The Silent Wife: From the No. 1 Sunday Times bestselling author comes a gripping new crime thriller (Will Trent Series, Book 10)

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The Silent Wife: From the No. 1 Sunday Times bestselling author comes a gripping new crime thriller (Will Trent Series, Book 10) Page 43

by Karin Slaughter


  Amanda asked, “Why the Gatorade? Why not immediately paralyze them?”

  Sara could only guess. “The Rohypnol would have diminishing returns. Unless he’s a pharmacologist, that’s a very tricky drug to experiment with. Death is a severe side effect. The respiration reaches the point of hypoxia. Brain death occurs in minutes.”

  Will said, “Unless he stayed with them the entire time, there must have been a point between when they were drugged and when they were physically paralyzed that they had a chance to get away.”

  “He’s had a lot of women to experiment with,” Sara said. “He learns with each victim.”

  Nick offered, “If you go back to the FBI profile, the guy’s a risk-taker. Could be in the beginning, he’s giving them a fighting chance.”

  Will said, “For what it’s worth, Humphrey and Caterino got away. Zanger got away.”

  Faith cleared her throat. She was still struggling, but she said, “Callie told me she threw up the blue liquid. Not just threw it up—she basically disgorged her stomach. That bought her some clarity so she could force herself to get up and look for help.”

  Will added, “Miranda Newberry found two other women she thinks were living victims. They both walked out of the woods, but they suffered catastrophic damage.”

  Sara was finally able to articulate what was bothering her about the Truong autopsy report. “Leslie Truong feels like an outlier. Her body exhibited all the signatures of the killer—the mutilation, the punctured spinal cord, the blue liquid—but she was murdered and mutilated within a thirty-minute time frame. There was no progression. He did everything at once.”

  “A kitchen sink approach,” Amanda summarized.

  “He was panicked,” Nick said. “She was a possible witness.”

  Sara couldn’t quite get there. “It bothers me that there were no traces of Rohypnol in her blood or urine. The drug metabolizes quickly, but death shuts down that function. There should’ve been traces found in her stomach contents. She had a blue stain on her lips, but I think that was left deliberately. Looking back at it, what I remember most about that scene is thinking that it felt staged, but staged by the same person who attacked Beckey. Which I realize doesn’t make a lot of sense, but it felt … different?”

  Nick said, “Jeffrey figured the killer got sloppy with Truong because he knew we were onto him. The campus was crawling with cops. The whole town was on alert.”

  Sara still couldn’t pin down what was bothering her. “I’m not saying that a different man attacked Leslie, but it’s possible that the motivation was different. He kicked the hammer hard enough to break it off. That sounds like anger to me. Nothing we’ve learned about the killer so far points to uncontrolled anger. If anything, he’s completely in control.”

  Will said, “It would take a lot of force to break that handle. You’d have to kick it a few times.”

  Amanda said, “Leslie Truong’s headband was missing. That’s the only piece that makes me think she wasn’t chosen simply because she could identify the killer.”

  “Gerald hedged on that, remember?” Faith asked. “She was a student living with students she probably met at the beginning of the semester. Kids steal each other’s crap all of the time. It drives me crazy.”

  “Let’s take the headband out of the equation.” Amanda asked, “Sara?”

  “The killer has always been very careful about covering his tracks. As far back as Tommi Humphrey, he brought a washcloth to the scene to wipe away DNA. The subsequent victims were believably staged to look like accidents.” Her brain had finally sparked back to life. “Think about this: with Leslie, he left a glaring piece of evidence on full display.”

  Faith said, “The hammer handle had a manufacturing number.”

  Amanda asked Will, “Is that common?”

  “No,” he said. “It’s usually stamped into the metal.”

  Faith had her notebook out. She was back in the game. “So A plus B equals C, right? Whoever attacked Tommi attacked Beckey attacked Leslie.”

  Nick said, “The only thing is, Daryl Nesbitt was a damn solid suspect. There was some real evidence against him.”

  “All right,” Amanda said. “Let’s look at that. Daryl was a good suspect because?”

