Read The Watcher Online

Authors: Jo Robertson

Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Crime, #Serial Killers, #Romance, #Romantic Suspense, #Thrillers, #Mystery & Suspense, #Suspense

The Watcher (22 page)

“He wouldn’t stop on his own,” Kate insisted. “His pattern is kidnap, torture in isolation, and murder, after which he places the body so it will be discovered, presumably some time after he’s left the area. Being
discovered
is one of the keys to his profile. He
wants
the body to be found by the authorities. He
wants
his notoriety.”

“What if he was in a hospital?” Bauer suggested. “Like a nut house.”

Kate mulled that for a moment. “Or what if he underwent a series of surgeries to correct some anatomical deficiencies?”

“Uh, I don’t get it,” Bauer said.

“Size
does
matter,” Slater clarified with a tight smile while Bauer blushed. “Okay, it could be a leap, but let’s say the killer was having some kind of sexual surgery during those years.”

“We can check records at hospitals that specialize in sexual reassignment surgery, or other sexual conditions,” Kate said. “There’s a limited number of them.”

“Good.” Slater propped an arm against the wall while he thought out loud. “The killing pattern is consistent with movement from coast to coast and back again. He left Idaho going east, then for some reason trekked back across the country fifteen years later.”

He traced his finger from Virginia to the last case before a California murder. “So, we’ve got a total of four murders every two years,” he summarized, “followed by eight murders twice a year from 2000 to 2004. Then nothing from 2004 to 2008, which could be explained by hospitalization or incarceration.”

“The last murder before the ones in Placer Hills was in Bishop, California. That’s southwest of Fresno,” Bauer added. “Then the two here in Bigler County.”

Kate leaned against the counter, sipping her water. “Jennifer Johnston’s the twelfth victim and Alison Mathews is the thirteenth, killed just days apart.”

Slater rubbed his knuckles into his gritty eyes. “The big mystery for me is why he took two girls from the same town. He’s never done that before.”

“It’s risky,” Bauer agreed.

“Unless he’s making a circle. Back to where he started,” Slater said, lifting an inquiring brow to Kate.

“Could be. He’s definitely accelerating because he’s not getting the same satisfaction from his kills,” she answered, weariness heavy in her voice. “He needs to murder more frequently and with greater violence to get the same sexual gratification.”

The three of them were silent for several minutes, mulling over the idea. Slater checked the time again, stretched and yawned.

“Okay,” he said, “here’s what we do. We track down anyone who knew Mary Stuckey before 1989. If this guy killed her and she was his first, he probably knew her. Matt, tomorrow you check out the Stuckey family, see if any still live around here. Talk to neighbors, teachers, the whole routine.”

Slater tapped the to-do list Kate had made. “At Monday’s incident meeting, we’ll hear the field and interview reports.”

“But if we’re right, those interviews aren’t going to do any good,” Bauer protested.

“I know, but for the time being, we don’t want to close those doors. Eventually, we’re going to have to justify the direction we’re taking. I’ll assign three teams to area hospital records between 2004 and 2008 for any kinds of surgeries.” He anticipated objections from the department. “They don’t need to know we’re going in a different direction. They can just follow orders.”

Kate nodded. “Have them check between 1950 and 1975 for children born with birth defects, too.”

“What about the Sheriff?” Bauer asked. “Do we tell him?”

“Let me worry about Marconi.” Slater checked the wall clock over the kitchen sink, saw that both hands were straight up at midnight. “That’s probably all we can get done tonight.” He sat down, closed up the laptop, and pushed back on the heels of his chair.

“My brain’s starting to freeze.” Kate yawned and her contagion spread to Bauer who stretched his lanky form and cracked his back.

“Let’s call it a night then,” Slater said.

Bauer looked from Slater to Kate and then down at his hands. After another moment of heavy silence, he stood and hooked his jacket off the back of his chair where he’d hung it earlier. He slung the jacket over his shoulder.

“Uh, well, I guess I’d better get going.”

“I’ll give you a ride,” Slater offered.

“That’s okay, man, I’ll just walk. It’s not too far.”

“Don’t be stupid, Bauer. I’ve got to go anyway. It’s on the way to my place.”

He stood, thinking how exhausted he was. They’d been working nearly six straight hours at Kate’s apartment after an already long day, stopping only long enough to eat the sandwiches she’d made for them around nine. He felt pretty grimy and glanced covertly at Kate. He wished he’d thought to have Bauer drive his own car, but it was too late now.

He shouldn’t be thinking what he was thinking anyway.

“Okay, I’ll see you two at the office,” Kate said, clearing the dishes off the table and stacking the notes she’d taken into a manila folder.

Slater made a quick decision. At least he’d give her a chance to say no. “Matt,” he said, tossing his keys to his partner, “go ahead and get the truck warmed up. I have to make a pit stop before I leave.”

After Bauer departed, Slater turned to Kate. “I don’t want to pressure you or anything.” He puffed his cheeks and spat out a breath. “After I drop Bauer off, I’d like to come back.” Before she could answer, he continued, “Look, I don’t want to complicate the situation. I just want – ”

“Come back, Slater.” She laughed softly, promise in her eyes. “I’ll leave the door unlocked.”

He stared at her mouth. “Are you sure? I’m not a teenage boy who can’t wait. I want you to be certain about this.”

“I know you’re not a boy,” she whispered as she placed her lips firmly against his.

Chapter Twenty-Four

 

Kate thought she heard the front door open, but the shower was so loud she couldn’t be sure. She turned the faucet off and wrapped a towel around her wet body, a matching one around her hair. “Ben, is that you?”

Silence.

“Slater?” More sharply.

She stood frozen, listening for the sounds of movement from the small living room which led down a short hall and into the bathroom and bedroom where she waited, her hand on the door knob.

