“I didn’t expect mercy from you.”
“That’s good. Because you won’t be getting any.”
She watched him across the dim, cavernous space. He wore slacks and a windbreaker with bulky pockets. When he moved toward her, she raised the shard, letting it catch the moonlight. “Don’t come any closer.”
“I’ve got a gun, remember?”
“So use it.”
He removed a gloved hand from the side pocket of his windbreaker, taking out the gun. Even at a distance, she could see that it was a pistol, probably a 9mm. The gun flashed toward her, and for an instant she was back inside Ramon Sanchez’s converted garage, facing his ancient revolver.
But he didn’t fire. “Put down the piece of glass, C.J.”
“Make me.”
“You’re a stubborn bitch—you know that?”
“And you’re a fucking psycho.”
He still didn’t fire, and she began to think he wouldn’t. But why not?
“I can take that weapon away from you anytime I want,” he said.
“Go ahead.”
“It’ll be no problem—just like jumping you in the hallway. You didn’t put up much of a fight, you know.”
“An ambush is one thing. Taking me here and now is another.”
“I’ll risk it.”
“You’ll get stuck.” She displayed the shard. “How’d you like it in your neck? Your eye?”
He studied her. She knew he was asking himself whether or not he could wrest control of the weapon without getting sliced.
“You can’t,” she told him, letting him know she could read his thoughts. “I’m too quick for you. I know too many moves.”
His reaction surprised her. He laughed. “Good old C.J. A fighter to the end.” His gaze shifted to the upended crate. “I shouldn’t have left my gear with you. I thought it was out of reach.”
His gear, he’d said. She saw other needles scattered on the floor, as well as more vials of ink. She wondered—
“It won’t save you, C.J.,” he said, cutting off her thoughts. “We’re still going to share that last dance.”
“I’m not much in the mood for dancing. You know what I was thinking about the whole time you were gone?”
“How to get free and save your ass?”
“Besides that.”
“What?”
“You. How you could do something this sick, this crazy.”
“It’s not crazy. Sick—yes. I plead guilty to that charge. But I’m perfectly sane. I’m just doing what any normal spurned spouse would do, given half a chance.”
“I hope you don’t believe that.”
“But I do.” His hard-soled shoes clicked on the floor as he began to circle a few yards from her, and she moved, as well, keeping her distance from him. “People aren’t nearly as civilized as they like to pretend. I’ll bet there isn’t anybody who hasn’t fantasized at one time or another about subjecting an enemy to a painful, violent death. Every kid who gets slammed around by the school bully, every teenager who’s grounded by his parents, every office drone whose boss is on his case—they’ve all thought about it.” A knowing smile came to his face. “After you found me in bed with Ashley, didn’t you think about it?”
The truth came out reluctantly. “I guess.”
He spread his arms. “Well, there you are.”
It occurred to her that he was arguing a case. Like one of those mock trials in law school. Showing how clever he was, how he could twist logic and facts to prove anything.
“Thinking is one thing,” she said, still sidestepping to match every step he took, the two of them circling each other like knife fighters. “This is reality, Adam. You’re really doing this. Do you understand? This is for real.”
“Of course it’s for real. It’s life and death. My life. Your death.”
“Because I left you?”
“Well, yes, that—and because I was handed the golden opportunity.” A disarming smile. “Pure serendipity. It would have been ungrateful of me to turn it down. Think about it. The chance to kill my ex-wife and escape all suspicions. To use a serial killer as my fall guy. The perfect crime.”
Serial killer?
She almost asked him what he was talking about, and then she understood.
The stuff on the floor. Needles, ink.
Tattoo equipment.
The Hourglass Killer.
She’d had nothing to do with the investigation, but it had been in the papers. Everybody knew about it.
So that was his plan. To playact as the Hourglass Killer. To pass her off as the latest victim.
Some of her fear left her. “It won’t work,” she said.
