Deja Blue (35 page)

Read Deja Blue Online

Authors: Robert W Walker

Carl was already on his phone, calling for a guard to come to the house and set up a perimeter to protect the family.

 

 

 

 

TWENTY EIGHT

 

 

 

From the Hatfield home, Rae, Amos, and Carl rushed for the city and Dr. Hatfield’s apartment at Summer andVirginia, the Chase Towers. Several squad cars had already encircled the place before they’d arrived. Everyone was on the lookout for Dr. Roland Thomas Hatfield as an all points bulletin had been put out on him as armed and dangerous, and possibly in a state of confusion. They’d withheld using terms such as suspect in a murder investigation, and they’d come up short of naming him the Sleepwalker aka Hammerhead killer.

 

Behind a small contingent of SWAT officers, Rae and the others raided the medical man’s apartment, finding him cringing in a closet.

 

He had the hammer in hand and was hitting himself with brutal strokes to the cranium, one nail through his skull, his eyes fixed and dilated, his body shivering and sweating at once. “Mother made me do it; she made me do it.” Hatfield was in a completely demoralized state when Kunati slapped on the handcuffs, and the medics were called in to strap him to a gurney and wheel him out and down the elevator and to a waiting ambulance.

 

News cameras took it all in, and most of Charleston as this point knew something awful had occurred with their ME, but they didn’t know just how bad it was, not yet. Carl, Amos, and Rae looked about the apartment, finding smashed mirrors, turned pictures, a destroyed bureau mirror that had been turned away to the wall.

 

“One part of him couldn’t look at himself any longer,” she decisively said.

 

“He’ll stand trial for multiple murder,” said Kunati. “But he’ll most likely be sent to a prison for the criminally insane,” added Orvison.

 

“True enough, and he will have gotten away with multiple murder,” she replied, angry at the thought of it.

 

Carl leaned in again the sofa edge, a bit dazed by all that’d happened. “His only personal target had been Marci, but once he killed her…”

 

Rae reminded Carl and Amos that the signs were all there. “I believe you when you say it was a ghastly mess of a murder scene—far worse than any of the others where the killer had been far more meticulous and in and out.”

 

Amos added, “He felt compelled to cover his sister’s murder up, by creating the Sleepwalker killer.”

 

“I began to notice that Hatfield referred to the case as that—the Sleepwalker case.”

 

Carl nodded. “The original scene was a crime between people in close proximity, a crime of passion, this time between a brother and sister.”

 

“Almost the perfect crime since the ME himself processed his own kill sites.”

 

“All but Marci’s, handled by his assistant, Sowards,” corrected Carl.

 

“Still,” continued Rae, “to perpetuate his findings of some stranger killing by some kind of fiend, he went out and targeted young women who resembled Marci and took more life.”

 

“To…to create the Sleepwalker killer,” said Amos, sitting now. “The letters to the editor, the wadded up notes in the throats, all part of his ruse.”

 

“And the older woman,” added Carl, sighing heavily. “Like you said, an error in the dark, the hammer meant for her daughter.”

 

“Turns my stomach that he might get away with it.” Rae wanted to run from here, get on a plane for home, and forget about this nightmare. She began thinking again of Nia, wondering where she might be at this moment. Her watch read 6AM.

 

“Working the system from the beginning,” Kunati said of Roland Hatfield, up again and looking anew about the apartment for any useful incriminating evidence. He lifted a book from a bedside table below the lamp. It was Dr. Jessica Coran’s non-fictional account of her early cases entitled Evil Intent. It’d been a bestseller years before.

 

“Hold on. Don’t handle the book!” shouted Rae. “I mean, handle it as evidence. Bag it. We need to show his prints on the pages.”

 

“What’s up with the book?” asked Amos.

 

“There’s a chapter devoted to a similar case in that book.”

 

“How similar?” asked Carl.

