Koontz, Dean R. - Mr. Murder
Page 39
Oslett was beginning to dislike Waxhill. The man was a hopeless
pessimist.
Picking up the thermos-pot and pouring more coffee for all of them,
Waxhill said, "Even if he was only going to movies, watching
television--didn't that worry you?"
"Look, he's supposed to be the perfect assassin. Programmed.
No remorse, no second thoughts. Hard to catch, harder to kill. And if
something does go wrong, he can never be traced to his handlers.
He doesn't know who we are or why we want these people terminated, so he
can't turn state's evidence. He's nothing, a shell, a totally hollow
man. But he's got to function in society, be inconspicuous, act like an
ordinary Joe, do things real people do in their spare time.
If we had him sitting around hotel rooms staring at walls, maids would
comment to one another, think he's weird, remember him.
Besides, what's the harm in a movie, some television?"
"Cultural influences. They could change him somehow."
"It's nature that matters, how he was engineered, not what he did with
his Saturday afternoon. Oslett leaned back in his chair, feeling
guardedly better, having convinced himself to some degree, if not
Waxhill. "Check into the past. But you won't find anything."
"Maybe we already have. A prostitute in Kansas City. Strangled in a
cheap motel across the street from a bar called the Blue Life Lounge.
Two different bartenders at the lounge gave the Kansas City Police a
description of the man she left with. Sounds like Alfie."
Oslett had perceived a bond of class and experience between himself and
Peter Waxhill. He had even entertained the prospect of friendship.
Now he had the uneasy feeling that Waxhill was taking pleasure from
being the bearer of all this bad news.
Waxhill said, "One of our contacts managed to get us a sample of the
sperm that the Kansas City Police Scientific Investigation Division
recovered from the prostitute's vagina. It's being flown to our New
York lab now. If it's Alfie's sperm, we'll know."
"He can't produce sperm. He was engineered--"
"Well, if it's his, we'll know. We have his genetic structure mapped,
we know it better than Rand McNally knows the world. And it's unique.
More individual than fingerprints."
Yale men. They were all alike. Smug, self-satisfied bastards.
Clocker picked up a plump hot-house strawberry between thumb and
forefinger. Examining it closely, as if he had excruciatingly high
standards for comestibles and would not eat anything that failed to pass
his demanding inspection, he said, "If Alfie's drawn to Martin
Stillwater, then what we need to know is where we can find Stillwater
now." He popped the entire berry, half as large as a lemon, onto his
tongue and into his mouth, in the manner of a toad taking a fly.
"Last night we sent a man into their house for a look around," Waxhill
said. "Indications are, they packed in a hurry. Bureau drawers left
open, clothes scattered around, a few empty suitcases left out after
they decided not to use them. Judging by appearances, they don't intend
to return home within the next few days, but we're having the place
watched just in case."
"And you have no idea in hell where to find them," Oslett said, taking
perverse pleasure in putting Waxhill on the defensive.
Unruffled, Waxhill said, "We can't say where they are at this moment,
no--"
"Ah."
"--but we think we can predict one place we can get a lead on them.
Stillwater's parents live in Mammoth Lakes. He has no other relatives
on the West Coast, and unless there's a close friend we don't know
about, he's almost certain to call his father and mother, if not go
there."
"What about the wife's parents?"
"When she was sixteen, her father shot her mother in the face and then
killed himself."
"Interesting." What Oslett meant was that the tawdriness of the average
person's life never ceased to amaze him.
"It is interesting, actually," Waxhill said, perhaps meaning some thing
different from what Oslett meant. "Paige came home from school and
found their bodies. For a few months, she was under the guardianship of
an aunt. But she didn't like the woman, and she filed a petition with
the court to have herself declared a legal adult."
"At sixteen?"
"The judge was sufficiently impressed with her to rule in her favor.
It's rare but it does happen."
"She must've had one hell of an attorney."
"I suppose she did. She studied the applicable statutes and precedents,
then represented herself."
The situation was bleaker all the time. Even if he'd been lucky, Martin
Stillwater had gotten the better of Alfie, which meant he was a more
formidable man than the jerk in People. Now it was beginning to seem as
if his wife had more than a common measure of fortitude, as well, and
would make a worthy adversary.
Oslett said, "To push Stillwater to get in touch with his folks, we
should use Network affiliates in the media to hype the incidents at his
house last night onto the front page."