Her tone of voice—unnaturally calm—caught his attention. He stopped circling. “Sure it will.”
“No. You can’t imitate a serial killer that easily. The police are always alert for copycats. They’ll find some details of the crime that don’t match the MO, and they’ll know it’s not the same guy.”
“Oh, really? I never thought of that.”
He came a little closer, and she let him, standing her ground. She could see his smile now, his white teeth against his tan face.
“Joke about it all you want,” she said. “What I’m telling you is true.”
“Ordinarily, yes. But not in this case.”
“Why not?”
“Because”—he leaned toward her, and involuntarily she stepped back—“he really had targeted you, C.J.”
“What?”
“If he continued his usual pattern, he would have struck tonight. I beat him to it, that’s all.”
“What are you—”
“He’ll be royally pissed off when he figures out what happened, don’t you think?”
She struggled to register the words. The Hourglass Killer after her? It was impossible. She hadn’t been stalked or followed or—
Followed.
“The white van,” she whispered.
“What’s that? A little louder, please.”
“A van tailed me home today. Was that you?”
“Nope. Must’ve been him. I told you he was getting ready to go for it. It’s the last day of the month, after all.”
Her head spun. Absurdly all she could think of was the one question that haunted her, always, though it was utterly irrelevant now.
Was it him?
The boogeyman?
She blinked the thought away.
“You know,” Adam was saying in a pleasant conversational tone, “in a way, it’s almost a public service I’m performing.”
She gasped out a laugh. “Is it?”
He started circling again, and so did she, and distantly it occurred to her that they were dancing, after all—a slow waltz of death.
“I’m removing a vicious multiple murderer from the streets,” Adam said. “I’m saving lives. Who knows how many more victims there might have been if this guy had remained on the loose? In the larger scheme of things, your life is an insignificant price to pay for bringing him to justice.”
He was being a lawyer again, arguing before an invisible jury. She turned his own logic against him. “If he was going to kill me anyway, why didn’t you let him? Then I’d be dead, and there’d be no risk to you.”
“I thought about it.” His voice changed, the jury disappearing from his imagination. “I really did, C.J. But I couldn’t let it happen that way.”
“Why not?”
“Because he doesn’t deserve you. Who are you to him? Nobody. A random target Somebody he spotted at a shopping mall and followed home—or maybe he saw you on patrol, or he delivers your mail. Whoever he is, he’s not part of your life in any meaningful way. So why should he be part of your death?”
She was silent. She didn’t know what to say.
“I do the killing, C.J. Me. Because I earned it. I put up with you for three years—”
“Put up with me?”
“—and I get to finish you now. To do it myself, with my own hands. T
hat’s how he kills them, you know. How I’ll do it too. Strangulation. You’ll look at me as you take your last breath.”
“You really are goddamned insane.”
“I thought that’s what you always loved about me.” He shrugged. “Hell, C.J., you would’ve been dead one way or the other. At least this way we keep it between friends.”
39
Tanner didn’t say anything to his team during the elevator ride to the third floor. There was nothing to say. The instructions had been given, the plan of attack laid out. It would be a dynamic entry—break down the door of Apartment 310 and flood the interior. Use caution when engaging the target; possible hostage situation. Clear your background. Take no chances.
As the arrow above the elevator doors climbed to number two, Tanner inventoried his gear. Colt .45 1911 semiauto pistol in a strongside thigh holster. A backup Colt in the pocket of his tactical vest. Flash-bangs, smoke grenades, and other diversionary devices clipped to his utility belt. On his head, a ballistic helmet and a LASH two-way radio headset with a throat microphone on a breakaway strap.
The four men with him in the elevator were similarly attired in full BDU—battle dress uniform. McMath and DiMaria were the two assaulters; in addition to their Colts, they carried Heckler & Koch MP-5 9mm submachine guns, each capable of firing eight hundred rounds per minute on full automatic. Weldham was the rear guard, armed with a Benelli Super90 Ml twelve-gauge shotgun. Automatic rifles like the MP-5s got all the press, but Tanner knew that a twelve-gauge was the deadliest gun on earth.
