Hunter could practically hear Kennedy frown.
‘What? What do you mean, Robert? What else? What other list?’
Hunter quickly told him.
‘Why?’
Hunter explained the reason why, and now he could almost hear Kennedy thinking.
A long pause.
‘I’ll be damned,’ Kennedy said in an outbreath. ‘Do you think . . .?’
‘It’s another shot,’ Hunter replied. ‘And we agreed to take every shot we could.’
‘Absolutely . . .’ Another thoughtful pause. ‘If you’re right, Robert, we
might
get a result. The problem is that that result could come tomorrow, next week, next month, or any time in the next twenty or thirty years. There’s no way of knowing.’
‘To get my hands on Lucien, I’m prepared to wait.’
‘OK,’ Kennedy agreed. ‘But the team is just about to finish with the locations list, and you know that we can’t lose time on that, so let’s get that list first and then I’ll tell them to start again.’
‘OK. You’ll have my list of locations within the next hour.’ Hunter disconnected and went back to Madeleine’s room.
He finished skimming through the last notebook he had with him in thirty-one minutes – no new locations. His location list contained three entries. He texted Kennedy his list, went back to the first notebook, and started it all over again.
When Kennedy called Hunter at 11:22 a.m., Hunter’s eyes were strawberry red from tiredness and reading fatigue.
‘I thought you’d like to know,’ he said. ‘We have fifteen locations in total, spread across fifteen states. FBI and SWAT teams are getting ready as we speak. We should be ready to coordinate a mass crackdown in about an hour to an hour and a half.’
‘It sounds good,’ Hunter said.
‘How are you doing with the second list?’
‘Almost there. Give me another half an hour. How’s your team doing?’
‘Exhausted and overworked. Living on strong black coffee. People here are calling them “the pink-eye squad”.’
‘Yeah, I guess I can relate.’
‘They should also be finished in the next hour. How’s Madeleine doing?’
‘Still unresponsive.’
‘I’m sorry to hear that.’
‘She’ll come out of it,’ Hunter said. ‘She’s a strong woman.’
Kennedy had to admire the confidence in Hunter’s voice.
‘Once you get the new list, you know what to do, right, Adrian?’
‘Yes, of course.’
They disconnected.
Back inside Madeleine’s hospital room, it took Hunter just another twenty-four minutes to complete his new list. This time he had four entries. He texted the new list to Kennedy and received a reply back in five seconds: ‘
Will initiate procedures as soon as I have all the entries. Locations crackdown will be in T–53 minutes. Will keep you posted
.’
One Hundred and Nine
Hunter received the next text message from Kennedy in exactly fifty-three minutes.
‘
Locations crackdown is a go. Will keep you posted. Second list now completed – every procedure initiated.
’
There was nothing Hunter could do now but sit and wait. He massaged the back of his neck for an instant. Exhaustion had slowly worn its way into his brain, joints and muscles. Every time he moved, he could feel the tendons pulling tight across his whole body, as if they were about to snap. He closed his eyes only for a moment, and the next thing he felt was his cellphone vibrating in his chest pocket.
Hunter had dozed off for eighty-four minutes. To him, it felt like two seconds. He quickly left the room and answered Kennedy’s call.
‘We’ve drawn a blank, Robert,’ Kennedy said. ‘Lucien was in none of the locations.’ Kennedy’s voice sounded defeated, as if all hope had gone out of him. ‘And it doesn’t seem like he’d been in any of them for weeks. Judging by the photographs I’ve received back from the crackdown teams, some of those places were a torture haven, a slaughterhouse. You wouldn’t believe the torture paraphernalia found in them.’
Hunter was sure he would believe it.
‘It will take our forensics teams weeks, maybe months, to sift through everything in those fifteen locations, and it still might give us no clue to Lucien’s whereabouts. I’d say that those notebooks are our best bet of finding anything . . . if there is anything to be found. But they have to be read thoroughly and scrutinized to the minutest detail, and that will also take a long time.’ Without realizing, Kennedy let out a beaten sigh. He had no doubt that by the time they finished analyzing everything Lucien had left behind, the killer would be long gone, vanished forever. As Lucien had said, they’d never see him again.
