“There's not going to be a trial; she doesn't need a defense.” He went back to the breadsticks. “I was hoping that by chance you had stopped by and maybe saw a tall black woman who had an affinity for torture.”
Amanda cocked her head ever so slightly and looked confused. “Greg, I was with you when that woman was arrested. Remember? You took me to that hot-dog place. You left me there when you got the call.”
Greg looked up from the wicker basket, confusion and then recognition creasing his face. “That's right. I forgot my keys and you brought them to me.”
Amanda nodded, and Lisa stared at her husband. “Greg, maybe it's a good time to take some time off.”
“No, I'm fine. This has been the strangest week. Let's forget about it.” He smiled brightly.
It took Amanda eight more days before she took her first life. She didn't count the four Honduran soldiers whom she had shot; that had been self-defense. This was murder in every sense of the word. Cold, calculated, pre-meditated murder, performed for her pleasure alone, and without hesitation. Angel Diaz was not a nice man by anyone's estimation, and some on the extreme right of the political spectrum would argue that Amanda had in fact done society a favor, but that had never figured into Amanda's thinking. She moved through society but remained distinct from it. For now, she required the infrastructure created by societyâfood, water, electricity, and a fringe element that served to meet her unique desiresâbut she had no wish to contribute to society, at least beyond what was required to maintain the pretense of normality.
Angel Diaz was the epitome of society's fringe element. A Mexican national, he had grown up in the barrios of Tijuana, literally a stone's throw from the promised land of the United States. Like his brothers before him, he gravitated into the drug trade primarily because of a lack of options and the easy money. It was fairly easy, mindless work: unload the truck, stack the product, carry it down the tunnel, and then hand it off to his American counterpart. Even the risk of incarceration was virtually non-existent, so long as he stayed on the Mexican side and kept his mouth shut. The only real inconvenience was that it was universally done in the dead of night. Everything hummed along in perfect harmony for years, until the Sinaloa Cartel tried to expand their operations westward. Angel barely knew that he was a tiny cog in the Tijuana Cartel; he and his brothers worked only when the mood suited them, and saw themselves more as independent contractors, happy to work for anyone so long as they got paid. When the shooting started, however, the Sinaloas failed to make the distinction. Two of Angel's three brothers were gunned down while unloading a pickup, and the third barely survived a shot in the head as the drug war weaved its way through the slums of Tijuana. Allegiance now became a matter of survival, and his choice was easy. Two years later, with the Sinaloa Cartel in full retreat, Angel Diaz had a tattoo of fourteen bullets encircling his right wrist and was a respected and feared lieutenant in the Tijuana Cartel, which now controlled all drug smuggling in Western Mexico and the Baja peninsula. The war had taught Angel and his overlords the undeniable lesson that stagnation invited confrontation, and confrontation was bad for business. Deciding to expand beyond their historic distribution, they sent the naïve and expendable Angel north to sniff out new opportunities. He eventually discovered Pueblo, Colorado, and that he was on a relatively long leash. It took him almost ten years to carve out a violent niche in an already saturated market, and to gain a degree of independence not available to his colleagues closer to home. Which is how Angel Diaz appeared on Greg Flynn's radar.
Colorado Springs is a relatively quiet city, not as flashy as its northern neighbor, Denver, or as dangerous as its southern neighbor, Pueblo. Relative to the region, unemployment is low, in part because of the extensive military infrastructure and tourism. Educational standards are reasonably high, and the prevailing political opinion is conservatism with a half step to the left. The citizens of The Springs paid their taxes, came to complete stops at stop signs, and more often than not said hello to strangers. So when the bodies of three prostitutes were found in a dumpster outside the bus station, people took note. Drugs, prostitution, and the inevitable violence associated with them could be found in Colorado Springs, but generally one had to go in search of them. The murders now brought it into the homes of every Springs resident who had a newspaper subscription or a television. For weeks a slow news cycle ensured that the three victims were not forgotten. Greg and his department devoted the majority of their resources to the case, but all they could come up with was a name never spoken aloud: Angel Diaz. His reputation preceded him, and an impenetrable wall of intimidation and threats shielded him. After weeks of banging their collective heads against it, the world began to turn again and necessity forced the triple homicide to slide from the front burner to the back burner, and then finally off the stove altogether. It was Greg's only unsolved multiple homicide, and he naturally turned back to the cold case once Larry Idle was off his plate.
