Richard Montanari: Four Novels of Suspense: The Rosary Girls, the Skin Gods, Merciless, Badlands

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Richard Montanari: Four Novels of Suspense: The Rosary Girls, the Skin Gods, Merciless, Badlands Page 34

by Richard Montanari


  Chase had known Simon Close, and Simon had paid for that proximity with his life.

  On the day she died, Nicole Taylor was not trying to write P-A-R-K-H-U-R-S-T on her palm. She was trying to write P-A-R-A-M-E-D-I-C.

  Byrne flipped open his cell phone, tried 911 one final time. Nothing. He checked the status. No bars. He wasn’t getting a signal. The patrol cars were not going to make it in time.

  He’d have to go it alone.

  Byrne stood in front of a twin, trying to shield his eyes from the rain.

  Was this the house?

  Think, Kevin. What were the landmarks he had seen the day he had picked her up? He could not remember.

  He turned and looked behind him.

  The van parked out front. Glenwood Ambulance Group.

  This was the house.

  He drew his weapon, chambered a round, and hurried up the driveway.

  79

  FRIDAY, 10:10 PM

  JESSICA STRUGGLED UP from the bottom of the impenetrable fog. She was sitting on the floor in her own basement. It was nearly dark. She tried to enter both of these facts into an equation, and got no acceptable results.

  And then reality came roaring back.

  Sophie.

  She tried to get to her feet, but her legs would not respond. She was not bound in any way. Then she remembered. She had been injected with something. She touched her neck where the needle had penetrated, pulled back a dot of blood on her finger. In the faint light thrown by the flashlight behind her, the dot began to blur. She now understood the terror that the five girls had experienced.

  But she was not a girl. She was a woman. A police officer.

  Her hand went instinctively to her hip. Nothing there. Where was her weapon?

  Upstairs. On top of the refrigerator.

  Shit.

  She felt nauseated for a moment, the world swimming, the floor seeming to undulate beneath her.

  “It didn’t have to come to this you know,” he said. “But she fought it. She tried to throw it away herself once, but then she fought it. I’ve seen it over and over.”

  The voice came from behind her. The sound was low, measured, edged with the melancholy of deep personal loss. He still held the flashlight. The beam danced and played about the room.

  Jessica wanted to respond, to move, to lash out. Her spirit was willing. Her flesh was unable.

  She was alone with the Rosary Killer. She had thought that backup was on the way, but it wasn’t. No one knew they were there together. Images of his victims flashed through her mind. Kristi Hamilton soaked in all that blood. The barbed-wire crown on Bethany Price’s head.

  She had to keep him talking. “What . . . what do you mean?”

  “They had every opportunity in life,” Andrew Chase said. “All of them. But they didn’t want it, did they? They were bright, healthy, whole. It wasn’t enough for them.”

  Jessica managed to look to the top of the stairs, praying that she would not see Sophie’s little form there.

  “These girls had it all, but they decided to throw it all away,” Chase said. “And for what?”

  The wind howled outside the basement windows. Andrew Chase began to pace, the beam of his flashlight bouncing in the blackness.

  “What chance did my little girl have?” he asked.

  He has a child, Jessica thought. This is good.

  “You have a little girl?” she asked.

  Her voice sounded distant, as if she were talking through a metal pipe.

  “I had a little girl,” he said. “She didn’t even get out of the gate.”

  “What happened?” It was getting harder to form her words. Jessica didn’t know if she should make this man relive some tragedy, but she didn’t know what else to do.

  “You were there.”

  I was there? Jessica thought. What the hell is he talking about?

  “I don’t know what you mean,” Jessica said.

  “It’s okay,” he said. “It wasn’t your fault.”

  “My . . . fault?”

  “But the world went mad that night, didn’t it? Oh, yes. Evil was unleashed on the streets of this city and a great storm descended. My little girl was sacrificed. The righteous reaped reward.” His voice was rising in pitch and cadence. “Tonight I settle all debts.”

  Oh my God, Jessica thought, the memory of that brutal Christmas Eve rushing back on a wave of nausea.

