what for how long?”

  Peterson took a deep breath, glanced at everyone in the room, then focused on Dillon. “I’m not going to lie to you. Trask has killed at least nine young women over the past ten years. Before he went underground five years ago, he was a semilegitimate businessman running an online porn website.”

  “How’d you get his prints?”

  “Off a murder weapon. We have no name, but we have matched them to a long-standing snuff-film distributor who ran a company called Achilles Film Distribution.”

  “Arrogant,” Dillon said. “He knows he’s not in the system so he doesn’t even try to hide his identity.”

  “Trask is the walking definition of arrogance,” Peterson said. “We know he still runs—through shell corporations, fake identities, and some real people—legal pornography websites. Live webcam sex acts, stripping, pornographic downloads, things like that.”

  “And you haven’t been able to track him from that?”

  “A task force worked for a solid year trying to unravel his network after one of his actresses disappeared and it appeared she’d been killed online. There was no proof, however, and the employees of his company claimed she’d just quit.

  “The task force was dismantled, but two agents continued to investigate on their own time. Trask’s organization came apart when he abducted one of those agents during an unsanctioned sting. He made a federal agent part of his show. He and his crew raped and murdered her live on the Internet, knowing the FBI would see it. Then he disappeared. Our team was”—he gestured helplessly with his hands—“torn apart. And because Trask went into hiding for two years, every trail we had turned cold.

  “He popped up three years ago with another live murder and has killed five more women since Agent Henshaw died. The bodies of three earlier kills—April Klinger, Denise Arno, and Erica Gomez—have never been found, but we have evidence that they are in fact dead.”

  “And you can’t find him?” Connor leaned over and put his hands on the table. “That doesn’t say much about our federal law enforcement, does it?”

  Peterson dipped his head in partial acknowledgment, but his clenched jaw told Dillon he was angry. “We lost two good agents five years ago. We’re not going to lose more.”

  “But you’re willing to sacrifice my sister!” Connor pushed himself away from the table and ran a nervous hand through his hair.

  “We’re not willing to sacrifice anyone,” Quinn responded.

  “So what is the FBI doing?” Dillon kept his voice composed while his stomach churned. He was trying to keep things calm even when he felt anything but.

  Peterson slapped a hand on the thick folder now in front of Dillon. “This is who we’re up against. A man without remorse, a man who gets his kicks from raping, torturing, and murdering women. But make no mistake about it, he’s in it for another reason, too: to make money. The legal porn industry is a multi-billion-dollar business; the illegal porn industry is worth even more. He thrives on the risk, on taunting us, on being smarter than anyone else. You read his file, Dr. Kincaid, and let me know what you think.”

  Dillon kept his voice low, but his tone radiated his own anger and helplessness. “From what you’ve told us so far, we have less than forty-five hours to find my sister before she’s dead. This isn’t pornography or sex slaves. This is murder.”

  Peterson curtly nodded.

  “What do we need to do? Between all of us we can pull together a million dollars, maybe.” Dillon glanced at his siblings.

  “He isn’t holding her for ransom,” Peterson said.

  “But we need resources to find him, don’t we? You’re basically saying that you don’t have the time, money, or manpower to track him down before Lucy’s time is up.”

  Peterson opened his mouth, then closed it, then said, “To be perfectly honest, by the time we found out about the women after our agent was murdered, the countdown was too tight. We tried and failed to isolate the feed. And by the time the girls were dead, he had closed shop. He sends out false leads that we follow, wasting time. But we can’t not follow up. We found one of the victims the day after, but by that time he’d cleared out completely and the rape and murder were already available for download. We have more time now—more time than we’ve ever had. That’s in our favor. This is the number one priority of our e-crimes unit.”

  “What about tracking the money?” Patrick spoke up. “The credit cards, the bank accounts? No one can funnel millions of dollars around the world without drawing the attention of the IRS and FBI.”

  “True. Remember how Capone went down. Money. We’re working that angle with the Treasury Department. But this guy is good. Off-shore accounts, lots of cash, lots of movement. Every time we think we’re close—and we have seized several of his accounts—he changes tactics.”