His run of luck continued when a drunken bar fight a week after Abby Eden's surprise confession escalated into an exchange of gunfire. Both assailants missed their intended targets, and it was out of sheer luck that only two of the eighteen shots fired in the middle of a crowded bar found a mark. One of the now incarcerated pair insisted that he was willing to trade some information about the “dead hookers” for a one way ticket out of Colorado Springs. The criminal/legal quid pro quo was relatively common practice, and although Greg had never been completely comfortable with it, in this case he was more than willing to make an exception. Three hours into his day, he was asking Randi Garner to push the deal through.
Less than eight hours later, Amanda had a name, an address, and a new direction. Her mind buzzed with possibilities, and she had to shorten Mittens' leash as her alter ego wanted to charge over to Diaz's house and play with the drug-dealer and some of his vassals. Like with the Edens, she started out by simply driving by his house, acclimating to the smells of the neighborhood. Diaz lived in a sprawling compound that was itself surrounded by other sprawling compounds in the foothills between Colorado Springs and Pueblo. He counted among his neighbors a former governor of the state, an All-Pro offensive tackle for the Houston Texans, and an unusually successful psychiatrist named Eldridge Adegbite. She slowed her Jeep, and it coasted passed the psychiatrist's large wrought iron gates. Her GPS gave her the address and the county tax records gave her the name, and although her intended prey lived up the canyon, Adegbite's name gave her mind a tickle and a pause. Not surprisingly, she could see little from the street, just strategically placed scrub trees that gave the false impression of unrestrained nature. Google Maps gave her a satellite view of the area, and she was surprised by how close Diaz had placed his house to Adegbite's. Both properties were more than fifty acres, yet the two homes were a mere five hundred yards apart, separated by a small hill and a steep draw.
Curious
, she said to herself as she accelerated up the street. Conforming to neighborhood norms, Casa Diaz was also not visible from the street, but instead of the rustic rock wall that encircled most of the other compounds, Diaz had a ten-foot stucco fortification complete with revolving cameras that tracked the progress of Amanda's jeep. She made a U-turn and cruised back down the canyon road, with Diaz's cameras following her. Her mind jerked again when she drove passed the Adegbites's gates.
Several minutes later, she was idling in a McDonald's parking lot sipping a Coke. A blue Prius pulled in next to her, and its interruption nearly stirred her to violence. Its three occupants gave her stern, reproachful looks as they made their way around her polluting SUV. Amanda flipped the nearest one her middle finger.
“Bitch,” he screamed, and then he squared himself to the front of her Jeep. His two friends were halfway to the door when they turned.
Just for a moment, Amanda thought about slipping the Jeep into gear and giving herself a new hood ornament. She smiled brightly.
“Let's go, fuck-wad,” one of his friends said. All three were stoned, but what made Amanda laugh was the realization that the eco-friendly car wasn't even theirs; it was Fuck-wad's father's.
“Fucking bitch!” He banged her hood with his open hand and turned back to his friends.
“Hey Fuck-wad!” Amanda was out of the car before he had taken two steps. “Did you just bang my car?”
“Yes, I did, skank.” He turned back towards her and retraced his two steps. He was tall, lanky, and reeked of pot. His two friends didn't know whether to back him up, laugh at him, or drag him into the restaurant, so they simply stood by the door. “What the fuck are you going to do about it, BITCH?” He yelled in her face and the next minute he was airborne. He landed in the bushes just in front of a window covered by a poster of an impossibly large and juicy hamburger. After a moment's delay, his two friends ran to his aid, screaming the word “bitch” far too liberally for the situation.
She gave them a moment to extricate Fuck-wad and redirect their attention to her. “I really do object to your language, gentlemen,” she said as the first tire in their Prius exploded with a loud boom that echoed across the parking lot. “I think you should perhaps apologize.” The second tire exploded with a similar report. The small car listed to the driver's side.
“Whatever you're doing, just stop it, okay? We're sorry, he's sorry, everyone's sorry, okay?” The smallest and oldest of the three had taken a step towards her, palms up in supplication. Mittens was emitting a low and menacing growl in Amanda's head.
