Toni and
I pulled the plug about an hour later, but Bailey stayed at the bar to spend some time with Drew. It wasn’t late, but it’d been a long day, so by the time I got back to the room, I was feeling warm and fuzzy but very tired. So I nearly missed seeing the note the night manager had slipped
under
my door, telling me to call him. Someone had left a package for me at the front desk. In light of recent events, he’d decided to have it checked out first. But the scanner had shown only a bottle with nonsuspicious liquid and a piece of paper. No dangerous materials. I told him to have it sent up.
I slipped off my shoes and sank onto the couch. It sounded like someone had sent me a bottle of hooch. Who was that thoughtful soul? Daniel? Or maybe Graden? Maybe this was Graden’s makeup gesture. The thought made me smile, and I kept smiling when I took the box from the bellman.
“Thanks, Jason.” Feeling magnanimous, I gave him a five-dollar tip and brought the box back to the couch and set it on the coffee table. The weight of it told me it was bigger than a wine bottle.
Using my car key, I slashed open the strapping tape and looked inside. It was a huge bottle of Russian Standard Platinum. My favorite vodka. It
had
to be from Graden. Not even Daniel knew it’d become my new favorite. My smile broadened as I lifted the bottle out of the box. Then I saw what was lying under it.
A photograph of me and Daniel, standing in front of Checkers. My hand on his chest. I stared dumbly at the image for a few seconds before recognition hit me: it’d been taken a couple of weeks ago, the night we’d had dinner together.
What the…?
It was just a photograph, but the image radiated menace. I stared down at the photo but refused to touch it. Because I knew exactly who’d sent it.
Lilah.
I felt a hot ball of anger start to burn in the pit of my stomach. If it was meant to make me feel guilty, she’d failed. I glared at the photograph with contempt. No. Lilah’s message was far more sinister than that.
This little “gift” was meant to make me feel vulnerable. It didn’t. All I felt was fury. If Lilah had shown up at my door in that moment, I would’ve beaten the crap out of her with my bare hands. I wanted to throw the whole box out the window. But on the off chance she or one of her hounds of hell had left prints, I knew I had to preserve it for examination. I wrapped my hands in a towel and moved the box to the end table. I’d take it in to SID with Bailey tomorrow.
When the sharp edges of my anger had worn off, I decided I needed an expert opinion. I looked at my watch. It was ten o’clock, but that was the shank of the evening for Dr. Bruno Spagnotti, my favorite forensic psychologist—or, as I privately called him, “the Scumbag Whisperer.” Short but with a powerful upper body, and a fuse that was both at once (short and powerful), Dr. Spagnotti had a big voice, a brusque demeanor, and a reputation for meting out visceral tongue-lashings from the witness stand to anyone who dared waste his time with “dumb” questions. But juries never seemed to doubt a word he said. On any given day, this could be a very good or a very bad thing for either side. Dr. Spagnotti had no favorites.
We’d met during a case I’d handled in the Special Trials Unit: a serial killer who raped and then set fire to five elderly women. The defense had called Dr. Spagnotti to persuade the jury that the defendant’s obvious mental disturbance—while not amounting to legal insanity—was sufficient to prevent him from premeditating the murders. It took Dr. Spagnotti just five minutes to leave that defense ploy in ruins. With a patience he never showed anyone but a juror, he explained that the crimes had to have been premeditated: victims of a similar age and appearance were deliberately targeted, and the defendant made sure to attack only when they were home alone. The jury came back with five verdicts of first-
degree
murder in less than an hour.
Since I knew Dr. Spagnotti hated chitchat as much as he hated dumb questions, I immediately launched into the reason for the call and told him about the case, about Zack, about Lilah, and of course about the package she’d just sent me.
“First of all, your blackmail theory, unusual as it is, does seem to fit this puzzle rather well,” he remarked. “And I can’t say I’m surprised that union ended in carnage.”
“What do you mean? Are you saying you think Lilah killed Zack?”
“That’s your bailiwick, not mine. I was just reflecting on the volatility of the situation and those two personality types. Not to say someone else couldn’t have killed Zack. I’d say it’s likely Zack had a number of enemies—given his nature and what he did for a living.”
“And what would you say his ‘nature’ was, psychologically speaking?”
“Psychopathic,” Dr. Spagnotti replied, in a tone that broadcasted
duh.
From what you’ve told me, they’re both fairly classic.”
I remembered the conversation I’d had with Bailey. “Then normal parents can wind up with a psychopathic kid?” I asked. “Because Zack’s parents don’t seem to have a mean or weird bone in their bodies.”