 

“A case a few years back in which the killer created a series of murders in order to cover his footsteps in the murder of his estranged girlfriend. This could prove he had planned this all along, that he’s hardly the insane maniac he is presenting himself to be—nail to his head notwithstanding.”

 

“Bag the book, Amos.”

 

“Hey, you forget. I work for the county now. If I bag it, it goes in county evidence lockup. You’d best bag it, Carl.”

 

“At the moment, with Charles Sowards, Hatfield’s dutiful assistant on the job, I believe I’d trust county above our lab right now. Bag it.”

 

“OK, but don’t order me around. I’m not your detective anymore.”

 

“And a sad thing it is, too.”

 

Before Kunati grabbed a bag from the kit he’d brought in with him, Rae, her hands now in gloves, snatched Evil Intent and opened it, flipping through to anything that might be written in the margins, anything highlighted or underscored. “I’m right. Case I’m talking about is marked up and highlighted like a textbook. I’d say Roland showed considerable interest in this case.” She carefully fanned through the rest of the book. “No other section’s been given this sort of intense attention, and the handwriting in the margins—”

 

“Is it a match?” asked Amos. “It matches in several respects.”

 

She then handed the book over to Amos, confident that this would get Roland Hatfield a suite at a prison and not a prison asylum.

 

It brought a confident smile to her lips. “I think we’ve got him, Carl, but this book must be carefully preserved and presented at trial.”

 

“Sure, if it helps nail the bastard—no pun intended.”

 

“You’ll—you need only call me back for the trial. If all three of us testify to having found this here at his bedside, marked up as it is, no jury is going to fall for his charm to—”

 

“Or his lies,” added Amos.

 

“—to send him off to a country club-hopefully.”

 

“Some bedtime reading,” commented Carl.

 

“County has a good record with evidence handling, Dr. Hiyakawa,” Amos assured her. “Not to worry.”

 

And she didn’t. For the first time in all these days, she felt a great weight lifted from her. So much had been riding on this case for the PSI Unit at Quantico, and for her personally after what had happened in Phoenix.

 

When they had exited the building and stood on the street where News cameras followed their every move, and newsmen and women shouted for some comment from them, Carl said in Rae’s ear, “I owe you major apologies, Rae.”

 

Questions were flying like jumping fish. Carl stopped and pulled Rae beside him. “You want some answers?” he shouted to the newshounds. “I’ll lay it out for you.” He quickly tossed out three sentences that summed up the situation, calling Dr. Roland Hatfield a horrible excuse for a man, a man capable of killing innocent women in their beds at night in a depraved manner merely to cover up an initial killing, a killing he had committed against his sister. He finished with, “The man has clearly shown the depth of his depravity and will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. A case like this begs for the reinstatement of capital punishment in our state. Write your Congressmen and legislators.”

 

He then introduced FBI Agent Dr. Aurelia Murphy Hiyakawa to the crowd, explaining, “Dr. Hiyakawa has pretty much single-handedly solved the case for the CPD.”

 

“What precisely does that mean?” asked one aggressive female reporter.

 

Carl smiled and replied, “Without Dr. Hiyakawa and her psychic help, we’d still be searching for the killer, and no doubt in my mind that he’d still be executing innocent victims in that particularly brutal fashion he’d chosen.”

 

# # #

 

 

 

Twenty four hours later in Quantico, Virginia

 

Rae had left Charleston, West Virginia without any fanfare, leaving the city to heal now that the so-called Sleepwalker had been safely put away. When the truth came out about Dr. Roland Hatfield, that he was indeed the Hammerhead killer—alleged, of course—everyone who had known him, a native of the area, a success story, could hardly believe it. No one wanted to believe it. In fact, the news was filled with testimonials from people who didn’t for a moment believe it, certain that their police had once again made the capitol city a laughing stock. Rae knew better.

 

He had done his level best to kill her in the same manner as his earlier victims, and he might’ve succeeded had she not gotten hold of her gun.

 

She also knew she had a good ton of paperwork to fill out on the case. Details, the chief would want every excruciating detail, even those she wasn’t proud of.

