“Yes.”
“Point the camera at yourself, Judy.”
There was a pause. Longer than I expected. Then the killer's voice was back. “Nice rack, Judy. And let's hope you're a smart blonde. Now connect the headset to the phone and put in the earbuds. Can you hear me?”
“Yes.”
“Okay, sweet stuff, take the elevator down to the street. When you get to the corner of Mission and Fifth, I'll give you instructions.”
“I can hardly wait,” I muttered.
“You're coming in loud and clear,” the killer said with an edge in his voice. “I'm warning you again, Judy. This is a lucky break for the city. Don't screw it up.”
Womans Murder Club 9 - The 9th Judgment
Chapter 60
THE PHONE HANGING from my neck felt like an explosive charge. The Lipstick Killer could see everything I saw, hear what I was hearing and saying, and if that vile, crude psychopath became unhappy, he'd cut down more innocent lives.
We'd been warned.
I walked out of the Chronicle Building into a dull gray afternoon. I took in the shoppers and the yellow-light runners, and wondered if the Lipstick Killer recognized the unmarked cars on Fifth and Mission. I saw Jacobi and Brady, Lemke and Samuels and Chi.
By now, Conklin had put out the word that I was the go-between and working undercover. Still, to prevent a shout-out, I caught Jacobi's eye and, being careful to keep my hand away from the lens, pointed two fingers to my eyes and then to the phone, signaling to Jacobi that I was being watched.
That's when I glimpsed Cindy. Her eyes were huge, and she was hanging back against the wall of the Chronicle Building, looking at me as though I were heading for the guillotine. I was suffused with love for her. I wanted to hug her, but I winked instead, holding up crossed fingers.
She squeezed out a smile.
I turned back to the street and hefted Tyler's ZERO Halliburton case in my right hand. I was afraid, of course. Once I handed “sir” the briefcase, he wouldn't want a witness. Odds were good that he'd shoot me. If I didn't shoot him first.
I said into the microphone, “I'm on the corner of Fifth and Mission. What now?” “Drop your handbag into the trash can. And show me.”
“My handbag?”
“Do it, princess.”
Because I was in my role as Tyler's secretary, I'd secreted my gun and my cell phone inside my shoulder bag. I dropped it into the trash can, then tilted the camera so the killer could see that I'd done it. That son of a bitch.
“Good girl,” the Lipstick Killer said. “Now let's head out to the BART on Powell.” The Powell Street BART was a block and a half away. As I crossed Market, I saw Conklin coming up behind me outside of camera range and felt a rush of relief. I had no gun, but my partner was with me.
I made my way down the stairs and reached the platform for trains going out to the airport. BART trains are sleek bullets that sound a warning whistle when they come into the station--which was happening now.
Brakes screeched. Doors opened. I got into the train marked SFO and saw Conklin get into the same car at the far end. The train started up, and the killer's voice piped into my ears, breaking up slightly. “Pan the car,” he said.
I swung my shoulders slowly, giving Conklin enough time to turn away. The train was slowing for the next stop when a canned voice came over the PA system. It announced the station--Civic Center.
The killer said, “Judy. Get out now.”
“You said the airport.”
“Get out now.”
Conklin was wedged into a corner, dozens of people between the two of us. I knew he didn't see me leave until I was off the train and the doors were closing. I saw the worried look on my partner's face as the train pulled out of the station. “Take off your jacket and put it in the trash can,” the killer said.
“My house keys are in the pocket.”
“Throw your jacket into the trash. Don't question me, sweetmeat. Just do what I say. Now, go to the stairs. On the first landing, pan around so I can see if anyone is following you.”
I did it, and the killer was satisfied.
“Let's go, princess. We've got a date at the Whitcomb.”
Womans Murder Club 9 - The 9th Judgment
Chapter 61
I CAME OUT of the underground into Civic Center Plaza, a clipped, tree-lined park flanked by gilded government buildings, banks, and cultural institutions--a fine public place encroached upon by the hopelessly addicted.