  He was talking about Katherine Chase. The woman who miscarried in her squad car. Andrew and Katherine Chase.

  “At the hospital they said things like ‘Oh don’t you worry, you can always have another baby.’ They don’t know. It was never the same for Kitty and me. With all the so-called miracles of modern medicine, they couldn’t save my little girl, and the Lord denied us another child.”

  “It . . . it was nobody’s fault that night,” Jessica said. “It was a horrible storm. You remember.”

  Chase nodded. “I remember all right. It took me nearly two hours to get to St. Katherine. I prayed to my wife’s patron saint. I offered a sacrifice of my own. But my little girl never came back.”

  St. Katherine, Jessica thought. She’d been right.

  Chase grabbed the nylon bag he had brought with him. He dropped it to the floor next to Jessica. “And do you really think that society is going to miss a man like Willy Kreuz? He was a pederast. A barbarian. He was the lowest form of human life.”

  He reached into his bag, and began to remove items. He put them on the floor next to Jessica’s right leg. She slowly lowered her eyes. There was a cordless drill. There was a spool of sail maker’s thread, a huge curved needle, another glass syringe.

  “It’s amazing what some men will tell you as if they were proud of it,” Chase said. “A few pints of bourbon. A few Percocets. All their terrible secrets bubble over.”

  He began threading the needle. Depite the anger and rage in his voice, his hands were steady. “And the late Dr. Parkhurst?” he continued. “A man who used his position of authority to prey on young girls? Please. He was no different. The only thing that separated him from men like Mr. Kreuz was the pedigree. Tessa told me all about Dr. Parkhurst.”

  Jessica tried to talk, but couldn’t. All her fear bottlenecked. She felt herself fade in and out of consciousness.

  “Soon you will understand,” Chase said. “Easter Sunday there will be a resurrection.”

  He placed the threaded needle on the floor, got within inches of Jessica’s face. In the dim light, his eyes looked burgundy. “The Lord asked Abraham for his child. And now the Lord has asked me for yours.”

  Please, no, Jessica thought.

  “It is time,” he said.

  Jessica tried to move.

  She couldn’t.

  Andrew Chase walked up the steps.

  Sophie.

  JESSICA OPENED HER EYES. How long had she been out? She tried again to move. She could feel her arms, but not her legs. She tried to roll onto her side, failed. She tried to drag herself to the base of the steps, but the effort was too great.

  Was she alone?

  Had he left?

  There was now a single candle lit. It sat on top of the dryer and threw long, shimmering shadows on the unfinished ceiling of the basement.

  She strained to hear.

  She nodded off again, startling herself awake seconds later.

  Footfalls behind her. It was so hard to keep her eyes open. So hard. Her limbs felt like stone.

  She turned her head as far as she could. When she saw Sophie in the arms of this monster, a freezing rain rinsed her insides.

  No, she thought.

  No!

  Take me.

  I’m right here. Take me!

  Andrew Chase put Sophie down on the floor next to her. Sophie’s eyes were closed, her body limp.

  Inside Jessica’s veins, the adrenaline fought the drug he had given her. If she could just get up and get one clear shot at him, she knew she could hurt him. He was heavier than her, but just
about the same height. One blow. With the rage and anger roiling inside her, it was all she needed.

  When he turned away from her momentarily, she saw that he had found her Glock. He now had it in the waistband of his pants.

  Out of his field of vision, Jessica moved an inch closer to Sophie. The effort seemed to exhaust her completely. She had to rest.

  She tried to see if Sophie was breathing. She couldn’t tell.

  Andrew Chase turned back to them, the drill now in his hand.

  “It is time to pray,” he said.

  He reached into his pocket, removed a carriage bolt.

  “Prepare her hands,” he said to Jessica. He knelt down, put the cordless drill in Jessica’s right hand. Jessica felt the bile rise in her throat. She was going to be sick.

  “What?”

  “She is only sleeping. I’ve given her only a small amount of midazolam. Drill her hands and I’ll let her live.” He took a rubber band out of his pocket and put it around Sophie’s wrists. He placed a rosary between her fingers. A rosary with no decades. “If you don’t do it, I will. Then I will send her to God right in front of you.”

