While Marsh had trouble believing the Duvalls had been faithful to each other, he had no doubt Brook was devastated by the murder—didn’t mean he hadn’t done it though, or hadn’t set it up.
“What did she do when you were away?” Marsh probed, noted Detective Cochrane’s interested gaze watching the senator carefully.
Brook drew himself upright, wiped his eyes. Marsh offered the man a handkerchief and had the weird thought that he’d have to get another one for Josie because he bet right now she was letting go of all the tears she’d bottled up since they’d woken to the phone ringing at four a.m. this morning.
And he’d behaved like a total asshole because everything he believed in was being challenged. The law. His personal code of ethics. And his views on marriage that he knew she wouldn’t share. And how the hell did he deal with that when he was smack bang in the middle of a murder investigation and law enforcement snafu? How did he deal with that when a killer was putting every effort into making sure the woman he loved died viciously and soon?
Vince was protecting her… and more guilt ate at him because it should be him. But he couldn’t leave Steve Dancer to face the wolves alone. Couldn’t stand the guilt of knowing he hadn’t been doing his job properly because he’d been too busy in bed with Josephine.
Dammit.
Brook looked away. “She had her own friends and social life. Geoffrey is getting her desk calendar from the apartment.” Tears shone like varnish on his cheeks under the harsh glare of the strip lights. “I’ve told the police everything I know.”
Pru had called Dancer to set up a lunch date and Marsh would bet she was somehow involved in the situation Dancer now found himself in. Pru Duvall was somehow involved in her own death.
Marsh grabbed Brook’s arm, forced the man to meet his eyes. “I know this is painful for you, but did she have a boyfriend?”
Brook didn’t bristle, didn’t blink. “I don’t know—we didn’t…”
He started crying and Marsh felt like a bastard for pushing, but he pushed anyway. “You didn’t have a sexual relationship with your wife?”
Brook shook his head. His lawyer came out of the room behind him followed by Special Agent Sam Walker, who looked like he’d spent the week in his clothes. Brook’s lawyer hustled him away with a wary glare. Poor bastard.
Agent Walker lounged against the doorjamb in a white shirt, sleeves rolled up past his beefy elbows. They exchanged a look and Marsh wanted to grab the other fed by the throat and slam him through the wall. Walker looked about ready to do the same to him.
“What’s going on?” Walker asked Cochrane, ignoring Marsh.
Marsh held his tongue. The detective shrugged and moved along the corridor. “Your man’s through here, Agent Hayes—”
Walker blocked his path. “No way are you getting in to see the suspect.”
Marsh was taller, but Walker was broader. Brawling was not in the FBI’s Code of Conduct Handbook, but it wouldn’t be the first time Marsh had broken that particular rule. He planted both hands on the other guy’s chest and shoved him back a step. “Don’t fuck with me, not today.” He held the man’s gaze, watched him bristle and raise his fists. Come on. Give me an excuse…
“Hey, Special Agent in Charge, this isn’t a pissing contest.” Detective Cochrane grabbed his arm. “Your guy’s down here.” Cochrane pulled him along and he went because Steve Dancer needed him.
Marsh followed him until they entered a viewing room. The Forgery and Fine Art team were as tight as family. They relied on each other. Supported each other, and steered clear of the competitive bullshit that invaded other divisions. Dancer was more than just another agent. He was his best friend.
Dancer sat with sagging shoulders in a hardback chair. Unfocused eyes registering nothing, dried blood caked his face, giving him a wretched appearance. Keeping hold of the rage that coursed through his veins, Marsh managed to sound casual.
“Has he seen a doctor?” he asked.
Cochrane nodded, rubbed his moustache. “Got a busted nose.”
The flesh around one eye was red, swollen completely closed. Dancer’s pallor shone white behind the dried brown blood.
“What evidence do you have?” Marsh asked. “Did he provide DNA? Have you run it yet?”
There was no way Dancer was the Blade Hunter.
