The Perfect Death (3 page)

Read The Perfect Death Online

Authors: James Andrus

FOUR
After lunch, John Stallings and Patty Levine sat in their office at the Police Memorial Building. The detective bureau on the second floor of the PMB was affectionately referred to as the Land That Time Forgot because the detectives rarely saw the new equipment and innovations the rest of the building enjoyed. Stallings didn't mind it; he had never cared about the condition of the office because he felt like a real detective needed to be out on the street working cases, not sitting around a plush office, chatting with the other cops about how much work they did. In fact, he usually felt antsy at his desk, but it was a necessary evil to keep track of all the leads he and Patty followed every day. He rarely paid attention to the detectives' comings and goings, but today he did notice the bureau was empty and their sergeant, Yvonne Zuni, was not at her desk in the small, separate office at the end of the squad bay.
His cell phone rang and he took a second to screen the call, seeing the name of the lead homicide detective, Tony Mazzetti, appear on the small Motorola phone. He considered not answering because he hated talking to the smug son of a bitch. Then he realized Tony Mazzetti didn't enjoy talking to him either and decided it might be important.
Stallings answered the phone and said, “What's up, Tony?”
“I need your help.”
A small smile spread across Stallings's face. “Really now? You need my help? This is an interesting situation. Do you mind saying it again? I like the sound of it.”
“I need your help, Stall. That's as much as I'd like to banter back and forth with you. I need your fucking help right now.”
Stallings knew when it was time for fun and games; now Mazzetti sounded serious. “What's wrong, Tony?”
“I have a body at a construction site in the south end of town.”
“You need help on a homicide?”
“Patty gave me one of the info sheets you made up on the missing girl, Leah Tischler.”
“Oh God, you found her body?”
“No. This victim is named Kathy Mizell.”
“I don't understand. What'd you need me for?”
“We identified the belt used to strangle her. It's from the swanky private school the missing girl attended.”
Stallings didn't say anything as silence held on the crackle of static over the cell phones.
Mazzetti said, “I think it's Leah Tischler's belt.”
 
 
Patty Levine sat in the passenger seat of John Stallings's county-issued Chevy Impala. She didn't try to engage him in small talk; she knew him too well. His mood always turned dark after hearing about the death of any young woman. This one was more devastating because of the implication that Leah Tischler was dead as well. No cop took a missing girl more seriously or her death harder. Unfortunately it was an all too common event. And that was just one of many concerns Patty had for her partner, who'd endured far too much stress in recent months. Patty looked across at Stallings, who focused his attention on the road, moving fast but not recklessly. His normally short, brown, curly hair barely touched his collar, and his handsome face, with the scar over one eyebrow and a slightly broken nose, gave him the look of a former football star who'd stayed in pretty good shape since college.
He rarely spoke to her about his problems with Maria, but that wasn't the heaviest weight on him right now. Patty didn't think he or his wife had ever moved past the disappearance of Jeanie. No parent really did, and Maria and John Stallings weren't just any parents. They were both trying to change the world in their own ways: Maria by involving herself in peer counseling for other grieving parents and Stallings through his work in Missing Persons. Now Stallings had set up house not far from the family and had been working hard to make time for the kids. Any time something like this happened, Stallings tended to tune out everything by finding the person responsible. For his sake Patty hoped they had a suspect in custody already.
A few blocks after exiting I-95, Patty could see the police activity and the first of the news trucks arriving on the scene. Stallings pulled the car to the curb more than two blocks from the action in an effort to stay under the radar of the news reporters. Based on his history of capturing serial killers, every reporter in Jacksonville tended to focus on Stallings whenever he arrived at a homicide scene. Stallings didn't like it and it drove Tony Mazzetti absolutely crazy. Patty and Stallings slid over to the edge of the scene and gave their names to the patrolman who was keeping a log of everyone who entered the crime scene.
