The Serial Killer's Wife (32 page)

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Authors: Robert Swartwood,Blake Crouch

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Horror, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Crime, #Kidnapping, #Murder, #Serial Killers, #Crime Fiction, #Thrillers

BOOK: The Serial Killer's Wife
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She glanced at the alarm clock on the bedside table, doing everything she could not to look at Foreman. It was almost five o’clock. How it had gotten this late so quickly, she didn’t know, but time was running out.
 

“This isn’t Michael. This is Elizabeth Piccioni. I need to speak with Sheila.”
 

Despite the fact the man didn’t say another word, she could tell he had instantly deflated. There was the sound of the phone changing hands, a quick whisper, and then Sheila was on the line.
 

“Elizabeth? What are you doing calling from Michael’s?”
 

“Sheila, I need to ask you something very important, and I need you to think about the answer.”
 

There was a slight hesitation. “What is it?”
 

“Your ... son?” Her throat had suddenly gone dry.
 

“What about him?”
 

“Did he have a purple dragon?”
 

“Yes ...” Sheila sounding suddenly guarded. “What about it? Michael was the one who gave it to him. He called it ... Dennis, I think. Yes. Dennis the Dragon.”
 

Elizabeth couldn’t help but smile at that. As far as she knew, Foreman hadn’t even known what she and Eddie had named the stuffed animal. But it had been among the others left behind—she hadn’t wanted to take a thing from their old life except what was needed, just the necessities—and she imagined him wanting to do something to please not just the newborn baby but Sheila, the love of his life. Maybe he had been on some kind of deadline, rushed, and hadn’t had time to pick out a toy at the store. Maybe he had felt picking one of the toys in the basement would hold some kind of sentimental value. Whatever the case, in the end he had taken the dragon, given it to Sheila and the baby, and even named it.
 

“What happened to it?”
 

“What?”
 

“Denny the Dragon. I mean, Dennis the Dragon. What happened to it?”
 

Sheila released an agitated breath. “Why don’t you ask Michael? You’re right there in his house, aren’t you?”
 

“Because Michael’s dead,” Elizabeth said, saying the words before she could stop herself, and the sudden silence on the other end of the line confirmed that it was the last thing Sheila had expected to hear.
 

“What ... what did you say?”
 

“Sheila, I don’t have time for this. What happened to the stuffed animal?”
 

There was dead silence on the line again, and Elizabeth was sure Sheila had hung up.
 

“Please, Sheila, I need to know. It’s important.”
 

“Is he really dead?”
 

“Yes.”
 

“How?”
 

“Sheila, the dragon. What happened to it? Did you ... throw it away?”
 

Another silence, this one lengthier, and Elizabeth wanted to scream.
 

“No,” Sheila said finally. “We didn’t throw it away.” She sniffled. “It was our baby’s favorite stuffed animal. He loved it. Whenever we took it away from him, he would cry, so we always kept it with him. So ... so when he died, we did what we knew he wanted.”
 

Elizabeth closed her eyes. “What did you know he wanted?”
 

“To be buried with it,” Sheila said, crying openly now. “It’s with our baby, God bless him, and will be until the day Jesus comes down and takes his body to heaven.”

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER 58

“W
E
CAN

T
DO
this.”
 

“Elizabeth ...”
 

“We can’t, Todd. It’s wrong.”
 

“What about Matthew, then? What about that FBI agent’s son?”
 

“I don’t care. This ... this is going too far. We just can’t.”


   

   

T
HEY
WAITED
UNTIL
the sun had started to make its decent, until it was dark enough with the overcast sky, to enter the cemetery. Weaving through the motionless grave markers along the narrow drive, deeper and deeper into the grounds, they came to the spot in the back corner, mostly obscured by trees, known locally as the Baby Lot. Here Todd parked the Prius and got out. He went to the back and pulled out the shovel they had found in Foreman’s garage. He paused to look at Elizabeth still sitting in the passenger seat, then continued forward, carrying the shovel in one hand, a flashlight in the other hand, the dull beam of light illuminating each chiseled name until finally he found the one he was looking for and clicked the light off.


   

   

“W
E

VE
COME
THIS
far already,” Todd said. “It’s insane to stop now.”
 

They were still in the master bedroom. Foreman was still on the bed. Elizabeth sat on the floor, her back against the wall, her knees pulled up to her chest. Her vision was blurry. Todd hadn’t moved from the doorway this entire time, but now he began to slowly make his way toward her.
 

“Are you listening to me? I don’t want to do this either, but after everything that’s happened, after everybody that’s died, we just can’t give up now.”
 

She stared down at the carpet, refusing to meet his eyes.
 

Todd came to stand before her, bending down, placing a hand on her knee. “Elizabeth?”
 

Her gaze shifted up to meet his, and she shook her head firmly. “Absolutely not.”


   

   

S
HE
DIDN

T
MOVE
for the next several minutes. She watched the dark silhouette that was Todd working. Her mind raced, thinking about everything that had happened since Friday afternoon. She thought about Matthew and she thought about Van and she thought about David Bradford and she thought about her husband, and the BlackBerry dinged and she withdrew it from her pocket and opened the picture and saw her son there, the bright red digits reading
07:00:00
. Seven hours left and here she was, sitting in the car while Todd worked. She started to dial a number, hesitated, then decided no, it was too soon. So she undid her safety belt, opened the door, and stepped outside.