“We’ve got semen on Mrs. Duvall’s body, although we haven’t run it yet.” Cochrane smoothed his palm over the bald spot on top of his head. “Your guy says his zipper was undone when he came to. Says he was drugged and doesn’t remember a damned thing.”
“The perp has never left semen behind before—”
“Yeah, that bothers me,” Detective Cochrane admitted as he pulled at the tight collar of his shirt. “And he looks twenty, even though I see from his file he’s thirty-three, but he still isn’t old enough to have knifed Josephine Maxwell when she was a child—well, he is, but he’d have been a kid too…”
Kids did god-awful things every day. But neither figured a kid was into this type of sophisticated torture.
“And we’re tracking the timeline and trying to place Agent Dancer at other scenes. But your guy has never traveled outside the US, so that fries the theory of this perp as an international killer.”
Inside the square sterile room, Special Agent Nicholl leaned over Dancer and placed a photograph in front of him. Even from this distance Marsh could see the blood on the digital image.
Marsh stared through the glass, knowing Dancer couldn’t see him but hoping to infuse the other man with some form of hope.
“He isn’t the Blade Hunter.”
Cochrane stroked his moustache. “So either he did Prudence Duvall and set it up as a copycat—a very obvious copycat—or he’s being set up.”
The unspoken question was why and by whom?
Cochrane was watching him closely, looking for what, Marsh didn’t know. He no longer trusted these guys to get the job done. “What about the knife?” Marsh asked.
“At the lab with everything else.” He shrugged, scratched his head. “You know in the real world how long it takes for those results to come in.”
“No CSI timeline for us, huh? Make sure it gets top priority.” Marsh sent a grim look at the detective. “You got motive?”
The detective laughed with a smoker’s rasp. “No motive.”
Marsh stared at Agent Nicholl who was trying to push Dancer into a confession. Dancer shouted something at the other fed, fury firing up his one good eye. Nicholl was an excellent interviewer, but when you had the wrong guy…
“Does he fit the profile the FBI generated?” Marsh asked.
Detective Cochrane stared through the window beside Marsh, and Marsh watched him though the reflective surface—the same way Cochrane watched him back. Both looking for clues, for tells that someone knew more than they were letting on.
Unfortunately, Marsh didn’t know a damned thing.
“Steve Dancer is a single white male who lives alone. Above average intelligence. Raised by his mother. Interested in law enforcement.” Cochrane shrugged. “He fits some of the profile but not all.”
Marsh looked through the glass at the best man he knew. “As a kid Dancer missed most of his formal education, but arranged his own home-schooling program so he could nurse his mother who suffered from MS. Then, after she died, he worked three jobs to pay his way through MIT—graduated top of his class at the age of twenty.” A muscle ticked near his eye.
What the hell had Prudence Duvall been up to?
The scene through the one-way window twisted his gut. Dancer had stopped talking and rested his forehead on clenched fists against the table. Nicholl left the room and Marsh heard footsteps along the corridor and the rattle of the doorknob as Nicholl entered the viewing room.
He stopped dead when he saw Marsh.
“Sir.” He nodded his head, pursed his lips and seemed to make up his mind. “Special Agent Dancer refused counsel, but he’s been asking for you.”
Grinding his teeth, Marsh pulled out his cell phone and held up his hand for a moment’s silence. “Dora, get Colavecchia back here immediately. Yeah, I don’t care what he says and I don’t care what Dancer says either. Colavecchia defends Dancer whether he wants it or not. Tell him I’m calling in all the chips this time.”
Benedict Colavecchia, Brett Lovine and Marsh had been best friends for fifteen years growing up. He was going to talk to Lovine next and he was going to obtain Steve Dancer’s exit visa from this shithole, whatever the cost to himself, his job, or his friendships. He knew things about the Director of the FBI that no one else knew. He pocketed the cell phone knowing he needed to make the second call in private. Steve Dancer was innocent and the Blade Hunter was out there, trying to get to Josie.
He wanted to play games? Game on.
***
“What. Are. You. Doing?” Each word boomed out like it was a whole sentence.