“Psychopaths can come from perfectly normal, unremarkable homes. As a general rule, a psychopath is born, not made. That’s not to say environment doesn’t play a part—it does, or at least it can.”
“But not in this case?”
Dr. Spagnotti humphed and exhaled loudly, the sound like a blast of wind rushing through the receiver, a cue that I’d ventured dangerously close to dumb-question territory. “Not as far as I’m concerned, though his relatively normal upbringing may have prevented him from becoming homicidal. But that wasn’t the question, was it? The question was whether I thought Zack was a psychopath, and the answer is yes.”
I chewed on that for a moment, but then Dr. Spagnotti broke in.
“You say Lilah was acquitted. Did she give a statement to the police or testify at her trial?”
“Both, actually.”
“She did well, didn’t she? I’d bet particularly in front of the jury.”
“On the money. Is that typical?” The last serial killer I’d had on the stand—and a psychopath if ever I saw one—was a complete idiot.
“It’s Psychopath 101. They’re often glib, frequently charismatic, and they’re adroit liars. Lilah also has the particular advantage of being a lawyer. I’d guess she had that jury eating out of her hand. Especially the male jurors.”
“You nailed it.”
Dr. Spagnotti grunted. “But Lilah’s encounter with Graden, sending you this package—it’s obvious she’s stalking you. I’d say obsessively. And she’s moving in closer. She went through Graden before, but this time she went at you more directly. I’d predict her next moves are going to bring her even closer to you.”
Even more than his words, Dr. Spagnotti’s dark tone gave me pause.
“I agree, it’s weird. And it really pissed me off at first. But when I sat back and thought about it, neither of those moves struck me as all that dangerous—”
He interrupted impatiently. “You’re missing the significance of those moves. Getting close to Graden, sending that package—those were just opening salvos. I’d say it’s a hundred to one she’ll escalate to violence at some point. I strongly recommend you get off this case, Knight. Let someone else handle it.”
“I’m okay, Doctor. I’ve got lots of security. And, besides, who says letting go of the case will make her stop…obsessing about me?”
“You don’t want to listen to reason, then don’t,” he said irritably. “I’m no clairvoyant, I just play the odds. The odds are strongly in favor of you landing in the morgue sooner rather than later.”
The ominous tone was meant to scare me, and it did. Just not enough to make me back down. “Can you tell me why she’s obsessed with me?”
“What difference does it make? You’ll be just as dead.” After a moment, he sighed and relented. “Look, I can only speak in general terms, because I don’t treat her. But my educated guess would be that you have something she covets.”
“Do you think she’s envious of my relationship with Graden? And that’s why she came on to him?”
“Could be,” he said. “Though that seems more likely to have been a way of letting you know she can get to you—as does this package.”
“I found out that Lilah got sent away to boarding school when she was only ten years old,” I said. “Might that be a sign of early criminal conduct?”
“Or that her mother wanted her out of the house, given what you’ve told me. Who knows? But I must say I’d be surprised if that hit-and-run killing of the Asian boy was the first criminal act she’d ever committed.”
“There was no indication that she got into trouble at boarding school,” I said. “In fact, she did very well. Got straight As.”
“So? All that tells me is that she was smart enough not to get caught. Besides, I’m not talking about her getting away with homicides, I’m talking about small-time stuff, kid crimes.” Dr. Spagnotti stopped and was silent for a moment. “I’m struck by the fact that you’ve got her history in boarding school. Seems to me you’ve gone to an awful lot of trouble for a case that hasn’t even been filed yet. Do you research all your defendants’ childhood histories this way?”
“Sometimes.”
But after I’d hung up, I had to admit that I couldn’t remember when.
I woke
up the next morning and stretched in bed, the jabs of pain in some parts reminding me that I wasn’t all the way back yet. Then I remembered our plan for the day, and my pulse sped up. Bailey and I were headed out to see Johnnie Jasper and the Bayers. Though we hadn’t told the parents, the visits had two goals. One was to find out if Zack had hidden the evidence of Tran’s homicide on their property. We’d figured it made sense to check places Zack had unique access to—places where Lilah couldn’t go. The Bayers said Lilah never came to the house without Zack. The other goal was to give Lilah a big, bright trail to follow that’d allow us a shot at her.
We’d talked it over with the DA investigators and pointed out the risks, but they’d been on board. I had a feeling watching me was so boring, they’d do anything—even wear a bull’s-eye—to spice things up. And it felt good to have a whole team primed and ready. It was one thing for Lilah to get the jump on Simon, unhinged as he was. It was another to end-run a group of trained officers.
