Текст книги "The Executioner"
Автор книги: Chris (2) Carter
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Текущая страница: 25 (всего у книги 27 страниц)
Hundred and Twenty-Seven
Garcia could barely believe what he was hearing. It was because of Hunter’s stubborn attitude that he was alive today. If Hunter thought Garcia would simply turn and walk away, he had another think coming.
‘Well, knowing that you can’t properly fuck up if I’m not with you,’ he joked, ‘I’m coming with, partner.’
‘Are you sure?’
‘Who knows? Traffic duty might be a blast. Let’s fucking do this.’
Hunter smiled and handed Garcia a pair of latex gloves before elbowing the door. There was a muffled crash and shards of broken glass hit the floor. They both looked around instinctively.
Hunter slipped his hand through the glass, unlocked the door and pulled his pen flashlight from his gun holster.
Garcia did the same and gingerly followed him inside.
The first room was a spacious rectangular structure with black marble floors, a few seats and a bar against the east wall. Definitely a party room, Hunter thought. Opposite the bar, a new set of double doors. These ones were hand carved in dark wood. Hunter carefully tried the handle – unlocked. They stepped through into a large and rich foyer decorated with antiques, fine porcelain, silver objects and a few paintings, no photographs. An imposing crystal chandelier hung above the split-level staircase that led up to the next floor.
‘This place’s too big. We’d better split up,’ Hunter whispered, leaning towards Garcia. ‘You stay down here, I’ll check upstairs.’
Garcia nodded. As Hunter cautiously took the steps to the next level, he took the door directly in front of him.
The main sitting room was as ostentatious as the rich foyer he’d just come from, filled with expensive furniture, oil paintings and sculptures. Garcia crossed the room silently and made his way through the French doors at the far end of it. They led him into a sprawling den, warmed by a black marble fireplace on the east wall. The white carpet was lush and spotless. The north wall was framed entirely in full-length windows. On the opposite side of the room Garcia noticed a strange wooden door, not as high as a regular house door. Faint spots of light were coming from underneath it. Tentatively, he walked over, put his right ear against it and listened for a moment – some sort of distant hum. He looked back at the den’s entrance as if debating whether he should go back and get Hunter. He decided to check it out by himself first.
As Garcia twisted the doorknob, he felt his blood warming and his pulse race. Every bone in his body was telling him something was wrong. He reached for his gun.
The door opened soundlessly, revealing a long and narrow flight of concrete stairs dimly lit by a single bulb that hung from a wire. At the bottom, another closed door. Garcia took the steps one at a time. The air was damp and heavy with a musty smell. His left foot caught the edge of a worn step and he slipped. His body was catapulted forward awkwardly, and he reached for the dirty walls, desperately trying to stop him from tumbling down. It worked, but he smashed his flashlight. His heart went into overdrive. Despite the cold, Garcia was sweating.
His eyes quickly moved from the door at the bottom to the one at the top several times, his finger tight at the trigger of his semiautomatic. He took a moment to calm his breathing and reassess the situation. He was sure that if the house wasn’t deserted, his clumsiness had given away his position.
‘Smooth, Carlos, very fucking smooth,’ Garcia whispered between clenched teeth. He stood still for a while, listening for footsteps, waiting for somebody to come from one of the two directions – nothing. He wiped the sweat from his forehead with the back of his gun hand and descended the last few steps. At the bottom he pressed his right ear against the door once again. The humming sound was coming from inside.
Extra-cautiously, he tried the handle – unlocked. He pushed the door open just enough for him to be able to take a peek inside. It was a large basement room. Garcia observed from the door for a long moment but saw no movement. Satisfied, he took a deep breath, steadied his trigger finger and stepped inside. A series of brass lanterns mounted at uneven intervals on each of the two long side walls lit the room with a pale glow. He walked forward slowly, giving his eyes time to get accustomed to the poor light. Something caught his eye on the north side of the room and he stopped dead, his gaze fixed on the display in front of him. He knew exactly what it was.
‘Oh God!’ He shivered.
