Sweet Dreams Boxed Set (78 page)

Read Sweet Dreams Boxed Set Online

Authors: Brenda Novak,Allison Brennan,Cynthia Eden,Jt Ellison,Heather Graham,Liliana Hart,Alex Kava,Cj Lyons,Carla Neggers,Theresa Ragan,Erica Spindler,Jo Robertson,Tiffany Snow,Lee Child

“So where do Mary Margaret and Mona Lisa figure into this? And why kill the priest?”

“The Seven Seals. The Apocalypse. The end of time. When a Messiah will come again and lead those worthy to the kingdom of heaven? The killings are representative of the seals. He’s creating his own version of the Apocalypse. Maybe he got the idea from the lecture Father Xavier gave at the community breakfast. Maybe it had been brewing in his head all along.”

She could hear paper rustling in the background.

“I realize this isn’t perfect, and as far as I can tell he didn’t go through all of the seven seals, but this makes sense to me. If he’s trying to create a messiah, doesn’t there have to be an end of the world?”

Taylor gave him an exasperated laugh. “Baldwin, it’s been a long time since I went to Bible study.”

“Me too, so this may be all wrong. But here goes. Shelby Kincaid was killed at the Parthenon, the figurative lap of Rome. She represents the whore of Babylon, the fall of the seven hills. She is poisoned and purified, ready for the Lamb of God. Jordan Blake was stabbed and thrown in the Cumberland, the blood from her stab wounds turning the rivers to blood. Mona Lisa was poisoned and thrown into Old Hickory Lake. She has AIDS, she poisons the water and the seas die. Mary Margaret de Rossi gave her life over to the church and was purified by fire; she becomes The Last Martyr. Father Francis Xavier was representative of Heaven—by killing him, he silences Heaven.”

Taylor was silent. This was a quite a theory. Baldwin continued his explanation.

“The tornado was just an added bonus. I would say it represents the winds being unleashed from the four corners of the earth. He certainly didn’t have any control over it, but it fits nicely, don’t you think? It would affirm his path, a true sign from God.”

“I think you’re out of your ever-loving mind, is what I think. I know this guy is a nut, but why in the world would he go to such lengths to create an apocalypse?”

“Because he thinks he is creating our messiah. He needs the Apocalypse to fulfill the ancient prophecies. He needs the Apocalypse to legitimize his son. He believes his unborn child is the Messiah.”

Taylor started slowing the car. They were getting close to the address, and in the heavy dusk it would be easy to shoot right by the driveway. Most were discretely hidden in this part of town.

“So by creating life, and putting the proper sacrifices in order, he thinks he’s created all the steps of the Apocalypse and his son will be the Messiah. He is one seriously screwed up dude.”

“Yes, he is. And apocalypse or not, right now, let’s worry about saving Jill Gates’s life. I hope to God she’s still alive. Marcus and I just pulled up to Granny White.”

“Roger that. Fitz and I are almost at the Hillsboro address. Be careful, okay?”

“Right. You be careful too. Bye.”

Price’s disembodied voice crackled from the radio. “We’re at site three, and we have renters on the property. Repeat, this is a rental, and the checks go to site two. This site is clear. Copy?”

Fitz spoke into the radio. “Fourteen copies. Eighteen, what’s your twenty?”

Marcus logged in to the conversation. “Eighteen at site two. We’re about to go into the house now. We’ll be radio silent for a few minutes while we check this place out.”

“Copy that, eighteen. Fourteen out.” Fitz put the mike back on the hook. “Okay, sunshine, you ready to rock this?”

Taylor looked over at Fitz and gave him a smile. “Absolutely.”

 

 

Seventy

 

Marcus and Baldwin walked carefully around the perimeter of the small Cape Cod on Granny White Pike. A real estate agent would call it charming; a buyer in their right mind would see a fixer upper. Even in the faltering light, they could see the white paint needed refreshing. Ants foraged in the windowsills. Several unkempt azalea shrubs grew wild around the base of the house; while they would be spectacular when they bloomed in the spring, now they just looked sick and straggly. There were no lights on inside.

Baldwin went carefully up the stairs and onto the front porch. The boards creaked and he froze, signaling to Marcus to take the route leading to the back door. He waited until the younger man disappeared around the corner, then stepped as softly as possible to the front door. He took up a sheltered position to the right, where he could stand out of the line of sight, keep his weapon drawn and still open the door freely. He reached for the doorknob and carefully started to turn it. It moved easily, and he stopped. The front door was unlocked.

