The Impaler
Page 11
“Well,” Schaap said, rising, “I’ll let you play. Be in my cell if you need me.”
Markham nodded, and Schaap left. He rotated the constellation Cancer one last time and crumpled it into the trash. He leaned on his desk—closed his eyes and rubbed his forehead.
He was irritated—not because Schaap was right that he was wasting his time—but because he knew there was a link to the murder sites that was just beyond his reach. It was the same for the crescent-moon visual. He was off with the Vlad the Impaler angle. He could feel it. The messages on the bodies, the ancient scripts were just as much for something in the heavens as it was for something here on the earth. Billy Canning proved this.
Markham looked at his watch. Schaap’s team had already questioned Canning’s lover, Stefan Dorsey, this afternoon—had most likely finished their sweep of the tattoo parlor, too—but Markham would need to question Dorsey himself. Would also need to spend some time at the tattoo parlor and see if anything spoke to him. But what could he possibly find there? Tattoos on the walls as numerous as the stars themselves?
Get off the stars, he said to himself. Focus on the victims. Quit theorizing for now and get back to the facts, the things you know for sure.
Markham stared at the map of Raleigh on his computer screen—thumbed his mouse and scrolled it over to the right, centering the map on Cary. He zoomed in. Canning was from Cary. So was Randall Donovan. Canning was a homosexual. But was Randall Donovan? And what about Rodriguez and Guerrera?
Randall Donovan. Schaap had questioned his wife again over the weekend, and the FBI had already analyzed the lawyer’s computers and combed through his files. Found nothing unusual, but now, with the discovery of Canning and this possible wrinkle in Vlad’s victim profile, he would need to speak to Randall Donovan’s wife himself.
Yes, he thought, if he could establish that Donovan was a homosexual, he would know where to begin again with Rodriguez and Guerrera. If Vlad turned out to be some kind of gay basher, one might be able to narrow down where the bastard would go looking for his next victim. Not to mention, if he could figure out Vlad’s game of connect the dots, he might also be able to narrow down where he intended to display him.
Markham turned off his computer and gathered his things, gulped down the last of his coffee, and turned off his office light. Tracy Donovan had been through a lot, he knew. Was devastated, from what Schaap told him. The lawyer’s body had just been shipped back from Quantico, and the funeral arrangements were in full swing. Maybe he should wait a day or two before implying her husband could’ve been killed because he was a homosexual.
“I don’t have time for courtesy,” he muttered as he was leaving. “And neither does Vlad.”
Chapter 20
Markham identified himself and was buzzed through the gate. He followed the driveway around a clump of trees and up to the house—one of those large, plantation-style repros with big white columns and lots of land surrounding it. The storm from the hunting lodge had followed him back to Raleigh, but through the rain he could make out someone sitting on the porch smoking.
It was Tracy Donovan. He recognized her blond hair and the trendy pink tracksuit from the countless family photos he’d sifted through the week before.
Markham parked his TrailBlazer at the end of a line of cars. There’d be no calling hours for Randall Donovan this week, Schaap had told him—only a small, private funeral for the lawyer’s family and closest friends. That was smart, Markham thought. The scumbags this guy dealt with, who knows who might show up?
Markham felt beneath the seats for his umbrella—he was sure he’d brought one—and when he didn’t find it, he exited the TrailBlazer with his briefcase over his head, ran across the soggy lawn, and bounded up the steps to the porch. Tracy Donovan didn’t move, didn’t even draw from her cigarette, but only tracked him with her eyes as if his presence was inevitable to her.
“All those movies,” she said finally. “I never asked myself why the FBI always shows up unannounced. You have that look about you. Like the others. Unannounced.”
Markham pegged her to be in her mid-thirties; knew from her pictures that she had been quite attractive before her husband’s disappearance—athletic, blond, blue-eyed with nice skin. But now she looked old and haggard; her dry hair pulled back like bundled straw, her face pale and blotchy with hollow red eyes.