At the edge of his peripheral vision he saw a smudge of movement, too fast for him to be able to react. The first blow hit him perfectly across the face. He heard something crack and blood spurted from his nose. Out of balance, Garcia stumbled backwards, but not far enough. The second blow was delivered a split second later, hitting the tender spot on the back of his head with military precision. Garcia’s world faded to darkness.
Hundred and Twenty-Eight
Hunter stopped suddenly, as if sensing something wasn’t right. He’d been through three of the six upstairs rooms and so far he’d found nothing to substantiate his theory. He unholstered his H&K USP Tactical pistol and turned around, half expecting someone to walk in on him. He heard something, he was sure of it. Some sort of crash.
Carlos. He quickly and quietly moved back downstairs.
‘Carlos?’ he whispered at the bottom of the stairwell.
No answer.
He moved into the next room – a large sitting area. ‘Carlos?’
Silence. The house was still. Stealthily, Hunter made his way through the French doors at the end of the room and entered the den.
‘Carlos, goddamnit. I’m getting tired of saving your ass. Where the hell are you?’ But if Garcia was in this room, he wasn’t talking.
On the opposite wall he saw the dimly lit, small doorway that led to the stairs going down to the basement.
‘I hate basements,’ he murmured and moved down the steps as quietly as he could. Halfway down, Hunter saw broken pieces of thin glass on one of the steps. He also noticed scratch marks on the walls and a small dent, where Garcia’s flashlight had hit it.
What the fuck happened here? His internal danger sensor started to scream at him.
The door at the bottom was ajar, and through the small gap Hunter could see that the room was large and in half darkness. He steadied his back against the wall and pushed the door open with his fingertips. From his outside position, he took in as much of the room as he could before checking his corners and finally stepping through the door. Crude brick walls surrounded the spacious area that was twice the size of the large party room upstairs. The air was saturated with a gagging, fusty smell. But there was something else in that basement room Hunter couldn’t identify. Something that made his skin crawl. Something very evil.
At the far end he could see a long metal table that served as a counter for several instruments, but he couldn’t make them out from where he was. There were seven life-sized dummies lined up against the wall. To their right there were drawings, sketches, timetables and plans. Hunter recognized what they were for before he saw the pictures. Large photographs of seven different people taken from all angles. The photos were divided into distinct groups clearly numbered one through seven. The first five had been marked with a large red cross over them. Hunter held his breath as he stared again at the photographs of the first five victims of the killer the press was calling the Executioner. The killer’s research had been impeccable.
From behind the wide pillar that sat three-quarters of the way down the room, Hunter heard a mumbling sound. A split second later an office chair was wheeled from behind it. Hunter stood fast as he saw Garcia. He was unconscious and bleeding from the nose – it looked broken. His ankles had been tied to the base of the chair, his hands cuffed behind his back to the chair’s backrest. Hunter lifted his gun in expectation. What else would come from behind the pillar?
He saw a black Sig P226 Elite pistol being pointed at his partner’s head. Hunter recognized the weapon as Garcia’s semiautomatic.
‘Put your gun down, detective,’ the man commanded from his hidden position. Only his arm was visible. In such dim light, Hunter didn’t have a clear shot. ‘Put your gun down nice and slowly or I’ll scatter your partner’s brain all over the floor.’
Hundred and Twenty-Nine
Hunter stood still, his aim as steady as it could be. He only needed one chance.
‘You’ve seen what I’ve done,’ the man continued. ‘I’m sure you know I’m not bluffing.’ His voice was as serene as it’d been the first time they’d met. ‘I’ll give you only a second.’ He cocked the gun.
‘OK,’ Hunter called out before cautiously placing his pistol on the floor.
‘Now kick it this way.’
Hunter did as he was told and his gun stopped just a foot away from the chair Garcia was on.
Finally, Dan Tyler, the owner of the house in Malibu and the person who tipped Hunter and Garcia about the photographs on the fireplace, stepped out from behind the pillar and picked Hunter’s pistol up from the floor. ‘Walk towards me, slowly. Any sudden movements, your partner dies first.’
