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Lucas Davenport Novels 1-5
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Текст книги "Lucas Davenport Novels 1-5"


Автор книги: John Sandford



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Текущая страница: 14 (всего у книги 105 страниц)

CHAPTER

16

A pig farmer?

The maddog raged through his apartment. They said he was a pig farmer. They said he smelled like pig shit.

He had trouble focusing.

The real issue. He had to remember the real issue: somebody had seen him and remembered the way he dressed. Had they seen his face? Was an artist working on circulars? Would they be plastered around the courthouse in the morning? He gnawed on a thumbnail, pacing. Pain flashed through his hand. He looked down and found he had ripped a chunk of nail out, peeling it away from the lobster-pink underskin. Blood surged into the tear. Cursing, he stumbled to the bathroom, found a clipper, tried to trim the nail, his hand shaking. When it was done, his thumb still throbbing, he wrapped it with a plastic bandage and went back to the television.

Sports. He ran the videotape back and watched Annie McGowan deliver her scoop. Pig farmer, she said. Commuter killer. Smells of pig manure, may explain his inability to attract women. He punched the sound and watched only the picture, her black hair with the bangs curled over her forehead, her deep, dark eyes.

Now she stirred him. She looked like . . . who? Somebody a long time ago. He stopped the tape, rewound it, ran it again, with the sound muted. She was Chosen.

McGowan.

Research would be needed, but he had time. She was a good choice for several reasons. She would be satisfying; and she would teach a lesson. He was not One to laugh at. He was not One to be called a pig farmer. The Cities would be horrified; nobody would laugh. They would know the power. Everybody: they would know it. He paced rapidly, circling the living room, watching McGowan’s face, running the tape back, watching again. A fantasy. A lesson.

A lesson for later. There was another Chosen. She moved through his sleep and his waking vision. She moved; she did not walk. She lived less than two long blocks from the maddog. He had seen her several times, rolling down the sidewalk in her wheelchair. An auto accident, he learned. She was an undergraduate at the university when it happened. She had been streaking through the night with a fraternity boy in his overpowered sports car. His neck snapped with the impact when they hit the overpass abutment, her back was shattered by a seat frame. Took an hour to get her out of the car. Both newspapers reported the accident.

But she came back, and both newspapers did feature stories about her return.

Graduated from the school of business, started law. A woman in law; they were all over the place now. She had a backpack hung from the side of her machine to carry her books. She rolled the chair with her own arms, so she’d be strong. Lived by herself in an apartment on the back of a crumbling house six blocks from the law school.

The maddog had already scouted the apartment. It was owned by an old woman, a widow, who lived in the front with a half-dozen calico cats. A student couple lived upstairs. The cripple lived in back. A ground-level ramp allowed her to roll right into the kitchen of the three-room unit. The news clips said she valued her singleness, her independence. She wore a steel ring on a chain around her neck; it had belonged to the boy killed in the wreck. She said she had to live for both of them now. More clips.

The maddog had done his research in the library, finding her name in the indexes, reading the stories on microfilm. In the end, he was certain. She was Chosen.

If he had the chance to take her. But he had been seen. Recognized. What would the morning bring? He paced for an hour, round and round the apartment, then threw on a coat and walked outside. Cold. A hard frost for sure. Winter coming.

He walked down the block, down the next, past the cripple’s house. The upper apartment was lit up. The lower one, the old lady’s, was dark. He continued past and looked back at the side of the house; the cripple’s window was also dark. He glanced at his watch. One o’clock. She was top of the class, the news clips said. He licked his lips, felt the sting of the wind against his wet mouth. He needed her. He really did.

He continued his walk, across the street, down another block, and another. The vision of the cripple rolling through his mind. He had been seen. Would his face be in the papers the next day? Would the police get a call? Might they be getting a call now? They could be driving to his apartment now, looking for him. He shivered, walked. The cripple floated up again. Sometime later, he found himself standing in front of a university dormitory. A new building, red brick. There was a phone inside. Davenport.

The maddog walked into the dormitory in a virtual trance. A blonde coed in a white ski-team sweatshirt glanced at him as she went through the door into the inner lobby, past the check-in desk. The phone was mounted on a wall opposite the rest rooms. He pressed his forehead against the cool brick. He shouldn’t do it. He groped in his pocket for a quarter.

“Hello?”

“Davenport?” He sensed a sudden tension on the other end.

“Yeah.”

“What is this game? What is this pig thing?”

“Ah, could you—?”

