The Rizzoli & Isles Series 10-Book Bundle

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The Rizzoli & Isles Series 10-Book Bundle Page 179

by Tess Gerritsen


  “That sounds like the ultimate paranoid delusion.”

  “It’s also a way to explain the unexplainable: how people can do such terrible things to one another.”

  “Your father believed all that?”

  “He wanted me to believe it. But it took his death to convince me.”

  “What happened to your father?”

  “It could easily have been taken for a simple robbery gone wrong. Naples is a gritty place, and tourists do have to be careful there. But my father was on Via Partenope, alongside the Gulf of Naples, a street almost always crowded with tourists. Even so, it happened so quickly, he had no time to call for help. He simply collapsed. No one saw his assailant. No one saw what happened. But there was my father, bleeding to death on the street. The blade entered just beneath his sternum, sliced through the pericardium, and pierced the right ventricle.”

  “The way Eve Kassovitz died,” she said softly. A brutally efficient killing.

  “The worst part for me,” he said, “is that he died thinking I’d never believe him. After our last phone call, I hung up and said to one of my colleagues, ‘The old man’s finally ready for Thorazine.’ ”

  “But you believe him now.”

  “Even after I got to Naples, a few days later, I still thought it was a random act of violence. An unlucky tourist, in the wrong place at the wrong time. But while I was at the police station, waiting for a copy of their report, an older gentleman stepped into the room and introduced himself. I’d heard my father mention his name before. I never knew that Gottfried Baum worked for Interpol.”

  “Why do I know that name?”

  “He was one of my dinner guests the night that Eve Kassovitz was killed.”

  “The man who left for the airport?”

  “He had a flight to catch that night. To Brussels.”

  “He’s a member of Mephisto?”

  Sansone nodded. “He’s the one who made me listen, made me believe. All the stories my father told me, all his crazy theories about the Nephilim—Baum repeated every one.”

  “Folie à deux,” said Maura. “A shared delusion.”

  “I wish it was a delusion. I wish I could shrug it off the way you do. But you haven’t seen and heard the things I have, what Gottfried and others have. Mephisto is fighting for its life. After four centuries, we’re the last ones.” He paused. “And I’m the last of Isabella’s line.”

  “The last demon hunter,” she said.

  “I haven’t made an inch of headway with you, have I?”

  “Here’s what I don’t understand. It’s not that hard to kill someone. If you’re the target, why don’t they just eliminate you? You’re not in hiding. All it takes is a gunshot through your window, a bomb in your car. Why play stupid games with seashells? What’s the point of warning you that you’re in their sights?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “You can see that it’s not logical.”

  “Yes.”

  “Yet you still think these murders revolve around Mephisto.”

  He gave a sigh. “I won’t even try to convince you. I just want you to consider the possibility that what I’ve told you is true.”

  “That there’s a worldwide brotherhood of Nephilim? That the Mephisto Foundation, and no one else, is even aware of this vast conspiracy?”

  “Our voice is starting to be heard.”

  “What are you going to do to protect yourselves? Load silver bullets in your gun?”

  “I’m going to find Lily Saul.”

  She frowned at him. “The daughter?”

  “Don’t you find it strange that no one knows where she is? That no one can locate her?” He looked at Maura. “Lily knows something.”

  “Why do you think that?”

  “Because she doesn’t want to be found.”

  “I think I should go inside with you,” he said, “just to be sure everything’s all right.”

  They were parked outside her house, and through the living room curtains Maura could see lights shining, the lamps turned on by her automatic timer. Before she’d left yesterday, she had scrubbed off the markings on her door. Staring through the gloom, she wondered if there were new ones scrawled there that she couldn’t see, new threats concealed in the shadows.

  “I think I’d feel better if you came in with me, too,” she admitted.

  He reached into his glove compartment for a flashlight, and they both stepped out of the car. Neither of them spoke; they were focused instead on their surroundings: the dark street, the distant hiss of traffic. Sansone paused there on the sidewalk, as though trying to catch the scent of something he could not yet see. They climbed to the porch, and he turned on the flashlight to examine her door.

  It was clean.

  Inside her house, the phone was ringing. Daniel? She unlocked the front door and stepped inside. It took her only seconds to punch her code on the keypad and disarm the security system, but by the time she reached the telephone, it had fallen silent. Pressing the call history button, she recognized his cell phone number on caller ID, and she itched to pick up the receiver and call him back. But Sansone was now standing right beside her in the living room.

  “Does everything seem all right to you?”

  She gave a tight nod. “Everything’s fine.”

  “Why don’t you have a look around first before I leave?”

  “Of course,” she said, and headed up the hallway. As he followed her, she could feel his gaze on her back. Did he see it in her face? Did he recognize the look of a lovesick woman? She went from room to room, checking windows, rattling doors. Everything was secure. As a simple matter of hospitality, she should have offered him a cup of coffee and invited him to stay for a few minutes, after he’d been kind enough to drive her home. But she was not in a hospitable mood.

  To her relief, he didn’t linger, but turned to leave. “I’ll check in with you in the morning,” he said.

  “I’ll be fine.”