The ashtray beside her was overflowing with cigarette butts.
“Forgive me, ma’am,” Markham said. He shook off his briefcase and showed his ID, gave her the standard intro, and was invited to sit down. The rain was blowing from behind the house, the porch entirely dry.
“The children are inside,” she said. “They’re old enough to know what’s going on, so I’ll ask you like I asked the others to keep your voice down. The reporters—were there any outside the front gate?”
“No. They’re still bothering you?”
“Since day one. But we’ve got our cameras on them, too. There’s one by the gate, hidden in the topiaries. I bet you didn’t see that now, did you?”
“No, I didn’t.”
“I take it my sister only let you in because she could tell you weren’t one of them. She doesn’t bother me with all that anymore. Been everything to me and the kids during all this. You’ve read those stories they printed about Randy? Calling him dirty and corrupt; lying down with dogs and getting up with fleas—that kind of thing?”
“Yes, I did. And I’m sorry that your family has to go through this. Truly, I am.”
Tracy Donovan snuffed her cigarette and lit another. Markham noticed the blisters between her index and middle fingers. She’d been letting the cigarettes burn down to her skin—intentionally or unintentionally, he wasn’t sure.
“You know,” she exhaled, “Randy came from nothing. He grew up in Providence, Rhode Island, in a working-class district made up of Italians mostly—all of them suspicious of anyone who didn’t have a vowel at the end of his name. There was this kid who used to pick on Randy in elementary school. Some punk from a broken home who didn’t make it past the eighth grade. Made my husband’s life miserable. Long story short, this guy grows up to be a small-time hood, gets busted on a narcotics rap, and is looking at twenty years minimum. But as fate would have it, guess who ends up being his attorney all those years later? That’s right. Randy’s first case with the public defender’s office. Scumbag didn’t remember Randy, but Randy remembered him. Most people you’d think would still hold a grudge, but not Randy. No, he did everything he could to get him a lighter sentence. Even kept tabs on him after he was paroled. That was Randy. Main thing for him was that everybody got a fair shake, no matter who you were. Didn’t read about that little story in the newspapers, now did you?”
Markham told her about the discovery of Billy Canning—showed her his picture, explained the details of the murder, and said that it was only a matter of time before the press got wind of the story.
“I don’t know if he’s connected to my husband, if that’s what you’re getting at.”
“Not exactly,” Markham said.
“Then what?”
“I know you’ve been questioned a lot since your husband’s disappearance, but I ’d like to ask you a few questions about your marriage. Specifically, about your sex life with your husband.”
Tracy Donovan smiled, but Markham noticed her hand begin to tremble, the smoke rising from her cigarette in thin, white squiggles.
“The police and the FBI already asked me that. And I’ll tell you what I told them. Randy would never cheat. All of you wasting your time searching for love letters, for shady dealings on his computers when you should’ve been out looking for his—”
She stopped—took a long drag off her cigarette and exhaled slowly. “Only thing they found,” she said after a moment, “were Internet records of some porn sites. No scandalous e-mails or pictures, no evidence of an affair or shady dealings with Colombian cartels out to kill him. Nothing you wouldn’t find on any other for
ty-five-year-old, devoted father of two’s computer.”
“That’s not quite what I wanted to ask you,” Markham said. “But since you brought up the investigation of your husband’s Internet activity, did the authorities mention what types of porn sites he was visiting?”
“What do you mean?”
“Did they indicate to you whether the sites were straight or gay?”
Tracy Donovan leveled her eyes at him—raised a trembling hand to her lips and took a drag off her cigarette. The ash needed to be tapped, but she ignored it.
“Special Agent Markham,” she began slowly. “Are you asking me if I think my husband was a closet homosexual?”
“Billy Canning, the man we found up north, was a known homosexual. I don’t know yet about Rodriguez and Guer-rera, but we’re trying to establish a connection between the killer’s victims—a profile of the types of men Vlad likes to hunt.”
Tracy Donovan smiled thinly.
