Read Eclipse Online

Authors: Hilary Norman

Eclipse (2 page)

He forced himself to look back at Amelia Newton.

The crime perpetrated on her was – even by the standards of an experienced homicide detective – bizarre and appalling.

She lay in the center of her double bed, tidily positioned. Her body, from the shoulders down, lay on a patchwork-style quilt covering the bed. She appeared fully clothed in turquoise cotton slacks and white T-shirt.

Her clothes and the quilt were blood-splattered.

Beneath her neck and head, someone had spread a sheet of latex, covering, but not really protecting, the pillows propping her up.

Three pillows, Sam counted, and a lot of blood.

A rectangle of foam lay on the floor to the left of the bed. It looked like the foam insert of a cushion, and it was scarred, burned-looking, had probably been used as a silencer.

If the killer had been true to form, toxicology would eventually show that Ms Newton had been sedated not long before death with a large dose of Diazepam. Almost tasteless, easy to mix with food or drink.

Duval came over, holding a Polaroid shot.

‘This was how she was found,' he said. ‘By her sister, who was coming for dinner. She had her own key. She'd brought wine, says they were going to order takeout and watch a movie.'

In the Polaroid, Amelia Newton was wearing a pair of oversized, very dark sunglasses.

‘Her sister says she's sure the glasses weren't Amelia's.'

‘Were the other victims wearing sunglasses?' Sam asked.

Duval shook his head. ‘In Orlando, it was a sleep mask. The victim's husband said he thought his wife had kept it from an overnight airline flight. In Jupiter, it was gauze covered by Band-Aids. In Naples, the victim's white-gloved hands were covering the wounds.'

Sam made himself look back at Amelia Newton again.

At her face.

Her eyes.

Or rather, the hideous, dark cavities where her eyes had been.

Two deep, round wounds.

Black holes, probably created – like the first three – by .380 ACP cartridges.

Not big slugs, but enough to do the job.

Sam suddenly wished he hadn't finished his ribs. He took a breath, became aware of the mix of odors in the room, tried separating them – blood and death, the lingering smell of burned foam, and something else . . . And then he reminded himself that he was not the investigator here, and quit trying so hard.

‘Some night off, huh?' Duval said quietly.

‘Yeah,' Sam said. ‘Thanks for sharing.'

Grace Lucca Becket sat in her airline seat, sipping a martini, contemplating the days ahead and admitting to herself that as much as she would rather have been making this trip with Sam, it was kind of fun sitting up here with her drink ahead of dinner and, she hoped, a reasonable night's rest.

A pleasant kind of limbo.

‘And don't go spoiling it with guilt,' Claudia had told her yesterday.

‘As if,' Grace had answered wryly.

All her family knew her talent for that most pointless of emotions. Though having committed herself to this trip, Grace's intention was to make the most of it. A good hotel outside Zurich, and the conference itself, with the stimulus of fellow professionals all with the same fundamental interest at heart.

Helping troubled kids.

Which was, of course, what she tried to do at home in her role as a child and adolescent psychologist. No need, therefore, for trips to Switzerland or any other place.

This was Magda's doing. Dr Magda Shrike, fellow psychologist, long-time mentor and valued friend, with whom Grace had been sharing work space for about a year.

The theme of the International Conference on Child Developmental Psychology to be held in Zurich, Switzerland, from May 10–12, was to be ‘Emotional education: drawing together the best to help give troubled young people the best'.

The speakers had been booked long ago, but illness had created an opening in the teenage psychology group, and an acquaintance of Magda's had asked her to suggest someone who could step up.

‘There must be any number of more suitable people,' Grace had said.

‘No one more suitable that I can think of,' her friend had told her.

‘That's very flattering, but I'm not sure it's true.'

‘From my perspective, it is.'

‘And is this the next stage, perhaps, of your therapy plan for me?'

Because Magda Shrike, as her own psychologist, had been helping Grace to continue her recovery from a series of traumatic events and, most notably, her all-consuming guilt over what had happened last May.

