“Hmm. Never been there,” Clarkson said, examining the tiny replica. “By the way, is it you I should call about the reward money after you nab the pair? The million dollars, that is. Or should I wait for another call from that other guy?”
“What other guy?”
“The guy who called me on my cell phone before you showed up. Said he was following up on my initial call.”
“He give you his name?”
“Nope. I didn’t think to ask.”
“What’d he sound like?”
“Whaddya mean?”
“Did he have an accent? Sound old, young? That sort of thing.”
“No accent. And I don’t think he was old. But I was on a cell phone. You know how those things are. Reception ain’t always that good.”
“Whaddya tell him?”
“Not much. I was still on the bus. You’re not suppose to talk and drive, right?”
“That’s right.”
“Well, I made it brief. Told him to call me after seven.”
Driscoll looked at his watch. It was 6:38.
“What should I tell him when he calls back?”
“Tell him you already spoke to me and gave me all your information. I’ll make sure you get the reward money when the time comes.” Driscoll produced his card and gave it to the man. “If he presses you further, tell him to call me.”
“That million’s legit, right?”
“Yes. And if what you’ve told me leads to their apprehension, you have my word you’ll get it.” What he didn’t tell him was that he might have to split it with Samantha Taft.
Chapter 54
Carbondale. Once the Pittsburgh of Sullivan County, it had been a bustling industrial town where men melted ore and forged steel. Proud smokestacks that had once billowed pitch into the Catskill sky now stood lethargic, their bricks covered with moss, their inner columns eaten away by rust.
Margaret and Thomlinson had spent the better part of the morning flashing copies of the photo to every storekeeper on Maple Street, the heart of town. The hardware store manager and a cashier at Toys on Maple both thought the teen featured in the picture was Angus. They believed he resided with a sister, but neither the manager nor the cashier knew where.
Driscoll, having left the Sheriff’s office with nada on the pair, was now inside Weatherley’s Hardware speaking with Fred Thurgood, the shop’s manager.
“The kid’s been in here maybe two or three times, tops,” Thurgood said. “Paid cash every time.”
“When was the last time he was in?”
Thurgood scratched the back of his head. A human computer at work, thought Driscoll.
“Hadda be a month ago. Maybe two.”
“How is it you remember his name to be Angus?”
“Came in with a girl, one time. Poor kid must have poked her nose inside a meat grinder. Disfigured. Ya know? Anyway, she screamed out his name like a banshee. Angus! Must have spotted a spider or something.”
“Get her name?”
“Nope.”
“A last name for Angus?”
Thurgood shook his head. “Wha’d the boy do?”
“Plenty,” said Driscoll. “Wha’d he buy?”
The storekeeper gave Driscoll a blank stare. It seemed to last a full sixty seconds. He then closed his eyes as if that would prompt faster recollection. The eyes shot open.
“An ax sharpener! That’s what he bought. An ax sharpener.”
Driscoll thanked the man, exited Weatherley’s, and headed for Toys on Maple, where a second retailer had ID’d the photo. He was greeted by a haggard gent, bib overalls draping a frail figure.
“Help ya?”
Driscoll produced the photo. “You the one who ID’d this fella?”
“You must be the cop lookin’ for Prudence. Followin’ up on the brunette cutie, are ya?”
He must have met Margaret. The old codger. “Right,” he said.
“I’ll go get her. I won’t be but a minute. You wait right here.” He disappeared through a door at the rear of the store.
The sound of the woman’s voice preceded her entrance. Driscoll’s eyes soon focused on a redhead with dazzling green eyes. He figured her for twenty, twenty-one.
“Are you here to see me?” she asked.
“You the young lady who recognized the teen in this photo?”
“That’s Angus. Where’d you get that?”
Driscoll caught something in the tone of her question. More than recognition registered in those glittering eyes. “You sound as though you know him. Do you?”
The question broadsided her.
“No,” she stuttered.