I swung my legs out of bed, feeling a mixture of dread and nervous impatience—the sooner we got Lilah and her henchmen in hand, the better. I went to the window and felt the warmth in the air before I even parted the drapes. The day was unusually balmy and bright. At least we didn’t have to contend with weather. I slipped into jeans and a waffle shirt and pulled out my fleece hoodie, just in case we were out late enough for it to get chilly.
I found Bailey in the living room, dressed similarly. Though she was sitting back in her chair, coffee cup in hand, her hunched shoulders told me she was every bit as much on edge as I was.
“Did you order breakfast?” I asked.
Bailey shook her head.
I had no appetite either. “We can grab something on the road later.”
I told her about the package I’d gotten from Lilah the night before. Though she tried to keep cool, I could see she was alarmed. “It’s not that big a deal,” I said. “She’s obviously known where I live for a while.” And I still had the bruises to prove it.
Bailey ran a hand through her hair and sighed. “I’ll be glad when this case is put to bed. Let’s get going. And bring that thing.” She gestured to the box. “We’ll drop it off at SID on the way.”
It was unlikely they’d come up with anything, but we both knew better than to make the rookie mistake of assuming something when it came to evidence. The ride out was silent and tense, and the crush of morning commuter traffic didn’t help.
“This is one of the weirdest cases I’ve ever had,” Bailey remarked. In all the time we’d worked together, I’d never heard her make a statement like that. The case was getting to her. It was good to know I wasn’t the only one. I told her about the conversation I’d had with Dr. Spagnotti and his diagnosis of Zack.
“So he agrees Zack was probably blackmailing Lilah into marrying him,” Bailey said.
“Yeah.” The words brought to mind the image of a bug pinned to a board, its legs and body pumping wildly in helpless agony.
Bailey said nothing for several moments. It had to be hard for her to deal with the notion that a fellow cop could be that twisted. We sat in silence, absorbing the horror of it all.
It was one hell of a bizarre duel. Two psychopaths locked in an unending battle of wills. Godzilla meets Mothra. Or, more precisely, Lizzie Borden meets Hannibal Lecter. I imagined Lilah looking across the table over her Cheerios every morning at the man who sadistically held the threat of ruination over her head. No matter what she did, Lilah would serve a life sentence. Her only choice was whether to serve it with Zack or in a prison cell.
“You know, I have no doubt that if Lilah ever tried to leave him, Zack would’ve brought out the evidence and taken the hit for his part in it, just for the pleasure of destroying her.”
Bailey nodded. “He was one sick fucking bastard.”
We lapsed into silence again, the hum of freeway traffic a soothing, familiar counterpoint to the dark, otherworldly revelations about Zack and Lilah. We’d decided to head out to Johnnie Jasper’s colorful encampment first. Since it was Simon’s last known living space, we thought he might’ve stashed evidence there. We got to Johnnie’s by nine thirty a.m. and found him sitting in his outdoor living room, watching television and holding what looked like a large cup of Starbucks coffee.
“Hey, Johnnie,” I said through the fence.
He frowned and peered at us at first. Then his eyes widened with recognition. He jumped out of his chair.
“You ladies got to go!” he shouted, agitated. “I mean it. You go on, now!”
“What’s wrong?” Bailey asked.
“What’s wrong?” he said. “Last time you were here, someone came by and tore my place up! I went out to do some shopping, and when I came back, everything was thrown around, broken—it was like a tornado hit it!”
Johnnie was bouncing on his toes, thrumming like a freshly tightened guitar string.
“I’m so sorry,” I said. “We had no idea. Are you sure it was because of us?”
Johnnie shook his head and vibrated at a
marginally
slower level.
“I can’t say for sure, ma’am,” he said. “And if I’m wrong, I’m real sorry. But no one ever bothered my place before. Then I talk to you, and the next thing I know, my place is trashed—”
“I understand,” I said, and reached into my purse. “Let me at least pay you back for your loss—”
“You can’t pay me back!” he said. “The stuff they broke was one of a kind!”
“What about for your hassle? I could—”
“No,” he replied emphatically. “The only thing you could do for me is get away and right now. I don’t want no more trouble.” He waved us away. “Just go. Please.”
And with that, Johnnie went back to his chair and his television show.
We walked to the car.
“At least he said please.”
Bailey looked at me, then got into the car. I joined her and put on my seat belt.
“How sure are we that Lilah’s people tossed his place because we talked to him?” I asked.
“On a scale of one to ten, with ten being most sure?” Bailey said. “I’d say an eleven.”
“We spread joy wherever we go,” I said.
She just shook her head.
She drove south, heading for the freeway. The snowcapped San Gabriel Mountains loomed in the distance, offering a comforting sense of being encircled, protected. But, of course, it was false. The mountains protected us from nothing.
