Phineas Troutt Series - Three Thriller Novels (Dead On My Feet #1, Dying Breath #2, Everybody Dies #3)

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Phineas Troutt Series - Three Thriller Novels (Dead On My Feet #1, Dying Breath #2, Everybody Dies #3) Page 29

by J. A. Konrath


  “Almost identical. Numerous bruises, lacerations, and burns that appear to be cigarette. Teeth filed out. The coroner will probably find evidence of vaginal and anal trauma. I can’t be sure right now, with the condition the body is in.”

  “Death by dehydration again?”

  “That would be my guess.” He put his glasses back on and itched under his nose. He wasn’t using any Vicks. “In my work, you have to have a detached curiosity. To think clinically, scientifically, instead of emotionally. But the last victim…” Hughes made a face. “I had nightmares. My first nightmares since med school. I have daughters, Jack.”

  I nodded. “We’ll get ’em.”

  I wasn’t sure if I was talking to Hughes or to myself.

  I’d recently moved to the suburbs, which wasn’t allowed. Chicago cops were required to live in the city. But I was the type who asked for forgiveness, not permission.

  My mother had guilted me into moving there with her, and then consummated her power over me by vacationing out of state seven months a year on a seemingly endless quest for meaningless physical encounters. She had recently visited Colorado, where she’d heard the men were more robust, and had returned with a male companion who was apparently staying with us for an indefinite amount of time. First night they were there, I rushed into Mom’s room after hearing full-throated screams coming from behind the closed door.

  You can guess how that turned out. I saw something going on in there that I’d never even done, and though I’d worked Homicide for over a decade and had dealt with all manners of death, mutilation, and all-around depravity, it easily went to my number one spot of things I wish I could unsee.

  Go, Mom.

  But it didn’t make me eager to go home.

  Neither did my calico cat, Mr. Friskers, who had taken to his new setting like a lion suddenly in possession of a larger hunting ground. Apparently, male calicos were extremely rare. Which might explain his unpleasant disposition. His most recent atrocity, other than the still-healing scratch on my calf, was a dramatic disapproval of my late-night reading habits. He’d shredded three paperbacks, then pissed on them.

  I now kept books in my refrigerator.

  No, I wasn’t eager to take the forty-five minute car ride to Bensenville, which, among its many minuses, was definitely not Chicago.

  You can take the girl out of the city, but you can’t take the city out of the girl. Which made me sad.

  My fiancé, a sweet and gentle accountant named Latham, was on a business trip and wouldn’t be back for three more sexless days. I had a key to his place on Wacker Drive. I’d crash there.

  But not yet. I lack adequate somnifacient abilities. That was why I read a lot of books, and knew words like somnifacient; because my insomnia kept me up. I needed to tire myself out more if I expected to get my five winks of shut eye.

  While Chicago was great for nightlife, options were limited if you were a forty-year-old police Lieutenant in a committed relationship. I was done with crowded, loud, hot-spots where younger, attractive people drank lots of fluids and then swapped lots of fluids. I also shied away from O‘Rourke’s, the bar where many of my fellow comrades in blue liked to unwind, because I wasn’t Irish and I wasn’t an alcoholic. Besides, after being a cop all day I didn’t want to go somewhere and hear cop stories.

  The place that took most of my after hour entertainment dollars was named Joe’s, a pool hall that catered to a slightly more mature crowd. Meaning it was scummy enough for the yuppies to leave alone. The beer was cheap, the place was quiet, and I could usually scare-up a game of eight-ball without being forced to conversate.

  I parked in front of a hydrant, because I can. In case of a fire, the CFD would break my windows and tow my car, but with the Nova that was no big loss. Sometimes, when I made a quick trip to the grocery store, I’d even leave it running, doors unlocked when I ran inside. In the past six months, the number of stolen vehicles in Chicago had skyrocketed, some speculating that a new chop-shop ring had moved into town. So far, unfortunately, they hadn’t picked up the low hanging fruit I’d been leaving for them.