“It just keeps getting better, doesn’t it?” she said, her eyes beginning to well.
“Please forgive me for the line of questioning, but so far the FBI can find nothing to tie all four of the victims together other than a loose parallel to the victims of the historical Vlad Tepes. We’re just trying to explore every avenue. Perhaps something we might have missed up front.”
“Randy and I had quite an active sex life,” Tracy Donovan said after a moment. “At least compared to what the girls at the country club tell me about their husbands. Usually two or three times a week. There are some DVDs back at the house in his top dresser. After Amber was born, we went through a bit of a dry spell, and it was Randy who suggested that we watch the DVDs to spice things up. All guy-girl stuff with the obligatory lesbian scenes thrown in for good measure. It seemed to do the trick; he was really into them at first and always got off pretty quickly. But we hadn’t watched them in years. No need to, quite frankly. No, in the last few years Randy was, well, pretty randy, if you’ll forgive the pun. Does that satisfy you?”
“And never once in your relationship did you ever suspect your husband might be a homosexual? Might be having an affair with another man, perhaps?”
“Randy was very neat around the house,” she said dryly. “Was a snappy dresser and did sing the occasional show tune. He even teared up the first time he watched Disney’s Tarzan with the kids—the part where Tarzan’s ape mother dies. So I guess you’re right. A raging queen my husband was, yes.”
Markham looked away into the rain, and Tracy Donovan took another drag from her cigarette—let the ash fall on her bosom and absently brushed it away.
“For the record,” she said after a heavy silence. “I loved being married to Randall Donovan. He was a good husband, a good father who always made time for his family.” Her voice began to break. “He didn’t deserve what happened to him, no matter what you and the fucking press might think.”
Another woman with blond hair stepped out onto the porch. Tracy Donovan’s sister. Markham recognized her from the photos.
“You all right, T?” she asked. “Anything I can get you?”
Her sister shook her head, snuffed her cigarette into the ashtray, and stood up.
“I have family inside,” Tracy Donovan said. “The funeral is on Saturday. All I ask is that you let us alone until then to grieve in peace.”
She made to leave, then stopped at the front door and turned back.
“One more thing,” she said. “If it’s your intention to slander my husband’s name in the press any further, I suggest you think twice before leveling accusations about his private life in public. Randall Donovan wasn’t the only Donovan in this family to pass the bar in North Carolina.”
The women disappeared inside—slammed the front door loudly and left Sam Markham alone on the porch with only the rain for company.
Chapter 21
Markham hung up with Schaap and parked his Trail-Blazer in the loading area behind the shopping plaza. He sat there for a moment, eyes closed, listening to the rain. Schaap had just told him the results from Quantico had come back negative; no discernable correlation between the constellations and the coordinates of the murder sites. There were patterns that jibed between individual stars, but that was to be expected, Markham thought. Schaap would forward everything to their man at NC State, of course, but Markham felt in his gut that it was all just another dead end. Just like Tracy Donovan. Either she was totally clueless, he thought, or her husband was not a homosexual.
Markham opened his eyes, took a deep breath, and made a dash for the back door of the tattoo parlor—BILLY’S, someone had written on it in black Magic Marker. Driving through the parking lot, he’d noticed a Chinese restaurant at the opposite end of the shopping plaza. He could smell it now through the rain, and promised himself he’d get something to eat there later. He was starving, hadn’t eaten a thing all day—
Anything but beef teriyaki, said a voice in his head. You’ve had enough skewered meat to last you a lifetime, eh Sammy boy?
Markham sighed and inserted the key into the lock. It was sticky, and he had to turn it a couple of times before the door finally gave. He stepped inside, felt for the light switch, and flicked it. He was in the back office. Homicide had removed all the business records and some other evidence the month before, but turned everything over (including the key) to the FBI upon the positive ID from Canning’s lover. The business records were scarce, but Schaap’s team would take care of the follow-up. That part of the investigation wouldn’t take long. There simply wasn’t much to look at.