Finally there was Chang, the scout, wearing his earphone and stalk microphone, carrying the 180-degree mirror he’d made himself—an eighth of an inch of mirrored plastic affixed to a telescoping handle. Using it, he could peer around corners without exposing himself to a head shot.
The elevator reached the third floor, and the doors opened. Everyone tensed, but the hallway was clear.
“Last door on the right,” Tanner reminded them. “Switch your flashlights on.”
The flashlights were mounted to the barrels of the MP-5s. In the bright corridor they were unnecessary, but there was no telling what would happen once the shooting team got inside Treat’s apartment.
Tanner led his men down the hall to the door marked 310. There was no legal problem about entering; a judge had already given telephonic approval to a search warrant and an arrest warrant. Even without the warrants, exigent circumstances would have justified the search-and-seizure operation. Treat was no longer protected by anonymity, and he was no longer protected by law.
His apartment was next to the rear stairwell. Just in case Treat managed to get past the tactical team, a pair of deputies from the City of Industry station had been deployed in the lobby to watch the stairs. Another two deputies in an unmarked car watched Treat’s windows from the street. If he tried to climb out, he would be spotted.
No escape.
Unless he was already gone. This was the thought that nagged at Tanner as he prepared to break down the apartment door. Sure, Treat’s van was in the garage, but he might use a different vehicle when committing his crimes. He might be miles away, the apartment empty.
Now that they knew his identity, they would catch him eventually. But not in time to save C.J... .
He cleared his mind of those fears and motioned to the first assaulter, who launched the hand-carried battering ram at the door, striking it directly beside the lock. Wood splintered, the door yielded, and then Tanner and Chang were inside, the two assaulters rushing after them, Weldham bringing up the rear.
As always in a raid, he found reality instantly reduced to a series of impressions—stray facts noted almost at random, without evaluation or context.
Living room. Brightly lit by a halogen floor lamp. Unoccupied. To his right, a kitchenette with a wet bar. To the left, an interior hall lit by a low-wattage overhead bulb—
Movement in the hall.
“Stop, police!” he yelled.
The figure vanished into a room at the far end of the hall, slamming the door.
Tanner’s instinct was to run for the door and force it open, but his training told him to always cover his back. “Check the kitchen,” he said to DiMaria. It was possible for someone to hide behind the counter.
DiMaria looked. “Clear.”
“Roger.” Tanner crossed the living room and opened the linen closet. Empty. Then he was in the hall, pivoting into a guest bathroom. No one there. Halfway down the hall now, his men behind him, Tanner acutely aware that slots were danger areas and he was the first target Treat would hit if he opened fire through the door. He was grateful for the heavy flak jacket, the aramid fibers that would stop most calibers of ammunition.
Another closet to examine—empty also—and finally he was at the door Treat had slammed. It was locked. No surprise.
The overhead light switched off. Now the hall was lit only by the flashlight beams that swept up and down like crisscrossing searchlights.
Tanner kicked the door. It didn’t yield. Not wood. Metal. A steel door, hardly standard issue for a residential apartment. Treat must have installed it himself. It was the door to his inner sanctum—a soundproofed room, maybe, where he brought his victims. Where C.J. might be held prisoner right now.
“Blow it open,” he told Weldham, whose twelve-gauge was best suited for the job.
Weldham took a step forward, feeding a Magnum slug into the tube, and then the screaming started.
It was McMath who screamed first, a high, feminine shriek like no sound any SWAT commando ever wanted to make, followed by a flurry of gibbering profanities and the words, “They’re all over me!”
Tanner swung his flash in McMath’s direction, but he had no time to see what was happening because suddenly DiMaria was screaming too. It had to be screams he was hearing, though at first they sounded like raucous, hysterical laughter. “Get ’em off, get ’em off!”