  It was creeping up on 1am, and the night was crisp and pleasant, with a faint bite of the winter that had just kicked our ass. A slight odor of sewage and car exhaust hung in the air, but that was preferable to Vicks and death. I walked into Joe’s intent on leaving that death, and the woes of my life, behind. At least for a few hours anyway.

  Inside it was warm. I inhaled the odor of stale beer and the faint stink of cigarettes that still lingered since the citywide smoking ban had kicked in earlier that year. A dozen or so people milled about, playing pool, watching the game highlights, speaking in clipped sentences. I paid a scant three bucks for a mug of Sam Adams, and looked over the tables to see if any were open. One was, shoved off into the far corner, and I got quarters and fed them in. The first rack took me five minutes to dispatch, pausing once to get another beer.

  The second rack took longer, because I sank the balls in sequence rather than simply going for the easiest shot. The table was gulping its third dollar and I was gulping my second beer when a familiar voice sounded off behind me.

  “Came to lose more money?”

  I racked the balls without turning around, then chalked my stick and gave Phineas Troutt a get real look.

  “Where have you been lately?” I asked. “At home, nursing your overdeveloped sense of adequacy?”

  “Adequacy is all I need to beat your broken pool game. Normal wager?”

  I nodded. He threw two bucks on the table. I matched it. Fast Eddie Felson and Minnesota Fats we weren’t.

  “Ladies first,” Phin said.

  “Sure.” I handed him the stick.

  Phin bent over and adjusted the cue ball. He was looking… off.

  I’ve known Phin for a few years, mostly from the pool hall, though our paths had also crossed a few times professionally. Phin seemed extremely competent at what he did, which was operate as a kind of private detective without a license. It was still strange to see him bald. His hair fell out from chemotherapy. Phin didn’t talk about it, but I had the impression he didn’t have too much longer. Every time I saw him he got thinner and paler and gaunter. More and more he took to pressing his hand against his side when he wasn’t shooting, and occasionally, when he had to stretch across the table for a tough shot, I could see pain flair in his eyes.

  I’d sent him some work earlier that day, and he responded to the favor by asking me for another favor.

  No good deed goes unpunished.

  Phin broke, sinking the three. I frowned. During the many ups and downs of our on-again/off-again pool game that had lasted several years, Phin had managed to creep ahead of me by about four bucks. It bugged me more than I let on.

  “Still seeing that pretty doctor?” I asked.

  He stopped chalking his stick and gave a slight head shake without meeting my stare. Maybe that’s what was off about him. I decided not to pursue the matter. As he began to methodically pocket stripes, I went to the bar and got us two beers.

  The small part of my mind that never stopped thinking about the Job reminded me that those two girls had died of dehydration, and here I was sucking down ale. I pushed the thought back and returned to the table. Phin had sunk all of his balls, save the eight. He was chalking his stick.

  “A cheater is his own hell,” I told him.

  He sunk the eight ball on a difficult bank, and let that stand as his reply. I handed him the beer and he reminded me that the loser racks. I racked.

  “I appreciate the Scadder referral,” he said, rubbing his nose.

  Was he high?

  Was it my business?

  “No prob,” I said. “Should have that partial plate for you tomorrow.”

  He nodded a thank you. “How’s things with the accountant?”

  “Good. You gonna be around for the wedding?”

  He didn’t answer.

  I didn’t press it.

  We played another game
, and the balls started to drop for me, and I got my two bucks back. There’s a big sign by the bar that says betting on games is not allowed. But what were they going to do, call the cops?

  We played a few more games, not trading more than ten sentences all night. He was obviously hurting, but he didn’t offer any details, and I didn’t pry. At the same time, the silence was comfortable.

  Phin was probably the closest thing to a friend that I had, next to Benedict.

  It was an odd relationship, to be sure. I was a cop. He operated on the other side of the law. I was ten years his senior, and a woman. There was occasional flirting on his end, a tomcat thing that he sometimes forgot to turn off. But mostly it was a relationship based on mutual respect, an ease around each other, and the comradery of beer and pool.

  Last call came and went, and then all the lights went on. We finished our beers and I calculated that Phin was still up four bucks.

