The Vigilante (12 page)

Read The Vigilante Online

Authors: Ramona Forrest

Tags: #revenge, #multiple personalities, #nurses, #nursing, #crime thriller, #vigilantes, #protection of women and children, #child predators, #castration of child predators

Silently, Martha thanked all the luck gods in heaven that her beaten, whipped-puppy grandson, had witnessed a small boy standing up for his rights. Hoping it would influence him in the future, she muttered softly, “A bit bloody maybe, but that is a definite reality he’ll have to face on his own one day. I’ll let Jeannie know what happened. She can inform the psychologist about the incident if she feels it’s necessary.”

“Grammy, was it okay for that little boy to hit back?”

“Some people might say it wasn’t, but I don’t think that bully will bother that boy again.” She smiled at Will via the rear view mirror. He might have internalized what he’d seen, but only time would tell what effect it might have on him.

Will entered the house and ran to his mother relating everything he’d seen. “Mommy, the little boy hit that big boy back and made blood run right out of his nose!” His eyes sparkled and shone with the telling. “That big boy won’t push that little boy again, will he, Mommy?”

Jeannie couldn’t miss the gleam in her young son’s eyes. “He did! No, Will, he’ll stay away from that boy, I’m sure of that. What did you think about that, Will?” She looked at Martha, cautious optimism lurking in her eyes at this new development.

“Well, if he gets near me again, I’m going to beat him up!” Will sounded as if he welcomed the challenge, even looked forward to it.

“Will, you know we don’t look for trouble,” Jeannie said. “You’ll remember that, won’t you?”

“Yes, but that boy needs a good fight. He does, Mommy!” With that, Will ran into the den, took his box of
Legos,
threw them all over the floor, and kicked the box they came in.

“Oh God, Mom, what next?” Jeannie’s jaw tightened in anger. “Everything affects him so strangely. Will he turn to violence, now?”

“Inform his doctor about this,” Martha replied. “It may be a normal reaction under the circumstances. They say violence begets violence. I’m afraid I don’t know enough about these things, but I already know more than I ever wanted to know about violence against children. This nightmare just keeps on, doesn’t it?”

“Yes, it does! I want to get away from this city so much! I’ve spoken to Martin and he isn’t against the idea.”

Jeannie’s tears kept flowing and once again, Martha felt the raging anger come over her. “I can’t blame you for wanting to leave this city where so much has happened. Of course, if you did move, I’d not be far behind. But remember, these things happen everywhere, you know that.”

“Yes, I know, but with Martin gone to Denver so much, it’s a natural move, or would be for us.”

Martha considered Jeannie’s words. “You’re right about moving, I guess. And too, maybe I shouldn’t keep taking Will to the same
Biggie’s Burgers
where he’ll meet that bully. But then, we can’t run forever, either.”

“No Mom, we can’t run from everything. We never can.” Jeannie seemed to shrug off her anger. She squared her shoulders and straightened her body. “If anyone knows how evil it is to suffer from child predators, it’s us.”

“Oh, Jeannie.”

Martha hugged her daughter warmly and turned to leave. She drove home, wondering if taking her young grandson out so often was a good idea and knew instantly that was not the answer. The child needed to get out of the house. It would require more thought, and her mind felt clogged with the events of the day.

She needed time and distance to sort things out. And then, she’d see the psychiatrist again in the morning. She groaned in despair. “God, help me, I really am going out of my mind. I need to run away—I am so afraid of what I might learn!”

She drove past a strange little house on a side street. It looked familiar to her, but why?
God, where do I go, and what do I do when I’m someone else
?”

Her alter did things she knew nothing of, Martha mused, remembering the unfamiliar purse and those horrid boots!

In her driveway, she put her head against the steering wheel in despair. “All this is making me exhausted. I can’t trust myself to work, and now, someone else is running my body when I don’t need it! So where will all this end?” A few futile tears escaped and ran down her cheeks.

She entered her garage, her home and, tired out of her mind, showered and sought her bed. Drifting into fitful sleep, she saw someone standing over her with arms upraised. Startled awake, her heart racing, she saw no one there. “Now, I’m seeing ghosts!”

She crawled out of bed and snapped on the tube. “Hmmph, nothing to watch but Jay Leno tonight. Good for laughs, that’s for sure.” She fixed a bowl of
Cheerios
with milk. “Maybe the tryptophan in milk will help. That amino acid is supposed to make you drowsy.” She knew it could and enjoyed the taste of the oats.

