Authors: Elizabeth Adler
“You spoil him, Doris. Besides, he just had his dinner. He’s going to get fat.”
“Yeah. I always liked fat men and fat dogs. And that leaves you out, detective. All muscle and no squeeze.” Laughing at her own joke, she shouldered her tray and marched determinedly toward the corner booth.
“Hey, you guys,” Harry heard her say loudly, “you gonna sit here all night or what? There’s paying customers waiting for this table.”
He laughed, and then his cellular phone beeped. Turning
away from the noisy room, he pressed it to his ear. “Jordan.”
“Detective, where the hell is this Ruby’s?” Mallory Malone sounded irate. “The limo driver has never heard of it.”
He grinned. “Everybody who’s anybody in Boston knows exactly where Ruby’s is, Ms. Malone. Put him on the phone, I’ll give him directions.”
She did not laugh or even say good-bye, or see you in a little while, or anything remotely sociable. Instead the driver came on the line and Harry gave him the directions. By the time he’d finished, Doris had the guys in the booth counting out their money while she stood, arms folded, watching them. Two minutes later they were shouldering past him to the door and Doris was clearing the table.
Harry hated to think of what might have happened if he had kept Ms. “Star” Malone waiting. He edged into the booth, his back to the wall so he could see her come in. Squeeze slid under the table out of the way—and his big head sank onto his paws as he prepared for a snooze.
Harry went over what he knew about Mallory Malone. Surprisingly, for such a public personality, it wasn’t much. Just that she was originally from Oregon and had attended Washington State University where she had majored in journalism. After a few jobs in small-town radio and TV, she had become a weather girl on a Seattle station. From there she had been picked up by a network and groomed as a newscaster; then she became a morning anchor woman, and now she had her own successful show.
There had been one marriage, to a rich Wall Street broker. But that hadn’t lasted long. Her hours were different from his and he said she was consumed by her work.
“Mallory has dedicated her life to TV,” he had told the press bitterly. “I hope it keeps her warm in bed at night.” There were no children.
As he watched, the door swung open and Mallory Malone stepped inside. She glanced around, her eyebrows raised, as though she were wondering if she could possibly be in the right place.
Harry slid quickly from the booth and loped toward her. “Ms. Malone.”
Her head swung around and their eyes met. He hadn’t realized from TV that hers were such a deep blue, nor that her lashes were so long. When she lowered them and looked down at his outstretched hand, she looked unexpectedly shy. She was smartly dressed in a gray cashmere sweater and skirt with a red jacket, and her golden hair was beaded with glittering raindrops. She looked as out of place in Ruby’s as a tropical flower in Alaska. And she had cold hands.
As she shook Harry’s hand, mal thought uncomfortably that she was overdressed in her cashmere, while Jordan looked scruffily at home in his faded jeans and the beat-up jacket. He was younger than she had expected and, damn it, he was attractive. His rain-wet dark hair was plastered to his narrow skull, his gray eyes were penetrating as they looked into hers, and his firm mouth looked sexy. He had at least a day-old black stubble and looked way too sure of himself. Disconcerted, she removed her hand.
“Detective Jordan,” she said coldly. “It took my driver half an hour to find this place.”
“I’m sorry, though it’s really not that hard.”
Antagonism crackled between them. She glanced disparagingly at the counter with its mirrored display of pies and chocolate cake; at the steamy little kitchen and the cracked red vinyl banquettes and the waitresses slinging hash and fried eggs and burgers and cholesterol.
She raised a superior eyebrow. “Slumming, Detective Jordan?”
Harry gritted his teeth. What the hell did she expect, Le
Cirque? “I’m sorry it’s not up to your standards, ma’am. But it
is
close to the precinct house, and I
am
on duty.” He shrugged. “Besides, cops can’t be choosers, with what they earn. All the guys eat here.”
Her blue eyes narrowed. “Most cops, Jordan. But not
rich
cops.”
Harry knew he was in trouble. She hated Ruby’s, she hated cops, and she hated rich cops even more. He wondered how she knew—then he guessed it was the same way she had known his unlisted home number. She made it her business to know exactly who she was interviewing, whether it was on TV or not.