"We are," Peter Waxhill said infuriatingly. He framed imaginary
headlines with his hands,"
"Best selling Author Shoots Intruder.
Hoax or Real Threat? Author and Family Missing. Hiding from Killer or
Avoiding Police Scrutiny?" That sort of thing. When Stillwater sees a
newspaper or TV news program, he's going to call his parents right then
because he'll know they've seen the news and they're worried."
"We've tapped their phone?"
"Yes. We have caller-ID equipment on the line. The moment the
connection is made, we'll have a number where Stillwater's staying."
"What do we do in the meantime?" Oslett asked. "Just sit around here
having manicures, eating strawberries?"
At the rate Clocker was eating strawberries, the hotel supply would be
gone shortly, and soon thereafter the entire hot-house crop in
California and adjacent states would also be exhausted.
Waxhill looked at his gold Rolex.
Drew Oslett tried to detect some indication of ostentation in the way
Waxhill consulted the expensive timepiece. He would have been pleased
to note any revelatory action that might expose a gauche pretender under
the veneer of grace and sophistication.
But Waxhill seemed to regard the wristwatch as Oslett did his own gold
Rolex, as though it was no different from a Timer purchased at K-Mart.
"In fact, you'll be flying up to Mammoth Lakes later this morning."
"But we can't be certain Stillwater's going to show up there."
"It's a reasonable expectation," Waxhill said. "If he does, then
there's a good chance Alfie will follow. You'll be in position to
collect our boy. And if Stillwater doesn't go there, just calls his
dear mater and pater, you can fly out or drive out at once to wherever
he called from.
Reluctant to sit a moment longer, for fear that Waxhill would use the
time to deliver more bad news, Oslett put his napkin on the table and
pushed his chair back. "Then let's get mo
ving. The longer our boy's on
the loose, the greater the chance someone's going to see him and
Stillwater at the same time. When that happens, the police are going to
start believing his story."
Remaining in his chair, picking up his coffee cup, Waxhill said?
"One more thing."
Oslett had risen. He was loath to sit again because it would appear as
if Waxhill controlled the moment. Waxhill did control the moment, in
fact, but only because he possessed needed information, not because he
was Oslett's superior in rank or in any other sense.
At worst, they held equal power in the organization, and more likely,
Oslett was the heavyweight of the two. He remained standing beside the
table, gazing down at the Yale man.
Although he was finally finished eating, Clocker stayed in his chair.
Oslett didn't know whether his partner's behavior was a minor betrayal
or only evidence that the Trekker's mind was off with Spock and the gang
in some distant corner of the universe.
After a sip of coffee, Waxhill said, "If you have to terminate our boy,
that's regrettable but acceptable. If you can bring him back into the
fold, at least until he can be gotten into a secure facility and
restrained, even better. However it goes . . . Stillwater, his wife,
and his kids have to be eliminated."
"No problem."
The branch manager, Mrs. Takuda, visited Marty while he waited at the
teller's window, shortly after the dark wave slammed into him and washed
away. If he had been confronted by his reflection, he would have
expected to see that he was still tight-lipped and pale, with an animal
wildness in his eyes, however, if Mrs. Takuda noticed anything strange
in his appearance, she was too polite to mention it.
Primarily she was concerned that he might be withdrawing the majority of
his savings because something about the bank displeased him.
He was surprised he could summon a convincing smile and enough charm to
assure her that he had no quarrel with the bank and to set her mind at
rest. He was chilled and shaking deep inside, but none of the tremors
reached the surface or affected his voice.
When Mrs. Takuda went to assist Elaine Higgens in the vault, Marty
looked at Paige and the kids, the east door, the south door, and his
Timer. The sight of the red sweep hand cleaning the seconds off i i the
dial made sweat break out on his brow. The Other was coming.
How long? Ten minutes, two minutes, five seconds?
Another wave hit him.
Cruising a wide boulevard. Morning sun flaring off the chrome of
passing cars. Phil Collins on the radio, singing about betrayal.
Sympathizing with Collins, he again imagines magnetism. Click.
Contact. He feels an irresistible pull farther east and south, so he is
still heading in the right direction.
He breaks contact seconds after establishing it, hoping to get another
fix on the false father without revealing himself. But even during that
brief linkage, the enemy senses the intrusion.
