The Christmas Killer (34 page)

Read The Christmas Killer Online

Authors: Jim Gallows

BOOK: The Christmas Killer
5.58Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
84
Sunday, 9.15 a.m.

He’d had a pleasant night.

His sense of a destiny being fulfilled, of a circle reaching completion, was getting stronger and stronger. The good Lord had decided it was time for him to reveal himself to the world. And that plan, which scared Father Ken at first, now filled him with joy.

How perfect that he would be saving souls on the anniversary of Christ’s birth. His only regret was, he couldn’t save them all. But he could manage one more. Of course he could. He would kill the old woman to save her. But first he would have to get the instrument of her sin.

That is why I need the knife.

85
Sunday, 10.45 a.m.

The drive to the morgue was a lot quicker than the last time. Traffic was light on Christmas Day everywhere in America.

There was no receptionist working, so Jake let himself in and walked to Ronnie Zatkin’s office. She wasn’t there. Jake found her down in the morgue, surrounded by a couple of twenty-somethings examining the seventeen skeletons.

She looked up as he walked in. ‘Hi, Detective. Merry Christmas.’

‘Thanks. Can I get a minute?’

Dr Zatkin nodded and led the way towards her office.

‘I had to call in help,’ she explained to Jake, pointing at her dutiful deputies as they walked past. ‘These guys are final-year students from the Indiana University School of Medicine. There’s no way my staff could cope with seventeen cold case autopsies on top of their normal workload. The only way we can get them done is by calling in the cavalry. Luckily, these kids are all desperate for experience. Looks good on résumés, you know?’

They got to the door of her office and she was about to open it when Jake stopped her. ‘Do you have another lab we could go to?’ he asked.

She nodded again and led him into a small room off the morgue and closed the door behind them. ‘What’s up?’ she asked.

He placed a plastic bag on the stainless-steel work surface, then removed the old kitchen knife he had recovered from the Chase Asylum.

‘I need to know: are those dark stains on the handle human blood?’

Doctor Zatkin put on plastic gloves, picked up the knife and examined it under a bright light.

‘Looks like it. I can see some residue where the blade sinks into the handle. I could take a scraping from there and test that.’ She started towards a microscope in the corner of the room.

‘Before you begin, Ronnie,’ said Jake, ‘this has to be between you and me. No one else can know.’

She looked at him and shook her head slowly. ‘That’s not the way we’re supposed to do things.’

‘And I’ll bet working on Christmas Day is not the way you’re supposed to do things either. But you’re here, aren’t you?’

She looked at him for a long moment. ‘You’re in a bind,’ she said, her voice halfway between question and statement.

Jake thought about agreeing, maybe even telling her everything, but …

‘It’s best I don’t tell you,’ he said.

He could see she was reluctant but intrigued, and finally she nodded. She opened a drawer and took out a small vial of luminol. Dimming the light, she sprayed the knife handle. After a second or two it began to glow slightly – a very faint blue. It lasted about thirty seconds, then faded away.

‘It’s blood,’ she said.

‘What type?’

‘Hold on – the test doesn’t even tell us if it’s human or animal blood. I need to collect a sample.’

Briskly she reached for a spatula and scraped it along the edge of the knife where it met the wooden handle. She dropped the black specks that came off into a small test tube. Then she added a clear liquid from one of the bottles on the shelf above the workstation. Within minutes, there was half an inch of pink liquid at the bottom of the test tube.

She took out a pipette and filled it, depositing some drops on a small card.

‘I’ll know blood type in the next two minutes,’ she explained.

‘What about DNA?’

‘You don’t want to wait – that will take hours. Unless you had something you wanted me to compare the DNA with?’

Jake didn’t reply.

They watched as the blood samples on the test card reacted with the enzymes.

‘How’s the case going? Any fresh leads?’ Ronnie asked.

Jake mumbled a non-answer, and Ronnie gave up on the small talk. Both of them just watched: some of the patches of pink remained uniform while others began to form clumps of darker material.

After a short while, Doctor Zatkin said, ‘The blood is AB negative. I don’t know if that’s what you were expecting, but that’s all I can tell you for now. I’ll run the DNA test, and if you have anything to compare it with, drop it in.’

Jake, on autopilot, nodded his thanks.

AB negative – that’s the same blood type as me.

‘How common is AB negative?’ he asked.

‘It’s the rarest blood type of them all. Forensics love it: it’s the best blood type for eliminating suspects. Maybe one in a hundred and sixty people has it.’ Her smile dropped and her eyes widened. ‘Don’t tell me it’s from the Christmas Killer?’

‘No, it’s not.’

Ronnie shrugged and didn’t push it.

It went against one of the earliest lessons a detective receives when he is first trained – do not make assumptions. Do not jump to conclusions based on one piece of evidence.

But, this time, Jake couldn’t help it. The odds were short enough that he was beginning to see it clearly.

It’s Fred Lumley’s blood.

Fred Lumley was my father.

86
Sunday, 11.30 a.m.

Jake left the morgue and drove back towards Littleton. The DNA results would tell him for sure, but he didn’t need them to confirm what he already knew.

He was clear of Indianapolis and driving through rolling countryside when his mobile buzzed. He glanced at the number, thinking it might be Father Ken – actually hoping it was. Instead, he saw the PD’s switchboard number.