Stressful times like this pushed Patty to reach for a Xanax or some other pharmaceutical crutch. She'd been working hard to ease off the pills and hadn't used an Ambien to sleep in over a week, resulting in about five hours of total sleep in seven days. She had taken one Xanax for anxiety two days ago and purposely hadn't carried any with her the last two days. She'd even allowed her prescription for Vicodin and another painkiller expire. Now, as they faced another traumatic scene, Patty felt the familiar pang of anxiety and desire for her soothing drug. She craved one to calm her down. Instead she focused on the grim task at hand.
Patty did a quick survey of the scene, wondering who was here already. A call like this, happening in the middle of a weekday, when things were generally slow, attracted cops from all parts of the city. But her new sergeant, Yvonne Zuni, did a pretty good job of scaring away anyone who wasn't vital to the investigation. Her reputation and nickname, Yvonne the Terrible, tended to keep people on task. And nothing was more at odds with her nickname than her looks. A petite build and exotic face with long black hair made it hard to believe she was one of the most feared sergeants in the entire Jacksonville Sheriff's Office. And now she was doing her usual efficient job of directing activities.
Patty saw her boyfriend, Tony Mazzetti, standing next to a green construction Dumpster with the two-letter logo of Waste Management on the side. Screens had been erected in front of it to keep the media from getting any direct shots of activity going on inside the Dumpster. Patty headed his way.
As she approached, Patty stepped onto a sidewalk, giving her a view into the Dumpster, which had settled a few feet lower in front of a gutted strip mall with nothing but walls and a roof standing. She saw two crime scene techs working behind the screens and realized the body was still there. She could clearly see the young woman with long, dark hair. The color was drained out of her face and her eyes were ringed with a pale discharge, which sometimes occurred during decomposition. As she stepped next to Mazzetti, Patty realized how the woman had died. A black leather belt with an ornate buckle was wrapped around her throat. She shuddered at the idea of what this woman had gone through.
Patty cut her eyes over to Stallings, who was speaking with the sergeant out of view of the Dumpster. She hoped it stayed that way. He didn't need a vivid reminder of what could've happened to his own daughter. Any time Patty saw him in conversation with a superior she worried. There were rumors around the department about how Stallings had gone crazy and beat up a rich-kid suspect a few months ago. Patty knew it was no rumor. She'd been there when Stallings caught the pharmaceutical rep handing some free samples to a young coed. Because of the incident, the detectives in the crimes/persons unit learned quickly their new sergeant, Yvonne the Terrible, wasn't quite so terrible. She was more of a miracle worker and steered the focus off Stallings so he could continue to work a big case going on at the time.
Patty stepped next to Tony Mazzetti and said, “Where'd you get the screens?”
Mazzetti turned his handsome face on his thick, muscular neck and said, “Paramedics had them for some reason and loaned them to us. Who would've guessed firemen could be helpful on occasion?” His dark brown eyes scanned the immediate area and settled back on Patty. In a much lower voice he said, “You look great, I'm glad I have something to distract me for a few minutes. This one is ugly.”
“How're you holding up?”
The big man shrugged, straining his tailored shirt. “I'm getting used to Sparky Taylor as a partner. I can't believe Hoagie accepted the teaching job at the police academy for three months.”
“I heard Sparky is really, really smart.”
“He's also really, really weird.”
Patty let her eyes drift to Mazzetti's new partner. He was built like a giant pear. Patty figured the African American man was about forty, but with the extra weight and floppy clothes he wore, it was very difficult to be accurate. He'd looked the same six years ago when Patty had first met him. Back then he'd been the tech agent for the department. Basically an audiovisual guy who could plant bugs, hide cameras, and work complex wiretap equipment. But all that ended for Sparky Taylor when he got hopelessly wedged in the bathroom window of a suspect's house after planting a microphone for the narcotics unit. Although the suspect had not come home and seen it himself, the neighbors had told him about the fire department and other cops rescuing a heavyset black man squeezing out of a back window. The department had been forced to reveal its court-ordered microphone and wiretap warrants. Since that incident, Sparky, whose real name was Cliff, had floated around different units in the detective bureau. Now he'd landed in homicide.
Patty turned to Mazzetti. “Any ideas on this one yet?”
“Her I.D. says she's Kathy Mizell, nineteen, and a student at UNF. Her parents said she didn't come home last night, which wasn't unusual. She stayed with friends near campus a couple of nights a week.”