  “Like a chameleon,” Dillon said. “Constantly changing to blend in with the environment.”

  “For all we know, he could be the CEO of a major corporation, or a self-employed accountant.”

  “He would have to be financially savvy,” Dillon agreed. “Someone with expert knowledge of banking, investments, money exchange, tax laws. He knows too much about the system to be an amateur.”

  “Absolutely,” Peterson said.

  “Which would suggest he went to school, has a degree, possibly worked in, still works in, the finance arena.”

  Peterson nodded. “Our top profiler indicated the same thing.”

  Dillon opened the file in front of him as Carina asked, “You said you found out about the feeds of the other victims too late to stop him. But we have time with Lucy. How did you find it so quickly?”

  Peterson said nothing and Dillon looked up at him, read his expression. “An informant?” he asked.

  Peterson dipped his head. “Of sorts.”

  “Can this person help us isolate the feed? Someone willing to help?”

  “She’s more than willing to help, but not us.”

  “Why not?” Carina demanded. “Doesn’t she know a life is at stake?”

  “More than anyone,” Peterson said, “but I don’t know where she is. She feeds me information and I forward it to the appropriate people.”

  “She can’t be hard to find,” Patrick said.

  “She doesn’t want to be found,” Peterson said. “I tried to bring her back with this case, but she’s not buying it. If she learns anything, she’ll let me know.”

  “That’s not good enough!” Connor exclaimed.

  Dillon listened to what Quinn Peterson said—and what he didn’t say. “Who is she?”

  “A former FBI agent.”

  “And?”

  Joseph Garcia spoke up. “Kate Donovan is notorious in the department. You either love her or you hate her. Agent Paige Henshaw was Donovan’s partner. They set up the sting after Trask was suspected of killing a teenage girl online. But—and no one is exactly sure what happened because Donovan disappeared—apparently she and Henshaw set up a sting without any authority. They walked into a trap. Henshaw was kidnapped, raped, and stabbed to death. Donovan missed saving her by minutes.”

  “Or getting herself killed as well,” Peterson mumbled.

  “Why is she a former agent?” Dillon asked. “Did she quit?”

  Garcia raised his eyebrows, glanced at Peterson. “That was before my time. I only know the rumors.”


  Peterson sighed. “When Agent Henshaw went missing, Kate was told to step back. The Office of Professional Responsibility wanted to talk to her about why they set up the sting without backup and in direct violation of their orders. Instead, Kate went underground to find her partner. She resurfaced only to ask for backup, but when teams were sent to two false locations and she claimed she’d finally isolated the feed, it was the case of crying wolf. No one believed her, and after the death of one agent and Henshaw still missing, the powers that be refused to act on unsubstantiated data. After Paige Henshaw died, Kate disappeared. She was right that last time, but the FBI had acted too late.”

  Dillon stared at the documents in front of him, pages of reports about the activities of “Trask.” The films, rapes, murders. Suspected and proven. His extensive pornography network.

  “Trask thinks of himself as playing a role like an actor. But he considers himself superior to Hollywood types,” Dillon said slowly. “He’s smart, probably a genius-level IQ, but for him I think this is more a game, a sense of grandstanding, showing off his intelligence. But why not fraud? Theft? Hacking into banks? Something about this manner of gamesmanship, this online show, fuels his fantasy. There’s something very personal in his choice of murder.”

  “Yeah, he gets his thrills from killing women,” Connor spat out. “Talking about this bastard isn’t getting us any closer to finding Lucy.”

  Dillon stared at Connor, wishing he could release his own rage and frustration, but he would leave that to his more volatile brother. “If we don’t understand him, we’ll never find him.”

  “Fuck that! We’re sitting around doing nothing while Lucy is…is—” Connor couldn’t finish. He stared at the computer screen, drawing all their eyes to a half-naked Lucy. Scared and vulnerable. Tears coated Connor’s eyes and he ran a hand over his face. Carina squeezed his arm.

 

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