Edge of Midnight (19 page)

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Authors: Leslie Tentler

BOOK: Edge of Midnight
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“I know you don’t like telling me about the investigation,” she murmured. “You don’t want to infect me with the ugly stuff and I appreciate that. But I have a television. I know what’s going on and that it’s bad.”

Cameron hung his head. He was a federal agent;
he’d seen things.
But this newest menace went beyond anything he had ever experienced. Even now, Cissy Cox’s stifled cries and the slow agony of her death tore at his insides. At the VCU, he suspected such horror was routine. He had no idea how Eric dealt with it, day in and day out. How he listened to those women’s screams without being hurtled back to the brutal murder of his own wife. The killer’s intent in sending the audios was clearly to keep torturing Eric, as well.

“We went out to talk to a possible suspect today,” he said finally. “The guy took a shot at us and fled.”

“God.” Lanie’s hands stilled and she moved to the edge of the bed to sit beside him. She brushed her honey-blond hair from her eyes. “Was anyone hurt?”

“No, but it’s a miracle. Eric took off after the guy. None of us could keep up with him—he was a sprinter in college, you know.” Cameron shook his head. “No backup and nothing between them. Clearly against protocol. They had their guns drawn on each other and Eric kept moving in, refusing to take cover or back down.”

“You know how much he wants Rebecca’s killer. Maybe he wasn’t thinking clearly—”

“That’s the thing,” Cameron said, looking at her. “Eric knew practically from the moment we got there we had the wrong guy. But it didn’t keep him from taking the risk.”

He rubbed his tired eyes. “I brought him in on this. Maybe it’s too much.”

“He got caught up in the heat of the moment and made a bad call. Eric’s been through a lot but he’s solid.”

Cameron hoped that was true.

Wearing only pajama bottoms, he stood and went to the window, looking out at the languid waterway behind their home. Somewhere out there, Karen Diambro was being held prisoner. Based on Eric’s theory, Anna Lynn Gomez was a corpse by now, a deteriorating shell waiting to be found, identified and claimed by her loved ones.

“Come back to bed.” He realized Lanie stood beside him. She ran a hand up his arm. “I get lonely without you.”

Turning to her, he placed a lingering kiss against her lips, his fingers intertwining with hers.

“I can’t sleep,” he whispered.

“Maybe I can help you with that.”

Cameron allowed her to lead him back to their rumpled sheets, vowing never to take for granted what he had been given, not for a minute. He thought of Eric and the different paths they’d taken, how each of them had been dealt a very different hand.

He had taken Mia’s suggestion to heart.

Eric stood on the beach, his shoes and socks left behind at the wooden steps leading onto the sand. It was late, and the darkened, roaring sea spread out in front of him, whitecaps visible as waves crashed along the shore. Two teenagers, a boy and a girl, walked by hand-in-hand. They glanced curiously at his dress clothes, the gun on his hip, before hurrying past.

He’d come out here to think, to deal with his spiraling thoughts. He should be focusing on the investigation—the lead weight of responsibility on his shoulders—but his mind remained on Mia.

She had kissed him. It had been all Eric could do not to take things further. He felt desire for her so sharp it created a near physical hurt inside him. But those feelings came layered with a heavy guilt. He had a job to do and she was a complication he could ill afford. He thought of Rebecca—what she’d gone through because of him. Mia was a salve for his wounds he very possibly didn’t deserve.

The cell phone in his pocket rang, pulling him from his internal sparring. Eric looked at the number on the phone’s screen. He considered not answering but then accepted the call.

“Hello, Dad,” he said quietly.

“The investigation’s getting coverage on the national news,” Richard Macfarlane remarked in his typical direct manner, no salutation given. “What’s happening down there?”

Eric released a breath, his chest tight. He wondered how much he knew. “He took another woman last night.”

“That’s two since you were brought on to the case. You need to catch this bastard, Eric. Now.”

“Yeah,” he rasped, gazing off toward the lights coming from a line of multistory hotels not too far off in the distance. “I know.”