Patty felt sick at the idea of a bright young student ending up like this. “What about the scene itself?”
“She wasn't killed here, just dumped. I called you guys because of the photo of your missing girl. I recognized the buckle on the belt. Has to be her belt.”
“Seems reasonable, but where's her body and why would the killer link two victims?”
Mazzetti sighed, saying, “I'm trying to find any possible link to the body in Rolling Hills. So far, aside from the mode of death being asphyxiation, there's nothing to connect the women. I don't want to make the same mistakes I've made in the past.”
Patty was so proud of him for even admitting he'd ever made a mistake she wanted to give him a hug right there on the spot. She looked back up and saw the dead girl's face as one of the crime scene techs moved to one side. She knew she'd see that face in her short periods of dreaming tonight.
FIVE
He sat outside a McDonald's not far from his warehouse with the living quarters above. He had a dream lease. The two-bedroom apartment covered half of the second floor above his shop and was nicer than half the condos in the city. He watched the two little girls in the covered ball pit. Blond heads bobbing up and down out of sight. The clouds and light rain forced him to stay under the overhang, but at least he had time to enjoy his Big Mac, fries, and Coca-Cola. One of the drywall workers he saw on jobs left the McDonald's and waved to him.
The burly young man said, “Hey, Buddy.”
He lifted his half-eaten Big Mac as a greeting and nodded. As the only employee of his business he had no need to make close friends. He was either “Buddy” or “the guy from Classic Glass Concepts.” That was how most of the construction business worked. Since his custom glass business took him to only the high-end homes and businesses, he usually saw the same companies catering to the wealthy. He had hoped, when he first started out in business, that his glassblowing talents would allow him to make money creating works of art. He quickly learned that to make a living in the glass business, you had to adapt. Now only a few square feet of his warehouse were dedicated to the actual art he had studied for most of his life. The walls of the warehouse held sheets of thick glass, some etched with exotic designs.
That was how he'd found the victim three weeks ago in Rolling Hills. He was working in a fancy house down the street. All the rich people insisted he use an unmarked van so he was parked in a driveway and no one noticed him. The street was crammed with lawn and pool service trucks and three separate construction crews working on remodelings. The gate to the community was unlocked for all the workers. He'd noticed Pamela Kimble walking with her children one day. Tall and graceful, she had the gait of a runner sidetracked by a pregnancy, fast and deliberate with the kids trying to keep up. He waited until he was done with the job, then came back two days later and parked at a house where he had installed an interior etched glass panel. He knew the owner wouldn't be home. He was careful to leave an invoice on the front door handle in case anyone noticed him, but no one did. No one ever did. Rich people use workers but don't notice them.
He'd slipped into Pamela's house in the middle of the day. She hadn't even known someone was inside until he had his hand around her lovely throat. He'd surprised her as she took a nap in her cool, dark bedroom on the mammoth king-sized bed. Sprawled in workout clothes and a loose T-shirt, she was the perfect picture of a suburban mom.
He had used his hands to choke her, requiring him to wear simple rubber surgical gloves, so he fumbled with his homemade glass jar. An exact little cylinder like the others. He opened his fingers slightly to let her gasp, then exhale, only to tighten his grip harder. It was difficult to describe the peace he felt when her body finally went limp and he let her lie across his lap for a few minutes. She was definitely worthy of eternity. He thought, in the long expanse of time, she might see what he was really doing for her. For her essence and memory. He slipped back out of the house, her kids sleeping in front of the TV in the next room. It was a great moment.
He had been shaken by his experience getting rid of the body the night before. The idea that someone might surprise him in such a vulnerable position was terrifying. He'd made some mistakes. He hoped he hadn't left a fingerprint or DNA somewhere on the body. He almost always used some kind of gloves. It was bad enough he had used the belt and been so flustered he left it. Not that it could be linked directly to him, but it was too unusual to be ignored. He liked leaving as little as possible in terms of evidence or clues. He wasn't like the nuts in the movies who enjoyed taunting the police.