  “I . . . I can’t . . .”

  “You have thirty seconds.” He leaned forward, depressed Jessica’s right forefinger on the trigger of the drill, testing it. The battery was fully charged. The sound of the steel twisting in the air was nauseating. “Do it now and she will live.”

  Sophie looked at Jessica.

  “She’s my daughter,” Jessica managed.

  Chase’s face remained implacable, unreadable. The dancing candlelight drew long shadows over his features. He took the Glock from his waistband, drew back the hammer, and placed the gun to Sophie’s head. “You have twenty seconds.”

  “Wait!”

  Jessica felt her strength recede, return. Her fingers trembled.

  “Think of Abraham,” Chase said. “Think of the determination that compelled him to the altar. You can do it.”

  “I . . . I can’t.”

  “We all must sacrifice.”

  Jessica had to stall.

  Had to.

  “Okay,” she said. “Okay.” She closed her hand around the grip of the drill. It felt heavy and cold. She tested the trigger a few times. The drill responded, the carbon bit whirring.

  “Bring her closer,” Jessica said weakly. “I can’t reach her.”

  Chase walked over, lifted Sophie. He put her down just a few inches from Jessica. With her wrists banded together, Sophie’s hands were steepled in prayer.

  Jessica lifted the drill, slowly, resting it for a moment on her lap.

  She recalled her first medicine-ball training session at the gym. After two or three reps, she wanted to quit. She was on her back, on a mat, the heavy ball in her hands, completely spent. She couldn’t do it. Not one more rep. She would never be a boxer. But before she could give up, a wizened old heavyweight who had been sitting there, watching her—a longtime fixture in Frazier’s Gym, a man who had once taken Sonny Liston the distance—told her that most people who fail don’t lack strength, they lack will.

  She had never forgotten him.

  As Andrew Chase turned to step away, Jessica summoned all of her will, all of her resolve, all of her strength. She would have one chance to save her daughter, and the time to take that chance was now. She pressed the trigger, locking it in the ON position, then thrust the drill upward, hard and fast and strong. The long drill bit dug deep into the left side of Chase’s groin, puncturing skin and muscle and flesh, roaring far into his body, finding and shredding his femoral artery. A warm gush of arterial blood erupted into Jessica’s face, blinding her momentarily, making her gag. Chase shrieked in pain as he reeled back, spinning, his legs starting to give, his left hand jammed against the tear in his trousers, trying to stanch the flow. Blood pumped between his fingers, silken and black in the dim light. Reflexively he fired the Glock into the ceiling, the roar of the weapon huge in the confined space.

  Jessica fought her way to her knees, her ears ringing, fueled now by adrenaline. She had to get in between Chase and Sophie. Had to move. Had to get to her feet somehow and plunge the drill into his heart.

  Through the scarlet film of blood over her eyes, she saw Chase slam to the floor, dropping the gun. He was halfway across the basement. He screamed as he removed his belt and slipped it around the top of his left thigh, the blood now covering his legs, pooling on the floor. He tightened the tourniquet with a shrill, feral howl.

  Could she drag herself to the weapon?

  Jessica tried to crawl toward him, her hands slipping in the blood, fighting for each inch. But before she could close the distance, Chase picked up the blood-slicked Glock, and slowly rose to his feet. He stumbled forward, manic now, a mortally wounded animal. Just a few feet away. He waved the gun in front of him, his face a tortured death mask of agony.

  Jessica tried to rise. She couldn’t. She had to hope that Chase would get closer. She raised the drill with two hands.

  Chase stumbled in.

  Stopped.

  He was not close enough.

  She couldn’t reach him. He would kill them both.

  Chase looked heavenward in that moment and screamed, the unearthly sound filling the room, the house, the world, just as that world came back to life, a bright and raucous coil suddenly sprung.

  The power had returned.

  Upstairs, the television blared. Next to them, the furnace clicked on. Above them, the light fixtures blazed.

  Time ceased.

  Jessica wiped the blood from her eyes, found her attacker in the miasma of crimson. Crazily, the effects of the drug played havoc with her eyes, splitting Andrew Chase into two images, blurring them both.