Heads turned in recognition as he led her to the table at the back, but she seemed unaware that there were other people in the place. As she slid into the booth opposite him, her foot encountered the soft bulk of the dog. Startled, she peeked underneath, then a sudden smile lit up her face.
Harry stared at her, dazzzled. It was as though somebody had switched her on.
“Say hello to the lady, Squeeze,” he instructed, and the dog, true to his name, squeezed out from between their knees. He sat next to Mallory, then raised his right paw politely.
“Oh,
cute.” She
threw Harry a for-God’s-sake glance. But she took the paw and patted the dog, murmuring sweet nothings to it.
“Back, Squeeze,” he commanded, and the dog slunk obediently under the table again. He rested his head on Harry’s shabby suede Paraboots, waiting for him to make his next move.
Her eyes met Harry’s across the cigarette-scarred Formica table. “Isn’t Squeeze an odd name for a dog? Shouldn’t he be called Rover or Fido or something?”
“He’s called Squeeze because he can squeeze out of any place. As he proved when he was just a pup. You name
it, he squeezed out of it. Under the backyard fence, out of a car window, out of my bedroom at night. I thought about calling him Houdini, but then I thought, nah, too fancy. Squeeze is better.”
She nodded, agreeing with him, and her chrysanthemum crop of blond hair, sequined with raindrops, fluttered like petals across her smooth brow.
Harry dragged his eyes from her and passed her a grease-spotted plastic menu. “What’ll you have? I can recommend the ham steak and home fries.”
She threw a quick glance at the heaping plates being passed over the counter. “A beer will do just fine.”
Beer did not seem her style; he would have thought she would go for coffee—black no sugar—but he guessed shrewdly that she knew when to play at being one of the guys.
He signaled Doris and ordered two beers. Doris’s jaw dropped when she saw his companion. “Two beers?” she demanded, astonished. “Ya should be buyin’ this lady champagne. Cheapskate.”
Mal laughed as Doris winked at her. “Us women gotta stick together,” Doris said, heading to the counter. She was back in a flash with the beers and her order pad.
“Could ya just put your autograph on here, Mal?” she asked, thrilled. “Otherwise my kids are not gonna believe it when I tell ’em who was in Ruby’s tonight. Aw hell,” she added resignedly, as Mal signed her name with practiced ease, “they’re not gonna believe me, anyways. They’ll think I just made it up.”
“But you and I will know you didn’t.” Mal smiled up at her.
“Yeah. And that’s what counts. Thanks, Mal, I appreciate it. And while you’re at it, don’t let this hunk give ya the run-around. I always tell him he’s all muscle and no brains.”
There was laughter lurking in Mal’s blue eyes as she
took a sip of her Bud Light. Then she slipped off her red jacket and looked squarely at Harry.
“Okay, Jordan,” she said, suddenly all business, “you’re on.”
“I feel like I’m auditioning for the show,” he said uneasily.
“You may be. So get on with it.”
He told her the facts about the murders and that there had been no connection between the three young women—they had not come from the same towns or even from the same states. They had not known each other. They had not lived near each other. They had not attended the same colleges.
“These were not random killings,” he said. “This guy is precise. He’s an organized killer. He knew exactly what he was doing. I think he knew where his victims lived and their daily routine, what times their classes were, and when they were likely to be alone.”
Mal’s eyes widened, and a little shiver ran down her spine. “You mean he
stalked
them?”
“I believe he did.”
“That’s terrible,” she said soberly. “A maniac on the loose around all these college kids. He can just take his pick. Don’t you have any line on him at all?”
“Forensics is working on scene-of-crime evidence—fibers, hairs, semen. We’ll have the DNA in a couple of weeks, and I’m certain it will link him to the two previous attacks. And the students are aware of the danger now. They’ve been warned not to wander around campus after dark. The schools have escort services to walk young women back to their dorms. It’ll help for a while.”
“You think he’ll strike again?”
“I’m certain of it. The FBI’s Behavioral Science Unit has a psychological profile. They say we’re looking for a guy with a deep psychosis against women. Cutting off their hair is symbolic—he’s divesting them of their femininity.
Rape proves his power over them, and the slitting of the wrists probably brings him to a climax he can never otherwise reach. For him, it’s probably the ultimate moment of power. The women are helpless, they feel pain—they are dying while he lives.”