We pulled up to the curb in front of the Bayer residence and found our old friend Tracy Chernoff fiddling with a sprinkler head. I’d expected to find a
FOR SALE
sign out front by now. She was wearing the same men’s nylon jacket. I had a feeling it was her dad’s.
I decided to forgive her for not covering me better after my run-in with the homicidal mailbox rooster.
“Hey, Tracy,” I called out. “How’re you doing?”
She straightened up and peered at Bailey and me. After a second, she brightened and moved toward us, hand extended. “Oh, right,” she said. “The cops. I’m good. And you?”
We shook, and I saw that a
FOR SALE
sign was lying on the ground near the side of the house.
“You put the house on the market?”
“Yesterday,” she said. “But my folks got upset when they saw the sign, so I had to take it down.”
“I’m sorry,” I said.
Tracy sighed and looked back at the house. I’d had the feeling she was withholding something when we spoke the first time, and now I was getting it again. I gave her an opening.
“Did anyone talk to you back when Zack’s case was going on?” I asked.
Tracy looked down at her feet. “Nah. I didn’t live here, and I didn’t really know anything.”
I keyed in on the
really
part of that sentence. “What’d you think of Zack?” I asked.
Tracy sucked in her cheeks and pursed her lips. She looked off in the distance, then jammed her hands into the pockets of her jeans and hunched over slightly. It was one hell of a lot of body language.
“I can promise you that whatever you say will stay between us.”
Tracy blew out a ragged breath and nodded. She turned, putting her back to the Bayers’ house, and stared at her feet as she spoke.
“Zack and I…hung around together when we were kids,” she said. “He was my best friend.” She squinted at the ground. “And my worst enemy,” she said, her voice low but hard. “We’d be having fun, playing video games, riding bikes, you name it…and then, out of nowhere, he’d turn on me—”
“Turn on you?” I asked, perplexed. “How?”
“Lots of different ways,” she said. “But the first one’s the one I remember best. We were playing in the abandoned house—of course we all called it the ‘haunted house.’”
“Every neighborhood has one,” I remarked. “How old were you?”
Tracy tilted her head, brow furrowed. “Five? Six at most. We’d just gotten inside, to the front room, when all of a sudden he was gone.”
I could actually feel her fear, still palpable, after all these years.
“I was so scared, I could barely breathe,” Tracy said. “I just stood there, couldn’t even move, for…well, at the time, it felt like hours. It was probably more like five minutes.”
I pictured her, small and terrified, standing alone in that scary house, waiting for an unknown horror to strike. I could relate to the trauma more than Tracy would ever know.
She took a moment to collect herself, then continued.
“Suddenly, he jumped down from…somewhere, screaming in this high, weird voice. Right behind me. I can still hear it.” Tracy shuddered at the memory. “I screamed, and when I turned around, he was gone again. I lost it, I had to get out of there. I ran to the door, but it was closed…it wouldn’t open. I didn’t know what to do, so I kept yanking on the door, kicking at it, but I couldn’t get it open. I didn’t know whether there was a back door, but the idea of running through the house was even scarier. I cried and pounded on that door until my hand was bloody. I was so scared, I thought I was going to die. And then, suddenly, something tapped me on the shoulder.” Tracy paused and looked down. “I…I completely lost it and wet my pants. It was Zack, of course, and he’d seen it all.” Tracy stopped again and inhaled deeply, then resumed. “Threatened to tell everyone how I’d ‘pissed’ myself. He teased me about it for years.”
She sighed heavily and shook her head at the memory.
“Did he ever tell anyone?” I asked.
“No.” Tracy shrugged. “But he never let me forget. I kept going back to him, thinking this time would be different, he’d be nice…and he was.” She paused. “Until the next time.”
Tracy took another deep breath, then let it out and dropped her shoulders. “Anyway,” she said, “I didn’t see how that had anything to do with Zack’s murder.” She added with a rueful smile, “And Lilah didn’t seem the type to get terrorized by anyone.”
I knew the irony of Tracy’s last remark had hit Bailey as hard as it’d hit me. Though it wasn’t admissible evidence, what Tracy had just described confirmed everything Bailey and I had surmised about Zack.
“You’re right. They couldn’t have used it,” I said. “But I really appreciate you telling us.”
Bailey nodded. “And it goes no further.”
“Thanks,” Tracy said. She surveyed the front lawn with a sigh. “Got to get back to it. This grass dies, it’ll be harder to sell.”
We thanked her and shook hands, and she moved slowly across the yard to her next errant sprinkler.