He pulled over and answered.

‘Austin, where the fuck are you?’ The voice at the other end was Colonel Asher’s. He was pissed off – likely because he had been called in on Christmas Day.

‘On my way back in, boss. I was at the morgue.’

‘I don’t give a fuck where you were. What were you doing out at the Chase Asylum last night?’

As the words hit him Jake felt the blood drain from his body. That’s why Asher had gone in. They knew already. He had hoped for a few hours more.

Jake leaned and rested his forehead on the wheel. It was over. He couldn’t go back to the station now.

‘Austin, do you have an explanation?’

Jake took his head off the wheel. Outside, traffic thundered by, but he didn’t really hear it. ‘I wasn’t at the Chase Asylum,’ he said. It was a shitty lie and wouldn’t buy him time.

‘Don’t fuck me around. Two FBI agents saw the ghost of Fred Lumley in the asylum last night. He knocked them over and ran, but they got his licence number and tracked him down. Do you know who the ghost was?’

Jake didn’t answer. What could he, realistically, say to that? One look at any image of Lumley, and Jake’s mistaken-identity defence would be shredded. But he didn’t need to answer because, from the way he ploughed on, Asher wasn’t really looking for one. He had clearly had it with Jake days ago, and getting dragged in on Christmas Day had not done anything to improve his opinion. ‘They want to know what you were doing there,’ he said, ‘and why you were contaminating evidence. I have Special Agent Colin Reader in my office right now. He wants a word.’

‘No, sir,’ said Jake.

‘Detective, you’d better—’ snapped Asher.

‘I have to follow up something. I’ll be in later.’

‘Austin, get back here now, or I’ll put an APB on you. Every cop in the state will have your picture, they’ll have—’

Jake ended the call and tossed the phone on to the passenger seat. He fired the engine and pulled on to the
road without any idea of where he was going. Things were closing in on him fast. It wasn’t just his career on the line; it was his mother, his family and his whole identity.

Where the fuck is Father Ken?

If Jake could track down the priest, he could save his mother. That was the only thing that mattered right now.

He took his eyes off the road to pick up his mobile again. He hit
Redial
to try the priest. He could hear the phone ringing. It seemed to go on and on.

Finally, Father Ken answered. ‘What can I do for you, Detective?’

Give me back my mother. And my life – all of it.

But Jake didn’t say that. This was a negotiation, and the secret of successful negotiation was to keep calm.

He made a show of taking a deep breath. ‘Forgive me, Father, for I have sinned …’

‘Too late.’

Jake tried again. ‘I want you to help me,’ he said. ‘I have questions … about me.’

There was a hiss on the line, and the signal came and went, but Jake managed to hear Father Ken say, ‘Fire away.’

‘OK, we’ll start at the beginning. Did you kill Fred Lumley?’ Jake asked.

The sound of laughter tinkled through the bad connection.

‘Is that a yes or a no?’

‘Jake, I do the Lord’s work. But I am not the only one who does.’

‘What about my mother?’ Jake asked. ‘Is she still safe?’

‘Your mother?’ Father Ken was feigning confusion. ‘Do you mean Jeanette?’

‘Who else would I mean?’

‘Jeanette … Austin?’

‘Yes. Jeanette Austin, the woman you kidnapped, you …’ Jake bit back the insult. The negotiation had been taken right out of his control. ‘My mother …’

‘That’s funny,’ the priest said and laughed again.

What was Father Ken up to, making him talk in circles? One last sick power play? A show of ultimate dominance – that he could toy with the younger man because he had all the cards?

‘Thing is,’ Father Ken continued, ‘I don’t see much Jamaican ancestry in your features, Detective.’ Father Ken laughed at his own joke, his mirth echoing down the line to Jake.

Echoing

Jake took the phone away from his face so Father Ken wouldn’t hear the thrill of hope in his voice. He knew exactly where the priest was.

When he spoke again, it was in the same little-boy voice he had not been able to control the night before – only this time it was a con. He was feeding Father Ken’s hunger for power. ‘I don’t understand …’

‘But you will, Jake,’ said Father Ken. ‘You will.’

The priest ended the call. Jake could imagine him smirking, laughing to himself, thinking that he was safe – that Jake was completely at his mercy, that there was no way he would ever be found. But there had been something about the call, the connection, that had been poking the nerve synapses in his brain all through the priest’s taunting. There had been an echo on the line, and not only the electronic echo of a faulty connection. It was a physical echo. The priest was in a big enclosed space. But the connection had been poor too – like he was underground …

Father Ken had not gone on the run at all. He was hiding beneath his beloved church.

‘The Lord has many instruments, Father,’ Jake muttered. ‘And one of them is coming to get you.’

Other books

The Raven Warrior by Alice Borchardt
Liverpool Angels by Lyn Andrews
Letters to Matt by Tara Lin Mossinghoff
Waiting for the Queen by Joanna Higgins
Valor on the Move by Keira Andrews
Tek Power by William Shatner
Deadly Promises by Sherrilyn Kenyon, Dianna Love, Cindy Gerard, Laura Griffin
Echoes of the Great Song by David Gemmell
Alpha Prince by Vivian Cove