Marcus appeared silently at the edge of the porch. Baldwin pointed to the doorknob and nodded. Marcus made his way carefully to Baldwin, then whispered to him.

“The back door is boarded up from the outside. Looks like it’s been that way for a while. I don’t think anyone is here.”

“Okay,” Baldwin whispered back. “The front door is open. Let’s do it.”

Marcus nodded and drew his weapon. Baldwin counted off one, two, three on his fingers, then turned the knob and flung the door open. He and Marcus burst into the open foyer. A stunning antique roll top desk greeted them, and an oriental runner led down a close hallway.

Baldwin took the lead and walked silently down the hall. It ended into a large kitchen, white cabinets and counters gleaming in the dark. A combination eat-in kitchen and great room was on their left. They could see the room was empty. Another dark hallway led off the kitchen to the right. Two doors were visible, closed. Another was open. Bedrooms.

Baldwin motioned to Marcus. They moved into the hallway, listening for any noise. They reached the open door. Baldwin stuck his head in and saw a neat bathroom. He pulled back into the hallway as Marcus opened the next door. The room was empty; a shell nightlight plugged into the wall illuminated a bed made up with a hand-sewn quilt. It struck Baldwin that this house didn’t look like it belonged to a young college professor; it was the sort of home you’d expect from a retired grandmother.

Baldwin reached the next door and silently turned the knob. The door swung open, and the coppery scent of old blood assailed his nose. This room was a duplicate of the first, but the nightlight spun dark shadows on the bed and walls. It smelled of death.

Marcus whispered a quick, “We’re clear.” Baldwin nodded, holstered his weapon and turned on the light with the back of his hand. The bedspread was black with blood, the wall to the right of the bed sprayed with an arc of dark red.  Cast off. The knife had swung away from its target, blood flying off of it, creating a Pollock-esque pattern on the wall. An expert would be able to tell them every tiny detail of how the blood got there, every strike into flesh. Baldwin immediately thought of the autopsy photos of Jordan Blake. The gaping stab wounds in her young body must have been the ultimate cause of the stains.

He turned to Marcus and shook his head. They’d definitely found the killing house. He made his way back to the kitchen, snapping on extra lights as he went. When the room was fully illuminated, he started opening cabinets and drawers. In addition to the usual kitchen accouterments, he found a large, white-and-green bottle with a stopper top. The label read
Aconite
, and had directions for use. It looked like it came from a store, like any other vitamin or supplements. Baldwin remembered Lincoln mentioning that aconite could be bought over the Internet from many different sources. How convenient.

He opened it and took a whiff of the contents. He couldn’t smell anything. Marcus came into the kitchen, looking pale. Baldwin showed him the bottle. “Bastard  bought it from somewhere. Man, that’s spooky. The Internet isn’t helping our jobs, is it?”

Baldwin gave him a sad smile. “No, it’s not. Time to call this in.”

Leaving all the lights burning, they retreated carefully, out the hallway to the front door, down the creaking porch steps to their car. Their backup was pulling up in their squad car. Marcus waved to them, then slid in the drivers seat and keyed the microphone.

“This is eighteen at site two. Evidence galore. Bottle of something that starts with an A.”

They were being as cryptic as possible in case one of the media radios had accidentally been tuned to their frequency.

“Eighteen, is that our COD?” Fitz answered brusquely.

“Yes, fourteen, it is. We have biologicals in a back bedroom, too, otherwise site two is clear. Nobody home. Copy?”

“Copy eighteen. Request you call Sam’s team to site two, then meet us at site three, please. Copy?”

“Copy that.” Marcus turned to Baldwin. “Let’s get the crime scene techs out here and head on to Hillsboro. I’ve got a bad feeling about this.”

The Hillsboro address was their last chance. Baldwin sent up a silent prayer Taylor and Fitz would find Jill safe.

 

 

Seventy-One

 

Taylor slowed and shut off her lights, pulled into the long driveway of the single-story rambler. There were no cars in the drive, and the lights weren’t burning. She looked around for better cover and saw a small road forking off to the right. It was unused and unpaved, overgrown with weeds.

“This place must be worth a fortune.” Fitz was looking at the land greedily. “Even though the house looks small, the land’s gotta be worth half a million, at the very least. Man, I’d kill for a spread like this.”