  Jessica closed her eyes, opened them, adjusting to the sudden clarity.

  It wasn’t two images. It was two men. Somehow Kevin Byrne was standing behind Chase.

  Jessica had to blink twice, just to make sure she wasn’t hallucinating.

  She wasn’t.

  80

  FRIDAY, 10:15 PM

  IN ALL HIS YEARS in law enforcement, Byrne was always surprised to finally see the size and shape and demeanor of the people he sought. Rarely were they as big or grotesque as their deeds. He had a theory that the volume of someone’s monstrousness was often inversely proportional to his or her physical size.

  Without debate, Andrew Chase was the ugliest, blackest soul he had ever encountered.

  And now, as the man stood in front of him, not five feet away, he looked small, inconsequential. But Byrne would not be lulled or fooled by this. Andrew Chase was certainly not inconsequential in the lives of the families he had destroyed.

  Byrne knew that, even though Chase was severely wounded, he did not have the drop on the killer. He did not have the upper hand. Byrne’s vision was clouded; his mind was a mire of indecision and rage. Rage over his life. Rage over Morris Blanchard. Rage over the way the Diablo affair had played out, and how it had turned him into everything he fought against. Rage over the fact that, had he been a little better at this job, he might have saved the lives of a number of innocent girls.

  Like an injured cobra, Andrew Chase sensed him.

  Byrne flashed on the old Sonny Boy Williamson track “Collector Man Blues,” on how it was time to open the door, because the collector man was here.

  The door opened wide. Byrne fashioned his left hand into a familiar shape, the first one he learned when he began studying sign language.

  I love you.

  Andrew Chase spun around, red eyes ablaze, the Glock held high.

  Kevin Byrne saw them all in this monster’s eyes. Every innocent victim. He raised his weapon.

  Both men fired.

  And, as it had once before, the world fell white and silent.

  FOR JESSICA, THE TWIN EXPLOSIONS WERE DEAFENING, stealing the rest of her hearing. She folded to the cold basement floor. There was blood everywhere. She could not lift her head. As she fell into the clouds, she tried
to find Sophie in the charnel house of torn human flesh. Her heart slowed, her eyesight failed.

  Sophie, she thought, fading, fading.

  My heart.

  My life.

  81

  EASTER SUNDAY, 11:05 AM

  HER MOTHER SAT ON THE SWING, her favorite yellow sundress accentuating the deep violet flecks in her eyes. Her lips were claret, her hair a lush mahogany in the summer sun.

  The aroma of just-lit charcoal briquettes filled the air, carrying with it the sound of a Phillies game. Beneath it all—the giggles of her cousins, the scent of Parodi cigars, the aroma of vino di tavola.

  Softly came forth the scratchy voice of Dean Martin crooning “Come Back to Sorrento” on vinyl. Always on vinyl. The technology of CDs had not yet moved into the mansion of her memories.

  “Mom?” Jessica said.

  “No, honey,” Peter Giovanni said. Her father’s voice was different. Older somehow.

  “Dad?”

  “I’m here, baby.”

  A wave of relief washed over her. Her father was there, and everything was going to be fine. Wasn’t it? He’s a police officer, you know. She opened her eyes. She felt weak, fully spent. She was in a hospital room but, as far as she could tell, she was not hooked to machines, nor an IV drip. Memory plodded back. She remembered the roar of the gunfire in the confines of her basement. It did not appear that she had been shot.

  Her father stood at the foot of the bed. Behind him stood her cousin Angela. She turned her head to the right to see John Shepherd and Nick Palladino.

  “Sophie,” Jessica said.

  The silence that followed exploded her heart into a million pieces, each one a burning comet of fear. She looked from face to face, slowly, dizzyingly. Eyes. She needed to see their eyes. In hospitals, people say things all the time; usually the things that people wanted to hear.

  There’s a good chance that . . .

  With proper therapy and medication . . .

  He’s the best in his field . . .

  If she could just see her father’s eyes, she would know.

  “Sophie’s fine,” her father said.

  His eyes did not lie.

  “Vincent’s down in the cafeteria with her.”

 

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