Hunter took baby steps towards Tyler and, as he did, Tyler walked backwards, approaching the metal table. ‘That’s far enough,’ he said as Hunter came side by side with Garcia. ‘Get your handcuffs from your gun holster and throw me the keys. I don’t have to tell you to do it very slowly, do I?’
Hunter followed the instructions.
‘Now cuff your hands behind your back.’
A clicking sound echoed through the room.
‘Turn around and show it to me.’
Hunter obeyed, snapping at them to show they were secure.
‘Now kneel down next to your partner and sit on your heels.’
Hunter’s determined eyes never left Tyler’s face.
‘It’s over, Michael,’ he said evenly. ‘You know you won’t be able to get away with this.’
Tyler looked undisturbed. ‘No one has called me Michael in a very long time.’ He chuckled. ‘I don’t want to get away with anything, detective. I don’t have anything or anyone to get away to. After I’m done, I don’t care what happens to me. My life ended a year ago.’
Hunter remembered the first time they talked. Tyler had told him that his wife had died twelve months ago.
‘Killing these people won’t bring Katherine back.’
‘Kate,’ Tyler shouted. ‘Her name was Kate.’
‘Killing these people won’t bring Kate back.’ Hunter tried again.
Tyler’s eyes flashed fire. ‘You have no idea what I’m doing or what this is all about.’
‘We know more than you think.’
Tyler smiled defiantly. ‘Is that so?’ He placed both guns on the metal table and checked his watch. ‘OK, I still have some time. Entertain me.’
Hundred and Thirty
Hunter saw this as an opportunity to buy time and maybe fill in some blanks.
‘Alright.’ He spoke slowly. ‘You used to be Michael Madden. Your wife used to be Katherine Davis. You were both students at Compton High. Like several other students you were bullied, pushed around and made fun of, and that extended way beyond the school gates. Back then, there was a particular group of kids who took bullying to a whole different level. They humiliated both of you to such a degree you ended up hating the way you looked. You couldn’t stand looking at yourselves in the mirror.’ Hunter paused, searching his attacker’s face. ‘That group of kids was known as “Strutter’s Gang”.’
Tyler didn’t look surprised. ‘So you finally found out about them? I’m glad. I was worried no one would.’
‘And that’s why you directed us to the pictures on the fireplace. We missed them at first and you couldn’t have that. You couldn’t have those victims being attributed to someone else. You needed us to find out about the bullying.’
Tyler smiled.
Hunter kept his voice steady as he continued. ‘Then you became rich. Very rich. You had money to do anything you wished, including starting a new life someplace else. Someplace no one knew who you were, far away from the bullying, but that wouldn’t be enough. The damage had already been done. Every time you looked in the mirror, you still hated what you saw.’
‘Money can buy anything, detective.’
‘Including a new face,’ Hunter admitted.
Tyler laughed. ‘Please don’t stop now,’ he teased. ‘My life story is just getting interesting.’ He leaned against the wall. A relaxed gesture. Hunter carried on buying time.
‘You created a new identity – Dan Tyler. From then on you had a good life. You’d even forgotten about Strutter and his gang for twenty-five years, hadn’t you? But something brought them back.’ Hunter paused, waiting for some sort of reaction from Tyler. He got none. ‘Was it Kate’s death? Is that why you decided to go after them and their fears? Because your worst fear had become a reality?’
Intrigue colored Tyler’s face. ‘My worst fear?’
Hunter needed to choose his words carefully. ‘Losing the person you loved the most. Your wife. That was your worst fear, wasn’t it?’
Tyler clapped his hands slowly while cocking both eyebrows and nodding. ‘I’m impressed. You do know more than I thought you did.’ He reached for something on the metal table and Hunter tensed. ‘Did you figure that out by yourself or did she tell you?’ Tyler lifted the copy of the LA Times with Mollie’s picture.
For the first time Hunter’s eyes left Tyler’s face and quickly searched the room for a hiding place – nothing.