  “I’ll get you next time,” I said.

  Once again, he didn’t answer.

  Once again, I didn’t press it.

  We went our separate ways, me stopping in the bathroom first to free the beer I’d been holding hostage in my bladder. My Nova was still parked on the street, untouched by the Chicago Fire Department. I judged my sobriety. Five beers drank in about five hours. Given my body weight, I was probably a hair under the legal limit.

  Erring on the side of caution, and still not sleepy, I went to an all-night diner, had a ham omelet and some decaf, tried not to think about anything, and failed.

  I liked being in Chicago. Where I could play pool and drink beer until 4am, and then grab a bite to eat. I’d moved to the burbs for my mother, who wasn’t home half the time, and when she was home it was in the company of older men who popped Viagra like kids with Halloween candy. The mother/daughter bonding time I’d been hoping for had never materialized. In its place, I was stuck alone in a big house on a big yard juggling big insomnia and unhappiness.

  Thankfully, Latham had a place in Chicago. After eating enough omelet to soak up at least one beer, I headed over to his apartment. Parking on the street around his building, even that early in the morning, was predictably full, even though you needed a permit (which I had) to park on the street. I finally found a spot, a block over, and just as I passed it up to parallel park by backing in, some asshat in a Mini Cooper cut in behind me and took it.

  I gave him a look, and he gave me a shoulder shrug.

  I thought about flashing my badge, remembered I was a cop, and parked in a loading zone a few spaces ahead. Then I walked to Latham’s place, let myself in, stripped, and curled up in his bed, breathing in his scent.

  Happily, I was asleep within ten minutes.

  Unhappily, I was up four hours later.

  I poured myself out of bed and used preternatural self-control to force my way through morning exercises. A hundred sit-ups. Fifty push-ups. Two hundred squats.

  Whomever invented squats was a sadist worse than some of the perps I chased. What I needed to do was get back to the dojang and get in a proper workout. But I hadn’t done any taekwondo for months. Call it a slump. Or a funk. Or maybe just plain laziness.

  I turned the shower up hot enough to boil vegetables, washing away yesterday and leaving me fresh and clean and ready to go on with the struggle.

  I kept an extra pantsuit, Louis Vuitton, at Latham’s place, still pristine in its dry-clean plastic wrap. I dressed, did some minimalist make-up (mostly around the eyes to minimize the dark circles, which made me look like a raccoon), pulled on my black Stuart Weitzman boots from the night before, strapped on my .38, and was out the door ten minutes after showering, dirty clothes in a pillow case.

  And who said women couldn’t get ready fast?

  The day was cool and clear, Mr. Sol drenching the city with enough UVs to make me squint. I noticed a weed growing in a sidewalk crack, soaking up the sun like a dry towel.

  Spring was here at last.

  I dropped off my old clothes at the dry cleaner on the corner, then went to my car, parked illegally in a loading zone, unlocked. Cops knew not to tow me; they could trace my license plate. But, sadly, no car thieves had taken the bait, yet again.

  Another motorist wasn’t as lucky. That asshat in the Mini Cooper who’d stolen my parking space was staring forlornly at said space, his car no longer there.

  “Lose something?” I asked.

  Jack Daniels, master of the barb.

  “I came out and it was being towed,” he whined.

  “It’s permit parking,” I said, happy to be helpful.

  “I’ve got a permit,” he whined. “I think that son of a bitch stole it.”

  “You should call the police,” I suggested.

  My heap choked to a start on the third try, and I melded into rush hour traffic and headed for my precinct. I arrived at the station the same time I always did; a quarter after nine. Benedict, who was always early, was waiting in my office with a cup of coffee for me. I would have considered this a kind gesture, but for the coffee. Most of the staff believed it wasn’t really coffee at all, but brown water that had been heated up one degree above room temperature. I disagreed with that belief, because brown water would have tasted better.

  “Morning, Herb. Thanks.”

  I took the coffee. It was bitter and salty. For the millionth time I wondered why I didn’t buy a machine myself and keep it in my office.

