Passions of the Dead (A Detective Jackson Mystery/Thriller)

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Authors: L.J. Sellers

Tags: #Mystery, #Murder

BOOK: Passions of the Dead (A Detective Jackson Mystery/Thriller)
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Novels by L.J. Sellers
 

Detective Jackson Series

 

Secrets to Die For

 

Thrilled to Death

 

Passions of the Dead

 

Dying for Justice

 

Liars, Cheaters & Thieves

 

Standalone Thrillers

 

The Sex Club

 

The Baby Thief

 

The Arranger

 

The Suicide Effect

 

Nonfiction

 

Write First, Clean Later:
Blogs, Essays, & Writing Advice

 

PASSIONS OF THE DEAD

 

Copyright © 2010 by L.J. Sellers

 

All rights reserved. Except for text references by reviewers, the reproduction of this work in any form is forbidden without permission from the author.

 

ISBN: 978-0-9795182-7-0

 

Published in the United States of America

 

Spellbinder Press
Eugene, OR 97402
ljsellers.com

 

This is a work of fiction. All characters, names, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual people, locations, or events is coincidental or fictionalized.

 

Cover art by Gwen Thomsen Rhoads,
http://www.gwenrhoads.com/

 

Digital Editions by
booknook.biz

 
Contents
 

Novels by L.J. Sellers

Copyright Page

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

About the Author

Chapter 1
 

Monday, June 1, 8:15 a.m.

“Final decisions about layoffs will be announced Friday.” Sergeant Lammers panned the room, stopping to make eye contact with Jackson. He and fifteen other detectives were crammed into an overheated conference closet. They shifted in their seats and tried not to glance at each other.

“Two detectives will be cut, one from vice and one from violent crimes.” Lammers’ voice was deadpan, and for the first time in his twenty-year career, Jackson worried he might lose his job. He’d been written up and suspended recently, and now he had a health issue the department might consider a liability. What would he do if he lost his job? He was still a month away from his twenty-year pension.

The door flew open and a desk officer rushed in. “Excuse me, Sergeant, but there’s been a mass homicide. Four people dead in a house at 1252 Randall Street. No reports of the assailant. A relative found the bodies and called it in.”

A mass of men in dark jackets jumped to their feet, and the air hummed with adrenaline. Lammers shouted over the din. “I want Jackson, Schakowski, McCray, Quince, and Evans at the scene. Everyone else is on standby for assignments as needed.” Lammers strode toward the desk officer. “Get the mobile crime unit out there. I’ll call the DA and the ME.”

Jackson hustled toward the door, thinking for the moment he still had a job.

As he raced over Ferry Street Bridge with the rushing water of the Willamette River below, Jackson worried about what was happening to his hometown. For most of his life, Eugene, Oregon had been a safe midsized college town—a tree-loving, friendly place to grow up in, with the mountains and the ocean only an hour’s drive away. A perfect place to raise his child. Now Eugene was a small city with a growing crime rate, a meth scourge, high unemployment, and a dying downtown—and no money to fix anything. They’d never had a mass homicide though. He’d worked several murder–suicides in which a man had shot his wife or girlfriend then himself, but never a crime scene with four people killed. What if some of the victims were children?

The home was in the Coburg Road area, in one of the older neighborhoods where the real estate had less square footage but bigger yards. A modest house that needed paint but otherwise looked cared for. The front lawn had been recently mowed and someone had planted petunias along the walkway—signs of an unusually warm month of May. A red F-150 pickup and an old green Subaru sat side-by-side in the driveway. The Subaru sported a bumper sticker bragging about a
Student of the Month
and another that said
I Love Al Gore
.

Two patrol units sat out front in the curve of the long cul-de-sac. One of the officers was on the sidewalk next to a weeping woman with a cell phone to her ear. An older couple huddled together at the edge of their adjoining yard, and across the street a woman in sweatpants stood on her front step, watching the activity. Another blue Impala screeched to a stop behind him.

Jackson climbed out of his car, wishing he’d taken some naproxen before leaving headquarters. The pain his ten-inch abdominal scar still produced surprised him. His kidneys, which had been compromised by the fibrosis, also bothered him if he moved too fast. As he approached the people on the sidewalk, the uniform officer said, “This is Rita Altman. Her sister is one of the victims inside. She came by this morning to pick her up and found them.”

The woman, late thirties and heavyset with hair to her waist, glanced at Jackson, then continued weeping into the phone as she described her ordeal to a listener.

“Don’t let her leave. I need to talk with her in a minute,” Jackson said and hurried past. He needed to get inside the home and see the scene before it was swamped with people doing their jobs. Behind him, the scream of an ambulance raced up Harlow Road. Why the siren? Jackson wondered. They wouldn’t need its paramedic services, just its cargo space to transport bodies.