She was concealing something.
“You wouldn’t be in any trouble if you did.”
Driscoll watched her. Her blank stare was replaced with the look of agitation.
“I knew it! I just knew it!”
“Knew what?”
“That the cheating bastard would get himself into some kind of trouble.”
“How old are you?” he asked.
“Seventeen.”
Clarity surfaced.
“You’d be doing him a favor if you told me what you know about him.”
“Can we talk outside?”
Driscoll spotted Old Baggy Bibs peeking from behind the rear door. “Sure.”
When they reached the curb, the teen leaned against a parked Buick and faced Driscoll.
“Ya wanna hear it from the top?”
“Why don’t we start with your name?”
“Sally. Sally Potter.”
“Pleased to meet you, Sally.” Driscoll extended his hand. “I’m Lieutenant Driscoll.”
“Okay. What I know about him. First off, our relationship, if ya wanna call it that, was like being on a rollercoaster with a stranger. The guy was distant. Seemed to have difficulty connecting. And the rollercoaster part. One minute he was up. And I’m talkin’ up! Like he was on some sorta drug. Then wham! The bottom falls out and he’s down, ‘I wanna kill myself’ kinda down. I don’t think he ever tried it, but with him anything was possible.”
“Did you ever see him use drugs?”
“That’s the thing. He wouldn’t take a sipa beer, for Chrissake! I doubt if he was using. Never did with me. But the mood swings had me wondering.”
“How long the two of you been seeing each other?”
“On and off for a few months. Like I said, it wasn’t what you’d call a regular thing. Hell, we never even-” She stopped abruptly. Driscoll wasn’t surprised. He’d found that most teens weren’t comfortable sharing intimate details with adults. More so when that adult was a cop she’d just met.
“What don’t we see in the picture?”
“Whaddya mean?”
“In it, he’s wearing a hood. Did he keep his hair long or short?”
“Somewhere between the two. The photo hides it, but his hair is blond.”
“How tall is he?”
“About five-eight.”
“Any distinguishing marks?”
“You mean like moles or freckles? Things like that?”
“Exactly.”
“No. He didn’t have any. His complexion was better than mine.”
“How ’bout the rest of him?”
She became flushed. “Um…” A half smile. “This is sort of embarrassing.”
A fatherly smile told her he understood.
“He kept his clothes on,” she said. “Always! Even when-” She stopped short again.
Driscoll waited.
“It could be ninety freakin’ degrees out and he’d be in pants, socks, shoes, and a long-sleeved shirt. Buttoned. To the neck!”
What’s he hiding? Driscoll wondered.
“Nothing was ever…what you’d call regular with Angus. Every time I turned around, he and his sister were either headin’ outta town or coming back.”
“Ever tell you where they went?”
“Nope.”
“What’d she look like?”
> “I guess like him.”
“You never saw her?” Driscoll found that surprising. Surprising and disappointing. He watched as anxiety collected on the girl’s face.
“He’s in a heap of trouble, isn’t he?”
“He could be.”
Silence settled. But not for long.
“With his sister! Can you believe it? He dodged having sex with me. But he goes and does his goddamn sister!”
Driscoll believed that if Angus had gone through half of what he had claimed, elective sex would be the last thing on his mind, but he wasn’t going to let Potter know what he was thinking. Instead, he’d rely on the adage about hell having no fury as a woman scorned. It’d just be a matter of time before she erupted. In the meantime, he’d light some fuses.
“You may have heard about the killing spree in New York City.”
“Jesus! Is he wanted in connection with that?”
Driscoll’s expression said “you tell me.”
“Figures. The guy was whack city.”
“Sally, you’re in a position to help us stop the killings.”
The teen narrowed her eyes. Driscoll sensed she was still reeling with jealousy and rage. He waited for that fury to ignite. His wait was short. With her eyes still tapered like a honing blade, she gave him up, feeling like she was a descendant of Judas Iscariot.