  “You need to be careful, Maura. We all do.”

  But I’m not one of you, she thought. I never wanted to be.

  The doorbell rang. They looked at each other.

  He said, quietly, “Why don’t you see who it is?”

  She took a breath and stepped into the foyer. She took one glance through the window and immediately opened the door. Even the blast of cold air could not drive the flush of heat from her cheeks as Daniel stepped inside, his arms already reaching for her. Then he saw the other man in the hallway, and he froze in place.

  Sansone smoothly stepped into the silence. “You must be Father Brophy,” he said, extending his hand. “I’m Anthony Sansone. I saw you at Dr. O’Donnell’s house the other night, when you came to pick up Maura.”

  Daniel nodded. “I’ve heard about you.”

  The two men shook hands, a stiff and wary greeting. Then Sansone had the good sense to make a quick exit. “Arm your security system,” he reminded Maura.

  “I will.”

  Before he stepped out the front door, he shot one last speculative look at Brophy. Sansone was neither blind nor stupid; he could probably guess what this priest was doing in her house. “Good night,” he said, and walked out.

  She locked the door. “I missed you,” she said, and stepped into Daniel’s arms.

  “It felt like such a long day,” he murmured.

  “All I could think of was coming home. Being with you.”

  “That’s all I could think of, too. I’m sorry to just show up and take you by surprise. But I had to stop by.”

  “It’s the kind of surprise I like.”

  “I thought you’d be home much earlier.”

  “We stopped on the road, for dinner.”

  “It worried me, you know. That you were driving home with him.”

  “You had absolutely nothing to worry about.” She stepped back, smiling. “Let me take your coat.”

  But he made no move to remove it. “What have you learned about him, since you’ve spent the wh
ole day together?”

  “I think he’s just an eccentric man with a lot of money. And a very strange hobby.”

  “Seeking all things satanic? That goes a little beyond what I think of as strange.”

  “The truly strange part is that he’s managed to gather a circle of friends who all believe the same thing.”

  “Doesn’t it worry you? That he’s so completely focused on the dark side? That he’s actually searching for the Devil? You know the saying. ‘When you look long into the abyss …’ ”

  “ ‘The abyss also looks into you.’ Yes, I know the quote.”

  “It’s worth remembering, Maura. How easily darkness can draw us in.”

  She laughed. “This sounds like something from one of your Sunday sermons.”

  “I’m serious. You don’t know enough about this man.”

  I know he worries you. I know he’s making you jealous.

  She touched his face. “Let’s stop talking about him. He doesn’t matter. Come on, let me take your coat.”

  He made no move to unbutton it. Only then did she understand.

  “You’re not staying tonight,” she said.

  He sighed. “I can’t. I’m sorry.”

  “Then why did you come here?”

  “I told you, I was worried. I wanted to make sure he got you home safely.”

  “You can’t stay, even for a few hours?”

  “I wish I could. But at the last minute, they asked me to attend a conference in Providence. I have to drive down there tonight.”

  They. She had no claim to him. The church, of course, directed his life. They owned him.

  He wrapped his arms around her, his breath warming her hair. “Let’s go away sometime,” he murmured. “Somewhere out of town.”

  Where no one knows us.

  As he walked to his car, she stood with her door wide open, the cold streaming around her, into the house. Even after he drove away, she remained in the doorway, heedless of the cruel sting of the wind. It was her just punishment for wanting him. This was what his church demanded of them. Separate beds, separate lives. Could the Devil Himself be any crueler?

  If I could sell my soul to Satan for your love, I think I would.

  THIRTY

  Mrs. Cora Bongers leaned her considerable weight against the barn door and it slid open with a tortured creak. From the dark interior came the nervous bleating of goats, and Jane smelled the gamey scent of damp straw and crowded animals.

  “I’m not sure how much you’ll be able to see right now,” said Mrs. Bongers, aiming her flashlight into the barn. “Sorry I didn’t get your message earlier, when we would’ve had daylight.”

  Jane flicked on her own flashlight. “This should be fine. I just want to see the marks, if they’re still there.”

  “Oh, they’re still here. Used to irritate the heck outta my husband every time he came in here and saw them. I kept telling him to paint over ’em, just so he’d stop complaining about it. He said that’d just make him madder, if he had to paint the inside of a barn. Like he was doing up House Beautiful for the goats.” Mrs. Bongers stepped inside, her heavy boots tramping across the straw-covered dirt floor. Just the short walk from the house had winded her and she paused, wheezing loudly, and aimed her flashlight at a wooden pen, where a dozen goats massed in an uneasy huddle. “They still miss him, you know. Oh, Eben complained all the time about how much work it was, milking them every morning. But he loved these girls. He’s been gone six months now, and they’re still not used to anyone else milking them.” She unlatched the pen and glanced at Jane, who was hanging back. “You’re not scared of goats, are you?”

  “Do we have to go in there?”

  “Aw, they won’t hurt you. Just watch your coat. They like to nibble.”