“You know who this is; and let me warn you. I’ve chosen the next one. And when you play games, you anger the One; and the Chosen will pay. I’m going to go look at her now. I’m that close. I am looking.” The words, in his own ears, sounded pleasantly formal. Dignified.

He dropped the receiver back on the hook and walked back through the empty outer lobby, pushed through the glass doors. Pig farmer. His eyes teared and he bent his head and trudged toward home.

The walk was lost in alternating visions of the Chosen and McGowan and quick cuts of Davenport in the clerk’s office, his face turning toward him, looking at him. The maddog paid no attention to where he was going, until he unexpectedly found himself standing outside his apartment. His feet had found their own way; it was like waking from a dream. He went in, began to take off his coat, hesitated, picked up the phone book, found the number, and dialed the Star-Tribune.

“City desk.” The voice was gruff, hurried.

“When do the papers come out?”

“Should be on the street now. Anytime.”

“Thanks.” The phone on the other end hit the hook before the word was fully out of his mouth.

The maddog went out to his car, started it, drove across the Washington Street bridge into the downtown. There were two green newspaper boxes outside the Star-Tribune building. He pulled over, deposited his quarters, and looked at the front page: MADDOG A HOG FARMER? TV STORY SAYS “YES.”

The story was taken directly from McGowan’s news broadcast. A brief telephone interview with the chief of police was appended: “I don’t know where she got the information, but I don’t know anything about it,” Daniel said. He did not, however, deny the possibility that the killer was a farmer. “Anything is possible at this point,” he added.

There was no sketch. There was no description.

He went back to his car, sat in the driver’s seat, and paged quickly through the paper. There was another story about the killings on page three, comparing them to a similar string of killings in Utah. Nothing more. He turned back to the front page.

Hog farmer, it said.

He would not permit it.

CHAPTER

17

Daniel leaned far back in his chair, the eraser end of a yellow pencil pressed against his lower teeth, watching Sloan. Anderson and Lester slumped in adjacent chairs. Lucas paced.

“What you’re saying is, we got nothing,” Daniel said when the detective finished.

“Nothing we can use to bag the guy,” Sloan said. “When we find him, we’ve got information we can use to pin him down. We could even run him by Jefferson Sparks, see if he rings a bell. But we don’t have anything to point at him.”

“What about driver’s licenses? Did we get that?”

Anderson shook his head. “They don’t track incoming state licenses by individual names.”

Lucas paced at the perimeter of the room. “What about those post offices?”

“We’re getting some returns. Too many of them. We’ve had a hundred and thirty-six moves so far, covering the past two years, and we’ve only heard from post offices covering maybe a tenth of the population we’re looking at. If that rate holds up, we’ll get about fourteen hundred names. We’re also finding out that the most likely moves are young single males. Probably a third of them in that category. That’s something like five hundred suspects. And all of it rests on the idea that the guy’s maybe got an accent.”

“And if he moved here three years ago, instead of in the last two, we’re fucked anyway,” said Daniel.

“But it’s something,” Lucas insisted. “How many of the ones that you have so far are single males? Assuming that’s what we want to look at?”

“Thirty-eight of the hundred and thirty-six. But some of those apparently moved here with women or moved in with a woman after they got here, or are old. We’ve had a couple of guys doing a quick scan of the names, and there are about twenty-two that fit all the basic criteria: young, single, male, unattached.”

“White-collar?” asked Lucas.

“All but two. People don’t move here for blue-collar jobs. There are more jobs in Texas, and less cold,” Anderson said.

“So what are we talking about?” Daniel asked.

“Well, we’re talking about checking these twenty-two. We should be able to eliminate half or better, just walking around. Then we’ll focus tighter on the rest of them. ’Course, we’ll have new names coming in all the time.”

“Lucas? Anything else?”

Lucas took another turn at the back of the room. He had talked to Daniel the night before about the phone call from the maddog, and told the others at the start of the meeting. He’d taped the call. He was taping all calls now. First thing in the morning, he’d taken a copy of the tape to the university and tracked down a couple of linguists to listen to it.

They had called Daniel during the meeting: Texas, one of them said. The other was not quite so certain. Texas, or some other limited sections of the Southwest. The eastern corner of New Mexico, maybe, around White Sands. Oklahoma and Arkansas were out.

“His accent has a strong overlay of the Midwest,” the second linguist said. “There’s this one line, ‘I’m going to go look at her now.’ If you listen closely, break it down, what he really says is ‘I’m-unna go look at her now.’ That’s a midwesternism. Upper Midwest, north central. So I think he’s been here awhile. Not so long that he’s completely lost his southwestern accent, but long enough to get an overlay.”