She pondered what must have happened to her as a child. “I don’t want to think about it! Why didn’t my folks watch out for me?” Heartsick at those thoughts, she turned her mind to a recent book she’d bought. “At least I remember buying it.” She laughed at herself and began to read. Finding it dull, she tossed it across the room. “So much for that trash. Maybe my alter had something to do with my buying this crap. Can’t say I care much for her taste.”

Later, she helped herself to another sleep-aid and tried it again. Drifting off, she again, vaguely sensed someone standing beside the bed but slept nevertheless, her extreme fatigue finally winning out. Tossing and turning, her dreams turned to nightmares, and she awoke with a silent scream on her lips.

 

CHAPTER
13

 

 

Ryan entered the ER seeking more detailed information. He introduced himself to the triage nurse. “If you have a moment, I have a few questions. Perhaps you or one of your other doctors could help me out. I’d like to get more input from your staff regarding the morning they brought in a recent trauma patient, Fred Callahan.”

“Okay, sir, I’ll call one of the docs.” Punching a button, she made a call.

In short order, a doctor appeared. “Yes, sir, I am Dr. Graves. How may I help you?”

“I’d like to speak personally to anyone who took care of the man injured in this vigilante-type attack a few weeks past. I believe you know the one I mean.” Ryan cleared his throat. They all knew the man he referred to.

“Oh yes, who could forget that case? So that’s what you’re calling it then, a vigilante attack?” Dr. Graves grimaced. “I was on duty the morning they brought him in, sad state of affairs for that poor soul—very mutilated.”

“Great, maybe you could help us out with our investigation in this case. And yes, we’re leaning toward the possibility of a vigilante of sorts. Tell me what you remember, doctor, of the man, mutilated in this particular manner.” Ryan frowned. “We have the gentian violet stains, large boot tracks, and some other forensic findings. We believe the perpetrator may be in the medical field since he or she used medical supplies on the victim. We consider long sanitary napkins and purple liquid to be in line with a medically trained person. Maybe an EMT, nurse, aide, or doctor. We’d like to get a medical slant on it.”

“He or she?” Dr. Graves asked. “Would a woman do such a thing? Well yes, I guess she might if she had an astronomical sort of grudge.” Dr. Graves scratched his head, thinking. “The cuts were fairly straight, and the attempt at anti-sepsis was made. Could be, I suppose.” He thought for a moment. “When I was a boy on my grandfather’s farm, he used gentian violet as an anti-infective on the male calves, sheep, and pigs when he docked them. At least it was the same looking purple stains I remember. I’m sure it’s the same solution, the devil to get off, once you get it on yourself. Maybe your person has a farm background as well as medical.”

“Hey, thanks for the input. Anyone else here who might have something to add?” Ryan looked around at the frenetic pace of activity in the busy ER department. He wondered how anyone could find time to talk with him. “God, this place is a zoo!”

“Yes, it’s usually like that on this unit, but I’ll ask around,” Graves replied.

He spoke to several staff members. Ryan saw several shake their heads and rush away, maybe too busy to have a chat with the police or else they had no input.

A young man approached Ryan. “Hi officer, I’m Jake Collins. I was here the morning Fred Callahan was brought in. I didn’t have him as a patient, but I heard him say he didn’t see his assailant, and he sure had the blue stuff all over his wounds as you say. Whined a lot, but who could blame the man, all cut up the way he was.” Jake involuntarily shivered as he spoke.

“Anything else?” Ryan asked, immediately recognizing Jake as a busy body type. Every facility had one.

“Well, he told his friend that came in with him, he believed what happened to him was an act of revenge for what he’d done. I don’t think they knew I heard that, but he was the guy who got off on that child molestation thing, anyway, didn’t he?”

Jake gave a knowing smirk and Ryan disliked him even more.

“That’s very significant, Jake, it adds to what we suspect may be a motive on the part of the attacker. Thanks for the input. We may need you as a material witness one day.” He saw the aide’s chest swell with importance at the idea of being a material witness in a trial.

“Yeah, sure,” Jake replied.

Ryan left the ER, feeling he’d gotten some new information. “It all adds up in some unusual way. We need a break. Strange case, this, can’t get a handle on it, not yet anyway. Sounds like our perp knew what Callahan had done and took vengeance on him.” His brow furrowed. “Farm background, eh? Might be important if we can find anyone that fits that particular bill. Farm and/or medical, or maybe both, might be what we’re looking for. Must be an early riser, didn’t mind the early hours for his grisly deed. And there must have been some intensive stalking done before that. Sure enough, the thing was well planned.”