 

She put it out of her mind for now, glad to be home. Despite the fact her home was falling down around her. The Queen Anne Bed and Breakfast, as the place was called, needed so much attention and so much money, money she ought to have in her bank account if only it weren’t for the army of lawyers arrayed against her in the divorce settlement. On paper, she was, while not filthy wealthy like Tomi, well off, but it remained on paper. Tomi’s lawyers, shrewd to a man, knew how to hide funds even from the court, and how to slow the process to a snail’s pace. They made a mockery of it, in fact.

 

The Queen Anne needed rewiring, needed new plumbing, needed painting inside and out. It needed experts to save the woodwork and the beautiful Waterford crystal chandeliers, and the stained glass windows, one panel of which, over the door, remained broken, patched with plywood, thanks to a tantrum Nia had thrown.

 

Despite it all, coming home was coming home; few feelings proved as wonderful as stepping through the door after the kind of stress and near death experience she’d had in the field. She believed it would be a cold day in hell before she’d ever return to Charleston save for the day when her testimony would help drive the nails into Roland Hatfield’s coffin: life imprisonment.

 

Her big, rambling Victorian home felt cold inside. Empty. The emptiness quadrupled as she moved from room to empty room, until she found herself standing in Nia’s room. It’d been cleaned out. Not completely and utterly but enough of her things were gone that it appeared there’d been a burglary and the burglar only wanted stuffed a favored set of sheets and spread, animals, matching outfits, shoes—Nia’s stuff. She’d even taken her cat with her, further ramping up the silence here, the emptiness. No living thing in the place except Aurelia, a mother abandoned by her own child.

 

Rae dropped to her knees, and crumpled against her daughter’s bed, stripped of its bedclothes. She cried. She cried for a long time.

 

Something deep within wanted to come to the surface, something dark and quite sinister, something that wanted to hurt Tomi Yoshikani and hurt him to his core, but to let this Grendel rise from out of her, a power so strong and ugly that it frightened Rae herself, she knew it’d turn on her, possibly harm others as well as Tomi, possibly even Nia. She must not give in to hatred and a desire for vengeance.

 

Still she felt violated. She was the primary care giver here, the biological mother, but Nia had, obviously chosen Tomi and life with Tomi over Rae and a life with her mother.

 

Rae cried on, the sobs rocking her body. “This…this is how you get out of that school, Nia? You uproot yourself entirely, and you break my heart?”

 

 

 

TWENTY NINE

 

 

 

Two Months Later

 

 

 

She’d called every night to talk to Nia, and while Nia was civil, she’d made it clear that she wanted to try living with her dad. “Just for a time, Ma…just to see how I like it. Please try to understand.”

 

She tried to understand. Every night she tried to understand. She cried herself to sleep each night as well.

 

In the meantime, she’d been summoned back to Charleston to be on hand at the murder trial of one Dr. Roland Thomas Hatfield, to testify to all that she knew and the attempt on her life. The evidence appeared

 

overwhelming against Hatfield, but his case had attracted a high-powered lawyer, the best in the state, and he was going for an insanity plea.

 

The trial pulled her away from home for days, and in the end, the jury found Hatfield guilty but guilty by reason of insanity—he got it his way. In a sense, he got away with multiple murder. He was well on his way to a federal prison for the criminally insane.

 

Days after the trial, Rae got a letter from Hatfield. She opened it and saw the familiar handwriting, but it now looked more relaxed, at ease. Hatfield wanted something from Rae. He wanted her to come see him, to see firsthand how far he’d come along already, and he said he had a business proposition for her.

 

She paid little attention to the cryptic note or the madman’s request. One day at her Quantico office, however, she mentioned the letter to Raule, and he became instantly interested. He sat down and read the letter over— twice. He then said, “You have to go see this creep, Rae.”

 

“What?”

 

“It’s an opportunity to conduct interviews, learn more about the enemy—something we—”

 

“Whoa up, there, boss!”

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