“Ah,” Lucas said. The detectives were looking at him curiously. “Last night, I was watching Channel Eight. McGowan comes on and she has this piece about the pig farmer. So the maddog calls forty-five minutes later. I checked with the Pioneer Press and the Star-Tribune to see what time the first editions came out—they both carried follows on the McGowan story. None of them were out when the maddog called.”

“So he saw it on TV,” Anderson said.

“And I’ve been thinking about McGowan,” Lucas said. “She fits the type the maddog’s been going after . . .”

“Ah, Jesus Christ,” Daniel blurted.

“There was something about that call. There’s something special about this ‘chosen’ one he talks about. I feel it.”

“You think he might go after McGowan?”

“He’s watching her on TV. And physically, she fits his type. And she’s had all these weird stories. The guy seems to want the attention, but from his point of view, everything she’s been saying is negative. He talks about being the ‘one’ and she says he’s impotent and smells bad and farms pigs. Last night, he was pissed.”

“That’s it,” Daniel said, his face flushed. “I want a watch on McGowan, twenty-four hours.”

“Jesus, chief—” Anderson started.

“I don’t care how many guys it takes. Break some of them out of uniform if you have to. I want guys on her during the day and I want a watch on her house at night.”

“But delicately,” Lucas said.

“What?”

“She’s our chance to grab him,” Lucas said. He put up his hands to stop interruptions. “I know, I know, we’ve got to be careful. Not take any chances with her. I know all that. But she might be our best shot.”

“If you’re right, he might be looking at her right now,” Lester said. “Right this minute.”

“I don’t think he’ll try during the day. She’s always around people. If he tries, it’ll be at night. When she’s on her way home or at her home. He could break into her house during the day and wait for her. We should cover that possibility.”

“You’ve thought about this,” Daniel said, his eyes narrowing.

Lucas shrugged. “Yeah. Maybe I’ve got my head up my ass. But it seems like a chance, just like when you put a watch on me.”

“Okay,” Daniel said. He turned and pressed an intercom lever. “Linda, call Channel Eight and tell them I want to talk to the station manager urgently.” He let the intercom go and said, “Lucas, stay a minute. Everybody else, let’s get going on the basics. Start processing the list of guys who moved in. It won’t do any good if he’s really been here for a while, but we’ve got to check. Anderson, I want you to go back over every note we’ve got, see if we’re missing anything we should have covered.”

As the others drifted out of the room, Lucas slouched against a wall, staring at the rug.

“What?” Daniel said.

“This guy is nuts in a different way than I thought. He’s not a straight, cold killer. There’s something else wrong with his head. The way he was talking about the ‘one’ and the ‘chosen.’ ”

“What difference does it make?”

“I don’t know. Could make it harder to outguess him. He might not react like we expect him to.”

“Whatever,” Daniel said dismissively. “I wanted to ask you about something else. Where is McGowan getting this crap she’s putting on the air?”

Lucas shook his head. “Probably a uniform who’s just close enough to the investigation to pick up some stuff, but not close enough to get it right.”

“So you’re in Cedar Rapids yesterday and it’s the first time anybody said the word ‘farmer’ in the whole investigation. The next thing I know, she’s on the air saying the maddog is a farmer.”

“Saying pig farmer. There’s a difference. Whoever’s feeding her is cutting the killer up. Sparks doesn’t even think the maddog is a farmer. I don’t either. I stopped on the way back and called in what Sparks said, so Anderson could get it in the data base. After that? Who knows. There’s a leak, but it’s all twisted up.”

“Okay,” said Daniel. He was suspicious, Lucas thought. More than suspicious. He knew, and was talking for the record. “I’m not going to ask you anything else about this coincidence. But I would remark that if somebody is playing a game, it could be a dangerous one.”

“We’re already playing a dangerous game,” Lucas said. “The maddog’s not giving us any choice.”

Lucas spent the afternoon on the street, touching informants, friends, contacts, letting them know he was alive. A Colombian had been in town, supposedly to negotiate a four-way cocaine wholesaling net to cover the metro area. It would be run by three men and a woman, each with separate territories and responsibilities. If any of them tried to make a move on somebody else’s territory, the Colombian would cut off the troublemaker’s supply.

Lucas was interested. Most of the cocaine in the Twin Cities was in weights of three ounces or less, bought on the subwholesale level from Detroit and Chicago, and, to a lesser extent, Los Angeles. There had been rumors of direct Colombian connections before, but they never materialized. This had a different feel to it. He pushed his informants for names, promising money and immunity in return.