Her horrified eyes met his. “Oh, my God.”
He nodded grimly. “So now you see why we have to catch him before he strikes again. From his pattern I’d guess he’ll take his time—perhaps a couple of months. He’ll survey the scene, pick out his victim, trail her, maybe even break into her house, get the feel of her, the scent of her. Like an animal stalking its prey. He’s methodical. That’s why he’s been so successful.”
“Why do men do these things?”
Harry shrugged. “Studies show that all murderers of this type come from dysfunctional homes—drug abuse, alcohol, criminal activities, you name it. There’s often mental illness in the family, and they probably suffered serious emotional and physical abuse in childhood. Usually the mothers dominated them, demeaned them, systematically emasculated them. In turn, they become sexually dysfunctional adults, unable to sustain a mature, consensual relationship with another adult.”
“You think this is what happened to our killer?”
“I wish I knew.” Harry ran his hands wearily through his still-wet hair. It stuck up spikily, and Mal thought interestedly that he looked as though he’d just stepped out of the shower.
“The public always thinks a murderer looks like a monster,” he said. “But the fact is, mostly he looks like any guy on the street. The FBI profile says our killer probably lives a ‘normal’ life. Meaning he is a man with a deep psychosis able to put up a facade of normality. He lives alone, in a house rather than an apartment because he needs privacy for his comings and goings. He’s of neat appearance and orderly in his daily life. He holds down adecent
job, white collar rather than blue. He might even be from a higher social level. He carries out his job well, has no friends, and is obsessively tidy.”
“So we’re not looking for a freak or a down-and-out vagrant roaming the streets. We’re looking for a regular guy, a man his neighbors and co-workers think quite normal. No different from you or any other man in Boston.”
“A needle in a haystack,” he agreed.
“It’s lucky you managed to get the photo-fit.”
Harry slipped the picture from the manila envelope. “One other thing. The last victim, Summer Young. Before she died, she managed to tell us two details. That he had dark staring eyes. And smooth hands.”
“So he’s definitely not a manual worker.”
“It’s unlikely.”
“Did she say anything else?”
“Yeah. She called him a bastard. Those were her dying words.”
Shaken, Mal looked away from him. She took a sip of the beer.
She studied the picture for a long minute, and Harry studied her. He liked the way her eyelashes curled, sweetly, at the tips.
“This is taken from the description of the two fishermen?” she asked at long last.
“Yes. They caught him in their flashlight for a second before he took off. But a police artist enhanced the eyes to match Summer’s memory of him.”
Mal’s voice was colder than the beer. “I’m afraid it’s not much to go on, Detective Jordan. It’s not accurate. And it’s certainly not enough to base a national TV program on. I’m sorry, but I can’t help you.”
Picking up her jacket and purse, she slid out of the banquette.
Harry stared at her, stunned. One minute she had been ready to get out there on TV and save other young
women from a terrible fate. The next she had slammed the door in his face.
“Wait just a minute.” His voice was harsh. Under the table Squeeze raised his head and growled softly.
Harry leaped to his feet. She turned away, but he grabbed her shoulder. “What happened?”
“What do you mean?” He let go of her and she thrust her arms hurriedly into her jacket, avoiding his eyes.
“One minute you’re hot for the story. The next you’re not. I’d like to know why.”
She shrugged. “I let you tell your story, detective. I listened. I made a decision. That’s the way I do things. Rejection is not sweet, Harry Jordan, I understand that.”
She picked up her purse, still avoiding his eyes. “Nothing personal, of course.” Then she strode past the cracked red vinyl booths, out of the diner, and into the waiting limo.
M
AL STARED DETERMINEDLY
out the rain-streaked windows at the passing scenery, willing herself not to think about it. On the flight back to La Guardia, she read four long articles in the latest
Vanity Fair
, though if you had asked her later, she would have been unable to tell you a thing about them.
The sight of her own front door had never been so welcome. She closed it behind her and leaned against it, her heart thudding as though she had just run five blocks.
Her housekeeper had left the lamps lit and she glanced gratefully around her peaceful home. Kicking off her shoes, she padded through the hallway to her bedroom.