  “Mostly because of Leslie Truong.” Sara ran through the corroborating details that Jeffrey had outlined in his notes. “The hammer inside of Leslie was a very specific type. Daryl was in possession of Axle Abbott’s tools while he was in prison. Daryl was familiar with the woods. He skateboarded with Felix on campus. Security footage was later found of them both practicing outside the library. Daryl worked near the fire road that accessed the Leslie Truong crime scene. A burner phone was later located in his house that tied back to the phone number in both Caterino and Truong’s contacts.”

  Faith said, “Devil’s Advocate here. There’s a reason Daryl Nesbitt’s in prison for possession of child porn and not assault and murder. That’s all circumstantial, or easily explained away.”

  In retrospect, Sara could not disagree. Eight years ago, she had been just as certain as Jeffrey.

  Amanda asked her, “What about the video from Truong’s case files?”

  “I haven’t watched it yet.” Sara had hoped to preview it on her own so she could prepare herself, but that opportunity had passed.

  She walked over to the giant tube television. Will often looked at the VCR with disdain, but the machine was finally earning its real estate. Sara slotted the videotape into the carriage. She pressed down the top. She found the remote. She unspooled the skinny cord as she sat back down. She pressed play.

  The image on the screen zigzagged, then started to roll.

  Will took over. He adjusted the dials, and suddenly, Sara saw herself eight years ago.

  She looked so young, was the first thought that came into her mind. Her hair was shinier. Her skin was smoother. Her lips were fuller.

  She was dressed in a white T-shirt, gray hoodie and a pair of jeans. Exam gloves covered her hands. Her hair was pulled back. Younger Sara was looking at the camera and giving the date, time and location. “I’m Dr. Sara Linton. I’m with Dan Brock, the Grant County coroner, and Jeffrey Tolliver, the chief of police.”

  Sara bit her lip as the camera turned toward the face of each person her younger self named.

  Jeffrey was in a charcoal suit. A cotton mask covered his mouth and nose. He looked concerned. They all looked concerned.

  She watched the younger Sara begin the preliminary exam, using a penlight to check for petechia, turning the head to better see the round, red mark on Leslie Truong’s temple.

  “This could be the first blow,” the younger Sara said.

  The present Sara, the living breathing Sara, wanted to look at Will, to study his face, to deduce what he was thinking.

  But she couldn’t.

  On screen, the camera had tilted. The lens skewed out of focus. She could see the blurred white of Jeffrey’s mask. Sara could still remember the stench of feces and rot coming off the body. The smell had made her eyes water. Now, she studied the blue staining along Leslie Truong’s upper lip. She had expected to see a mark similar to the one that came from drinking the contents over a period of time. In retrospect, the blue looked like the liquid had been dropped onto her lips, then allowed to dry.

  “Blockages?” Brock’s voice was loud. He had been holding the camera.

  Sara listened to her younger self explain the findings. She sounded so damn sure of herself. Eight years later, Sara seldom spoke with the same conviction. The price for having lived those ensuing years was that she had come to understand that there were very few situations that could be viewed with absolute certainty.

  Jeffrey said, “We think the killer was trying to paralyze the victims.”

  A lump came into Sara’s throat. She had not thought far enough ahead to realize that she was going to hear Jeffrey’s voice again. It carried with the same deep resonance that she remembered. She had felt her heartbeat falt
er at the sound.

  Her younger self was lifting up Leslie Truong’s shirt, finding a dislocated rib.

  Sara let her gaze travel down until she was staring at the flashing clock on the VCR.

  She heard her younger self tell Brock, “Get closer on this.”

  Sara parted her lips. She took in a deep breath. She could feel Will’s eyes on her. Could almost hear the self-doubt troubling his mind. He was slightly taller than Jeffrey, but not as classically handsome. Will was more fit. Jeffrey more confident. Will had Sara. Did Jeffrey still have her, too?

  On the video, Brock said, “Ready.”

  Sara looked up at the TV. Brock was helping her roll Leslie Truong onto her side. Jeffrey was behind the camera. He had zoomed wide to get the full length of the body. Dirt and stray twigs were stuck to the young woman’s bare backside. Younger Sara was postulating about whether the girl had pulled up her pants, or if the killer had done it for her.