Ed McCray, an older detective fond of brown corduroy, joined him on the sidewalk. They looked at each other without speaking, then started for the house. Jackson visually searched the driveway as they walked past the cars. He had a small hope of finding something the killer might have dropped.

At the threshold, Jackson grabbed paper booties and latex gloves out of his shoulder bag. McCray did the same. Jackson suspected today he would need nearly everything the bag held: flashlight, crime scene tape, an assortment of pre-labeled paper bags and clear plastic bags, a box of latex gloves, tweezers, and three cameras: film, digital, and video.

He braced himself, nodded at McCray, then pushed though the door. A sour metal smell soaked the air, overpowering even the odor of meat scraps in the garbage. The front door opened into a narrow hallway with vinyl flooring, bordered by a step down into a carpeted, crowded living room. With a sweeping glance, Jackson took it all in. Two well-worn couches huddled around a big TV, a cluttered desk in the corner with an older computer, a bookshelf with more sports trophies than books, and a wall covered with family photos.

Then he saw the wide archway into the kitchen. And beyond it, the bodies.

A patrol officer squatted near the bloody mess. He jumped at the sound of their footsteps. “This girl is alive,” the officer said in an excited rush. “After we cleared the house, I went back to the kitchen to stand guard. I was taking pictures and realized she was still breathing, so I called for an ambulance.”

A survivor! Thank God. Someone would be able to tell them what the hell had happened here. Jackson started toward the kitchen, then froze. He looked down at the floor and spotted bloody footprints leading away from the bodies toward the front door. Critical evidence and they were walking on it. He turned to McCray. “We need samples of the blood on these footprints right now.” Jackson wondered about another way into the house, maybe through the garage. He let the idea go. The paramedics would charge through the front door no matter what he requested. Their objective was different than his.

Jackson took five quick photos of the footprints while McCray scraped and bagged some dried blood. They hurried over to the bodies. Jackson forced himself to shut out everything but the girl who was still breathing. She looked about seventeen and her head rested on the stomach of another woman. Based on their matching reddish-blond hair and freckles, he assumed the body underneath was her mother.

Knowing the paramedics were a heartbeat away and would alter the crime scene when they carried the girl out, Jackson knelt and snapped another round of photos. He took one of her face, one of the congealed bloody gash cut through the belly of her blood-soaked shirt, and one close-up of each hand to document the defense wounds. For a moment, her eyes fluttered open, pale green and distant, then closed again. Jackson stepped back and took two pictures of her position, relative to the other bodies, before the paramedics rushed in.

“Stop there,” he said. “You’re not wearing booties, and we’ve have to do this carefully. McCray and I will carry her to the gurney.”

“No,
we
have to do this.” The taller paramedic rolled the gurney into the kitchen and pushed past. He shifted to the other side of the bodies and squatted near the young woman’s head and shoulders. The other medic in dark blue grabbed the girl under her knees, and they gently loaded her on the gurney. As they tended to her wound and gave her oxygen, Jackson hung back and let them work. The foot traffic patterns in the crime scene area had just been obliterated. As the paramedics rolled the girl out, Jackson said a little prayer, asking God to keep her alive.

In the distance, cars raced up the street, followed by the rumble of the mobile crime unit’s diesel engine. The white, truck-style RV would serve as their base today while they processed the house and questioned the neighbors. Jackson looked over at the patrol officer. “Please stand by the door and don’t let anyone in yet, except the medical examiner and my team of detectives. We need a few minutes alone in here.”

“Yes, sir.”

Jackson panned the room, finally taking in the whole scene. Adrenaline rushed through his veins, and he felt a little lightheaded. The kitchen, once a yellow and white invitation to domesticity, was now a scene so gruesome it almost looked staged. A teenage boy was face down near the door to the garage, his t-shirt soaked in blood. The forty-something woman, who looked like the girl they’d just carried out, lay near the center of the once-white vinyl. She was on her back in a pool of blackish-red blood. Jackson’s eyes were drawn to her right wrist, stuck in the congealed mess. Someone had hacked off her hand. Chipped pink polish topped the appendage, which lay nearby, and blood pooled around it, thickening. The offending kitchen knife lay on the floor two feet away. Jackson scrutinized the woman’s amiable face and wondered what she could have possibly done to inspire such violence. Blood had run down one side of her cheek from a trauma to her forehead.

What had she been struck with? Jackson’s stomach curdled. He wished he had some mint gum to keep the sour-rust taste out of his nose and mouth.

Near the sink McCray squatted next to a prone male body partially propped against the lower cabinets. Even from eight feet away, Jackson could see the father had also been bashed in the head. Yet his life had poured out through the stab wounds in his chest. Typically, in a scenario like this, Jackson would suspect the man of the house to be the perpetrator of a murder–suicide, but this poor guy had not gouged open his own chest.

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