When Grace had killed a man.

It was extraordinary, she often thought, the horrors that people did manage to get past, if not over. Sufficiently, at least, to continue their lives; to go on, in her case, being a wife and mother, sister, daughter-in-law, aunt, and psychologist.

She had argued against accepting, but with Sam and Claudia both backing Magda, Grace had capitulated. So here she was tonight, wishing she had a satellite phone to use for a goodnight call to Sam, even if it would be disproportionately expensive.

But worth every cent.

May 9

At night, he read ceaselessly, driven by insomnia and his never-sated hunger for learning.

He had studied for so long, filling his brain with knowledge, had a passionate love for his chosen profession, yet that never stopped him exploring other fields. The mind, after all, being an infinite repository, requiring constant exercise and restocking, at work even when the body slept.

Excess sleep was the greatest waste known to man.

His walls were covered with diplomas and certificates attesting to his achievements and qualifications, and his shelves were filled with books. He had the facility to speed-read, but preferred to take his time.

Words and images reaching his brain courtesy of rods and cones in the outermost layer of neurons in his retinas, sending their signals to the middle layer of bipolar neurons, relaying their signals in turn to the optic nerve fibers in the third layer – and this was what he was reading about right now, the myriad miracles of vision.

Eyes, presently his area of fascination.

He was a proud man. No strutting peacock, but proud of what he had achieved. Of what he could do for others. Prouder of two letters after his name than of anything else.

MD.

He was a medical man.

A doctor.

That sang in his brain.

The most important thing a person could aspire to being.

A
doctor.

‘Someone leaked Black Hole.'

Alejandro Martinez, Sam's partner and close friend of many years, a stocky, middle-aged Cuban-American with dark, sharp, expressive eyes, was already at his desk when Sam arrived in the Violent Crimes office.

They'd spoken last night, Sam bringing Martinez up to speed on his evening. Now Martinez held up the
Herald
for Sam to see.

‘
Black Hole Killer Strikes in Fort Lauderdale

Florida Victim # 4!'

Sam took the newspaper, scanned the piece and shook his head.

‘Getting too close, man,' Martinez said.

‘Tell me about it,' Sam said.

‘Grace arrive safe?'

Sam smiled. ‘Sure did. She called soon as they landed. Sounded a little tired, but fine.'

‘She has the day to rest, right?'

‘And take a look around.'

‘Meantime, we're due at the range,' Martinez said.

Sam grimaced, always a little antsy about the yearly State Qual.

Shooting not his favorite pastime.

Especially when the targets were human.

At the seven-bay range on the fifth floor of the Miami Beach Police Department headquarters building, waiting with Detectives Mary Cutter and Joe Sheldon for the range master to give his first order, Sam's mind returned to the odor he'd smelled in the victim's bedroom last evening.

‘I still can't nail it, and it's bugging me.'

‘The FLPD and Duval got noses too,' Martinez said. ‘Don't worry about it.'

‘You're right,' Sam said. ‘Not our problem.'

‘Let's hope it stays that way.'

‘You'd better believe it,' Sam said, putting on his headset.

‘Make your weapons ready, and holster.' The range master's voice came through loud and clear.

Sam, Martinez and the other detectives loaded up their magazines, moved to their respective bays, made ready and holstered their firearms. Unloaded again, reloaded, holstered.

Sam was tense now, his mind clear, knowing the routine – holster, fire, holster; good with his weapon, fast and effective, but never complacent.

‘When the target turns, you have two seconds to draw and fire two rounds from the hip position, cover your target, then holster,' the range master instructed them. ‘Ready on the line.
Gun
.'

The target turned.

Sam fired.

‘I think you might need glasses,' David Becket told his wife, Mildred, as they sat in their backyard on yet another gorgeous morning, reading and drinking coffee.

Both in their mid-sixties, they had only married a year before. A second marriage for David, Sam's adoptive father and a retired pediatrician; a first for Mildred, whose life up until a couple of years ago had been far from easy.

They were very happy together.