   

   

T
ODD
STARED
AT
her for a long time, then nodded and stood back up. “So then what do you want to do? You want to call the police? You want to call that FBI agent and his girlfriend? You think any of them are really going to help us?”
 

He waited for her to say something, and when she didn’t he muttered, “Screw it,” and turned away and started toward the phone on the bedside table, the one she had just used not five minutes before to speak to Sheila. The keypad was on the handset itself, and when he dialed the first number she spoke.
 

“Don’t.”
 

He paused, staring back at her.
 

She said, “The police will just make it worse.”
 

“How can they possibly make it any worse than it already is?”
 

Elizabeth didn’t answer. Todd kept his stare level with hers, waiting, and when it was clear she wasn’t going to speak, he dialed the second number.
 

“Don’t,” she said again, pushing herself off the floor and onto her feet. She kept her back against the wall, leaning into it. “Just hang up the phone for a second. Let me think.”
 

Todd stood motionless for a long moment, then placed the phone back in the cradle so gently it didn’t make a sound.


   

   

T
ODD
PAUSED
ONLY
briefly to regard her as she approached. She came to stand by the pile of dirt that was growing with every shovelful. There was no telling the exact length and width of the coffin below them, so Todd was digging a wide enough hole to hopefully accommodate. Above her the sky was thick with clouds, hiding the moon and stars and, if he was up there, God himself. Stop, she said after a moment, her voice cutting like a scalpel through the darkness. Todd didn’t stop. Take a break, she told him, I’ll dig for a little. He continued with one more shovelful before stepping out of the hole and handing her the shovel. It felt extremely heavy in her hands. She stared down into the hole for another half minute, then stepped in and started working.


   

   

“I
F
WE
DO
this,” Elizabeth said, “we need to be respectful of the body.”
 

“Of course.”
 

“We can’t just tear it up and take what we want. We’re not grave robbers.”
 

“Nobody’s saying we are.”
 

“It’s just—”
 

She felt it then in her stomach, working its way up her throat, the taste suddenly vile and disgusting. She hurried out of the bedroom and made it to the bathroom in time, throwing the toilet seat up and vomiting straight into the bowl. She was aware that in a normal instance her hair would be in the way and that she would have to hold it back, and here she tried doing that out of instinct but of course there was no reason to, not with her hair cut short just today, and the irony of it all (and was that even the right word for it?) made her want to laugh. And kneeling there at the porcelain throne, something she hadn’t done since college, Elizabeth did begin to laugh. She couldn’t help it. Then when Todd came into the bathroom, asking her what was so funny, she threw up a little more and began to laugh even harder.


   

   

T
HEY
WORKED
FOR
over an hour in silence, one only pausing to switch off with the other. Their eyes had adjusted enough that they didn’t need the flashlight anymore to see.
 

It was Todd who made contact with the coffin, the wedding of the shovel tip and the casket lid making a dull and hollow thud. They worked even faster then, Elizabeth digging with her hands, which seemed incredible because they were already working as hard and as fast as they could. They weren’t even going to try to pull the casket out of the ground, and so Todd positioned his feet on either side and bent down and undid the clasps while Elizabeth shined the flashlight. Todd paused only once before opening the lid, and he turned his face quickly away, his eyes squeezed tight and his nose wrinkled. Elizabeth smelled it, too, that awful odor of decay, and had she not already thrown up everything in her stomach, she may have just gone for a second round.
 

“Give me the flashlight,” Todd said, and when he had it he bent again and aimed the beam into the casket.
 

Elizabeth looked away. She didn’t want to see the nearly four-year-old remains of a child. Nobody did.
 

“Here,” Todd said, and when she looked again he was holding it out to her, Denny the Dragon, that mythical purple stuffed animal that had once been trapped in the confines of an arcade crane game to then eventually become trapped in the confines of a child’s casket.
 

She took it from him, hesitantly, forcing herself to forget that it had just been with a decaying child.
 

Todd climbed out of the hole. “Well?”
 

She stared down at the dragon in the dark. Because of the flashlight, her eyes needed time to adjust again. She felt around the animal, first its feet, then its wings, then its nose ... before she remembered something.
 

Right now he’s the answer you’re looking for
, Eddie had said to her before she left the interview room.
He knows
.
 

“He knows,” she whispered.
 

Todd came to stand beside her, holding the flashlight. “He knows what?”
 

“Not
he
knows,” she said, reaching out to direct the flashlight to shine on the dragon’s face. “
His
nose.”
 

She grabbed the tip of its nose and began to pull. It was surprisingly easy. Of course it was. After all, not too many years ago, it had been removed for a reason and then either glued or stitched back in place.
 

“Holy shit,” Todd murmured, as she extracted a key from the stuffing filling the nose. It was a small key, with the number 49 written on the side in black marker. “Do you know what it goes to? I mean, do you know what it unlocks?”
 

Staring down at the key in her hand, turning it around and around with her fingers, she nodded. “Yes.”
 

“Great.” He used the flashlight beam to glance at his watch. “Then let’s go. We don’t have much time.”
 

“No,” Elizabeth said, her voice forceful. She slipped the key into her pocket and gave him a hard stare. “Not yet. Not until we fill in the hole.”

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER 59

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