  “Wait.” Faith stood up. “Pause it. Go back.”

  Sara looked for the buttons, but Faith took the remote.

  “Here.” She clicked the frame into slow motion. “By the trees.”

  Sara squinted at the set. There were people in the distance, approximately fifty feet away. They were standing behind yellow police tape. She couldn’t make out Brad Stephen’s face, but she recognized his crisply starched uniform, his goofy gait, as he tried to cordon back the spectators.

  “This guy.” Faith paused the image. She pointed to one of the students. “He’s wearing a black knit hat.”

  Sara could make out the hat, but the face was a blur.

  Faith said, “Lena’s notes outlined the witness statement she took from Leslie Truong at the Caterino scene. Truong reported seeing three women and one man in the woods. She couldn’t remember anything about the man, except that he was a student wearing a black, beanie-style knit cap.”

  Sara walked over to the set for a closer look. The videotape was old, the technology even older. The man’s face was pixelated down to an amorphous blob. “I recognize Brad because I know Brad, but that’s it.”

  Faith was looking at Amanda, a pleading expression on her face.

  Amanda’s lips pursed. The chance that something could be done to enhance the image was slim. For Faith’s benefit, she said, “We’ll have IT look at it.”

  Faith stopped the video. She punched the eject button. “I can take it downstairs now.”

  “Go,” Amanda looked at her watch. “I’ll meet you in the lobby.”

  Faith grabbed her purse. Sara heard her running down the hallway. Like all of them, she was desperate for something to break.

  “Will,” Amanda said. “I want Faith on her desk tomorrow. There are plenty of phone calls that need to be made. We’ve got thirteen different jurisdictions to butt heads with. We’ll meet in my office at seven tomorrow morning and establish the parameters. Yes?”

  “Yes, ma’am.”

  “Nick,” she said. “Will can catch you up on what you missed. My last order is for all of you. Go home. Get some sleep. Today was hard. Tomorrow will be harder.”

  Nick and Will both gave her a “yes, ma’am.”

  Sara started gathering up the paperwork from Leslie Truong’s autopsy. She listened with half an ear as Will told Nick about the formation of a task force. Her phone vibrated in her pocket. Sara prayed it was not her mother, because she knew she couldn’t put off finding Tommi Humphrey any longer.

  The text was from Brock, a question mark followed by—

  Think this was meant for Cathy? I can ask around if you like?

  Sara had accidentally sent Brock the text meant for her mother. She tapped out a quick apology, then copied and pasted the note to Cathy.

  Surprisingly, her mother wrote back in seconds—

  Sweetheart, I have already left a message for Pastor Nelson. As you know, it is very late in the day for most people to return a phone call; however, Marla thinks that Delilah remarried and moved out of state after Adam died. Daddy sends his love, as do I.—Mama. PS: Why are you arguing with your sister?

  Sara stared at the postscript. Tessa had told their mother that they were arguing, which meant that the situation was more dire than Sara had wanted to admit.

  “Something wrong?” Will asked.

  Sara looked up. Nick was gone. They were alone in the room. “My mother’s trying to find Tommi for me.”

  Will nodded.

  And then he stood there, waiting.

  Sara said, “I’m sorry about—about Callie Zanger. That must’ve been—”

  “You drove back home today.” He picked up the empty file box and put it on the desk. “Did you have time to see anybody?”

  “No, I had to drive back to meet the Van Dornes, then I got stuck in traffic, which took forever.” Sara felt a flash of guilt, as if she was hiding something from him. She decided to put it out in the open. “The storage facility is across from the cemetery.”

  He stacked the folders and dropped them into the box.

  “I didn’t go in.” Sara had stopped that regular habit years ago for the sake of her own sanity. “I put flowers on his grave once a year. You know that.”

  He said, “It was weird watching you on the tape. You looked different.”

  “I was eight years younger.”

  “That’s not what I mean.” Will closed the box. He seemed like he wanted to say more, but he told her, “I’m tired.”

  Sara didn’t know if he meant that he was physically tired or that he was tired the way he had been last night when he’d walked out on her.