For so long he'd been patient and careful never to use a woman who could be linked to him as a subject for his work of art. He wondered if it was really necessary. Were the cops really that good at discovering minute clues? He doubted it. That was one of the reasons he had picked up the pace lately. He realized his work of art would take too long to complete if he only added a piece every other year or so. But last night had spooked him.
The buzz of the encounter had him pumped up. He felt like a kid on Christmas morning as he calculated how many more he needed. Not too many now. Soon he'd have a real monument. A memorial that would be special. He couldn't help but smile as he thought about his work of art in progress for sixteen years.
He finished his Big Mac and took a long swig of Coke. A red plastic ball popped out of the pit and rolled next to his heavy work boot. As he bent down to retrieve it, one of the blond girls scampered out of he ball pit, red ribbons tying her ponytail, flopping over to one side. She skidded to a stop about ten feet away and fixed her blue eyes on him. A smile swept across her face, showing one missing front tooth.
Then his moment of humanity was shattered when he heard an unmistakable voice say, “Look who's here, the squatter.”
He looked up slowly, knowing exactly who had the sneer in her voice. He was surprised it wasn't just Cheryl, but her sweet, younger sister too. Poor Donna had a look of horror on her face as Cheryl marched toward him.
Buddy mumbled, “Hello, ladies.”
Cheryl jumped right to the point. “You ready to accept our offer?”
“I'm looking, but I
do
have six years left on my lease.”
“I can have that voided in court.”
“You keep saying that. If that's true, why are you after me to move the shop?”
She growled in frustration. Her sharp features flushed red, while Donna looked on silently. He knew Cheryl had a chance to rent the warehouse for twice what he paid and was pissed her late father had made the agreement. But she was stuck. She also hated him because Donna thought he was sweet. Like their father had. Buddy always figured that was one of the reasons the old man had given him an extended lease. He wanted Buddy to hook up with his daughter. The old man's drastically younger Lebanese wife had produced the two pretty daughters after he was fifty. He had done his best to make sure they were secure before their combined drama had sent him to the grave at seventy-seven last year.
Buddy had options in his living arrangements, but he liked annoying Cheryl too. He always kept a cheap apartment downtown. He had a few things there for storage and spent the night there when the power was knocked out to his warehouse and home a few months back. The place was cheap and on the outside chance this crazy chick got him out of his current place at least he'd have somewhere to crash.
Cheryl turned, shoving her sister in front of her, then stooped and wheeled on her heel one last time to say, “This isn't over. We won't be held hostage.” She followed Buddy's eyes to her sister and added, “And stay the fuck away from Donna.”
 
 
John Stallings hung up the phone at his desk before heading into the conference room, where the other detectives had gathered to discuss the leads to be followed on the new homicide. The link to Leah Tischler put everyone into high gear because of the implications of a possible serial killer. He'd called to check on the kids and tell Charlie he wouldn't be able to practice soccer with him. The seven-year-old took the news in stride. His fourteen-year-old, on the other hand, seemed relieved she wouldn't have to put up with her father today. He didn't bother to talk to Maria. She needed some space and he was doing his damnedest to give it to her. But he could tell she appreciated his efforts to stay connected with the kids and didn't mind him swinging by the house almost every day.
Meetings like this, after normal working hours, were the biggest sticking point in his marriage. Although he had never realized how much time it took away from his marriage, police work had found a way to crush his family life. He wondered how cops with young kids ever managed to balance their lives.
The conference room was jammed with detectives. Tony Mazzetti sat at one end of the table, but it was Yvonne Zuni who was clearly in charge. She leaned on the table near the center as she made sure everyone understood his or her role in the investigation. The dynamics of an investigation had changed greatly from when Stallings had first started sixteen years earlier. In these lean economic times, overtime was a premium and management found a way around the expensive program by farming out leads to a number of different detectives. As usual, Tony Mazzetti would run the investigation. His new partner, Sparky Taylor, took notes as Sergeant Zuni explained the plan of attack.
Stallings liked the odd detective. The guy was a virtual reference book of the sheriff's office policy and procedure. He could quote specific statutes under the Florida criminal code for the most common crimes they had to deal with. A graduate of Georgia Tech, with a degree in engineering, Sparky had a different way of looking at things from most detectives. Stallings appreciated new perspectives.