Though the second wave was of shorter duration than the first, it was no
less powerful. Marty felt as if he had been hit in the chest with a
hammer.
With Mrs. Higgens, the teller returned to the window. She had loose
cash and banded packets of both hundred- and twenty-dollar bills. It
amounted to two stacks of approximately three inches each.
The teller started to count out the seventy thousand.
"That's all right," Marty said. "Just put it in a couple of manila
envelopes."
Surprised, Mrs. Higgens said, "Oh, but Mr. Stillwater, you've signed the
withdrawal order, we ought to count it in front of you."
"No, I'm sure you've already counted correctly."
"But bank procedure--"
"I trust you, Mrs. Higgens."
"Well, thank you, but I really think--"
"Please." Merely by remaining seated at the room-service table while
Drew Oslett stood impatiently beside it, Waxhill exerted control. Oslett
disliked him and grudgingly admired him simultaneously.
"It's almost certain," Waxhill said, "that the wife and children saw
Alfie in that second incident last night. They know very little about
what's going on, but if they know Stillwater was telling the truth when
he talked about a look-alike, then they know too much."
"I said, no problem," Oslett reminded him impatiently.
Waxhill nodded. "Yes, all right, but the home office wants it done in a
certain way."
Sighing, Oslett gave up and sat down. "Which is?"
"Make it look as if Stillwater went off the deep end."
"Murder-suicide?"
"Yes, but not just any murder-suicide. The home office would be pleased
if it could be made to appear as if Stillwater was acting out a
particular psychopathic delusion. "Whatever."
"The wife must be shot in each breast and in the mouth."
"And the daughters?"
"First, make them undress. Tie their wrists behind them. Tie their
ankles together. Nice and tight. There's a particular brand of braided
wire we'd like you to use. It'll be provided. Then shoot each girl
twice.
Once in her . . . private parts, then between the eyes. Stillwater
must appear to have shot himself once through the roof of his mouth.
Will you remember all of that?"
"Of course."
"It's important that you do everything precisely that way, no deviations
from the script."
"What's the story we're trying to tell?" Oslett asked.
"Didn't you read the article in People?"
"Not all the way through," Oslett admitted. "Stillwater seemed like
such a jerk--and a boring jerk, at that."
Waxhill said, "A few years ago, in Maryland, a man killed his wife and
two daughters in exactly this fashion. He was a pillar of the
community, so it shocked everybody. Tragic story. Everyone was left
wondering why. It seemed so meaningless, so out of character. Still
water was intrigued by the crime and considered writing a novel based on
it, to explore the possible motivation behind it. But after he'd done a
lot of research, he dropped the project. In People, he says it just
depressed him too much. Says that fiction, his kind of fiction, needs
to make sense of things, bring order to chaos, but he just couldn't find
any meaning in what happened in Maryland."
Oslett sat in silence for a moment, trying to hate Waxhill but finding
that his dislike for the man was fading rapidly. "I must say . . .
this is very nice."
Waxhill smiled almost shyly and shrugged.
"This was your idea?" Oslett asked.
"Mine, yes. I proposed it to the home office, and they went for it
right away."
"It's ingenious," Oslett said with genuine admiration.
"Thank you."
"Very neat. Martin Stillwater kills his family the same way the guy did
in Maryland, and it looks as if the real reason he couldn't write a
novel about the original case was because it struck too close to home,
because it was what he secretly wanted to do to his family."
"Exactly."
"And it's been preying on his
mind ever since."
"Haunts his dreams."
"This psychotic urge to symbolically rape--"
"--and literally kill--"
"--his daughters--"
"--kill his wife, too, the woman who--"
"--nurtured them," Oslett finished.
They were smiling at each other again, as they had smiled when
discussing that lovely cafe off the Champs Elysees.
Waxhill said, "No one will ever be able to figure out what killing his
family had to do with his crazy report of a look-alike intruder, but
they'll figure the look-alike was somehow part of his delusion, too."
"I just realized, samples of Alfie's blood taken from the house in
Mission Viejo are going to appear to be Stillwater's blood."
"Yes. Was he periodically exsanguinating himself, saving his * 303 own
blood for the hoax? And why? A great many theories are sure to be put
forth, and in the end it'll be a mystery of less interest than what he