  She said, “Will—”

  “I don’t want to talk anymore.”

  Sara bit her bottom lip to keep it from trembling.

  “I want to go home, order a pizza, and watch TV until I fall asleep.”

  She tried to swallow the cotton in her throat.

  He turned to her. “Will you do that with me?”

  “Yes, please.”

  Grant County—Thursday

  25

  Jeffrey could only stare at Frank. “What did you say?”

  “The dean called,” Frank repeated. “Another student is missing. Rosario Lopez, aged twenty-one, missing for the last five hours.”

  Jeffrey heard a door open. Lena came out of the viewing room. Her BlackBerry was in her hand.

  Frank told Jeffrey, “Chuck Gaines had his people turn the campus upside down. They’re searching the woods now. The dean sent out a call for volunteers.”

  “Make sure everyone searches in pairs.” Jeffrey had broken into a cold sweat. Three students in three days. His nightmare was coming true. “Pull in Jefferson and White off patrol. Get them on top of that search. Meanwhile, I need you to find as much information as you can on Daryl Nesbitt.”

  “Nesbitt?”

  “He’s got to have an arrest record. His stepfather—”

  “Hold on.” Frank had his notebook out. “Go.”

  “Daryl’s got a common-law stepfather at Wheeler State Prison, goes by the name Axle, last name Abbott. He has a house in Avondale that Daryl is living in. Check the tax records. See if there are building plans or at least a plat that shows the orientation of the house on the property. Send Matt on a drive-by to check if anybody is home. Call the rest of the patrol shift and tell them to suspend the search for the dark van. Don’t use your radio. We don’t know if Daryl has a police scanner.”

  Frank was still writing when Jeffrey turned to Lena.

  She said, “I called over to Memminger. Felix was sleeping it off in the drunk tank the morning that Caterino and Truong were attacked. He wasn’t out until after lunch. There’s no way it was him.”

  He told her, “With me.”

  Jeffrey went back into the interrogation room. Felix Abbott was picking at the pimple on his chin. “Damn, dude, when can I g—”

  Jeffrey grabbed him by the front of his shirt and threw him into the wall.

  “What the—”

  Jeffrey jammed his fore
arm into Felix’s throat hard enough to lift him off the floor. “Listen to me carefully, son, because right now, you’re either useful or you’re not. Do you understand?”

  Felix’s mouth gaped open as he tried to pull in air. He struggled to nod.

  “Beckey Caterino. Leslie Truong.”

  Felix’s eyes went wide. He tried to speak, but his throat was crushed.

  Jeffrey gave him a few centimeters of relief. “Do you know them?”

  “They’re—” He gasped for air. “Students.”

  “Daryl’s number was in their phones. Why?”

  He struggled to breathe. His feet kicked wildly. His lips were turning blue. He coughed out, “Weed.”

  “Daryl sold weed to Beckey Caterino and Leslie Truong? He’s a pot dealer?”

  Felix’s eyelids started to flutter. “Y-yes.”

  “For how long?”

  Felix coughed.

  “How long has Daryl been selling pot at the school?”

  “Y-years.”

  “What about Rosario Lopez?”

  “I don’t—” He gulped. “I can’t—”

  Jeffrey stared him in the eye. “Do you know her?”

  “I never—” He gasped again as Jeffrey’s arm flexed into his throat. “No.”

  Jeffrey let him drop to the floor.

  Felix fell onto his knees. His face had turned red. He started coughing.

  Jeffrey told Lena, “Cuff him to the table. Keep him isolated. No phone calls. Get him some water. Lock the door. Come find me.”

  “Yes, Chief.”

  Jeffrey wiped his hands on his shirt as he walked toward the squad room. He saw Brad at one of the computers. Marla on the phone. He could feel an electrical current running through everything. Another student was missing. They could be zeroing in on the killer.

  “Matt’s on his way to Abbott’s house.” Frank came out of Jeffrey’s office. He read from his notebook. “Daryl Eric Nesbitt. Twenty-eight years old. He’s kept his nose clean, but my buddy over in Memminger says his juvie file’s as long as my dick.”

  “For?”

 

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