‘Where is she? Where’s Mollie?’ he asked tentatively.
Tyler frowned. ‘You think she’s here? Why would I have her?’
‘Because she was a threat to you and your plan. Because she knows who you are.’
Hundred and Thirty-One
Tyler threw his head back and laughed a strange, gurgling laugh. Hunter grimaced at the sound.
‘No, she wasn’t a threat, and, no, she doesn’t know who I am.’ His voice was confident. ‘I got close to her, detective. We shook hands. She’s quite a sweet thing.’
Hunter felt a knot start in his throat.
‘Even after touching my hand, there was no recognition. She had no idea who I was. Whatever she was helping you with, whatever she sensed wasn’t clear enough to make her a threat.’ Tyler chuckled. ‘If I wanted to kill her, she would be dead.’
Hunter held his stare with equal determination.
‘You think you figured this out, detective? You have no idea what really happened or what Strutter’s gang was capable of. You didn’t dig deep enough.’ Tyler’s voice had deepened to a chilling tone. ‘This didn’t start in high school. It started on the streets when we were much younger. They used to push and push until we couldn’t take anymore, and then they’d push some more.’ He licked his cracked lips. ‘Almost every day I saw Kate crying on her way back from school. They’d always come up with something to make her cry: name-calling, face spitting, physical abuse, sick humiliation . . . they didn’t give a fuck. Do you have any idea what being laughed at and treated like a worthless piece of shit every goddamn day feels like? What kind of psychological damage that would do to a terribly shy girl like Kate? They were happy to scar her for life just for a laugh. One day they even covered her in human excrement, just for the hell of it.’
Hunter closed his eyes for a moment. Kate had been the same Katherine that James Reed had talked about that day in his house.
‘And then there was Kate’s father,’ Tyler continued. ‘That drunken and pathetic asshole. She’d come home from school with tears in her eyes and he’d scream at her and beat her up even more. Her mother was never around to care.’ Tyler was grinding his teeth in anger. ‘They shot her confidence to pieces. She was made fun of and called “ugly” for so long and so many times she truly believed she was. But Kate was the sweetest and the prettiest girl I’d ever seen and I’d do anything for her.’ He paused to compose himself. ‘I was intelligent, very intelligent. I figured out very early that I could make a lot of money without having to have a job. I could make money from my bedroom or from the street just by using a pay phone.’
Hunter remembered what Tyler did for a living. ‘From the stock market.’
‘That’s right, detective,’ Tyler agreed. ‘I’m brilliant with numbers, better than anyone you’ve ever seen. And my brain understood the market. It was so simple I couldn’t figure out why everyone else wasn’t making money from it. Soon a few dollars turned into hundreds, hundreds turned into thousands, thousands into tens of thousands, and by the time I started my junior year I had almost a hundred thousand dollars in a bank account.’
Hunter read the satisfaction in Tyler’s voice. ‘You had already created a different identity even before leaving school.’
‘You’re quick, detective.’ Tyler smiled. ‘Just like Kate’s father, mine was another drunken, good-for-nothing bastard. After my mother died when I was thirteen, the drinking and the beatings just got worse and worse. If he ever found out that I had money, or that I could make money, he’d no doubt stab me in the back so he could get his dirty hands on it. But he would never get anything from me.’ He paused and wiped his mouth. He was over-salivating with anger. ‘All you need to get a driver’s license in this country is to pass the test and show a birth certificate, which can be easily forged or obtained from a dead child. With a driver’s license and a false birth certificate you can apply for any other documents you’ll ever need.’ He gave Hunter a proud smile. ‘In school I was still Michael Madden, but outside I had already become Dan Tyler.’
Hundred and Thirty-Two
Hunter needed to keep him talking. As long as Tyler was talking, no one was dying.
‘But for Dan and Kate Tyler to exist, Michael Madden and Katherine Davis had to disappear,’ Hunter offered calmly, careful not to sound challenging.