“What. Does. It. Look. Like?” Josie tried to imitate Vince’s deep rumble but sounded more like a dog with parvo. She turned away, sick and tired of trying to pretend everything was all right when it was so far from all right she was ready to volunteer for a straitjacket and a padded cell.
Sitting on her knees in the closet, she was surrounded by shoes. After years of being a pack rat—grinding childhood poverty did that to a girl—she was finally having a clean out.
There was a pair of sparkly stilettos that Elizabeth had loaned her for some party her old roommate Pete had needed a date for. A straight date.
The heels had damn near crippled her and Pete had gone home with a blond named Dave.
She threw the stiletto at the bed, but it missed and thumped to the floor. Next came a pair of lime green Doc Martens that had seemed like a good idea at the time. She lobbed them out.
“Hey!” Vince yelped.
“Then get out of the way!” she snapped at the big man.
Vince rubbed his shin like she’d shot him. Then he picked up the sparkling high heels and checked the size.
“You want ‘em, you can have ‘em,” she told him.
He laughed the way she knew he would. “Thought my girlfriend might look good in them, but they’re two sizes too big.”
Josie stretched her eyebrows high, though the effect was lost as he couldn’t see her face beneath the rack of clothes. “I do not have big feet.”
“I never said you did, but Laura has got the tiniest feet I ever saw.” He’d never told her about his girlfriend before, it was like they’d crossed some barrier or threshold whereby she was suddenly to be trusted with classified information.
Maybe because she didn’t have long to live…
“What exactly did you do to be a war hero?” She made her tone as dubious as possible because baiting Vince was a damn sight better than crying in the bottom of a smelly closet.
“I single handedly rescued thirty-six orphans from a refugee camp in Darfur that was under attack by rebel forces.”
Suddenly very white teeth were smiling at her from a yard away. His diamond stud twinkled.
“You’re making that up.” Josie glared at him, chewing her lip.
“Why would I do that?” His tone suggested he was laughing at her. “That’s what the press reported.” He crouched lower. “That’s what my military record says.”
It was so obviously not the truth, but… if he could do that…
“Do you really think you can save me?” Josie swallowed and the tears started to flow. They were hot on her lashes and hotter still on her cheeks.
Big hands hauled her from the closet as if she were a rag doll.
“Josephine.” He hugged her to the wall of his chest and wrapped her in his big strong arms and she wanted to believe Vincent would be enough to protect her from this man who dogged her life like a ghost. She told herself to be grateful it was Vince and not Marsh she was crying all over.
“I’ll do for you what I did for those kids,” he told her.
“What was that?” Her words were muffled and her nose was running. God, she hated tears.
Vince didn’t answer and Josephine knew whatever it was, it wasn’t in his file. She hoped it would be enough.
Chapter Sixteen
__________________
“You got anything from the tip called in?” Marsh walked fast. He’d parked a block east of the church the closest he could get even with a shiny gold badge.
Detective Cochrane had been sent to babysit him. Marsh didn’t care as long as the veteran cop didn’t get in his way.
“Disposable, bought in Manhattan last week.” Cochrane was having a hard time keeping up with his stride, but Marsh didn’t ease the pace. The little man huffed out deep breaths, clouds of water vapor condensing in the frigid air, his feet shuffling quickly through piles of fallen leaves. “The feds are checking it out. Maybe they’ll get something off a surveillance camera or those financial records they’re always pulling.”
Marsh snorted. He wished the Blade Hunter was dumb enough to leave a trail. “You read all the files?” Marsh asked. He needed to know the detective was up to speed on this investigation.
“Sure, I read them and Special Agent Walker got a hit on what he thinks might be a Jane Doe who fits Margo Maxwell’s description, but he’s waiting for a court order to begin the exhumation—”
“And he never mentioned it to Josie?”
“You guys were out of town…”
Boston, right. A million miles away.
“And until they’re certain…”
Walker hadn’t informed him of any of this, despite Marsh sharing the information on Admiral Chambers—who’d right now be Marsh’s prime suspect for Pru Duvall’s killing, except, the whole thing was so planned, so organized, so reeking of the Blade Hunter’s insidious style.
