“Yeah, well, guess what? Your name's already come up as a suspect. In fact, it was Rafe Christien who told us that you liked to mess around with her. He's sitting in NOPD lockup, by the way.”
Gabe frowned and stood up. “That's because I put the local cops onto him.”
“You been sleeping with her, Gabe?”
“Hell, no. Why?”
“Because she was pregnant when she died. Which might turn out to be the motive. You may have to give us a paternity test, unless your DEA boss can fix it with my sheriff.”
“She can fix it. I'm getting close to taking down the entire Skulls outfit. But I've got no problem taking the test, if you want me to. The kid's not mine. She slept with nearly all the Skulls, one time or another. She turned tricks at Voodoo River. It could be anybody's baby.”
“Any of those guys into voodoo rituals?”
Gabe smiled. “They like to wear the skulls and crosses and all that shit, but none of them practice it. Why?”
“Because Madonna's body was found right up there in your old dining room, smack dab in the middle of a voodoo altar.”
Gabe glanced up at the dark house. “Man, Mom and Dad would've hated that.” He looked back at her.
Claire said, “Do you still miss them and Sophie?”
“Yeah. I've felt all alone for a long, long time. It's hard not having a family, especially right now at Christmastime. I've got my uncles and aunts, though. They try to be there for me when I need them. And I've got you every five years or so.”
Claire smiled, but she knew all about not having a family. She didn't like thinking about it. “I heard about your parents' car wreck, but not until a long time after it happened. I'm sorry I wasn't around to help you get through the funeral. I can't believe you lost them all at once, even poor little Sophie. That's just awful, Gabe.”
“Clyde and Luc and the other guys kept me sane, somehow.” Gabe wouldn't look at her, obviously not wanting to talk about the deaths of his parents and only sister because he quickly changed the subject. “How bad was it for Madonna?”
“Horrendous. She was beaten black and blue. The killer sewed her eyes and mouth shut with heavy-duty thread.”
Gabe looked repulsed. “No shit? Sounds like a whack job's on the loose.”
“Yeah.” Claire sighed. “And we aren't getting much yet, either.”
“You will. A scene like that should give up lots of evidence. Any suspects?”
“Jack Holliday's a suspect.”
“The Tulane football star? No way. He was a great quarterback when I went there.”
“You ever see him with her?”
“No, but I remember her talking about him all the time. She had it bad, but I was pretty sure she was makin' all that stuff up. From some of the stories I heard, I figured she was stalking the guy.”
“You're probably right. He's got alibi witnesses all over the place. Problem is, we got his prints on a glass at the murder scene, and he says he's never been there.”
“Could've been planted, I guess.”
“Yeah, I thought of that.”
“I'd believe him, if I were you. Like I said, Maddie was fucked up, big time. Her brother didn't help, either. Rafe gave her anything she wanted to get high on, and she wasn't particular about what she took. Anything that numbed her to her life did it for her.” Gabe hesitated, looked away, out over the slow bayou current just barely visible in the boat lights, and then back at her.
“I hate to tell you this, but Madonna was one of my confidential informants.”
“She was a CI? Are you kidding me?”
“Why'd you think I sweated her taking drugs so much? She started using more after I recruited her.”
“You're damn lucky DEA's gonna back you up, Gabe. Otherwise, you'd look pretty damn guilty. They're gonna say you wanted to get rid of her because she was going to blow your cover. You're playing a dangerous game here.”
Gabe shrugged. “I'm used to it.”
“Would anybody in the Skulls kill her?”
“Sure. Hell, they give out special patches for murdering people. But none of them have the intellect to think of leaving her on an altar with her orifices violated.”
“Well, did anybody get a shiny new kill patch this week?”
Gabe laughed, and he did look good when he smiled, even with that stupid chin braid. “Nope, and I would've heard about it. They get drunk and run their mouths. Most of them are fine with her. Unless they found out she was a CI. If that's why they killed her, I'm next.”
Claire wondered how he could stand being part of such a sleazy, violent, disgusting world. “What about voodoo? You sure none of them are into that?”
“Pretty sure it's all talk.”
Claire said, “When are you getting out, Gabe? They're gonna find you out, sooner or later. You do know that, right?”
Gabe shrugged again. “I've got almost enough on them to shut it down. I'm gonna make sure that every single one of them goes down on drug charges.” He glanced inside the galley windows. “I came out here once to see if I could find you. You had beer in the fridge. How about a drink before I take off?”
“You've been coming out here looking for me?”
“Yeah, heard you were back and wanted to see you. I think a lot about the good old days when we were little and you lived with us. You ever think about it?”
“Yeah. A lot's happened since then.”
“True. We went our separate ways, that's for damn sure.”