I searched parked cars with my eyes, hoping to see backup as I walked from the BART station to the Hotel Whitcomb. I heard a car take a fast left onto Market and saw a plain gray Ford pull up on its brakes. I couldn't turn without showing the camera who was driving, so all I could do was hope that Jacobi or someone was on my tail. I crossed Market to the Whitcomb, an elegant four-hundred-room Victorian hotel, and entered the opulent lobby, glittering with crystal chandeliers, marble floors underfoot, wood paneling everywhere, and humongous floral bouquets scenting the cool air. My personal tour guide sent me with instructions to the Market Street Grill, a beautiful restaurant that was nearly empty. The trim young woman behind the restaurant's reception desk wore her dark hair pulled back and a name tag on her blue suit jacket reading SHARRON.
Sharron asked if I'd be dining alone, and I said, “Actually, I'm here to pick up a letter for my boss. Mr. Tyler. He thinks he left it here at breakfast.”
“Oh yes,” Sharron said. “I saw that envelope. I put it away. Hang on a minute.” The hostess dug inside the stand and, with a little cry of “I've got it,” handed me a white envelope with “H. Tyler” written in marker pen.
I wanted to ask if she'd seen the man who'd left the envelope, but the killer's warning was loud in my head. “Screw with me in any way, and I'll hang up. After that, I'll kill a few more people, and their deaths will be on you.”
I thanked the hostess and walked down the hallway from the restaurant toward the lobby.
“Open the envelope, sweetheart,” the killer said, and, gritting my teeth, I did it. Inside, I found a ticket stub and twenty-five dollars in crisp bills. The stub was marked TRINITY PLAZA. I knew the place, an all-day lot nearby.
“Having fun?” I asked the Lipstick Killer.
“Loads,” he told me. “If you're bored, tell me about yourself. I'm all ears.” “I'd rather talk about you. Why did you shoot those people?” I asked. “I'd tell you,” he said, “but you know how the saying goes: then I'd have to kill you-- Lindsay.”
“Who is Lindsay?” I asked, but I was rocked. My stride faltered and I nearly stumbled down the hotel steps. How did he know my name?
“Did you think I didn't recognize you? Gee, princess, you're almost a celebrity around this town. I knew, of course, that they'd put a cop on this gig. But, to my delight, it's you. Sergeant Lindsay Boxer, my girl on a leash.”
“Well, as long as you're happy.”
“Happy? I'm ecstatic. So listen up, Lindsay. I'm just a Google click away from knowing where you live, who your friends are, who you love. So I guess you've got an even better reason to make this a payday for me, don't you, sweetmeat?”
I pictured Cindy in the camera's eye, Conklin, Joe working in his home office, Martha at his feet. I saw myself with my Glock in my hand, sights lined up between the no-color eyes of a guy in a baseball jacket. I squeezed the trigger.
Problem was, I didn't have the Glock.
Womans Murder Club 9 - The 9th Judgment
Chapter 62
“YOU'RE QUIET, PRINCESS,” said the voice in my ear.
“What do you want me to say?”
“No, you're right. Don't think too much. Just execute the mission.”
But I was thinking anyway. If I saw his face and lived, I would quit the force if I had to in order to get the job done. I would look at all the thousands of photos of every former soldier, sailor, coastguardsman, and marine in San Francisco.
And if he wasn't living in San Francisco, I'd keep looking at photos
until I found him, if it was the last thing I ever did.
But, of course, he wouldn't let me see his face and walk away. Not this guy. I walked along Market, turned, and finally saw the parking lot. The guy in the booth was leaning against the back wall with his eyes closed, deep into his iPod. I rapped on the window and handed him the ticket stub, and he barely looked at me. “That's twenty-five bucks,” he said.
I pushed the bills at him, and he handed me the keys.
“Which car is it?” I said to the presence hanging from my neck.
“Green Chevy Impala, four cars down and to your right. It's stolen, Lindsay, so don't worry about tracing it to me.”