Mazzetti droned on about the scene and his brilliance in noticing the unusual buckle on the belt used in the homicide. He told them the victim's brief background to give them avenues to investigate, like who she hung out with, boyfriends, and creepy guys in her classes, but the biggest detail was Leah Tischler's belt. All Stallings could think about was where Leah was. Dead or alive, he'd like to find her and give her parents some form of closure. Her wealthy attorney father was already blaming his long hours for her disappearance. Stallings could relate. But now Stallings wondered if he thought Leah could hold a clue to his own daughter. Was this what he would find? Had Jeanie run away, then stumbled into a monster like this? He shuddered at the thought and looked back up at the crowd in the room as the sergeant started to talk.
Yvonne Zuni's dark eyes flashed at Stallings. “Stall, we're gonna need you to work your magic. Focus on Leah Tischler and find out if anyone noticed her around. There's a good chance she had run away when this creep found her.”
Stallings just nodded. This was his strength and what he was needed for most often. Besides, he owed the new sarge and would do anything she asked. She may have been a pain in the ass administratively, but there was no one he'd rather have backing him up if he ever got in trouble again.
 
 
Tony Mazzetti stared down in silence at the plain chicken breast, tiny helping of pasta, and raw vegetables on his plate. It was tough staying fit while trying to make a relationship work. He glanced over at Patty's plate of lasagna and basket of garlic rolls. As a kid in Brooklyn, a meal in a nice Italian joint was a special occasion. Now it was an exercise in restraint. Before he could feel sorry for himself he remembered he needed to talk to a supervisor at public transportation. He pulled out his pocket-sized, leather-bound notepad and scratched a one-line reminder. When he looked back at Patty, her blue eyes were focused on him like lasers.
He stuffed the notepad sheepishly into his coat pocket. “Sorry, I'm not used to having to balance a homicide and a relationship. It's all new to me. And with no overtime to go out and hit the streets you have to make use of any time an idea pops into your head.”
She smiled that sweet smile and took another monstrous bite of lasagna. She looked tired, and he worried she pushed herself too hard in her search for runaways with John Stallings. But homicide was no piece of cake either and if she was gonna be running leads on this new case, she wouldn't catch up on her rest anytime soon.
Relationships might be new to him, but homicide was old hat. He wasn't sure what would happen in his romance. It was uncharted territory—a scary, thrilling adventure ride—but he knew he'd never be able to stomach an unsolved homicide. His phenomenal clearance rate was one of the few things he could point to as an accomplishment and he liked everyone at JSO knowing he kicked ass in homicide investigations. He told himself that was why they called him the King of Homicide. The murder he'd been working on until this afternoon had really eaten at him. Pamela Kimble had left behind a husband and two kids. She was no gang-banger or dope dealer gunned down by a competitor. He knew someone else would take up any slack on the Kathy Mizell case. Maybe even Stallings, who seemed to have a thing for young, confused women who ended up in bad situations. Everyone in the S.O. understood Stallings had some kind of deep-seated desire to make up for whatever had happened to his own daughter. He may not have been Mazzetti's best friend, but there was no denying he was a hell of a cop.
Patty set down her fork, wiped her face, and said, “Do you really think the world would come to an end if we went public with our relationship?”
“There's nothing I'd like better than to tell people you're my girlfriend, but based on policy and what they've done in the past, one of us would have to transfer out of the squad. I figured we'd let things go until we have no choice.” He didn't want to bring up the recent feeling that they were drifting apart. Maybe it was just the natural rhythm of a relationship and he didn't have the experience to deal with it correctly.
“You mean you wouldn't be willing to work road patrol instead of homicide just for me?”
He hesitated, not only unsure of his answer, but not wanting to upset Patty. She burst out laughing, covering her face with her hand. Then gave him a sly smile.

Other books

After Me by Joyce Scarbrough
Just Like a Woman by Madeleine Clark
My Hollywood by Mona Simpson
The Farming of Bones by Edwidge Danticat
A Curtain Falls by Stefanie Pintoff
Deceived by James Koeper
Discovery by T M Roy