One Hundred and Ten
Hunter came to a sudden stop as he returned to Madeleine’s bedroom. All the hairs on the back of his neck stood on end. Madeleine was still lying flat and still, but her eyes were open, or semi-open, her eyelids struggling with their own weight.
Hunter rushed to her bedside.
‘Madeleine?’
She blinked hazily.
Hunter gently touched her hand. ‘Madeleine, remember me?’
She blinked again and her eyes finally found his face. She didn’t say a word, but her lips stretched into a thin, but very truthful smile.
Hunter smiled back. ‘I knew you’d beat this,’ he whispered. ‘I’m going to go get a doctor. I’ll be right back.’
She gave his hand the faintest of squeezes.
Hunter rushed out of the room, and in less than a minute was back with a short and plump doctor who walked as if carrying his body weight was an everyday penance. As the doctor approached Madeleine’s bed, Hunter felt his cellphone vibrate in his chest pocket again. He excused himself and quickly left the room.
‘Robert,’ Kennedy said as Hunter answered it, ‘the second list, the idea you came up with?’
‘Yes, what about it?’
‘You’re not going to believe this.’
One Hundred and Eleven
Seven hours later.
John F. Kennedy International Airport, New York.
‘Would you like a drink while we wait for the rest of the passengers to board, Mr Tailor-Cotton?’ the young stewardess asked with a bright smile. Her blonde hair was pulled back and styled into a perfect bun, and her carefully applied makeup accentuated her facial features perfectly. ‘Perhaps champagne, or maybe a cocktail?’ she offered.
Champagne and cocktails were some of the many perks of flying first class.
The passenger’s eyes broke away from the window and found her pretty face. The nametag on her blouse read
KATE
. He smiled back.
‘Champagne would be perfect.’ His voice was soft, with a gentle Canadian accent. His dark green eyes had an intense, but knowledgeable look in them.
The smile never left the stewardess’s lips. She found Mr Tailor-Cotton mysteriously charming, and she liked that.
‘Great choice,’ she said in reply. ‘I’ll be right back with a glass.’
‘Excuse me, Kate?’ he called, as she was turning away. ‘How long before we take off?’
‘We have a full flight tonight,’ she replied. ‘And we just started boarding all the other classes. If no one is late, we should start taxiing toward the runway in no more than twenty to thirty minutes.’
‘Oh, that’s great. Thank you.’
‘But if there’s anything I can do to make this short wait more comfortable for you, just let me know.’ Her smile gained a flirtatious sparkle.
Mr Tailor-Cotton nodded, with a flirtatious smile of his own. ‘I’ll keep that in mind.’
His gaze followed her as she started down the aisle. When she disappeared past the dividing curtain, his attention returned to the window. He’d never been to Brazil before, but he’d heard great things about it, and he was really looking forward to spending time there. It would be a nice change.
‘I’ve heard that the beaches in Brazil are simply breathtaking,’ the passenger sitting directly behind Mr Tailor-Cotton said, leaning forward. ‘I’ve never been there before, but I’ve heard that they’re like paradise on earth.’
For a split second Mr Tailor-Cotton’s heart almost froze, then he smiled at his own reflection staring back at him from the airplane window. He would recognize that voice anywhere.
The passenger behind him stood up, moved forward, and casually leaned against the armrest of the single seat across the aisle from Mr Tailor-Cotton.
‘Hello, Robert,’ Mr Tailor-Cotton said, turning his head to look at Hunter.
‘Hello, Lucien,’ Hunter replied calmly.
‘You look awful,’ Lucien commented.
‘I know,’ Hunter admitted. ‘You, on the other hand, have done a great job on the look. Different hair color, contact lenses, the beard is gone, even the scar is gone. All that in the space of just a few hours.’
Lucien looked like he was accepting a compliment.
‘You can do wonders with makeup and a little prosthetics if you know what you’re doing.’
‘And you have mastered that Canadian accent to perfection,’ Hunter admitted. ‘Nova Scotia, right?’
Lucien smiled. ‘You still have a great ear, Robert. That’s right. Halifax. But I do have a collection of accents I’ve mastered. Would you like to hear some of them?’
That last sentence was delivered with a perfect Midwestern accent – Minnesota to be precise.
‘Not just right now,’ Hunter replied.
