Dark Eye (7 page)

Read Dark Eye Online

Authors: William Bernhardt

Tags: #thriller

BOOK: Dark Eye
5.91Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
The elevator doors dinged and she stepped out into the cold, barren garage. It was quiet and dark, shadowy. This was one area where the haunted house motif did not need to extend, she thought.
Her pace quickened; she heard each step echo in her wake. Chill bumps rose on her arms and legs. She moved even faster.
That was when she heard the footsteps.
No one had come off that elevator since she arrived, she was certain of that. Nonetheless, someone else was here. She fumbled in her purse for her keys. She was practically running now, her heart thumping in her chest. She was alone, dressed provocatively, carrying a big wad of cash-an obvious target, an easy one. Please, God, just get me back to the rental…
She rounded a lane of cars and sprinted. Just a few more steps and she’d be safe. Just a few more steps…
He jumped right in front of her. She screamed.
It was the man from the blackjack table. The little man with the mustache.
“Where you going in such a hurry?” he said, his vulpine eyes dancing.
“Leave me alone.” She held her purse up, brandishing it like a club.
He was quick, smooth, as if he’d had martial arts training. He knocked the purse out of her hand, then grabbed her by the hair. The wig came off in his hands.
“Not a natural blonde? That’s disappointing.” He tossed the wig away and grabbed her brunette locks, jerking her head back. He pressed his face close to hers. “If you take that pretty dress off yourself, I won’t have to rip it.”
“Please leave me alone. Please.”
“After, bitch.”
“You don’t want me. I-I’m pregnant.”
“Sure you are,” he said, flinging her back against the hood of the car. He grabbed the front of her dress with both hands, one over each breast. “Don’t forget that I gave you a chance to do this the easy way.”
“Freeze!”
Her assailant’s head jerked around.
It was the security guard from the casino. He stood about ten feet away and had his gun pointed right at them. “Good thing I kept my eye on you. I thought you were a thief, not a rapist.” He stepped closer, keeping his weapon level. “Now let go of the little lady.”
Instead the assailant thrust Annabel forward, locking his arm around her neck. “She’s my shield, man.”
The guard continued his steady approach. “Do you think I can’t hit you without hitting her? Think again.” He adjusted the aim of the gun, obviously training it on the man’s head. “She won’t even get dirty.”
“All right, all right!” The man released Annabel and pressed himself face-first against the car. “I give up.”
“Very wise.” Lowering his gun, he grabbed the assailant’s right arm and swung it behind his back.
In a sudden flurry of movement, the man whipped around and knocked the gun out of the guard’s hand. He pushed the guard backward and tore off running.
“Stop!”
He bolted down the parking garage, back toward the stairs.
The guard scrambled under a car to retrieve his gun, then gave chase. Before he was halfway across the expanse, the man had disappeared through a stairwell door.
“Damnation!” The guard pulled out his radio and called for help. Then he returned to Annabel’s side. “Are you okay, ma’am?”
“I’ll live,” she said, steadying herself with one hand on the car roof. “You think they’ll catch him?”
“The way he was running? He’ll be at the Luxor before the men upstairs are on their feet. I’m sorry.”
“Hey, I’m just glad you showed up when you did. You’re my hero.”
His eyes twinkled. “Told you that man was dangerous, didn’t I?”
“Yeah, you did.”
“You’ll need to fill out a report.”
“Ohhh…”
“You can do it tomorrow if you’d rather.”
“I would, thanks.” She smiled. He was kind of cute, really.
“Got your purse?”
“Sure.” She bent down and picked it up. “Well, thanks again.”
“Of course.” He started to go, then stopped. “One other thing.”
“Yes?”
“That dress you’re wearing? I don’t like it.”
“Excuse me?”
“Look at yourself in the mirror. Your breasts are on display, as if you were a southern plantation slave girl.”
“I-I didn’t realize-”
“Your teats are for nursing children, my dear. Not for attracting men.” His voice seemed to slow, to acquire a more pronounced drawl. “Not for producing unholy thoughts. Luring men to their doom. Throwing your sex at them like some kind of harlot.”
She turned toward her car. “I-I think I should go.”
“Too late for that, petunia.” One hand on the back of her head, he jabbed a syringe into her neck. Her legs wobbled.
He scooped her up into his arms and carried her to his pickup. “I am sorry about the pain, my dear. But you won’t feel it for long.”