There were more rumors of gang activity, recruitments of local chapters out of Chicago and Los Angeles. Gang growth was slow in the Cities. Members were systematically harassed by the gang squads in both towns and were sent to prison so often, and for so long, that any kid with an IQ above ninety stayed away from them.

Indians on Franklin Avenue were talking about a woman who either jumped or was thrown off the Franklin Avenue bridge. No body had shown up. Lucas made a note to call the sheriff’s river patrol.

He was back at his desk late in the afternoon when McGowan called.

“Lucas? Isn’t it wonderful?” she bubbled.

“What?”

“You know about this thing with the maddog? They’re setting up surveillance around me?”

“Yeah, I knew the chief was going to get in touch.”

“Well, I agreed to the surveillance, but only if we could tape parts of it. You know, we’ll cooperate and everything, but once in a while, when it’s natural, we’ll get a camera in the house and get some tape of me cooking or sewing or something. They’re going to set up a surveillance post across the street and another one behind the house. They’ll let a camera come up and shoot the cops watching my house with their binoculars and stuff.” She was more than excited, Lucas thought. She was ecstatic.

“Jesus, Annie, this isn’t a sporting event. You’ll be covered, of course, but this guy is a maniac.”

“I don’t care,” she said firmly. “If he comes after me, the story will go network. I’ll be on every network news show in the country, and I’ll tell you what—if I get a chance like that and I handle it right, I’ll be out of here. I’ll be in New York in six weeks.”

“It’s a nice idea, but death would be a nasty setback,” Lucas said.

“Won’t happen,” she said confidently. “I’ve got eight cops, twenty-four hours a day. No way he’ll get to me.”

Or if he got to her, there was no way he’d escape, Lucas thought. “I hope they’re setting you up with some sort of emergency alarm.”

“Oh, sure. We’re working that out right now. It’s like a beeper and I wear it on my belt. I never take it off. As soon as I hit it, everybody comes running.”

“Don’t get overconfident. Carla Ruiz never saw him coming, you know. If she hadn’t been worried about going out on the street alone and if she hadn’t been carrying that Mace, she’d be dead.”

“Don’t worry, Lucas. I’ll be fine.” McGowan’s voice dropped a notch. “I’d like to see you, you know, outside of work. I was going to mention something, but now, with twenty-four-hour surveillance . . .”

“Sure,” he said hastily. “It wouldn’t be good if the chief or even your people found out how close we are.”

“Great,” she said. “I’ll see you, good old Red Horse.”

“Take care of yourself.”

Detectives from narcotics, vice, and sex set up the direct surveillance, backed by out-of-uniform patrolmen who were assigned unmarked cars on streets adjacent to McGowan’s. Lucas stayed away the first night, when the posts were established. Too many cops, too much coming and going, would draw attention from the neighborhood. The second night he went out with a vice cop named Henley.

“You ever seen her place?” Henley asked.

“No. Pretty nice?”

“Not bad. Small older house across the street from Minnehaha Creek. Two stories. Lot and a half. There’s a big side yard on the east with a couple of apple trees in it. There’s another house on the west, maybe thirty feet between them, all open. Must have set her back a hundred thou.”

“She’s got some bucks,” Lucas said.

“Face like hers on TV, I believe it.”

“She said you’re on both sides?”

“Yeah. We’ve got a place directly across the street in front and one across the alley in back,” Henley said. “We’re watching from the attics in both places.”

“We renting?”

“The guy on the Minnehaha side didn’t want any money, said he’d be happy to do it. We told him we could be there a couple months, he said no problem.”

“Nice guy.”

“Old guy. Retired architect. I think he likes the company. Lets us put stuff in the refrigerator, use the kitchen.”

“How about in back?”

“That’s an old couple. They were going to give us the space, but they looked like they were hurting for money, so we rented. Couple hundred bucks a month, gave them two months. They were happy to get it.”

“Funny. That’s a pretty rich neighborhood,” Lucas said.

“I was talking to them, they’re not doing so good. The old man said they lived too long. They retired back in the sixties, both had pensions, they figured they were set for life. Then the inflation came along. Everything went up. Taxes, everything. They’re barely keeping their heads above water.”

“Hmmp. Which one are we going to?”

“The architect’s. We park on the other side of the creek and walk across a bridge. We come up behind a row of houses along the water, then into the back of his house. Keeps us off the street in front of the place.”