So how the hell did Pru Duvall and Steve Dancer fit in? She didn’t fit the profile of the other victims. And Dancer—he had to be a fall guy. Why him?
Marsh dodged a streetlight and kept moving. He checked his cell phone, made sure it was set to vibrate only. He was expecting the shit to hit the fan any minute when the admiral was hauled in for questioning. Unless the admiral was a damn sight smarter than he looked, Marsh doubted the guy had much to worry about except being caught in an extramarital affair. But his parents would go ape shit and the admiral’s wife was going to freak. Brett Lovine had already gone ballistic.
Clenching his fingers, he knew he’d deal with the devil himself as long as Josephine was safe. He’d been an asshole, but he was going to make it up to her.
Keep her safe, Vince…I can fix anything but dead.
This was a nice part of Brooklyn. The sky was so blue it provided a deep backdrop for the bright-yellow Aspen leaves. They weren’t far from Greenwood Cemetery and Marsh paused for a second, sure he heard the squawk of parrots. That nailed it on the head. He was going insane.
“Why would the perp set up Special Agent Dancer?” Cochrane asked.
That question bugged him constantly.
The UNSUB had targeted Josephine, then Lynn, then Pru and Dancer—and the only link Marsh could see was…himself.
Do I know this fucker?
Or had that picture on the front page of The NY News been the catalyst the UNSUB needed to target his next set of victims? Had he been following Josie that day and seen Marsh talking to Pru Duvall in Washington Square? Did he have a source inside the investigative team? He shot the detective a look. The wrinkled suit and worn brown shoes screamed bad pay and crappy fashion sense. He didn’t look dirty, but then they never did.
Cochrane remained silent, as watchful of him as he was of the NYPD detective. Thirty seconds later they were opposite a big old ruined church that was surrounded by acid yellow police tape. The walls of the limestone building looked solid, but the roof was buckled and the windows broken and boarded up. The cross on top of the old church tower was crooked and tilted to the north.
Why here?
A priest was talking to a beat cop and shaki
ng his head with a worried expression on his face. A dead birch tree threw a shadow over the two men as they stood speaking too softly to overhear.
Marsh passed an old weathered sign and made out the faint shadow of a name. St Mary’s. He took out his cell and dialed Agent Walker. “Did you figure out this was the same church Josephine Maxwell attended as a kid?”
The long pause told him the agent had already made the connection.
“You speak to the priest from back then?” Marsh asked, eyeing the gray-haired man talking to the uniformed officer.
“Priest from her day is dead.” Walker sounded like he was talking through gritted teeth.
“Talk to anybody else from the parish?” asked Marsh.
“I’ve been chasing evidence and leads since Angela Morelli was murdered last week. I haven’t slept in—”
“I’m not questioning your dedication, Agent Walker, just your results.” He snapped the phone shut and flashed his badge to the cop, who looked all of twenty and puffed up with self-importance. The detective gave the beat cop a roll of his eyes, making the rookie grin as the kid backed away. Marsh didn’t let his mood show. This was no good for law-enforcement relations—was that what the perp wanted? Cops divided and not sharing information? Purposely screwing up the investigation and slowing them all down?
Marsh held out his hand to the elderly gentleman in a tweed jacket and dog collar.
“SAC Marshall Hayes, and this is Detective Cochrane, NYPD.” He indicated Cochrane with his right hand, realizing he didn’t even know the guy’s first name.
“Father Malcolm.” The priest held out his hand to shake first Marsh’s and then Cochrane’s. “I’m the priest of this parish.”
“Were you ever in charge of this church, Father?” Marsh asked, noticing the brisk wind that made both the priest and the detective shiver. Inside he felt as hot as a volcano on the verge of eruption. Every cell in his body was fueled with rage and focused on catching this killer. Nothing else mattered.
Father Malcolm had wiry gray whiskers and nose hair that bordered on fluffy. “I was the priest here up until four years ago—”
Her Last Chance Page 20