Annabel was dazed, limp. “What… what are you going to do…?”
“I’m going to help you. Help you be something better than you are. Something wonderful.”
4
Chin up, Susan, chest out, I told myself as I made a beeline toward the yellow crime scene tape. Walk like you know exactly what you’re doing and you’re in a hurry to get there. That’s how I’ve managed to bluster my way past guards, thugs, reluctant witnesses, and on one occasion, Secret Service agents.
I nodded at the patrolman posted by the entrance to the ballroom-and kept on walking. I could read his confusion, his uncertainty. No doubt he’d heard that I’d been relieved of duty and didn’t know what I was doing here. But he didn’t stop me. There was also a hotel security guard standing by the door, a little guy with a tangled mess of black hair and a big bad gun. He was watching me carefully, too. But I kept on walking.
This ballroom was something else. I had been out to this hotel before, not for work but for pleasure. I liked the joint. It appealed to my sense of the macabre. Of all the themed casinos that had sprung up over the last couple of decades, this was my favorite. It was built back in the early Nineties, when Steve Wynn and some of the other high rollers were doing their Vegas Is for Families initiative. Disneyland of the Desert, that’s what they wanted. That’s when the new improved Strip got Treasure Island (pirates) and the Excalibur (Camelot) and the Luxor (fantasy Egypt). Then we got the geographical reconstructions-the New York, complete with a fake Statue of Liberty, and the Paris, complete with a fake Eiffel Tower (like the original, only better-lit). By the end of the decade, the pendulum had swung back again and Vegas was refocusing on its old reliable: vice. This has always been a city of addictions-booze, drugs, sex, money, risk-and now they were back in fashion. Most of the new resorts focused on providing premier shopping or replicating high-dollar vacation spots. Truth was, most of the chumps who came to Vegas had never been to Europe and would be bored stiff at the real Bellagio. But they loved the chance to pretend to be cosmopolitan sophisticates-with girlie shows and free drinks, of course.
The Transylvania had come in about the same time as Treasure Island and the Excalibur. With a choice spot just up the Strip from Circus Circus (now there was an interesting concept-Gambling for the Whole Family!), it had done a brisk business, specializing in those with a taste for the outré. Most of the joint was more tongue-in-cheek than terrifying. Scary more in the sense of, say, Disneyland’s Haunted Mansion than, say, a Jason movie. That showed in the galleries, too. That was another hot Vegas trend-everyone wanted a exhibition. The Bellagio had originally sported Steve Wynn’s art collection. The Venetian had a Guggenheim museum. Mandalay Bay had art treasures collected from around the world. And the Transylvania had a series of ballroom galleries exhibiting re-creations of various fright classics such as
Frankenstein, Dracula,
and
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
This gallery was dedicated to Edgar Allan Poe. I didn’t know enough about his work to identify most of the references. But there was a spooky Victorian house, crumbling and decayed, with a façade that looked like a human face-windows for eyes, et cetera. There were cobwebs and skeletons and, of course, the requisite graveyard, which was where I found Chief O’Bannon, crouched on the floor examining something in a tiny evidence baggie. He was surrounded by a swirl of activity, at least a dozen forensic technicians carefully combing the site with dusters and infrared lights. Chemical swabs. Tweezers. I wondered if they knew about me. For a brief moment, I thought about turning tail and running before I was spotted. But that’s not my style. That would be too sensible.
One of the techs approached O’Bannon. Tony Crenshaw. His specialty was dactylograms-that’s
fingerprints
to the rest of the world-but he was so good O’Bannon let him mess around in hair and fiber and pretty much anything else he wanted to do. I decided to keep my mouth shut for a moment-a novel idea, for me-and just listen.
“We’ve gone over the box pretty carefully, sir. Lots of good trace evidence.”
“From the victim?” O’Bannon asked in his usual gruff manner. “Or the killer?”
“Certainly from the victim,” Crenshaw said, wincing slightly. “But we’re hoping we’ll get something from the perp.”
“What have you found on the girl?”