Nothing.

Had she been mistaken? Was she just edgy from the late night and the grisly investigation?

She eased the bedroom door open and glanced down the dark hallway to the dim lights she’d left on in the living room. She should’ve given Slater the key, she realized, instead of leaving the door unlocked. Damn, she knew better. She lived in a ground-level apartment, more accessible to intruders than a second-floor one.
Idiot.

Tiptoeing into the kitchen, she peered around the corner. No one there, but the front door stood slightly ajar. The swooshing of her blood roared in her ears. She was positive she’d closed it.
Had the wind – ?

For the first time since she’d worked in law enforcement, she wished she carried a gun. Her former boss, Chief Howes, the one who’d effected her transfer to Bigler County, constantly nagged her to get certified at the rifle range. You work with too many nut cases, he insisted.

But she’d always detested guns of any kind. There was something so lethal, so deadly and final about them that she wouldn’t take the training to become competent with firearms. She rationalized that her job as a profiler was to bring a psychological element to cases, not try to run with the cowboys.

Now she wished she’d taken the Chief’s advice.

She eyed her purse from the hallway. She’d slung it over the chair when she returned from the office. Her cell phone was inside, along with the pepper spray her mother had forced on her the first time she’d consulted with LAPD.

The land line hung on the kitchen wall by the counter top. That phone and her purse were equidistant from her. Making the decision to dash for the wall phone, she dropped the towel and leapt toward the counter.

The front door swung fully open.

Kate gasped and instinctively grabbed a knife from the butcher block near the refrigerator. When she turned to face her intruder, Slater stood in the doorway to her apartment, a look of shock on his face.

Then he burst into laughter.

Even though they’d made love, Slater hadn’t appreciated the sight of Kate fully unclothed. Now she stood at the edge of the kitchen, naked except for a purple towel turbaned around her head. She clutched a large butcher knife in her right hand, raised as if to make a downward stab. The sight was sensuous and hilarious at the same time.

Standing with his arms filled with files, a small travel carrier, and a brown paper sack from the grocery store, he realized immediately the laugh was a goof.

When she saw him, fear, relief, and anger raced in quick succession across her face. “It’s not funny,” she stormed. “You scared me to death.”

“I’m sorry,” he mumbled, trying to keep a straight face. “I – it wasn’t funny.” Of their own volition, his eyes moved to the lovely sights above and below her waist.

Understanding flooded through Kate as she saw where his gaze strayed. The knife clattered to the floor, and her body flushed crimson from breasts to face. She stomped down the hall, leaving both towels discarded on the kitchen floor.

After storing the groceries in the refrigerator and cabinet, Slater waited for Kate to come out of the bathroom, but when she didn’t, he knocked softly on the door.

No answer.

He rapped more forcefully.

Her voice was an angry muffle through the door. “What?”

“Ah, Kate, it’s not like I haven’t seen you naked.” Though not quite like that, he thought.

More silence, then an annoyed retort. “I
know
that.”

“Well, then, why don’t you open the door?”

“Because I made a fool of myself and I’m embarrassed. I must’ve looked pretty silly.”

“No, you looked cute.”

She flung open the door. “Cute?”

He reconsidered. “Smart? Cool? Sophisticated?”

“I don’t have any clothes in this bathroom,” she muttered.

He cleared his throat. “Hmm, why don’t I step outside for a minute or two while you get dressed?”

A long pause while he dared not take his eyes off her face even though he had to clamp down on the urge to do far more than look.

“Fine,” she agreed imperiously.

Slater stayed on the cement landing just outside the door to the apartment even when it began drizzling and the temperature dropped. He’d left his jacket lying on the sofa, but he forced himself to wait ten minutes longer to make sure Kate had plenty of time to compose herself.

Sometimes he really didn’t understand very much about women, he realized, even though the years of living with three sisters should’ve been good training. When he judged enough time had lapsed, he knocked softly and then entered the apartment, closing the door with a soft click and locking it behind him.

Occupied with images of Kate Myers’ naked body, he didn’t even notice the gray van idling down the street, its headlights off and its exhaust sending whiffs of smoke into the cold air.

#

 

The watcher idled at the curb nearly a block from the new duplex, two side-by-side apartments, at 4890 Cirby Way. Only one of the apartments was occupied. The number one downstairs apartment was where the woman he’d seen while pumping gas lived. The purple-eyed woman.

The encounter at the convenience store had shaken him up. But after he’d gotten her address, he’d driven by, not lingering in the neighborhood – too risky. Obsessed and filled with fascinated fear, he’d returned tonight to make sure it was her.

There’d been several men coming in and out of the apartment since six-thirty. Smith wondered what that meant. Two men, wearing suits and ties, one a dark giant who walked with heavy purpose, and a younger fair-haired man, had arrived shortly after the woman returned to her apartment. The younger one left around nine and came back twenty minutes later with several six-packs of soda. Then after midnight, both men left.

Smith figured the woman wasn’t coming out of the apartment tonight. He was getting ready to leave when the second man returned with a small grocery sack in one arm, a travel bag over his shoulder, and a stack of folders. The man stayed for a few minutes, and then came out to stand on the concrete landing whose overhanging offered a little shelter from the rain.

Leaning carelessly near the door, the dark giant stared across the street into the dark shadows of the pines that ran along the banks of Linda Creek. The creek was low, but when the winter snows melted in the Sierras, they’d empty their load to rush down into the valley, sometimes flooding the small creek.

Smith assessed the man’s size, observing the muscles that bunched beneath a light blue, long-sleeved shirt. He was jacketless and there was a studied stillness about him, a panther waiting to pounce on a gazelle. The man pushed off from the stucco wall and wandered over to the front window of apartment number two, peered in the window to the empty rooms.

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