Richard Montanari

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Richard Montanari Page 34

by The Echo Man


  Whoever they were looking for was gone.

  Chapter 79

  In the Loss Prevention office Jessica stood behind John Shepherd. He rewound the video files. The recordings shuttled between different views, so there was a six-second rotation between each of four cameras on the twelfth floor. Even in a hotel as pricey and profitable as Le Jardin, they did not have the resources to devote a hard drive to each of the scores of cameras in and around the property.

  Shepherd rewound the recording to when Jessica and the other detectives came to Room 1208, then kept going. A handful of people backed up to their rooms, as well as the stairwell at the end of the hallways. Shepherd carried on until he saw one of the room attendants exit the room backward, then retreat down the hall. He stopped, played it forward.

  In normal time the view showed the room attendant walking down the hall, toward Room 1208. The attendant was female, petite and slender, with her light-colored hair in a braid. Here the view began its rotation, shifting to the area near the guest elevators.

  'Do you know who this is?' Jessica asked.

  'Hard to tell,' Shepherd said. 'I know a lot of the room attendants - most of them, in fact. But from this angle it's difficult.'

  When the view returned to the eastern hallway, they saw the attendant stop in front of 1208 for a few seconds. She didn't knock, she didn't try the door. She just stood there, perhaps listening. The camera then cut away to another view, again to the elevators, where it stayed for six seconds. No one came or went. It then cut to a view of the other end of the hallway, the western wing. Two women came out of a room there. The next cut was to the service elevators. Empty. Back to the young woman in front of 1208. The recording caught up with her as she knocked on the door. There was no audio, but Jessica could see her lips move. In the split second before the cut-away she lifted her hand, and appeared to swipe a card in the electronic lock.

  The recording moved again to its other locations. No other people were visible.

  They watched the rotation for the next minute and saw no activity. When they returned to the eastern hallway they saw a man heading away from the camera. He was in costume, a wizard's costume. He moved slowly, so that by the time he reached 1208 the camera had rotated. When the camera returned he was gone, and the door to the stairwell was just closing.

  'Shit,' Shepherd said. He rewound the recording with the joystick, and toggled it back and forth. There were no details visible. It was impossible to tell if the man had entered the room or just passed by. With his hat, long coat and what appeared to be gloves on his hands, there were no identifiable details.

  Shepherd pointed to the time code in the lower right-hand corner of the frame.

  'Right around here is when we went up,' he said.

  A minute later Jessica saw herself and Josh Bontrager walking down the hall. A few seconds later Shepherd joined them. They went inside the room.

  'I'm going to interrogate these locks,' Shepherd said. 'I'll be right back.'

  While Shepherd was gone Jessica toggled the video back and forth. She saw nothing new. She looked at the menu down the right side of the screen. She saw that one of the selections was the rear loading dock. She clicked over. It was a static shot from above one of the three docks behind the hotel, showing the loading bay, a pair of Dumpsters, and the hotel's shuttle bus parked in a space. There was no movement. In the upper right-hand corner she could see a sliver of Seventeenth Street.

  She was just about to click back over - she was certain that John Shepherd didn't want her messing around with the computers - when she saw a view that she had not seen before. It was above the side door to the loading dock, the man door, not the huge corrugated steel door. The view cut away, but before it did she saw something. She ran it back.

  There was no mistake. It was Kevin Byrne standing near the mouth of the alley.

  Jessica checked the time code.

  Was this when Byrne dropped off the package with the concierge? If so, what was he doing at the rear of the hotel?

  Jessica heard the door open in the outer office. She clicked back to the paused recording at the beginning of the clip of the twelfth floor. Shepherd reentered the office.

  'I interrogated all four locks along the path,' Shepherd said. 'The lock on 1208, the service elevator, the security door leading out to the loading dock, and the door on the dock itself. All four locks register the same card. It is signed out to one of the room attendants. Lucinda Doucette.'