‘I do not need glasses, old man,' she said. ‘I can read as well as I ever could, maybe even better.'

‘Uh-huh,' David said.

‘What does that mean?' Mildred set her book on her lap.

‘Just that you've been peering at things lately. And frowning too.' He paused. ‘Look down there.'

‘What am I looking at?'

‘That bird to the right of the pond.'

‘What about it?'

‘Describe it to me.'

Mildred's mouth tightened. ‘I'm not a child.'

‘You can't see it, can you?'

‘Of course I can see it,' she said. ‘It's a bird. It has wings. Now lay off.'

‘It's a white-winged parakeet,' David said.

‘Whoop de doo,' she said.

‘You've never been nearsighted before,' he said.

‘I can see the damned bird,' Mildred said.

David looked at her sideways. ‘Mildred, are you having problems with your eyes?'

She sighed. ‘You want me to have an eye test.'

‘I don't think it would hurt,' he said. ‘I'll come with you.'

‘I may possibly need glasses' – Mildred was scathing – ‘but I am far from helpless.'

‘I'm glad to hear it, but I'd still like to come.'

‘You didn't come with me the last time.'

‘You said you preferred to be independent, as I recall.'

‘As I still do,' Mildred said.

‘Who was it you went to?'

‘I don't recall offhand.'

David smiled. ‘That's OK. We can go to my optometrist.'

‘I'd prefer to go to my own,' Mildred said.

‘What's going on, Mildred?'

‘Nothing is going on, except that you're starting to get me mad.'

‘Why?' he persisted. ‘I've expressed the mildest concern that you might not be seeing as well as you used to.'

‘You're bullying me,' she said.

‘Nonsense,' David said.

The parakeet flew away.

‘The bird left,' Mildred said.

‘You had to screw up your eyes to see that,' David said gently.

She sighed. ‘I guess I did.'

‘And is the glare bothering you?' He smiled. ‘I only ask because you've been wearing sunglasses more than you used to.'

She didn't answer.

‘Mildred, why are you reacting this way?' he persevered.

She took another moment. ‘Because I'm scared.'

‘Of what?' David was surprised and concerned.

‘If you really insist on knowing,' she said stiffly, ‘I'm squeamish about my eyes. I'm afraid of going to the eye doctor.'

‘But you've been before.'

‘No, I haven't,' Mildred said quietly. ‘I just told you that I went.'

‘You said your vision was perfect.' Now he was astonished.

‘I don't believe I used that word.'

‘You led me to believe it.'

Mildred's cheeks were warm. ‘I'm not proud of this.'

‘So when did you last have an eye test?'

‘When I was a teenager. In New York City.' She paused. ‘I hated it so much that I ran out and vomited.'

‘How horrible for you,' he said. ‘Do you know what upset you so much?'

‘The whole thing.' Mildred had grown pale. ‘The doctor sat very close, and . . .' She shook her head. ‘I don't even like talking about it. I know it's idiotic, but I can't help it.'

‘It's not idiotic,' he said.

‘Yes, it is,' she said. ‘It's foolish and irrational and cowardly.'

‘You're no coward,' David said. ‘You're a remarkable, brave woman with a tiny weakness, which we can deal with together.'

‘I can deal with it,' Mildred said, ‘by staying away from eye doctors.'

‘No,' David said. ‘That has to stop.'

She leaned back in her chair, and then, after a few moments, sighed.

‘So what do you think is wrong with my eyes, Doctor?'

‘I think it's possible that you might have the start of cataracts.'

‘Will I go blind?' she asked bluntly.

‘Only if you ignore them for long enough.' He paused. ‘Will you let me help you with this?'

‘I don't want to go blind,' she said.

‘Is that a yes?' David asked.

‘I guess it is,' Mildred said.

In the room of dead things, the one who made them, who took them, living or inanimate, and turned them into little corpses, was working again.

Another doll, this one wearing turquoise cotton slacks and a white T-shirt.

The T-shirt was stained with dark red splatters.

Like blood.

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