The architect’s house was large and well-kept, polished wood and Oriental rugs, artifacts of steel and bronze, beautifully executed black-and-white etchings and drypoints hung on the eggshell walls. The vice cop led the way up four flights of stairs into a dimly lit, unfinished attic space. Two cops sat on soft chairs, a telephone by their feet, binoculars and a spotting scope between them. A mattress lay on the floor to one side of the room. Beside it, a boombox played easy-listening music.

“How you doing?” one of the cops asked. The other one nodded.

“Anything going on?” Lucas asked.

“Guy walked his dog.”

Lucas walked up to the window and looked out. The window had been covered from the inside with a thin, shiny plastic film. From the street, the window would appear to be transparent, the space behind it unoccupied.

“She home?”

“Not yet. She does the ten-o’clock news, cleans up, usually goes out for something to eat. Then she comes home, unless she has a date. For the next couple of weeks, she’s coming straight home.”

Lucas sat down on the mattress. “I think—I’m not sure—but I think if he hits her, he’ll come after dark but before midnight. He’s careful. He won’t want to walk around at a time when people will notice him, but he’ll want the dark to hide his face. I expect he’ll try to get in the house while she’s gone and jump her when she comes back. That’s the way he did it with Ruiz. The other possibility would be to catch her right at the door as she’s going in. Sap her, push her right inside. If he did it right, it would look like he was meeting her at the door.”

“We thought he might try some kind of con,” said one of the surveillance cops. “You know, go up to the door, say he’s a messenger from the station or something. Get her to open the door.”

“It’s a possibility,” Lucas said. “I still like the idea—”

“Here she comes,” said the cop at the window.

Lucas got up and half-crawled, half-walked to the window and looked out. A red Toyota sports car pulled up to the curb directly in front of McGowan’s house, and a moment later she got out, carrying a shopping bag. She self-consciously didn’t look around and marched stiffly up to the house, unlocked the door, and went inside.

“In,” said the first surveillance cop. The second shone a miniature flashlight on his wristwatch and counted. Thirty seconds. A minute. A minute and a half. A minute forty-five.

The phone rang and the first surveillance cop picked it up.

“Miss McGowan? Okay? Good. But keep the beeper on until you go to bed, okay? Have a good night.”

“You coming up every night?” Henley asked casually.

“Most nights, midweek. For three hours or so, nine to midnight or one o’clock, like that,” Lucas said.

“You do it for too long, you wind up brain dead.”

“And if the surveillance doesn’t do it, this fuckin’ elevator music will,” Lucas said. The easy-listening music still oozed from the boombox.

One of the surveillance cops grinned and nodded at his partner. “Compromise,” he said. “I like rock, he can’t stand it. He likes country and I won’t listen to all that hayseed hillbilly tub-thumping. So we compromised.”

“Could be worse,” Henley chipped in.

“Not possible,” Lucas said.

“Ever listen to New Age?”

“You win,” Lucas conceded. “It could be worse.”

• • •

“Oh, God damn, folks, she’s doing it again.”

“What?” Lucas crawled off the mattress toward the window.

“We thought maybe she didn’t realize there’s a crack in the curtains,” the cop said. His partner had his binoculars fixed on McGowan’s house and said, “C’mon, babee.” Lucas nudged the first cop away from the spotting scope and peered through it. The scope was focused on a space in the curtains on a second-story window. There was nothing to see at first, then McGowan walked through a shaft of light coming from what Lucas supposed was a bathroom. She was brushing her hair, her arms crossed behind her head. She was wearing a pair of white cotton underpants. Nothing else.

“Look at that,” whispered the cop with the binoculars.

“Give me the fuckin’ things,” said Henley, trying to wrench them away.

“Goddamn one-hundred-percent all-American TV-reporter pussy,” the surveillance cop said reverently, passing the binoculars to the vice cop. “You think she knows we’re watching?”

She knows, Lucas thought, watching her face. It was flushed. Annie McGowan was turned on. “Probably not,” he said aloud.

Five days of surveillance produced nothing. No suspicious cars checked her home, no approaches on the street. Nothing but falling leaves and cold winds rattling the tiles on the architect’s roof. The curtain never closed.

“Red Horse?” It was midday and Lucas was calling from his home.

“Yeah, Annie. This is no hot tip, but I was out in the neighborhoods and noticed something you might be interested in. One of the women’s business clubs is going to hear a lecture from a university shrink about—I’m reading this from a flier—‘the relationship between sexual-social inadequacy and antisocial activity, with comments about the serial killer now terrorizing the Twin Cities.’ That sounds like it could be good. Maybe you’d want to get a camera over to see this guy before he gives his speech.”