Tyler started pacing the room. ‘And it took me a while to convince Kate we could do it. I told her we could go anywhere. I had more than enough money for us to start a new life, and I didn’t need to be in LA to carry on making money. But her fear was stronger than her hope . . . until that day in English Lit class.’
‘English Lit class?’ Hunter pressed, gaining more time.
Tyler’s gaze became distant as he remembered. ‘As a teenager Kate developed a common hormonal imbalance – estrogen and progesterone. Do you know the consequences of such an imbalance, detective?’
Hunter shifted his weight from one heel to the other. ‘It can cause excessive bleeding during the menstrual period,’ he confirmed.
‘That’s right.’ Tyler looked impressed. ‘In Kate’s case, the kind of bleeding that no pad could stop. And that day she was unprepared. It happened four days earlier than expected, inside our fourth-period class.’
Hunter could only imagine the embarrassment that would’ve caused Kate. He sensed the anguish in Tyler’s voice.
‘Blood was everywhere as if she’d been shot. And the word spread around like wildfire. Strutter and his gang had a new weapon to torment Kate with. And that’s exactly what they did. They started a rumor that Kate was a little slut and that she’d miscarried in the classroom.’ Tyler ran a hand through his hair and breathed in deeply. ‘They started calling her “Baby Killer” and making jokes of how ugly the baby would be because she was the mother . . .’ Tyler paused to let Hunter dwell on the gravity in his voice suggesting the subtext. ‘After so many years of abuse she couldn’t take anymore. She wanted to die. She thought about suicide. So I told her we could both die, at least to everyone we knew. Three weeks later we went camping and mountain climbing in Arizona and no one ever heard of Michael Madden or Katherine Davis since. Though they did find traces of an accident.’ Tyler chuckled proudly. ‘Did you know that when a body goes missing in the mountains, rescuers only hold a fifty percent hope of ever finding it?’
Hunter knew the statistic.
‘We started a new life in Colorado. A few years later we flew to Rio for our operations. No one would ever again look at us and laugh at our ears or nose or anything. But there were complications during one of Kate’s procedures.’
Hunter’s eyes narrowed with interest.
‘She almost died, and the fear I felt when I thought I’d lose her was something like I never felt before. It petrified me down to my core. She was everything to me.’
Hunter shifted his weight again. He was slowly seizing up: numb legs, sore spine, cramping muscles.
‘Even though we had a brand-new life away from everything and everyone we hated,’ Tyler continued, ‘we never really managed to escape our past. We tried for years to start a family, but Kate just couldn’t get pregnant. The doctors told us that there was nothing physically wrong with her. The problem was psychological.’ Tyler rubbed his face with both hands in an agitated manner. ‘She was scared that the baby would be born ugly, just like Strutter and his gang had said. She never forgot it. We had our appearances changed, but that didn’t change our genes, which would’ve been passed down to the baby. She didn’t want our baby to go through what we’d been through. Do you see, detective? We couldn’t start a family because of the psychological damage Strutter’s gang had caused.’
The light in one of the brass lanterns went off and the room got a fraction darker. Tyler moved to the front of the metal table, but that was still too far for Hunter to try anything.
‘A psychologist suggested that we relocated back to LA. She said that we should face our fears, that avoiding them would only feed the uncertainty; it would only keep us from moving on. She said that being in Los Angeles could be the first step. It took years for Kate to agree to come back here. But the psychologist was right.’ Tyler’s lips spread into a half smile. ‘Thirteen months ago Kate called me in the office. She was crying. She’d never been so happy in all her life. She said she’d bought a whole drugstore’s shelf worth of pregnancy tests just to be sure. They all gave her the same result. We would finally be a family.’
The joy in Tyler’s voice gave Hunter goose bumps.
‘We celebrated every day. But I made the mistake of taking her out to a restaurant in Santa Monica Boulevard one night.’ He paused and Hunter saw anger in his eyes. ‘As we were having dinner, we heard a customer curse at a waiter who’d made a simple mistake. He made sure everyone in the restaurant heard him humiliating the poor kid. I saw Kate go rigid. She recognized his voice before I did.’