Lucien looked at his nails, unconcerned. ‘How’s Madeleine?’
‘She’s alive. She’ll make a full recovery.’
Lucien looked back at Hunter. ‘You mean physically, right? Because mentally, she’s probably fucked-up for life.’
Hunter’s stare became even harder. He knew Lucien was right again. The trauma Madeleine had experienced would stay with her for the rest of her life. The true extent of its consequences wouldn’t be known for many years. Neither would the lasting psychological effects.
There was a long, silent break.
‘How did you find me?’ Lucien finally asked.
‘Your notebooks,’ Hunter explained. ‘Your lifelong project. Your “gift” to us, as you put it. Or, better yet, your encyclopedia.’
Lucien looked at Hunter, curiously.
‘Yes,’ Hunter said, ‘I still remember the day you mentioned the idea to me back in Stanford.’
Lucien smiled. ‘You thought it was a crazy idea.’
Hunter nodded. ‘I still do.’
‘Well, the crazy idea became a reality, Robert. And the information inside those books will forever change the way the FBI, the NCAVC, the BAU, and every law-enforcement agency in this country, maybe in the world, look at violent and sadistic repeat offenders. It will make you understand things that up to know no one ever did, and otherwise the world never would. Intimate things and thoughts that have never been explained. Things that will exponentially better your chances of capturing those offenders. That’s my gift to you, and to this fucked-up world. My work and those books will be studied and referenced for generations to come.’ He shrugged. ‘So what if I took a few lives in the name of research? Knowledge comes at a price, Robert. Some much higher than others.’
Hunter nodded as his eyebrows arched. ‘All that knowledge about psychology and criminal behavior, and you failed to see your own psychosis. You’re not a researcher, Lucien, much less a scientist. You’re just another run-of-the-mill killer, who, to justify your actions and feed the sociopath inside you, deluded yourself into believing that what you were doing was for a noble cause. It’s pathetic, really, because it’s not even original. It’s been done so many times before.’
‘Nothing I’ve done has been done before, Robert,’ Lucien shot back.
Hunter shrugged carelessly. ‘I’m not your therapist, Lucien. I’m not here to help you and this isn’t a session, so you can carry on deluding yourself as much as you like. No one cares, but the good thing was that in your books, you were kind enough to note absolutely everything concerning your experiments – locations, methods used, victims’ names, and much more. I spent the night going through some of them.’
‘You read through fifty-three books in one night?’
‘No, but I managed to skim through eight of them. And that’s where I got lucky, and you didn’t.’
Lucien’s expression showed interest.
‘While skimming through one of them, I came across the name of one of your victims that I knew I’d heard somewhere before – Liam Shaw.’
Lucien’s eyes went cold.
‘It took me a little while to place it,’ Hunter said, ‘but I did eventually remember. That was the name you were using when you were first arrested in Wyoming.’
Lucien stayed quiet.
‘You were also kind enough to very thoroughly describe all your victims,’ Hunter continued. ‘And that was when I realized that Liam Shaw shared several physical characteristics with you – same height, same body type, same skin complexion, same facial shape, including the shapes of his eyes, nose and mouth. You were also of similar age.’
Still silence from Lucien.
‘Then I remembered something else you’d said in one of our interviews. You told Courtney that the reason you were caught wasn’t merited to the FBI. They weren’t investigating any of your murders, or any of the
aliases
you used.’
Lucien shifted on his chair.
‘Well, that got me thinking, so I went back and checked for all other
male
victims you described in the books. There weren’t that many, but all of them shared those same physical characteristics with you.’
Lucien scratched his chin.
Hunter tucked his hands inside his trouser pockets. ‘And that was why you picked them. Not because you wanted them to be part of your encyclopedia of torture and death, but because you were creating a list of identities you could steal at the drop of a dime.’
Lucien’s gaze moved back to the window and the darkness outside.
‘Some of your male victims were prostitutes,’ Hunter moved on. ‘Some were people who were down and out on their luck, but all of them had one major thing in common – they were all lone souls. People who were misunderstood and probably cast aside by their family and friends somewhere else. People who had left their lives behind to start something new in a new city. People with no attachments to anyone. The ones who’d never get reported as missing. The forgettables. The ones no one would miss.’