Taylor raised an eyebrow and gave him a smile. “You’re probably right. Look at this road. Must be the track to an old barn. Lots of horse country out here before they built it all up. Lucky us, it’s the perfect place to stash the car.” 

She pulled down the path and almost rammed the car into a police cruiser. Officer Miller and Officer Wills must have had the same idea. She stopped behind the first car and popped the trunk so they could grab the gear stashed there. She and Fitz stepped out into the cool night air.

The two officers stepped out from the front of their cars. They looked dangerous, dressed head to toe in their black SWAT gear, guns pointing from every angle.

“Good of you to join us.” Miller said. “Didn’t see no cars in the drive when we pulled in, thought we’d just duck in here.” Miller flashed Taylor a smile, his white teeth flashing in the moonlight. “Heard your transmissions. You guys matched DNA on this one, huh?”

“Close, there’s a blood type match between this guy and semen found at the first scene. Enough to go on. Thanks for coming. His other two addresses are clear. The West End property is a rental. You heard Marcus’ transmission, looks like he was killing the girls at the Granny White address. Which leaves this spot as his hidey-hole. Marcus and Baldwin will be showing up, so don’t shoot them. You’ve seen the picture of the girl we’re looking for?”

“Yeah, Jill Gates. We also got a shot of this Gabriel Lucas character. How do you want it to go down?”

Taylor was shrugging into her bulletproof vest, and Fitz was checking the shells on a shotgun he’d gotten out of her trunk. “Fitz and I will take the front. You guys get the back. When you hear the door break in, get in the house. We’ll start looking for Jill. You start looking for Lucas. Clear?”

“Clear.” Their combined voices made the word echo in the darkness.

“Good. He’s going to protect Jill and the baby. He’ll think we’re trying to hurt her and will do anything to defend her, but he’s sick and may not have the physical power to fend us off. Keep an eye out for weapons.”

After conducting one last press check on their guns, they stole silently into the night.

The house was set back far from the road on at least a few acres of land. Though there were other houses around, they were far enough apart that nosy neighbors wouldn’t see them sneaking through the grass.

They crept to the house to take up their stations. There was a flicker of light coming through the window on the east side of the house. Taylor reached the window, stuck her head up quickly and saw it was the kitchen. She couldn’t see anyone inside. She signaled to Miller and Wills to head around the back. She and Fitz made their way to the front of the house, then to the front porch. She felt Fitz tug lightly on her shirt. She pulled up short and turned to him, brows raised. He whispered, “Easy, now.” She blew out a deep breath and nodded. They made their way to the front door.

Taylor had a momentary thought of simply ringing the bell and grinned to herself. Surely a rational man like Gabriel Lucas would invite them in to make their arrest. She sent up a last silent prayer as Fitz stepped in front of her, lifted his fingers in a silent one, two, three, then shouted,

Metro police,

and kicked in the door.

They were met with no resistance. They saw Miller and Wills come in the back door. It was unlocked; they had simply turned the knob and it opened. Both entrances opened into a dark great room. Two hallways shot off opposite sides of the room. One led to the kitchen; the source of the meager light she’d seen from the window was the backsplash light on the stove. The other hall was dark.

Fitz jerked his head to Miller, who tapped Wills on the shoulder and gestured toward the kitchen. He nodded at Taylor and pointed down the darkened hall. Taylor went first, Fitz followed, guns at the ready.

There were two doors down the hall. The door at the end was open. The one at the beginning of the hall had a slide lock bolted to the door’s exterior.

Taylor figured if Jill were in the house, this would be the best place for her. She stopped and put her ear to the door as Fitz continued down the hall. He swept into the other bedroom, then signaled her it was clear. He came back up the hall.

Quietly, gently, Taylor slid the lock on the door and turned the knob.

It opened into darkness. Letting her eyes adjust, Taylor saw there was little in the room besides a bed. Fitz touched her on the shoulder and signaled to the light switch. Taylor reached for it, gun pointed into the middle of the gloomy room.

She flicked on the light. There was a woman tied down, spread-eagled, centered perfectly in the middle of the bed.

“Jill? Jill Gates?”

The woman didn’t answer immediately and didn’t move.
We’re too late, damn it, we’re too late
. Before she could move, Taylor heard a small moan. Jill was alive. Relief coursed through her and she rushed to the girl’s side.

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