“God, Gabe, it's good to see you again.”
“I've read about you in the newspapers, y'know. You're quite the famous detective. You still dating that shrink?”
“Yeah, but I'm kinda ticked off at him at the moment. C'mon, let's sit down and catch up.”
Gabe walked inside and got them cold bottles of Dixie beer. They sat down across from each other at the round picnic table on the upper aft deck. They just talked for about an hour, smiling and remembering all the times when they'd fished off the bank and shot at birds with slingshots and stolen the best sugar cookies in the world out of his mother's pink-and-white-flowered cookie jar.
“So, Gabe, tell me, who's your squeeze with the classy tattoo on her boob? You get married and not tell the family?”
“Bonnie's FBI.”
Well, that shocked the hell out of Claire. “No way.”
“We work together. She's good, but she's reckless and takes way too many chances. That's why I keep her so close to me. If she's my old lady, the other guys won't bother her.”
“Sexually assault her, you mean?”
Gabe didn't answer, which probably meant yes.
“How'd you come up with that ridiculous name? Rocco? Come on.”
“Had a nice ring to it.”
“What's the last name?”
“Ramone.”
Claire leaned back her head and laughed out loud. “Rocco Ramone. That is just downright pitiful.”
They drank and talked and listened to the night sounds of the bayou for a while. Finally, Gabe said, “I'll see what I can find out about Maddie. Just don't expect much. I don't think the Skulls were involved. I would've heard something by now.”
“Thanks. Things just aren't adding up very fast. Madonna was with lots of men, but we haven't found anybody with a real motive. Except for Holliday, because of the stalking. And now we got the CI thing, which could be a reason. I don't think Holliday did it. He's way too eager to prove his innocence. But maybe he's slick. Using voodoo as a distraction sounds more like him than your biker buddies.”
“Some killers come off as white as snow. He had a motive. She was driving him crazy. I can attest to that. Could be she was accusing him of fathering her baby. He sure wouldn't want the press to get hold of that.”
“He was in New York with lots of eye witnesses. So he could've hired it done. The Skulls are all thugs for hire. And the Montenegro family's into lots of criminal activities.”
Claire stiffened at the Montenegro name. Black had a closer association with the Montenegros than anyone knew, not that he was ever involved with their underworld dealings, true, but very few people knew about the connection. And she didn't want Gabe to know about it, either. Fortunately, the sound of a car approaching interrupted their conversation. They both stood up. Gabe looked at her.
“Who's that? Your partner? You didn't tell him who I was, did you? You can't tell anybody. You gotta promise me.”
“No, of course, I won't. It's probably Black out looking for me. We had a little disagreement. He's determined we're going to talk about it tonight.”
“Good, I'll get a look at him. See if he's really good enough for you.”
“Well, just keep your mouth shut and let me handle it. He's a shrink, and he's good at it. He'll see right through your biker act. He's jealous sometimes, too, but he's too polite to attack you outright. But he can handle himself, trust me, so don't sell him short. I've seen him in action.”
Gabe gave a low laugh. “I was jealous over you, too, once a long time ago. 'Member the time you went fishin' with Freddy Sabattein at his secret fishing hole and didn't tell me? Boy, was I ever pissed at you. Especially when you caught a whole string of crappie to fry up for supper.”
“Yeah, you wouldn't speak to me for two days. Okay, just sit right there, look tough, and say nothing. It'll go better, believe me.”
Gabe merely grinned, apparently enjoying her predicament. Ignoring him, Claire watched Black's Range Rover appear just as she predicted. She walked down the gangplank to meet him and to keep him away from Gabe.
A Very Scary Man
Once back at the assassin's condemned house where Malice planned to keep his victims until the maze was complete, he carried his old girlfriend's two children inside and laid them in front of his impressive voodoo altar. He had prepared it earlier and with the sole intention of scaring the hell out of anybody unlucky enough to be trapped inside the house with it. He tied the two kids to lawn chairs first off, binding their legs and feet with tape. They were still sleeping peacefully, poor little drugged sacrificial lambs. He hated them, almost as much as he hated their dead parents. But at least they were going to provide him with some pleasure. But, first things first. He got out the battery-operated tattoo gun he'd purchased for a pittance in the slums of Mumbai and started with the little girl. Her arms were taped palms up on the arms of the chair so he started inking the tattoo of his Veve at the inside of her wrist. He drew it carefully freehand, just as he intended to draw it on every one of his future victims. It was his gift to the Loa he had adopted. Papa Damballah would be pleased to see his symbols worn upon such a young and innocent person and would bless the kills sacrificed to him.