“That sounds pretty relevant. What’s the name?”

“Lucas?” It was Jennifer, a little breathless.

“Jennifer. I was going to call. How are you feeling?”

“I’m getting a little queasy in the morning.”

“Have you seen a doctor?”

“Jesus, Lucas, I’m okay. It’s only morning sickness. I just hope it doesn’t get much worse. I almost lost my breakfast.”

“With the breakfasts you eat, I believe it. You’ve got to get off that eggs-and-sausage and butter-toast bullshit. It’ll kill you even if it doesn’t give you morning sickness. Your cholesterol is probably six hundred and eight. Buy some oatmeal or some Malt-O-Meal. Get some vitamins. I can’t figure out why you don’t weigh two hundred pounds. For Christ’s sakes, will you—?”

“Yeah, yeah, yeah. Listen, I didn’t call you for culinary advice. This is an official call. I’ve been hearing strange rumors. That something heavy is happening with the maddog. That you know who he is and that you’re watching him.”

“Absolutely wrong,” Lucas said flatly. “I can’t prove it, obviously, but it’s not true.”

“I won’t ask you for Boys Scout’s honor, because that’s personal and this is an official call.”

“Okay, listen, as the woman who is carrying my kid, I don’t want you to run around and get exhausted, okay? So on a purely personal basis, I tell you, Boy Scout’s honor, we’ve got no idea who he is.”

“But you’re doing something?”

“That’s an official question. I can start lying again.”

Jennifer laughed and Lucas felt cheered. “I read you like an open book,” she said. “I bet I find out what’s going on within, say, a week.”

“Good luck, fat lady.”

• • •

Anderson and Lucas were talking in Lucas’ office when Daniel edged in. He had never seen Lucas’ office before. “Not bad,” he said. “It’s almost as big as my closet.”

“There’s a trick wall and it opens into a full-size executive suite, but I only do it when I’m alone,” Lucas said. “Don’t want to make the peons jealous.”

“We were going over the case,” Anderson said, looking up at the chief. “It’s been ten days since the maddog’s last hit. If the shrinks are right, he should be coming up on another one. Probably next week.”

“Christ, we gotta do something,” Daniel said. He was wringing his hands and Lucas thought he had lost weight. His hair was uncharacteristically mussed, as though he had forgotten to brush it before he left home. The maddog was bearing him down.

“Nothing on the McGowan thing?” he asked.

“Nope.”

“Lucas. Tell me something.”

“I don’t have anything specific. We might be able to cool the media. I’m thinking that we should release some information about him. Something that would make it harder for him to pick up his victims.”

Daniel paused. “Like what?”

“A flier listing the type of woman he goes after—dark hair, dark eyes, young to middle-aged, attractive. Then maybe a few hints about him. That he’s light-complected, dark-haired, a little heavy, maybe recently moved in from the Southwest. That he dressed like a farmer at least once, but that we believe him to be a white-collar worker. Appeal to women who fit the type, and who feel approaches from men like that, and ask them to call us.”

“Christ, you know how many calls we’d get?” Anderson asked.

“Can’t be helped,” Lucas said. “But we’re not getting anywhere, and if he takes another one next week . . . We’d be better off if the press thought we were doing something about it.”

Daniel pursed his lips, staring blankly at the pebbled plaster on Lucas’ office wall. Eventually he nodded. “Yes. Let’s do it. At least we’re doing something.”

“And maybe call an alert for next week,” Lucas suggested. “Put a lot of extra cops on the street. Let the media know about it, but ask them not to publish. They won’t, and it’ll make them feel like they’re in on something.”

“Not bad,” Daniel admitted with a wintry smile. “And after it’s over, we can all go on television and debate media ethics, whether they should have cooperated with the cops.”

“You got it,” said Lucas. “They love that shit.”

Lucas called her from a street phone.

“Red Horse?”

“Listen, Annie, Daniel has ordered Anderson—you know, from robbery-homicide?—he’s ordered him to make up a list of characteristics for both the victims and the maddog killer and release it to the media. Probably sometime this afternoon. Some of them are already well-known, but some of them were confidential up to this time.”

“If I can get it in ten minutes, I can make the noon report.”

“I can’t give you all of it, but we think he’s fairly new to the area. We don’t think he’s been here more than a few years and that he moved in from the Southwest.”


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