  Probably because someone would swipe it. Cops are people, too.

  “Morning, Jack.” He was wearing a fat orange and green tie. It reminded me vaguely of a dead Muppet hanging from his neck.

  “What happened to that tie I gave you?” I asked. “For your birthday?”

  My phone rang, and I slapped it to my cheek.

  “Daniels.”

  “You and Benedict. My office.”

  “Yes, Captain.”

  I hung up the phone.

  “We’re on,” I told Herb. I took another swig of brewed sewage and we were out the door, heading for the office of Captain Steven Bains.

  Bains was a good guy and a good captain, but he was also a bureaucrat. That meant he adhered to a strict policy of covering his own ass. If he was getting pressure from above, he’d pass it on down the chain.

  Because he had an early warning system for cases that would prove politically harmful, Bains expected to be briefed on every important case. Also because of his political ambitions, he had a hair weave. It would have looked realistic if it had some grey in it, like his mustache did. Instead, it was a shade of brown only found in a can.

  Benedict and I entered his office without knocking, as per usual when we were called in to visit. He removed the reading glasses from his fiftyish face and considered us. Benedict closed the door behind him.

  The captain was short and going to flab, and his squarish face wasn’t built for laughing. The grey mustache lit up his lip like a beacon in contrast to his hair.

  “This one is going to be bad,” he said.

  Thus setting the tone for the rest of the meeting.

  “We rushed the autopsy, and somehow the report leaked. I’m tracking down who did it, and I’m going to crucify that person on barbed wire.”

  “We haven’t seen the report yet,” I said.

  “I know. I’ve held back copies.”

  He indicated his desk and Benedict and I each took one. Usually coroner’s inquests took several days, due to the backlog of bodies. But on special cases; important murders, serial murders, the like, a man named Phil Blasky was brought in to do the honors immediately. Blasky taught at UIC, but was on a retainer by the city of Chicago to help out when things got bad. A dozen times or so a year we called him. This was one of those times.

  “The press played this to the hilt,” Bains continued.

  “It’s as bad as the Kork case.”

  Charles Kork was an individual who was dropping mutilated bodies in dumpsters around the Chicagoland area. He was headlines every day until he was caught.
/>   “This girl was mutilated like the other one, no teeth, raped, etc. Her body had been washed in Drano, probably to remove any DNA. Like the first one, she died of dehydration. Which means she was bound and suffering for days. But it gets worse. We got wrist X-rays. The bones weren’t fused yet.”

  Herb and I knew what that meant. When people are born, their wrist bones are separated by cartilage. In the late teens, the bones finally come together. If they hadn’t fused yet…

  “How old was she?” I asked.

  “The estimate is under seventeen.”

  Ugh. Murder was bad. Murdering children was worse.

  “I just got off the phone with the mayor and he’s demanding we set up a task force.”

  That could get ugly. I kept my face neutral. “We don’t have any hard leads to follow yet. All a task force will do is get in its own way.”

  “I realize that. The task force will handle the phone confessions. So far we haven’t gotten that many. Even the sickos out there don’t want to take credit for this one. But once you get even the tiniest lead, get it to me so the task force can start narrowing it down.”

  “There’s more,” I said, reading his face.

  “The FBI has also expressed an interest in getting involved.”

  “Ah… hell.”

  The FBI’s Violent Criminal Apprehension Team sent two agents to cling to me like ticks during the Kork investigation. One of their gimmicks was profiling. Profiling meant taking evidence from crime scenes and feeding it into a computer to create a history and modus operandi on repeat killers. For Kork’s case, they were convinced he frequented country and western bars and had a fetish for horses.

  “Last time they staked out a horse,” Herb said.

  “The pics were in the paper,” I added.

  “That’s their PR problem, not ours. If they can prove jurisdiction, we’re letting them have it.”

  I searched for some fair words, and decided on, “They suck.”

  “What’s your job?” Bains asked us.

  The correct answer was to serve and protect. My personal coda was to make the world a better place on the off chance that someday I’ll have children. But Herb and I knew what the captain was asking.

 

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