  Why is that name familiar? Jessica thought. 'Do you know her?'

  'Oh yeah,' Shepherd said. 'Sweet kid. Shy.'

  'Do you have a photograph of her?'

  'Sure,' Shepherd said. He moved to another computer terminal, tapped a few keys. He input Lucinda's name and a few seconds later her ID page came up. He hit print and the color printer began to cycle. Seconds later, Jessica was looking at Lucinda Doucette's young face. Jessica knew her. She was the young woman at the Hosanna House, the one who'd been sitting at the little table with Carlos.

  Jessica had no choice. She called in an all-points bulletin on the girl.

  Shepherd hit a few keys, printing off one hundred copies of Lucinda Doucette's photograph. 'We need to get this to all the sector cars in the area.'

  When John Shepherd grabbed the printed photos and left the office, Jessica's cellphone rang. It was Nicci Malone.

  'Nicci. Why aren't you on channel with this?'

  'I'm not in the hotel anymore.'

  'What do you mean? Where are you?'

  Nicci gave her the location. It was a few blocks away.

  'What's going on?' Jessica asked.

  Detective Malone hesitated. 'You better get over here right away.'

  Chapter 80

  Lucy walked up Sansom Street in a fog, stepping from shadow to shadow. Everyone who passed her was a danger. They all knew what she had done. She could see it in their eyes. There was traffic, conversations, street sounds all around her, but she didn't hear the sounds. All she heard was the white noise in her head, raised to an insane volume, the static of her impending madness.

  What had she done?

  All she remembered was the bell. It had rung twice.

  What did it mean?

  She kept walking. Block after block passed. Walk. Don't Walk. Red light. Green light. There were people all around her, but they were ghosts. The only person who lived in her world right now was a dead man. A man lying under the sheets, soaked in blood.

  All that blood.

  At 22nd Street her legs felt as if she could not take another step, but she forced herself, she knew she had to keep moving.

  When she reached the corner of Sansom and 23rd something jolted her out of her dark reverie. There were police cars all up and down the streets, their lights flashing on the walls of the buildings. Groups of people were gathered on the corners, chatting with each other, pointing at the church. Lucy had walked this way many times.

  She was pretty sure that there was a small cemetery next to the church. What was going on?

  It didn't matter. It had nothing to do with her. She knew what she had to do. She knew who she had to call. She crossed 23rd Street. There was a policeman standing in the middle of the street, directing traffic away from the church. Lucy pulled up the collar on her coat, angled her head away from him. As she passed, she chanced a glance. He was looking right at her. She quickened her pace, made it across the street. When she had gone half a block she stepped back into the shadows, glanced back. The cop was still looking in her direction.

  Lucy ran. She tried to get her bearings. The river was just a few blocks to her left. Ahead was Chestnut, Market, Arch, Cherry.

  Cherry.

  There was only one place for her to go.

  Lucy stood in front of Apartment 106, her breath coming in hot, painful waves. She had run nearly six blocks and her sides ached. She tried to calm herself, to catch her breath. She could hear the sound of a television coming from one of the other apartments on this floor. Somewhe
re a dog was barking. She knocked softly, but there was no response. She tried again. Nothing.

  She tried the doorknob. It turned in her hand. She pushed open the door, and stepped into Mr. Costa's apartment.

  The flat was completely empty. This time, even the Dreamweaver booth was gone. The floor had been swept, the walls were bare. She could smell the cleaning products - Spic 'N Span, Lemon Pledge, Windex, Scrubbing Bubbles.

  Lucy moved slowly through the living room, glanced into the tiny kitchen. The old appliances remained, but that was it. There was no dinette table, no chairs, no dishes in the sink, no strainer. She turned back to the living room. On the right was a door that she figured led to a bedroom. She stepped lightly, but the old wooden floor still creaked under her weight. She stopped, waiting for the light to go on, for Mr. Costa to appear suddenly as he was likely to do. But it didn't happen. Lucy inched open the door to the bedroom. It too was empty. No furniture, no clothing, no personal items of any kind. There was a single window overlooking the street. That was it.