Chapter 55
Sally Potter wasn’t much help in providing a last name for the twins. When asked, she said Angus told her it was LTB. At first, Driscoll thought the letters may have some Native American significance. That notion ceased when Sally explained LTB meant Like The Beef. Angus Like The Beef was clearly fond of games.
But she had told him where they lived.
The clapboard one-story house sat under a sprawling willow, fifty yards in from a dirt road, some six miles from the outskirts of town. Well hidden. Weathered plywood covered the windows and a 1962 Plymouth Belvedere was decomposing by its side.
The tall grass that helped conceal the residence was now matted down by a twenty-man Sullivan County SWAT team that was sitting tight and awaiting Driscoll’s orders.
The Lieutenant, armed with an arrest warrant, radioed Thomlinson, who was in place with Margaret, some thirty yards away. On Driscoll’s orders, two SWAT team officers, armed with a three-foot battering ram, stormed up rickety steps and charged the door. A barrage of armor-clad policemen hustled inside, machine guns at the ready.
In seconds, they swept from one end of the house to the other. Besides the chirping of a canary and the skittering of a calico cat, the place was deserted.
“Secure!” the team leader shouted.
Driscoll entered. In what appeared to be the living room, he spotted a padlocked door.
“Break that down,” he ordered.
An officer, using a two-foot industrial cable-cutter, made short work of the padlock. When the door swung open, Driscoll stood staring at a set of steps that led downward. Three members of the SWAT team rushed past him and hurried down the steps. “Secure!” sounded within seconds. The Lieutenant descended into a small cellar. There was an opening behind the furnace that led into a windowless room where a faint smell of copper lingered. He recognized the scent. It was the characteristic odor of dried blood. Who or what was slaughtered in here? he wondered. In the center of the room was a table. On it sat a cardboard box with “New York, New York” scrawled in felt-tipped marker across its top.
Driscoll donned a pair of latex gloves and opened the box. It contained a game board. Its surface was a map of the city of New York. A snaking trail of one-inch squares meandering in and about the five boroughs. At the site of each landmark, the square appeared to be raised. He traced his finger along the path, beginning in the northwestern corner of Brooklyn, up and onto the Brooklyn Bridge. There, he depressed the square. Something metallic sounded, followed by Sinatra’s voice singing “New York, New York.”
“Who had made such a game?” he asked Thomlinson, who was now at his side. He turned his attention back to the game box and saw a velour pouch, stuffed in its own cardboard compartment. He emptied its contents into his hand. Miniature representations of city landmarks crowded his palm. He had found more trophies. As if the scalps weren’t enough. They included an inch-high tin replica of a carousel. Driscoll recognized it as matching the one on Coney Island’s Surf Avenue, a stone’s throw from the Wonder Wheel, where the body of the second victim had been discovered. There was also a silver charm bracelet, dangling an imitation sapphire. He was sure he’d be able to trace that one back to the gift shop at the museum. He fingered a two-inch brass-plated model of an aircraft carrier; surely from the Intrepid Sea, Air, and Space Museum. There was a small magnet characterizing Central Park, and a tiny orangutan; no doubt from the Bronx Zoo. Saint Patrick’s Cathedral, the bus operator’s find, was indeed missing. But, so, too, was any item relating to the murder on the Brooklyn Bridge. That he found odd. Still, he allowed the rush of adrenaline to warm him.
“Lieutenant, whaddya make of that?” Thomlinson was gesturing to an item, sitting on the floor, in the corner of the room.
The two lawmen approached. They stood staring at a small square package covered in newsprint that had been wrapped in such a fashion so as to showcase Angus’s sketch. Smoke rings, which had been penciled in, spewed from his mouth. Driscoll and Thomlinson exchanged glances. Glances that read caution. They may have happened upon something they wish they hadn’t.
“Everybody out!” hollered the Lieutenant.