“Your mother saw Clarissa Garner yesterday at the club,” he said. “Awkward situation. Clarissa still won’t speak to her, of course. She has to use a cane to get around now, poor woman. Charles was with her…”

Eric closed his eyes as he listened to his father talk about his former in-laws. They’d had Rebecca late in life; they had lost their only child. Both Clarissa and her husband, Charles, had refused to acknowledge Eric at their daughter’s funeral, which he had interpreted as a direct accusation. He hadn’t protected Rebecca, hadn’t loved her enough to keep her safe. She was dead because of the enemy he had created.

“What’s your game plan, son?”

“Quite honestly, Dad, I don’t know. I’m taking one day at a time. We’re looking into every lead.”

A long moment of silence stretched between them. It was clearly not the response his father had wanted. Richard Macfarlane was known as a tough nut to crack within the upper echelons of the DOJ. It was what made him a force to be reckoned with in his job. “I’ve taken some criticism for putting you on the case. But I know what this means to you. To Rebecca and her family, too. You have to put this dog down.”

Eric heard the unspoken directive.
Don’t disappoint me. Make me proud.

They talked awhile longer, with Eric asking after his mother and sister, Hope, who was younger by seven years and working on her doctorate in Art History at Georgetown. The remainder of their conversation was perfunctory, an almost obligatory, even formal exchange between father and son. Richard loved him, Eric believed that, but he was uncomfortable with emotion and he set the bar high for his eldest.

“Be careful, Eric.”

Good hunting. Godspeed.
The airwaves went dead. He returned the phone to his pocket and stared out at the tumultuous body of water awhile longer, his heart heavier than before.

19

 

“T
wo canoeists hiking down to Black Creek found it.” The park ranger was still chalk-faced under his uniform hat. “One of ’em went off trail to take a piss and stumbled over the grave. Hell of a start to a Saturday morning.”

Eric followed his gaze to the two young men who sat huddled on a downed tree trunk a few dozen feet from the parking area. Their canoes and backpacks lay nearby. Although Jennings State Forest was outside of their Duval County jurisdiction, Detectives Boyet and Scofield were there as well, talking to the local police. Workers from Forensics and the M.E.’s office moved around the cordoned-off crime scene.

“The fella with the ponytail thinks he stepped on her.” The ranger added with a grimace, “You know,
squish.

Cameron frowned. “Didn’t he notice the smell?”

“We’ve got a lot of wildlife out here—raccoons, otters, alligators—he just thought it was a dead animal until he saw a hand sticking out of the brush. Hey, is this one of those abducted women out of Jacksonville?”

Eric didn’t answer. He had arrived a few minutes behind Cameron, who lived closer to the latest dump site. Dread sat heavy in his stomach. Karen Diambro had been missing for over two days, but he already knew the body located by the canoeists wasn’t hers.

He left Cameron talking to the ranger and moved past the crime scene tape to the makeshift grave, although it was more of a natural, shallow ravine than a hole someone had dug. Tree limbs and brush had been used as cover. One of the forensics techs was busy taking photographs.

Eric stared down at Anna Lynn Gomez. He wiped his mouth with the back of his gloved hand, his throat tight with anger and guilt. Wild animals had gotten to her, not to mention the impact of the Florida heat that had sped up the deterioration process. Bugs crawled over the badly bloated corpse. It was hard to imagine the flight attendant had only weighed a hundred and fifteen pounds. The release of gases inside the body had caused blisters to form on the skin. Despite this, a crudely carved number,
nine,
remained partially visible.

Eric couldn’t look away. Her fingernails were all missing. Flies buzzed around the rotting carcass.

Cameron joined him. Based on the white smear under his nose, he’d taken time to borrow vapor rub from one of the techs in an attempt to mask the stench. “He won’t make it official until autopsy, but the M.E. suspects she died by hanging, due to pinpoint hemorrhaging and horizontal bruising around the throat—the line’s too high for manual choking. He rolled the body earlier and there’s an inverted V indentation on the back of the neck indicating where the noose was pulled tight by the vic’s body weight.”