  Now you be nice goats, thought Jane as she stepped into the pen and latched the door shut behind her. Don’t chew the cop. She picked her way across the straw, trying to avoid soiling her shoes. The animals watched her with cold and soulless stares. The last time she’d been this close to a goat had been on a second-grade school trip to a petting zoo. She had looked at the goat, the goat had looked at her, and the next thing she knew, she was flat on her back and her classmates were laughing. She did not trust the beasts, and clearly they did not trust her; they kept their distance as she crossed the pen.

  “Here,” said Mrs. Bongers, her flashlight focused on the wall. “This is some of it.”

  Jane moved closer, her gaze riveted on the symbols cut deeply into the wooden planks. The three crosses of Golgotha. But this was a perverted version, the crosses flipped upside down.

  “Some more up there, too,” said Mrs. Bongers, and she pointed the beam upward, to show more crosses, cut higher in the wall. “He had to climb onto some straw bales to carve those. All that effort. You’d think those darn kids would have better things to do.”

  “Why do you think it was kids who did this?”

  “Who else would it be? Summertime, and they’re all bored. Nothing better to do than run around carving up walls. Hanging those weird charms on trees.”

  Jane looked at her. “What charms?”

  “Twig dolls and stuff. Creepy little things. The sheriff’s office just laughed it off, but I didn’t like seeing them dangling from the branches.” She paused at one of the symbols. “There, like that one.”

  It was a stick figure of a man, with what appeared to be a sword projecting from one hand. Carved beneath it was: RXX–VII.

  “Whatever that means,” said Mrs. Bongers.

  Jane turned to face her. “I read in the Police Beat that one of your goats went missing that night. Did you ever get it back?”

  “We never found her.”

  “There was no trace of her at all?”

  “Well, there are packs of wild dogs running around here, you know. They’d pretty much clean up every scrap.”

  But no dog did this, thought Jane, her gaze back on the carvings. Her cell phone suddenly rang, and the goats rushed to the opposite side of the pen in a panicked, bleating scramble. “Sorry,” said Jane. She pulled the phone out of her pocket, surprised that she’d even gotten a signal out here. “Rizzoli.”

  Frost said, “I did my best.”

  “Why does that sound like the beginning of an excuse?”

  “’Cause I’m not having much luck finding Lily Saul. She seems to move around quite a bit. We know she’s been in Italy at least eight months. We’ve got a record of ATM withdrawals during that period from banks in Rome, Florence, and Sorrento. But she doesn’t use her credit card very much.”

  “Eight months as a tourist? How does she afford that?”

  “She travels on the cheap. And I do mean cheap. Fourth-class hotels all the way. Plus, she may be working there illegally. I know she had a brief job in Florence, assisting a museum curator.”

  “She has the training for that?”

  “She has a college degree in classical studies. And when she was still a student, she worked at this excavation site in Italy. Some place called Paestum.”

  “Why the hell can’t we find her?”

  “It looks to me like she doesn’t want to be found.”

  “Okay. What about her cousin, Dominic Saul?”

  “Oh. That one’s a real problem.”

  “You’re not going to give me any good news tonight, are you?”

  “I’ve got a copy of his academic record from the Putnam Academy. It’s a boarding school in Connecticut. He was enrolled there for about six months, while he was in the tenth grade.”

  “So he would have been—what, fifteen, sixteen?”

  “Fifteen. He finished up that year and was expected to come back the following fall. But he never did.”

  “That’s the summer he stayed with the Saul family. In Purity.”

  “Right. The boy’s father had just died, so Dr. Saul took him in for the summer. When the boy didn’t return to school in September, the Putnam Academy tried to locate him. They finally got a letter
back from his mother, withdrawing him from the school.”

  “So which school did he attend instead?”

  “We don’t know. Putnam Academy says they never got a request to forward the boy’s transcripts. That’s the last record of him anywhere that I can find.”

  “What about his mother? Where is she?”

  “I have no idea. I can’t find a damn thing about the woman. No one at the school ever met her. All they have is a letter, signed by a Margaret Saul.”

  “It’s like all these people are ghosts. His cousin. His mother.”

  “I do have Dominic’s school photo. I don’t know if it does us much good now, since he was only fifteen at the time.”

  “What does he look like?”

  “Really good-looking kid. Blond, blue eyes. And the school says he tested in the genius range. Obviously he was a smart boy. But there’s a note in the file, says the kid didn’t seem to have any friends.”

  Jane watched as Mrs. Bongers soothed the goats. She was huddled close to them, cooing to them in the same shadowy barn where, twelve years ago, someone had carved strange symbols on the wall, someone who could very well have moved on to carving women.

  “Okay, here’s the interesting part,” said Frost. “I’m looking at the boy’s school admission forms right now.”

  “Yeah?”

  “There’s this section his father filled out, about any special concerns he might have. And the dad writes that this is Dominic’s first experience at an American school. Because he’d lived abroad most of his life.”

  “Abroad?” She felt her pulse suddenly kick into a faster tempo. “Where?”

  “Egypt and Turkey.” Frost paused, and added, significantly, “And Cyprus.”

  Her gaze turned back to the barn wall, to what had been carved there: RXX–VII. “Where are you right now?” she asked.

 

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