“Hair. A few latent prints. Blood.”
“How much?”
“Not a lot. She does not appear to have been wounded in any significant way.”
“Anything else?”
Crenshaw hesitated a moment. “Sir… have you looked inside the box?”
“Briefly.”
“The inner side of the lid?”
“No. Why would I?”
“Claw marks.”
O’Bannon squinted. “Like a wild animal?”
“Like she was desperate to get out. The marks match the victim’s fingers, which you may have noticed were raw and bloody.”
His eyes narrowed. “You mean-she was still alive when-”
Crenshaw nodded grimly. They both looked as if they were about to be sick. I crept forward to get a look at the box they were talking about.
Just below O’Bannon, sticking out of the mock graveyard adjoining the haunted house, was an open coffin. With a very scratched inner lid.
“Christ,” O’Bannon said, wiping his brow. “What have we got now?”
Crenshaw shook his head and went back to work. O’Bannon did the same, but I could tell he was shaken.
A moment later, O’Bannon spotted me out of the corner of his eye. “What the hell are you doing here?”
I moved closer, hoping to avoid a scene. “Looking for you.”
“You should’ve been stopped on the other side of the tape.”
“C’mon. You know no one can stop me.”
He grunted unhappily.
“I wanted a few words with you, Chief. About my job.”
“Here’s your few words: you don’t have a job anymore.”
“Chief, I know I kind of screwed up.”
“That’s like saying Rush Limbaugh is kind of conservative.”
“Let me make it up to you. Reinstate me.”
“No can do.”
“Please.”
He started to speak, then stopped, glancing at all the people surrounding us. He grabbed my elbow and dragged me off to where we would be less conspicuous, then looked me straight in the eyes, glowering. “Do you have any idea what I’ve had to deal with this past week, while you were off taking your rest cure?”
“It was hardly-”
“I’ve been dealing with a family-a very rich and influential family-that doesn’t understand why one of Las Vegas ’s finest beat their oldest son to a pulp. It’s amazing how unreasonable people can be about things like that.”
“The kid was a jerk.”
“Oh, well, in that case, you should’ve just killed him.”
“Chief-”
“They’ve been threatening to sue the department, something that would decimate our already strained budget, not to mention create some incredibly bad press.”
“If there’s anything I can do-”
“But there isn’t. You created a big shitpile and left me to clean it up.”
I had to take a step back. O’Bannon was way angrier than I had anticipated. I’d never seen him like this, and I’d known him even longer than I’d been on the force. His left eye was twitching, for God’s sake, and the little purple veins on the bulb of his nose were throbbing.
“Of course, I’ve had to deal with the IA boys, who were all over us, calling for an investigation, policy changes. The usual bull. I tried to point out that you were not exactly acting ex cathedra when the incident occurred-although apparently in your drunken stupor you thought you were-but that didn’t placate them. They’re demanding prompt action, which is just IA code for ‘throw us a scapegoat.’ ”
“And I’m the scapegoat.”
“What’d you want me to do, pin it on the kid you creamed?”
“So you just fired me. While I was seeking medical attention.”
“Technically, I didn’t fire you. Internal Affairs did.”
“Bastards.”
“IA wanted to go the whole dishonorable-discharge route-put a permanent stain on your record that would guarantee you couldn’t get hired as a security guard at Piggly Wiggly. But I told them you were dealing with personal problems and had a chemical dependency and a lot of other crap, so they just fired you and left it at that.”
“Thanks so much.”
“Don’t thank me. I didn’t do it for you. I did it for your dad.
He
earned my loyalty.”
I can’t pretend that one didn’t kick me in the teeth pretty hard. My father was a cop. He and O’Bannon had been peers. I think they were even partners for a while.
“Chief-please. Listen to me.”
He pushed my hands away. “Pulaski, we’ve got nothing to say.”
“I need to work right now.”
“They’re hiring at McDonald’s.”
I gestured toward the coffin. “Looks like you’ve got a weirdie on your hands. Some kind of psycho?”
“God, I hope so. Maybe if we have a real case to work, IA will ease up on my former behaviorist’s drunken brawls.”

Other books

Gluten-Free Makeovers by Beth Hillson
OmegaMine by Aline Hunter
The Gentleman's Daughter by Vickery, Amanda
Betrayed by Kelly Harper
Amelia by Diana Palmer
The Fall of the Year by Howard Frank Mosher
The Third Wife by Jordan Silver
The House of Dies Drear by Virginia Hamilton
Sword Play by Emery, Clayton