Based on the low ceiling of the room Mia had described, there wouldn’t have been much of a distance for a hanging victim to fall. Which meant The Collector had probably placed her on a chair and then taken it out from under her. Eric looked briefly over the sloping, moss-covered ground, heartsick. Death in that manner would have taken a while, the asphyxiation gradual. He tried not to think of Anna Lynn struggling, suspended in midair for her killer’s pleasure.

He pushed emotion from his voice. “As soon as we’re done here, I’ll notify the family.”

“Do you think that’s a good idea? Victor Gomez already unloaded on you once. Why don’t you send the detectives—”

“I’m going,” he said tightly. “I owe her father that much.”

“Then I’m going with you. That’s nonnegotiable, Eric.”

A tech who had been combing over the forest floor near the gravesite captured their attention. He held up the butt of a marijuana joint in an evidence bag. “We’ve got something.”

“That’s not the killer’s.” Eric nodded discreetly at the two guys seated on the tree trunk, who were exchanging nervous glances with one another. He guessed they’d attempted to calm themselves while waiting for the ranger service, or it was why they’d been off trail in the first place. His own nerves felt splintered. He was merely chasing dead women, left behind like a trail of stale breadcrumbs for him to find.

There had to be a break in the investigation soon.

Forty-five minutes outside Jacksonville, Mia drove along the Atlantic Coast, heading north into Fernandina Beach.

Bypassing the historic downtown district, she traveled past hotels and high-rise condominiums until the buildings became older and incrementally smaller, eventually morphing into a long line of private beach homes. A few minutes later the Volvo’s GPS indicated she had reached her destination. She came to a stop in front of an aged beach cottage with a covered observation deck on the roof. Tall clumps of sea grass bordered the property, and a whimsical painted-wood sign on its gate announced it as The Captain’s Roost.

Mia took the yellowed folder from the passenger seat. The sultry breeze lifted her hair as she exited the car, bringing with it the scent of seawater and suntan oil from vacationers on the shoreline. She went to the front porch and rang the doorbell.

“Up here,” a booming voice called. Shielding her eyes, she squinted up to the deck. Retired JSO detective Hank Dugger was not what she had expected. Far from frail, even robust, he leaned over the deck railing, his eyes bright under a thick head of silver hair. “Take the stairs around back.”

Smoothing her khaki shorts, Mia headed up the steps. Green outdoor carpeting covered the deck floor, and a corner bar made out of old dock timbers displayed an impressive collection of liquor. A battered rattan couch and chair set were arranged nearby under a canopy of netting woven with seashells. Jimmy Buffett sang from a pair of speakers mounted to the wall. She extended her hand, which he shook.

“I’m Mia Hale. We spoke earlier by phone?”

The retired detective had deep crinkles around his blue eyes. He remained handsome despite the sun damage to his tanned skin. “Back in my day, reporters didn’t look like you, Ms. Hale. If they did, I might’ve been a little more cooperative.”

“Call me Mia.” She judged Hank to be somewhere in his mid- to late sixties.

“Can I get you a drink? How about a rum and Coke?”

“I have a long drive back to Jacksonville. Just the Coke would be great.”

As he poured their beverages, Mia noticed the view from the deck. Even though the house was nothing fancy—more of a beach shanty, really—the view was breathtaking. Seagulls fished and took flight on the shore, and vacationers’ umbrellas provided pops of bright color along the pale sand. Just beyond them the green ocean waves rolled and crashed into foam.

“You can see the old lighthouse to the left,” he noted, handing Mia her drink. Indeed, it stood on a faraway sandbank, a red-and-white candy stripe swirling up its length.

“You have a nice place, Detective.”

“I worked for thirty years and bought this property when it was still affordable. And I’m not a detective anymore, thank God. Call me Hank.” He peered at the folder Mia had set on the low table in front of the rattan couch. “Is that it?”