The car looked so old, it could've been from the '80s, not the kind of junker someone would be in a hurry to report stolen. I opened the door and saw the brand-new Pelican gun case--long enough to hold an assault rifle--resting on the backseat. “What's that for?” I asked the Lipstick Killer.
“Open it,” he said.
Pelican is known for its protective cases. They are lined with foam, have unbreakable locks, and can withstand anything fire or water or an explosive blast can throw at them. I opened the padded case. It was empty.
“Put the money inside,” said the Lipstick Killer.
Again, I followed his directions, transferring the money from Tyler's special briefcase, stacking the bills, closing the locks, all the while raging--I was helping a psycho get away with holding up a city. I couldn't help thinking about the Nazis putting the screws to Paris in World War II.
“Slide Mr. Tyler's briefcase under the Lexus to your left,” the killer said. “Just another precaution, princess. In case there's a tracking device in there.”
“There's no tracking device,” I said, but there was. Tyler's case had a GPS built into the handle.
“And take off your shoes,” the killer said. “Slide them under the car with the case.” I did what he said, thinking how Jacobi would follow the GPS signal to this parking lot and find the case--and it would be a dead end.
“Feel like going for a ride?” my constant companion asked me.
“I'd love to,” I said with false brightness.
“I'd love to, what?” said WCF.
“I'd love to, sir,” I answered.
I got into the driver's seat and started the car.
“Where to?” I asked, sounding to myself as though I were already dead.
Womans Murder Club 9 - The 9th Judgment
Chapter 63
“WELCOME TO THE mystery tour,” the killer told me.
“Which way do you want me to go?”
“Take a left, princess.”
I looked at my watch. I'd been wearing the devil around my neck for what seemed like forever, and I still knew nothing about him, nothing about what he intended to do. Since our genius “follow the money” plan had been canceled by the killer, my brain was on overdrive, trying to come up with another. But how could I? I didn't know where this guy was going to execute the drop.
I left the parking lot and drove past the Asian Art Museum. The killer told me to follow Larkin. I glanced at the rearview mirror, seeing nothing that looked like an unmarked car.
No one was following me.
I took Larkin into the Tenderloin, threading the Impala through the roughest section in San Francisco, the dark streets crammed with hole-in-the-wall bars and girlie shows and rent-by-the-hour hotels. Jacobi and I had been shot in an alley not far from here, and we both almost died.
I passed streets I'd worked as a uniformed cop, a first-class pizzeria that I'd introduced Joe to a while ago, and a bar where Conklin and I sometimes came to wind down after a double shift. I turned onto Geary and drove past Mel's Drive-in, where I used to hang out with Claire when we were both rookies, the two of us laughing away our frustration at being females in a man's world.
I felt tears gathering in my eyes, not from the hoops the killer was making me jump through but from nostalgia, the aching memories of times with my good and beloved friends, and from the feeling that I was visiting sweet scenes from my past for the last time.
The disembodied voice of a man who'd wasted three young mothers and their small children spoke once again.
“Hang the phone over the rearview mirror, lens pointing at you.”
I was at a stoplight at the intersection of Van Ness and Geary. As soon as I hung the phone on the mirror and looked into the pea-sized camera's eye, the Lipstick Killer said, “Take off your blouse, sweetmeat.”
“What's this, now?”
“I told you. No questions.”
I understood. He was checking me for a wire. First my purse, then my jacket, my shoes, and the briefcase. Now this.
I took off my blouse.
“Throw it out the window.”
I complied. Not one of the skeezy pedestrians looked up.
“Do the same with your skirt.”
“The light is green.”
“Pull over and park. That's a smart girl,” the killer said. “Take off that skirt and toss it. And now your bra.”
I felt sick, but I had no options. I unhooked my bra and dropped it out the window as directed. The killer whistled, a wolf call of appreciation, that sicko, and every part of my psyche hurt from the degradation. Not the least of which was that this murdering, childkilling woman hater had boxed me in and outmaneuvered the entire SFPD. No one knew where I was.
