Copycat (36 page)

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Authors: Erica Spindler

BOOK: Copycat
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They were next.
Kitt looked at M.C. She was struggling against the duct tape. Joe stirred and moaned, and even as her heart leaped with joy that he was alive, she acknowledged the emotion would be short-lived.

Her only hope was that the sheriff's deputy would swing by, realize something was amiss and investigate.

Every moment counted. If she could keep him talking, buy them some time, maybe they would live through this.

It was a slim chance, but it was the only one they had.

“You seem pretty cocky for someone who's going to be arrested for serial murder.”

He grinned. “Now you're talking crazy. Nobody besides the people in this room know I had anything to do with this. Lance was neck-deep in it, but not me.”

“The Smith & Wesson,” she reminded him. “Traced to you. Traced here—”

He cut her off with a laugh. “Traced to Lance. I was sent to a home for kids. I was fourteen, too old to be adopted. As soon as I was old enough, me and a buddy were emancipated. He came to an untimely end, very sad. I took his identity. It was no big deal. A couple of kids with no family to speak of.”

“I was wondering how—” she struggled to focus her scrambled thoughts “—how your family history had flown under the RPD…radar. No way they would have hired you if…known your old man was doing life for—”

“Whacking my mother. Exactly.”

“So what's your plan?” M.C. asked.

“You all die. Lance takes the rap. It's all sown up nice and neat.”

“What ab't th'photos?” Kitt slurred the words and she wondered how much blood she had lost. How long before she lost consciousness.

“What about them?” he asked.

M.C. jumped in. “They have your signature all over them.”

“They go with me, of course. I couldn't leave them, they're my masterpieces.”

Visual trophies.

“The lock of hair,” Kitt asked, “was it from one of the angels?”

Snowe didn't respond and she realized she hadn't actually voiced the thought.

“Disobeying the chief's direct order,” Snowe was saying, as if from a great distance. “Now you're all going to die. What were you thinking?”

“I know why Lance did it,” M.C. said. “Why he resurrected the SAK.”

“That so, genius?”

“To get away from you. He wanted to get caught. Because you're as bad as your father. No, you're worse. Mean. A bully and a brute.”

He swung toward her, trembling. “You don't know dick.”

“You grew up to be just like him. How does it feel to—”

“I'm not like him,” he said, leveling his gun at her. “Time to shut up, Detective Rigg—”

The sound of a gun discharging drowned out his words. Not Snowe's gun. Lance's. He had dragged himself to his knees and shot his brother. The bullet tore into Snowe's chest; he brought his hand to the wound, face blank with shock. He made a move, as if to try to aim; Lance squeezed off another shot. It hit Snowe lower this time, his abdomen. His body jerked and he sank to his knees.

Kitt tried to call out, to beg Lance to free M.C. With horror, she saw him swing toward Joe. He was sobbing. Stumbling.
He meant to kill them.

She closed her eyes, drifting, flying. She heard voices, an explosion, a scream…

And then nothing at all.

74

Thursday, March 23, 2006
10:50 a.m.

“H
ey, partner,” M.C. called softly, tapping on the door to Kitt's hospital room. “Can I come in?”

Kitt looked up and smiled. She had awakened in a hospital bed, disoriented and hooked up to all sorts of bells and whistles.

And confused. How had she gone from the Dekalb safe room to OSF St. Anthony Medical Center in Rockford?

Turns out, Lance had freed M.C., then turned the Smith & Wesson on himself. A single shot to the head.

She waved the other woman in. “Please.”

“You look good,” M.C. said. “Considering.”

“Considering” was right. After awakening, she'd learned that due to blood loss, she'd fallen unconscious. Luckily, M.C.'s 911 call had yielded a near immediate ambulance. The EMTs had done their thing, then the doctors. One surgery and a boatload of meds later, there she was.

“What's the latest?” she asked. M.C. pulled a chair over to the bed and sat. “Sal's ass is so chapped at you. Deep shit, Detective.”

“I figured the worst. He hasn't been in.”

M.C. grinned. “Actually, you're going to be okay. He's using a medicated ointment that consists mostly of self-aggrandizement and credit-hogging. I expect you'll get a slap on the wrists for disobeying a direct order. More for show than anything else. If not for you, Snowe might have gotten away with it.”

“Sal can hog all the credit he wants. I'm just glad that monster won't be hurting any more children.”

M.C.'s smile slipped slightly. Kitt wondered if she was thinking of Lance.

M.C. glanced away, then back at Kitt. “Thanks, by the way. I'm very happy to be alive.”

“You're welcome, by the way.”

“Brought you something.”

She handed her a bag from Logli's grocery. Kitt opened it and peered inside. “Snack crackers?”

“And a Diet Coke. Didn't know which kind you liked best, so I bought several.”

“Thanks. But I thought I wasn't supposed to be eating this junk?”

“I'm making an exception. Since you got shot.”

“Saving your ass.”

“Exactly.”

They fell silent a moment. M.C. broke the silence first. “Have you spoken to Joe?”

Kitt shook her head. “I got a report from a nurse. He was treated for lacerations and a broken nose, then released.”

And he hadn't been by.

It hurt so bad she could hardly breathe.

M.C. squeezed her hand. “I'm sorry.”

“I suspected him of murdering children, M.C. How could I have? And how could he ever forgive me?”

“It could be worse. My boyfriend was a serial killer. Actually, I'm thinking of selling my story to the tabloids.”

M.C. delivered the comment dryly. Like a big, self-deprecating yuk. Kitt smiled. “I'm sorry.”

M.C. shrugged. “I'm over it. Mama's not.”

“How'd she find out?”

“One of the Suck-ups. She's starting to think my being a lesbian would be better.”

Kitt fought a laugh. “You've still got me.”

“You think you can work with a too-ambitious, humorless hard-ass?”

“Sure. If you can trust an over-the-hill screwup to watch your back?”

“I'm willing to give it a try.”

“So get out of here,” Kitt murmured, leaning her head against the pillow, suddenly tired. “Someone's got to hold up this partnership until the twelve-year-old who's masquerading as my doctor lets me out of here.”

M.C. laughed and popped to her feet. “Already carrying you, Lundgren. Jeez.”

As she exited the room, a nurse entered carrying a huge spray of flowers. They could be from anyone. The department. Her VCB colleagues. M.C.

She prayed they were from Joe.

With a cheery smile, the nurse set them by the bed. Kitt waited until the woman had exited the room, then reached for the card. But instead of opening it, she held it gingerly in her hands. Heart pounding.

Not yet, she thought. If they weren't from Joe, she didn't want to know. She had lots of time for that. Lots of time.

ISBN: 978-1-4268-0502-8

COPYCAT

Copyright © 2006 by Erica Spindler.

All rights reserved. Except for use in any review, the reproduction or utilization of this work in whole or in part in any form by any electronic, mechanical or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including xerography, photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, is forbidden without the written permission of the publisher, MIRA Books, 225 Duncan Mill Road, Don Mills, Ontario, Canada M3B 3K9.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

MIRA and the Star Colophon are trademarks used under license and registered in Australia, New Zealand, Philippines, United States Patent and Trademark Office and in other countries.

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