Markham gave the office a quick once-over and stepped out into the studio.
Billy’s Tattoo Parlor was a small, one-man operation with a large plate-glass window and an L-shaped display counter full of cheap, sterling-silver jewelry. There was a couch and a Barcalounger toward the front, and behind the counter, along with a pair of chairs and a padded table, was Canning’s equipment. None of that stuff had been touched since the day he disappeared, Dorsey had told the FBI in a stream of tears, and Markham could clearly see the marks the forensic team had made in the dust upon their initial sweep of the parlor earlier that afternoon.
He wandered about looking at the images on the walls—thousands of drawings grouped by subject matter. He paused briefly at the signs of the zodiac, then came upon the letters and symbols—the obligatory Chinese and Japanese, of course, but also Hebrew, Arabic, Greek, even Egyptian. There were countless others, too, but no Babylonian cuneiform from what he could see, and certainly no arrangement of letters that even remotely approached the markings found on Donovan and Canning.
Markham worked his way in a horseshoe around the par- lor and came to the section devoted to photographs of Billy Canning’s work: a large, six-by-six-foot bulletin board covered in Polaroids of tattooed flesh—arms and legs and chests and backs, a couple of necks and a pair of breasts here and there. There were hundreds of them, and Markham’s eyes darted about the photos haphazardly.
Canning was good, he had to admit, and the Polaroids were obviously of some of the artist’s best work. His eyes came to rest on a large back tattoo of a pair of sword-dueling ninjas. He thought of Jackson Briggs—removed the picture and stared at it for a long time.
The superposition principle, said the voice in his head. The ninjas are speaking to you, telling you to look closely, telling you not to miss anything. Like that time in the martial arts studio. Briggs was coming for your head with his ninja sword. Would have lopped it off like a pineapple if you hadn’t stopped to look in the mirror.
Markham’s left shoulder began to tingle. He quickly skirted around the counter, grabbed one of the chairs, and sat down in front of the bulletin board. He let his eyes wander slowly across the collage of jumbled body parts, scanning back and forth in a manner that reminded him for some reason of Arnold Schwarzenegger in The Terminator. There had to be a thousand pictures, he thought, going back many years.
Markham’s eyes began to ache with fatigue. What the hell was he l
ooking for? The writing on Donovan and Canning? Was it possible Vlad had Canning tattoo the same thing on his chest? But surely Vlad wouldn’t have been so stupid as to let him take a Polaroid of it.
He gazed down at the photo of the dueling ninjas in his hand. The size, the detail, the color—how long would it take Canning to do a tattoo like that?
Vlad kept Canning longer than the others, Markham thought suddenly. Almost two and a half weeks. The hair growth. What if the autopsy comes back and says Canning was alive for most of that time? What if Vlad had his own private tattoo session with Canning before he impaled him?
Pure supposition, Markham thought—but something about the image of the faceless Vlad forcing Canning to tattoo him gnawed at his gut.
Canning’s car was found out back, Markham said to himself. That means he had to have driven here after he went to the convenience store. But why so late at night? A private session? Could he have been two-timing Dorsey? Whatever the case, Vlad had to have known he was coming back here that night.
Or, the voice in his head countered, Vlad could’ve simply been following him. Canning could’ve come back here for any number of reasons—forgot his cell phone or some-thing—and Vlad took advantage of the situation. Pretty dark back there.
But the writing on Canning and Donovan is like a tattoo. He didn’t do that to Rodriguez and Guerrera. It started with Canning.
The voice in his head was silent, and Markham stared at the photos. He would have to get Dorsey back in here to double-check if any equipment was missing. Would have to follow up with distributors on any recent orders in the Raleigh area, too. Christ, that would be a pain in the ass—just another wild-goose chase? Was he really getting that desperate?
Markham sighed and returned the photo of the dueling ninjas to the bulletin board. The guy in the picture was bald—reminded him of an album cover he’d once seen.