Chapter 56
For Driscoll and the platoon of law enforcement personnel, it had been a tense fifty minutes, spent three hundred yards away from the perimeter of the house. Some quelled their anxieties by exchanging war stories while Driscoll pondered what his next move might be. The Lieutenant, knowing he was closing in, wanted to get closer.
His radio crackled, dispelling the stillness that hung in the country air: “All clear.”
Eager to find out what was inside the package, he and Thomlinson drove to the house. Two officers, clad in blast protective tactical body armor, were waiting there for them.
“It’s all yours, Lieutenant, and many returns of the day,” one of the officers said with a grin as he handed a box to Driscoll.
The Lieutenant was holding a wooden coffer. Teak, he believed. On its exterior was an expertly carved Native American whom Driscoll recognized immediately as Sinister, the same Manhattan tribe warrior featured on his and every New York police officer’s shield. “Cute,” he said, before lifting the lid.
Inside was a piece of clay pottery. It stood about three inches tall and an inch and a half wide. Its body, supported by three fixed feet, resembled a bowl with strawlike stems protruding from its sides in the four cardinal directions. A small envelope was attached. Driscoll opened the envelope and retrieved a white card. He read from it. “Sorry we’re not here to greet you. My face plastered across everything but the freaking Goodyear blimp told us you’d soon make a visit to Carbondale. Lieutenant Driscoll, you got to have a heart. Don’t you think we suffered enough? This here’s a Catawba peace pipe. We’re hoping to share it?”
Chapter 57
Margaret fidgeted with her fingers as she studied the woman seated across from her. Elizabeth Fahey, psychotherapist extraordinaire, was what Driscoll had called her. Margaret hoped his accolade was appropriate. She was as he had described: an attractive redhead with sparkling green eyes and a gentle demeanor.
“You said on the phone you wanted to discuss some childhood fears that have resurfaced,” Fahey said. “I think it best I get to know a little more about you. Would you feel comfortable with that?”
Margaret inhaled deeply. Then nodded. She was one tough cop but the thought of embarking on a journey of self-exploration scared her half to death.
Fahey crossed her legs, placed her hands on her lap, and smiled. It appeared to Margaret she was eager to listen. But was Margaret eager to talk?
“Where do I start?”
“Anywhere you’d like.”
“Okay. I’m a police officer. I work with John Driscoll. I suppose you’re aware of that since John referred me to you.” Margaret caught herself editing her words. Should I be calling him John? she wondered. Focus. Make this more about you. “I was raised in Brooklyn in a typical Italian family.” She stopped abruptly. “Well, maybe, not typical. But Italian. Catholic Italian. We attended Mass on Sunday. I wore a new outfit on Easter. And attended parochial school…”
Margaret looked down at the floor and shook her head. The gesture did not go unnoticed.
“Sounds like an idyllic childhood.”
Margaret knew better and was willing to bet Fahey did too.
“Look at me. I’m acting like those zealots who drape themselves in enough scapulas and Saint Anthony medals to choke a horse! Rambling about a childhood steeped in allegiance to the Catholic Church, Easter Sunday, and goddamn parochial school as if it would all protect me now. Hell, it didn’t then!” Moisture coated Margaret’s eyes.
“Define ‘maybe not typical.’”
Margaret smiled. “We’re there already! Wow! I’ve been hovering an inch above solid ground for over thirty years. You ask me for a snapshot of my life. And in less than a minute I stumble over the word ‘typical’ and wham! We zero in on why I’m here.”
“We have?”
“I was in therapy once before. In my teens. It seemed to take a lot longer back then to get to the crux of the problem.”
“I’m not sure we’re there yet. But we’re circling. What was so untypical about your family?”
Margaret felt like she had been asked to dive into a freshly dug grave. She’d been caught. On some level, she had hoped she could get away with hinting that her childhood was anything but ordinary and leave it at that. The mere notion of exploring it further shot splinters of fear through her marrow.
The Screaming Room jd-2 Page 15