But he had special plans that day for the boy, the child whose birth had ruined his life. He pulled off the boy's sweatshirt, laid him on the floor, and carefully tattooed his thin wrist. Now he belonged solely to Malice, and so did his little sister. And they would belong to him for as long as they lived, which might be a very long time or might just be a few more hours. It depended on how much fun they turned out to be. He was all-powerful, like his patron Loa.
After he was finished inking his tribute to Papa Damballah, he bound the boy's hands together and tossed the end of the rope over one of the cellar's ceiling beams. He hoisted him up far enough so that he would be able to stand after he came to. Both of them were still deeply unconscious and had not moved a muscle throughout all his preparations. Good, that's what he wanted. He took his cigarette lighter and began to light all the white candles around his altar and then took time to go behind the screen and slather his face with black and white paint.
After he molded his face to look like a smiling skeleton, he poured a good amount of cornmeal on the floor and drew the same Veve in it that he had inked onto the children's arms. Still, neither of them moved, which was beginning to get on his nerves. Impatient to start his fun and games, he almost woke them, but decided against it. He didn't want them to be groggy. He wanted them to feel fear and terror and despair, wanted to see them shake and tremble and suffer and beg him to stop.
Moving behind a screen, he sat down and watched them and ate a package of barbecue potato chips and a can of Vienna sausages. He was starving. He had been so eager to finish his vendetta that he had skipped lunch. He got a Coke out of the crushed ice in his cooler and leaned back and waited some more.
At long last, the boy came to and struggled desperately to free himself, but that was futile. Malice watched him swing on the ropes and heard all the muffled yells of panic underneath the duct tape covering his mouth. Most of all, he enjoyed the absolute terror in the boy's eyes, reflected in the mirror he'd set up so the boy could see his own predicament, especially when the kid managed to twist around enough to see his little sister taped to the chair. He started trying to wake her up, his cries muffled and pathetic. The little girl still did not move.
Malice slipped on his red devil mask and stepped outside, where the kid dangling on the ropes could see him. The boy went rigid, eyes huge and shocked. He approached the twelve-year-old, reached out and grabbed his hair. His young captive tried to jerk free and kicked out hysterically at him. This one was going to be a handful, but he liked that. The boy had guts, just like his daddy; he'd give them both that. He picked up the cat-o'-nine-tails rawhide whip that he had bought in Shanghai and slapped it in his open palm. He came up close and stared into the boy's bulging eyes. He made his whisper low and gruff and impossible to recognize.
“Meet your new daddy, kiddo. You and little sis over there are gonna live with me from now on. And we're gonna have all sorts of fun. Know what else? You're gonna do every single thing I tell you, or I'll make your little sister pay for you bein' obstinate. Got that? I'll string her up here instead of you, understand me, boy? Understand what I'm a sayin' to you?”
The boy struggled impotently and looked frantic, but after a few minutes, he stilled and just hung there.
“Ever heard anybody say âthe sins of the father,' sonny? That's what we got here. That's why I'm a gonna whoop on you until you bleed. Got that? Okay, hold still now, it's time for your very first whoopin'.”
Smiling in anticipation, Malice pulled back the whip and sent it slicing through the air. He'd been practicing his aim on stray dogs, and the practice had done him good. The leather lash hit the boy's in the middle of his back and cut a long red streak across it, exactly where Malice had intended. The boy jerked but didn't scream. So he flicked it against him again, harder this time and with more sting.
Malice stopped and watched the blood now dripping down the cut on the kid's back, like water oozing over a wall. The kid moaned some, but he still wasn't pleading and whimpering the way Malice wanted him to. So he hit him again, and then again, and then again, crisscrossing the blows in a nice neat little tic-tac-toe pattern. Smiling, he stopped for a moment. He felt a great satisfaction well up inside him. Yes, it did feel good to wreak his revenge at long last. Really, really good, in fact. And the boy would eventually beg for mercy. Oh, yes, he would. Malice wouldn't stop until he did.
For the next week, he kept them locked in the dark, dank cellar, pretty much drugged up during the daytime while he worked. His double murder of their parents was all over the front pages of the parish newspapers, and the New Orleans television stations were all over it. Everybody in town was upset and afraid, so the police went on high alert and put out a curfew for all young kids. They were searching all over the parish for the perpetrator so he had to play that game along with everybody else and pretend that he felt sad for the family. How ironic was that? They had search teams from all over the state coming in to look for the two kids, but he wasn't worried.
There was no way they would ever find them. The assassin's old house was on private property and was boarded up and isolated and overgrown and very few people knew it was behind the tall brick wall edging the river. Even if someone came around, the kids were in the root cellar secure in a hidden wooden box with air holes, unconscious and silent. He was not worried in the least. He would just have to wait until things cooled down some, and then he would take them upstairs where he had built a mini maze for them to play in, one that was just as terrifying as the real one. But in the worst case scenario, and even if the search parties did manage to locate the children someday, they could never pin him to the murders or to the kidnapping. He made damn sure of that. The kids would never get a look at his face.