 

***

 

Jake found a moment to take coffee in the nurse’s lounge. “Something seems familiar about that purple stuff they keep going on about. Where the hell have I ever seen anything like that? I know I have, and lately, too.” He tried to recall something, he’d seen, but where? His reverie, interrupted by the charge nurse, ended when she called him to attend a mother threatening to deliver, and far too soon. This new emergency filled his mind and he forgot his train of thought.

The place, filled with anxious, demanding, frightened patients and crying children, kept him running for the remainder of his shift. He had no time for thought, but in the back of his mind, knew he’d seen something, but where?

Jake worked a double, which he frequently did, having no one at home to complicate his life. After work, he often sought relaxation at a dive called The
Paradisio
. Though not of the gay persuasion, he found the place more entertaining than any night spot he knew. “Lots of action in the place. Never know what’ll happen, and something always does. “He laughed as he pulled into the parking lot. Tired but wound up from two hectic shifts, he needed a diversion. “Lot of fancy wheels out here. Somebody in that crowd’s got a few bucks.”

Edging into the throng, he met a few guys he knew, but he eschewed the company of the females. He wasn’t sure of the status of their sex and didn’t plan to take one home and find out she wasn’t a
she
. “Hey bro, what’s happening?” he asked a lanky, stubble-faced dude named Joey.

“Aw, ’nuthin’ much so far, unless that guy that got clipped happens to show, then we’ll get some action. Can’t take a joke, no how. Getting kinda late for them to come in. After midnight and all.”

“Hell, it’s a wonder he’s brave enough to show his face anywhere after what happened to him,” Jake returned, putting the frosty, foaming glass of golden brew to his lips. “Had a tough couple of shifts and need to relax a bit. This place is a real kick, huh?” A trickle of beer ran down his chin. “God, I must be wiped out, drooling like a baby.”

“Hey, Jake, here he comes, tagging along with that slicky lookin’, weirdo friend of his.” Joey nudged Jake in the ribs to catch his attention. “Don’t look real chipper, now does he?” he snickered, seeing Fred Callahan shuffle in with his companion, Denny.

He needn’t have bothered pointing Callahan out. The sight of the unfortunate victim not only held Jake’s attention, but everyone else’s, too. Jake was enthralled at the sight of the rotund victim and his friend. He’d seen the extent of the man’s injuries first hand that night and would never forget the sight of those lacerated genitals.

Jake waited to see how the mutilation had altered the man’s life, wondering that the poor soul had the courage to come out at all, when he was forced to endure the snide remarks, raw jokes, and such. “He’s got to feel well accepted in a place, to stick his neck in here like he does,” he murmured to Joe. “Wonder who his friend is? Even a creep like Freddie boy has friends? Go figure.”

“Yeah, everybody in here knows and accepts those two. Anything pretty much goes in this place. Heard some mighty rotten stuff about both of ’em, too,” Joey confided. “Somebody really had it in for Callahan, and from what I hear, what he got, he well deserved. That is, if you go for the revenge thing.”

“Well, if he’d done to my kid what they say he did to that nurse’s grandkid, I’d have chopped his damned balls off myself!” Jake said.

“Yeah? What nurse’s kid?” Joey was surprised, he hadn’t heard that.

“Grandkid. She never talks about it, but most of us know what happened anyway. That dude right there is the one who molested her grandkid and got off clean, so they say.”

“Hell ya say, Jake—him?” He gestured at Callahan.

Within moments, comments flew thick and fast toward the two as Denny and Fred found a booth. “Hey, queenie, how’s tricks? Gittin’ any lately?”

“How’s things holdin’ up?”

The words floated across the room, accompanied by raucous, roaring, laughter. Jake watched Callahan’s face redden in anger and embarrassment. His temper hadn’t been chopped.

“Up your asses, you bastards, maybe you’re next!” Fred growled. His voice approached a thin, high-pitched, whine. His face wore an ugly scowl. “Don’t forget, that son-of-a-bitch’s still out there. They ain’t caught ‘em yet, and the damned bastard cops don’t give a damn if they do!”

Other books

The Burning Hand by Jodi Meadows
The Hero and the Crown by Robin McKinley
Forgotten by Evangeline Anderson
The Pursuit by Johanna Lindsey
The Retribution by Val McDermid
Judas Kiss by J.T. Ellison
Weeping Willow by White, Ruth
RICHARD POWERS by Unknown