Now Chang was slapping at the back of his neck, and Weldham was stomping his boots in manic desperation.
Tanner didn’t understand until he looked up, his flashlight beam following his gaze.
Spiders were dropping from the ceiling.
They fell in clouds, like confetti. He knew they were spiders because even in the chancy, flickering light he could see the black bulbs of their abdomens and the stringy strands of webbing that floated down with them, wisps of cotton candy, unreal in the semidarkness.
It was a trap. He’d been trained that hallways were the ideal place for an ambush, but in all his training he’d never heard of an ambush by spiders.
“Retreat!” he yelled, pushing Chang toward the front of the hall, but Chang merely fell, eight-legged shapes whispering across his face. In his flashlight’s glow Tanner saw one of the shapes scuttle inside Chang’s collar and vanish beneath his clothes.
Instinctively he checked his arms, the front of his flak jacket. He saw one spider clinging to his utility belt and flicked it away. Another one, larger—a tarantula?—had landed on his trouser leg and was curling up in a defensive posture, threatening no harm, but Tanner kicked it loose anyway, not wanting the goddamned thing on his person.
He couldn’t force a retreat—his men, who had been bunched up at the midpoint of the hall and had received the brunt of the downpour, were incapable of withdrawing, incapable of anything except slapping at the spiders that plastered them in quivering bunches.
All right, go forward.
He grabbed the shotgun out of Weldham’s hands, jammed it into the door beside the dead bolt, and fired point-blank, the Magnum slug cratering the metal. Still the door didn’t give. He fired twice more—the Benelli’s standard load this time, 00 buckshot shells—the reports thunderous in the confined space.
One side of the door was a scorched, smoking ruin. The lock had been torn apart. Tanner gave the door his shoulder, and Chang, recovering sufficiently to assist, rammed it at the same time. The door heaved open, tilting on its hinges.
Tanner rushed through—
he had no time to slice the pie, and no patience for it either. Dimly he knew that Treat would be counting on him to make the kind of stupid mistake he’d just made.
Well, come on, asshole, Tanner thought. Give me your best shot.
His flashlight swept a large bedroom. Table lamps on nightstands flanking a neatly made bed. Some kind of aquarium in the corner—no, a terrarium, housing another spider, this one behind glass. TV against one wall. A few other items of furniture, none big enough to hide behind.
No C.J.
No Gavin Treat.
Where was he? Bathroom?
Tanner ducked inside. No one there.
The closet, then.
He kicked open the closet door and stepped back, expecting a volley of shots. Nothing happened. He risked a look inside and saw shirts and trousers meticulously arrayed on wooden hangers, several pairs of shoes, a tie rack—and a hole in the wall.
It was a neat rectangular hole, obviously cut with care some time ago. The panel of cutout drywall leaned beside it.
Tanner reviewed the apartment’s layout in his mind and saw that this closet was adjacent to the stairwell.
“Fuck.” Into his radio mike: “He’s taking the stairs, repeat, taking the stairs. Could be going up or down. Watch the lobby and the roof. Control the perimeter. And we’ve got officers down—send an RA.” Rescue ambulance.
He turned to look at Chang and found him leaning on the bed, a sick look on his face. “Itches,” he managed to say.
“Where’d it bite you?”
Chang touched his breastbone. “Here.”
Tanner remembered the spider that had skittered under Chang’s collar. He tried to remember if any spiders injected enough venom to prove fatal to a healthy adult. The black widow, maybe. And the brown recluse? He wasn’t sure. “You’re not gonna die on me, are you?” he asked with a strained smile.
“I’m okay. Just get that cocksucker.”
Chang rarely swore. Tanner liked hearing it. It showed he had some fight left.
“Count on it,” he promised, and he went into the closet again.
The crawlway in the wall was narrow. This Treat must be as thin-shouldered as a girl. With an effort Tanner forced his way through. Then he was on the stairwell landing.
Last Breath Page 19