When she nodded, he said, “I’ll be damned. I’m surprised they haven’t cleared all that out by now.”

“Apparently it was buried in the JSO records room. I understand it took a while to find.”

His eyes held interest. “And they passed it over to a reporter, just like that?”

Mia hadn’t been completely forthcoming with the retired detective in their earlier phone conversation. “I
am
a reporter with the
Courier.
But my interest in the case is more…personal. I think I might’ve known Joy Rourke as a child. We were both in foster care, in the same group home at the same time.”

Hank nodded thoughtfully as he regarded Mia. Taking a sip of his drink, he sat on the couch and indicated she should do the same, then leafed through the file. As he read, Mia noticed the sign over the bar.

This Property Guarded by Smith & Wesson Three Days a Week. You Guess Which Three.

Based on her impression of the man beside her, she wasn’t completely sure it was tongue-in-cheek.

“Yep, these are my reports—I can tell because the space bar on my typewriter had a tendency to stick.” He shook his head nostalgically. He’d retrieved a pair of bifocals from the pocket of the Hawaiian shirt he wore and perched them on his nose. “Crying shame we never found this kid. My partner, Carl Witherspoon, and I worked the case. Carl died a few months ago. Throat cancer.”

“I’m sorry.”

Hank grunted, still scanning the file. His gaze returned to Mia. “How can I help you, exactly?”

“I’m wondering why the Sheriff’s Office closed the investigation.”

“As best I remember, we ran out of leads and were assigned elsewhere—”

“Didn’t a child’s disappearance merit more time?”

He frowned. “It wasn’t my decision. JSO detectives in those days were handling nine, maybe ten cases at once. Probably a lot more than that now with the city’s budget cuts and the jump in crime. Like I said, I’m glad to be retired. It’s not like it used to be. These days you look at a perp the wrong way and get your ass sued.”

“You said you followed up on all the leads regarding Joy’s disappearance—no one stood out to you?”

He sighed. “We talked to neighbors, the group home director and caseworker, even the children who were residing there. No one claimed to have seen anything. The little girl didn’t have any relatives, and those are typically the first suspects when a child goes missing out of state custody.”

Mia scrubbed her hands over her thighs, ill at ease. She wondered if Detective Dugger and his partner had spoken to her back then and what, if anything, she’d told them.

He must have noticed her disquiet, because he leaned forward and added, “I know this girl seems special, but you need to understand that over two thousand children a day are reported missing in this country, whether a noncustodial family member or a stranger takes them, or they just run off of own their accord. We did what we could given the resources, but eventually we turned the information over to the FBI. They keep a file on missing children. If I recall, the NCMEC even put her face on billboards for a while, but none of the calls that came into the hotline panned out.”

“The NCMEC?”

“The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. You say you knew this girl?”

“Not well,” she admitted.

Draining the rest of his drink, Hank placed the empty tumbler on an end table. He handed the file back. “I wish I could tell you more, but it was a long time ago and my memory’s not as sharp as it used to be. ’Course, that’s why God invented notepads.”

Mia tilted her head. “I’m not sure I understand.”

“What you read in that official file are just summaries—the forms and paperwork required by the job, rolled up to an executive level so the top brass doesn’t have to waste time reading through everything. Most of my real thoughts on cases I kept in a spiral-bound notepad. Probably went through hundreds of them over my career.”

“Do you still have them?”

Chuckling, he slapped the arm of the couch as he stood. “Pardon my French, but does a bear shit in the woods?”

The cottage was comfortable and quaint, with a country-style braided rag rug in the living room and well-worn furniture. A television set was blaring a Tampa Bay Rays baseball game. Mia followed Hank through the kitchen into a rear bedroom that now appeared to be used as a study. As he rummaged in the closet, Mia noticed framed photos that indicated grandchildren and possibly also a wife. But there was no other sign of a female presence in the house. Her heart tightened as she wondered if Hank was a widower.

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