Then at night, when he got off, he would return and force them upstairs where he would chase them around inside the boarded-up first floor and jump out and catch the little girl. Her big brother was very protective and took her whippings for her. That was fine by him. His true love would've come back to him if she hadn't gotten pregnant by the boy's father. Then the boy had been born, tying his true love to the other man forever.
Sometimes, he'd take the girl upstairs and pull her hair or shake her violently, just to make her scream and cry, because he knew that tormented her brother even more than the daily beatings, but he rarely ever really hurt the little sister much. She was a pretty sweet little thing, to be sure. Just a slap now and then to shut her up or make her mind him. She would just cower and cry and plead, and that was no fun for him. He liked her brother better. He had so much grit and gumption. Brave as the day was long.
Although he still hated the boy, he had to respect his courage. No matter how many times he hit him, the boy set his jaw and refused to beg. It was really something to see, all right. He wasn't even sure that he would be able to do that if his back were being lashed. But he always stopped before the boy passed out. And then he doctored him carefully and gave him painkillers and didn't touch him for a time, so that he wouldn't die. He didn't really want to go that far. In fact, he might even let both of them go, since they'd ended up giving him so much enjoyment.
One night he forced them into a tunnel he'd made out of barrels positioned end to end, so that he could beat on the metal and listen to the girl scream and cry. He could see them through tiny holes he'd drilled in the barrels but they couldn't see him. He had other holes on the sides, where he could thrust in sticks to prod them in one direction or the other, depending on what he wanted to do to them. He was having a ball, and they were becoming more docile with each passing day.
After about a month without detection, he no longer worried about being found out. The investigation was running into dead ends, and nobody suspected him, not a single soul. So elated with the success of his very first double murder and abduction, he went back out to the house by boat in the middle of the night. Eager to see his playthings again, he opened the cellar door and went down the steps, wearing his devil's mask, his heart racing with excitement. He had a new experience for them tonight. A cold water drenching that he'd jerry-rigged up out of odds and ends.
To his utter shock, the two kids were gone. Oh, God, they had escaped! He finally found where a board had been pulled off a window. The boy must have found something with which to pry it off. Malice leaned out and got a quick glimpse of them running through the moonlight back toward the old graveyard on the edge of the swamp. He ran back upstairs and grabbed his shotgun and headed out after them. He could see their silhouettes in the distance, running for all they were worth. They wouldn't get far, not with the boy nursing the lashing he'd given him the night before. Malice couldn't believe he had actually been able to get up and run so soon after his injuries. Then, suddenly, they just disappeared into thin air.
Frantic, he searched everywhere and heard nothing, no splashing of water, no panting or thud of running footsteps. Then he realized they were probably hiding among the gravestones. He moved into the cemetery and stood very still, listening in the quiet night. He could hear the wind in the trees and the distant rush of the river. But then another sound came to him, a low whimper, and it came from somewhere very close by. They were hiding in one of the crumbling burial crypts. He followed the sound and jerked open the wood door and flashed his light inside. The little girl was in there all right, huddled in the corner and hiding her face, but the boy wasn't. He had gotten clean away, probably thinking he had hidden his sister well enough while he ran for help.
Cursing, he grabbed her out and dragged her back to the house. Damn it, now he'd have to get rid of her. The boy probably wouldn't make it through the swamps alive, not in his condition and with his back dripping blood, and not with so many alligators swarming in the stagnant water back there. He would never make it to town. He'd end up on the bottom in a gator's nest, or what was left of him. But he couldn't take that chance. So he put his hands on both sides of the girl's head and gave it a sharp jerk. Her fragile little neck snapped easily with a crunch of bones but no pain. He walked to the side of the bayou and tossed her out into the still and murky water. It didn't take the gators long to discover her. He watched a moment until the biggest gator got a good hold on her body and took her down under the water. Damn it, he hadn't wanted to kill that cute little girl. He liked her. She was a real sweetie pie. It was her brother's fault that Malice had been forced to do such a terrible thing.
So Malice went hunting. Big brother would have to die, too, as soon as he tracked him down. That was fine with him. He had grown tired of the boy's stubborn resistance, anyway. The kid couldn't have gotten far, not in the shape he was in. Malice headed out into the swamp, following the boy's trail with a flashlight, shotgun in hand. He needed to find the boy before dawn and finish him off, because he had to be at work in the morning at nine o'clock sharp or risk getting his pay docked.