  But it wasn't.

  There was something on the wall. A small picture in a frame. Lucy reached over, flipped the light switch, but it didn't work. She crossed the bedroom, pushed the curtain to the side. A wedge of illumination from the street lights across the road spilled into the room. She took the small picture from the wall, angled it toward the borrowed light. The photograph was old, kind of blurry. It was a picture of a little girl, no more than two years old. She sat on a beach. In front of her was a bright red plastic bucket. In her hand was a small shovel. She squinted at the sunlight. She wore a floppy flowered sun hat. Chubby cheeks, chubby knees.

  Lucy knew the face, the eyes. The last time she had seen those eyes they had been red with crying.

  It was Peggy van Tassel.

  Lucy's hands began to shake. She tried to plug it into everything that had happened in the past few days and she could not. Then she tried to put the picture in the pocket of her coat but it wouldn't fit.

  She knew what she had to do. She would get to the nearest phone and call Detective Byrne. The longer she waited, the worse it was going to get for her.

  Before she could take a single step, she heard the floorboards creak, felt the warm breath on her neck. Someone stood right behind her.

  'Police,' the man said. 'Get down on the floor and put your hands behind your back. Do it now.'

  Lucy felt her legs go soft. The photograph slipped from her grasp. It crashed to the floor.

  'Now,' he repeated.

  Lucy got down on the floor, next to the shattered glass, put her hands behind her back. She felt the man take her arms by the wrists, then slip a plastic band around them, tighten it.

  He left her there like that for a full minute. She dared not turn to look at him. She heard him pace around the room. Then he spoke.

  'Can you hear them?' he asked softly.

  Lucy didn't know what he was talking about. She tried to listen hard, to figure out what he meant, but there was only the roar of terror in her head.

  'The dead are all over the city,' the man continued. 'Tonight it belongs to them. It always has.'

  A few moments later the man shone a flashlight on the broken photograph on the floor, spotlighting the little girl's face. He held it there for a long time.

  'You could have saved her,' the man said. 'You could have saved her and you did nothing.'

  Lucy's mind began to spin. This man was not the police.

  She was pulled roughly to her feet. She felt the man's breath right near her ear.

  'You're as guilty as George Archer.'

  Chapter 81

  The St Demetrios Orthodox Church was a long rectangular building with a single cupola. Behind it was a graveyard, a small neighborhood cemetery, easily a hundred years old. There was a waist-high brick wall surrounding the courtyard, which was accessible by a double wrought-iron gate. In the light thrown from the headlights of the sector cars and departmental sedans, the headstones cast long shadows over the grounds, as well as onto the walls of the row homes on either side. The flashing lights projected images nearly ten feet tall, giant specters overseeing the dead.

  As Jessica approached the scene, Nicci Malone came jogging up to her side. Nicci pointed to a young couple standing near one of the sector cars. They looked terribly frightened.

  'These two were walking up the street about a half-hour ago. They said they were not really paying attention but when they got here to the edge of the block they saw someone walking in the shadows to the center of the cemetery. They said it was a man carrying something heavy over his shoulders.'

  'Did they get a good look at the guy?' Jessica asked. Nicci shook her head. 'Too dark on that side. But they still watched what he was doing. They said he dropped the parcel to the ground, unwrapped it. When they saw that it was a body, they froze. Then they saw the man position the leg, propping it up on one of the low headstones.'

  Jessica knew what came next. She remained silent.

  'Then, according to our witnesses, the man jumped high into the air and came down on the leg. The woman said she heard the sound of the breaking bone all the way on the other side of the cemetery.'

  A news helicopter roared overhead. Jessica wondered what this grotesque display might look like from above.

  'What about the vehicle? Did they get a look?'