She held the young man's eyes and the moment began to defuse. “Maybe just one more?” She smiled mischievously, holding up one finger.
Their spokesman forcefully shook his head, his high now completely wasted.
“One question,” she answered his pleading look. She was having a hard time reading them, both as a result of their intoxication and her energized emotional state. “Where did you get the pot?”
They exchanged a quick look, and finally Fuck-wad spoke in a much more respectable tone. “It's ours. We, ah, grow it ourselves.”
Amanda stared into him and found that he was telling the truth. It was too much to hope that she would just happen to stumble on a trio of Diaz's dealers. “Pity,” she said, and both of the Prius's passenger side tires exploded as one.
Their first instincts were to run to their stricken car or to attack Amanda as she walked back to her idling Jeep, but after a shared hesitation the trio just stood where she had left them. Amanda pulled out and gave them a smile with a little wave as she drove past.
“Why do you believe that you are a psychopath?” Eldridge Adegbite was the proverbial stately man. Tall, thin, well-dressed, and with a sharp, hyperarticulate manner of speaking. Amanda thought he should be sitting in a library chair, legs crossed as he puffed on a pipe, and a book in his lap as he introduced “Masterpiece Theater.”
“Doctor, I know I am a psychopath.” Amanda sat across the sixty-two-year-old man. It had only been slightly harder getting an appointment with Adegbite than it had been with Christi Bates, although she did have to wait a day. “I believe that it is something we share in common.”
He smiled benignly at her. “I see; so you believe that I am a psychopath as well.”
“Once again, Doctor, I know you are a psychopath.” The previous fifteen minutes had completely reshaped Amanda's immediate future. All thoughts of the now rather banal Angel Diaz were forgotten. She desperately wanted to kill, slaughter, obliterate Eldridge. Even his name was an affectation, but a perfect one. Her mind was practically bursting with excitement over the untimely but exquisitely slow demise of the old fraud. Ahh, but what a fraud. At least in total numbers he wasn't the killer Diaz was, but what Adegbite lacked in volume he made up with style.
“I stand corrected.” He nodded his head in condescending acceptance. “May I ask you how you know we are psychopaths?”
“Of course.” Amanda leaned back in her own library chair and tried to unmask the psychiatrist-who-wasn't with her eyes. “We are both social predators. We take what we want and do as we please, without regard to social norms or expectations, and without the slightest sense of guilt or regret.”
“I see that you've read Robert Ware.” Adegbite nodded slowly and approvingly. “Then you know that there is no treatment for the condition. No therapy or medication can give you, us, the emotional complexity or empathy that is missing in our psychological makeup. We are irretrievably flawed.” Amanda now nodded her approval. “Which of course raises the question of why you charmed your way into my office?”
Eldridge had been born Lucas Tyler in Davenport, Indiana. His father was a school principal and his mother a school librarian, at least until their untimely deaths when Lucas was nineteen. “I'm curious ⦔ Amanda ignored his question. “What set you off, Lucas? Did you wake up one morning and suddenly decide to burn down the house as they slept? Or did the idea slowly evolve during all those years of stifling boredom?”
Amanda wasn't surprised at his lack of reaction. Externally, he still projected an unshakable sense of comfort and ease, and even his thoughts remained relatively calm. No panic, not a trace of fear or even concern, just a sense of intrigue, a thrill of excitement as his daily routine took an unusual turn. “My name was Lucas, but now it is Eldridge. And indeed my parents did tragically die in a fire, but I assure you I had nothing to do with it. In fact, I was away at school. Does that disappoint you?”
“Not in the least. In fact I am very impressed with your ability to lie convincingly.”
“Apparently not well enough to convince you.” His relaxed, comforting smile hadn't dimmed a degree. “But aren't we here to discuss your issues?”
Amanda felt the pull of his magnetic personality and very nearly ceded control by answering his question. “You've locked away a good deal of your life.” She stared back at him, quietly sifting through his mind. “Shuttered doors and windows. I wonder what's behind them?” She could easily answer her own question, but that would prematurely end her visit. “Can we go back to your parents? I really am interested in your motivation. They were out of your life, yet you went back almost a year and a half later just to kill them.”
“Mrs. Flynn, I believe that we have ⦔