Silent Screams - C. E. Lawrence [104]
Chapter Forty-six
Sophia wanted a cigarette. She knew she shouldn’t smoke, but she desperately, dreadfully needed a cigarette. She sat at the desk in her dorm room trying to concentrate on the book in front of her: Film Analysis by R. L. Rutsky and Jeffrey Geiger.
Her mother had said she was crazy to think she could make a living working on “those Hollywood movies,” as she called them, but her father had glowed with pride when she was accepted into NYU as a film major.
“She has a talent, Loretta—you’ll see,” he had said to his wife, squeezing her to him, her round little body plump as a ripe peach.
“You should be glad she’s staying close to home,” he continued, looking out at the garden in front of their two-family house in Queens. “She’ll be able to come over for dinner.”
Sophia wished she were going away to college, but NYU was a really good school and she was grateful to be accepted into the film studies program there.
Now, sitting in her dorm room with most of her classmates asleep around her, she tried to concentrate on the book on her desk, but the words blurred and danced on the page in front of her. All she could think of was how much she longed for a cigarette.
Finally she gave up. Moving quietly so as not to disturb her sleeping roommate, she grabbed her pack of Marlboro Lights, pulled on her boots and overcoat, and slipped out of the room.
The fresh snow was silent and glistening in the street, soft and white and pristine, not sullied yet by the soot of engines and the pollution of the city. Sticking a cigarette in her mouth, she realized she’d forgotten her matches. She shivered, drew her coat tighter around her, and headed through the snow toward the deli on the corner of La Guardia Place.
The street was deserted, and the street lamps cast pools of light onto the softly falling snow. The flakes swirled and danced under the lights; caught up in the magic of the night, Sophia almost didn’t see the man standing in the shadows of the NYU dormitory building. Seeing her, he took a step toward her.
“Need a light?” His voice was soft, his face still half in shadow.
“Sure—thanks.”
It was the last thing she ever said.
Chapter Forty-seven
When the phone rang at seven the next morning, Lee awoke instantly, the sharp stab of sound pulling him out of bed. He grabbed the receiver.
“Hello?”
“Lee, it’s Chuck.”
“Oh, God—another one?”
“Yeah.”
“Where is it this time?”
“Old St. Patrick’s. You know it?”
“On Mulberry?”
“Right.”
Old St. Patrick’s Cathedral was a beautiful landmark building nestled between Mott and Mulberry Streets, at the intersections of Chinatown and Little Italy. Lee had never been inside, but had walked past it countless times. It was a fifteen-minute walk from his apartment.
“I know where it is,” Lee said. “Jesus.”
“I’m on my way,” Chuck said, “but you’ll probably get there first.”
“Right. Any instructions?”
“No—just don’t let anyone move anything until I get there.”
“Right.”
Lee pulled on some clothes and hailed a cab in under five minutes. He was there in less than ten. He showed his ID to the uniformed cop on duty and went in the side door.
The scene at Old St. Patrick’s was depressingly familiar: the same group of investigators dispersed around the church, the same hushed voices and dimly lit interior. The early-morning rays of the rising sun crept tentatively through the circular stained-glass window at the back of the church.
Lee walked past the crime scene technicians, who were just unpacking their equipment, and approached the altar, to look upon the face of the latest victim. He steeled himself for the sight of her naked, mutilated body, but he couldn’t prepare himself for what