  Again Nicci shook her head. 'They were both pretty much over the edge at this point. We were lucky they had the wherewithal to call us.'

  Jessica glanced at the street corners. She did not see any police cameras. This was not a high-crime or high-drug-traffic area. She looked at the walls of the stone church. She did not see any surveillance cameras there, either.

  When she stepped into the gated graveyard, Jessica saw the corpse, the now-familiar signature. The body was nude, a white middle-aged male, shaved clean. There was a band of paper around his forehead. The left foot rested on the headstone. Jessica crossed over to the plot, aimed her Maglite at the dead body, and saw the sharp bone protruding from the skin, just above the left knee. She thought about the line from Danse Macabre.

  Zig, zig, zig, each one is frisking,

  You can hear the cracking of the bones of the dancers.

  Then Jessica leaned in, moved the victim's left leg a few inches, directed the beam of her flashlight at the headstone. At the top she saw:

  O THEOS NA TIN ANAPAFSI

  The name of the person in the grave was Melina Laskaris.

  She angled the light to the victim's right hand, which was on the ground, palm up. On the ring finger she saw a small tattoo of a donkey. It was the seventh animal, which meant there was one more to go.

  Before Jessica could stop her - and she didn't really want to stop her - Nicci Malone stepped forward, knelt down, pulled off the bloodied white headband. When Jessica saw the victim's face, the triangle was complete.

  The dead woman was Lina Laskaris.

  Her killer was Eduardo Robles.

  The accomplice, the harmony in this horror show - the broken body sprawled before them in this crumbling graveyard - was Detective Dennis Stansfield.

  Chapter 82

  He stood in shadows, just a block from the Le Jardin hotel, the sounds of his city all around him, the flashing police lights a few blocks away. He felt the hand on his arm.

  'Kevin.'

  Christa-Marie looked fragile, sculpted from moonlight. She raised a hand to his cheek, a warm finger tracing the lines in his face. She slipped her hand around the back of his head, leaned forward and kissed him, gently at first, then with a growing passion.

  A moment later she leaned back, looked into his eyes.

  'It's time, isn't it?' she asked.

  'Yes,' Byrne said. 'Are you ready?'

  'Yes.' She took his hand in hers. 'Take me home.'

  Chapter 83

  'Jess?'

  It was Russell Diaz. The city block had been taken over by law enforcement. Residents had begun to drift out of their houses. Endl
essly, the helicopter flew back and forth, hovering overhead. Jessica looked around. David Albrecht was not to be found.

  'You have a minute?' Diaz asked.

  She did not. But she knew that this was coming, just as she knew what it was about. 'Sure.'

  Diaz looked at his two men. 'Give us a second.'

  The two officers walked a few feet away, leaned against Jessica's car. When Diaz felt they were out of earshot, he spoke.

  'You know what I have to ask, don't you?' he said, lowering his voice.

  Jessica remained silent. It was a rhetorical question. Diaz plowed ahead. Niceties were over.

  'I need to talk to Kevin,' Diaz said. 'Have you heard from him?'

  'Not since earlier this evening.'

  'About what time was that?'

  Jessica had to think about this. She had to be accurate. This was all going on the record. 'Maybe an hour ago.'

  'He called you?'

  'Yes.'

  'Did he mention where he was going?'

  Now she had to be careful. Byrne had not said anything specific. 'No.'

  'Is he still driving that van?'

  'I don't know.'

  Diaz looked out over the gathering crowd, back.

  'I want to show you something.'

  They walked over to the unmarked police van. Diaz opened the sliding side door. Inside was a rack of electronic equipment, surveillance monitors, three locked gun racks. Diaz grabbed a laptop off the front seat, opened it, put it on the floor of the van. The screen instantly displayed a flow chart. On it were six different squares. Diaz clicked the first one.

  Seconds later three separate documents cascaded across the screen. Jessica recognized them as PPD witness statements, presented in .pdf format.

 

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