“Good girl, Lindsay. Very, very good. Now, hang the phone around your neck and let's get going. The best is yet to come.”
Womans Murder Club 9 - The 9th Judgment
Chapter 64
I URGED THE old Impala up and down winding roads, then onto Lombard, the most curvaceous road of all, a tourist magnet that rose upward, cresting at Hyde, giving me a billion-dollar view, the reason why San Francisco should be one of the seven wonders of the world.
I've seen this panorama again and again, but this was the first time I'd failed to be dazzled by the full expansive sight of San Francisco Bay, Alcatraz, Angel Island--and then, in a flash, I was hurtling down the steep, twisting plunge of Lombard Street. There were more directions in my ear, commentary about how cool it felt to let me do the driving while he got to sightsee and think about his money. Meanwhile I was stopping at every cross street, hunching my shoulders, praying that no one would notice a bare-breasted woman heading down one of the most scenic drives in the nation.
I checked my mirrors and swiveled my head at intersections, looking for Jacobi, Conklin, Chi, anyone.
I'll admit it. For an irrational blazing moment, I got mad. It's one thing to put your life on the line for a cause you believe in. It's another thing to be used as a robot for a killer, to be the lone sacrifice in an action you don't believe in--in fact, one you think is insane.
The killer spoke again. He told me to double back toward the Presidio, and I did it, continuing on Richardson, taking the ramp leading to the Golden Gate Bridge. Were we leaving town?
My anger dissipated as I came back to myself, realizing that the squad was frantic to know where I was. How could they find me when I was driving an old green Impala? The Lipstick Killer had stopped joking and was all business as I joined the high-speed river of traffic heading across the bridge. The needle on the gas gauge was hovering over the E.
“We need to fill up the tank,” I said.
“No,” the killer told me. “We'll be at the center of the bridge in about a minute. I'll tell you when to pull over.”
“Pull over? There's no stopping on the bridge.”
“There is if I tell you to,” he said.
Womans Murder Club 9 - The 9th Judgment
Chapter 65
SWEAT POURED INTO my eyes as the killer counted down from ten to one. “Pull over now,” he said.
My turn signal had been on since I got onto the Golden Gate Bridge, but anyone who saw it would have thought I'd left it on by accident.
“Pull over!” he repeated.
There was no actual place to stop, so I slowed, then
braked in the lane closest to the handrail that acted as a safety line between the road and the narrow walkway. I put on the hazard lights, listening to their dull clicking and imagining a horrible rearend crash that could kill the occupants of the oncoming car and crush me against the steering wheel. I reduced my odds of making it from fifty-fifty to ninety-ten against. How could it be that today was my day to die?
“Get the case from the backseat, Lindsay,” the killer told me.
I undid my seat belt, reached behind me for the long, awkward case, and hauled it into the front seat.
“Good. Now get out of the car.”
It was pure suicide to exit on the driver's side. Cars whizzed past me at high speeds, some honking, some with drivers screaming through their windows as they passed. I angled the gun case, reached the passenger-side handle, pulled up on it, and kicked open the door.
I was almost naked, yeah, but I couldn't wait to get out of that car. I banged my shins with the case and negotiated the handrail, then my feet touched the walkway. Oncoming traffic was still swerving and honking. Someone yelled, “Jump. Jump,” and there were more horns.
“Bridge security is tight,” I told the killer. “There will be cops here any minute.” “Shut up,” he said. “Go to the rail.”
My head swam as I peered down into the glinting water. He was going to make me jump. Approximately thirteen hundred people had leaped to their deaths off this bridge. Only twenty-odd jumpers had survived. It had come down to the wire, literally and figuratively. I was going to die, and I would never even know if I'd saved anyone--or if the killer would take the money and keep on killing.
And how was he going to get the money anyway?
I stared down at Fort Point, just under the south end of the bridge, and my gaze drifted along the Crissy Field shoreline. Where was the killer? Where was he? And then I saw a small motorboat coming out from Fort Baker, at the foot of the north tower, on the far side of the bay.
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