Stealing Faces - Michael Prescott [41]
“Ah, fuck it.” That was the driver. “I’m getting too old for this shit. Let’s get out of here.”
“We can ask in the store if they saw anything.”
“Let’s just go,” the driver said, then added in his radio voice, “Mary Twelve.”
He was on his portable, calling in. Cray heard a soft sizzle of static, then the driver again, his words fainter as the two cops walked away.
“The RP is GOA." Gone on arrival. “Negative on the ten-thirty-one.... Yeah, she didn’t leave anything behind.... We’re code four here.”
Cray did not move until he heard the double slam of the squad car’s doors. Then he stepped out from behind the wall. Hidden in shadow at the rear of the alley, he watched the car pull out of the parking lot into the traffic stream on Grant Road. Finally he exhaled a slow breath and lowered his head.
He saw the knife in his hand. It was unsheathed, and his fingers were curled tightly over the handle, holding the weapon poised for a lethal thrust.
He hadn’t even known he’d removed the sheath. The act had been carried out unconsciously, by instinct.
Well, he of all people could hardly be surprised by the limitations of the conscious mind.
Cray sheathed the knife and replaced it in the satchel, then left the alley. Before driving off, he bought a thermos of coffee at the Circle K.
It had been a long night, and if Kaylie had indeed given his name to the 911 operator, then he could expect an equally long day.
18
“You already told us that. But you haven’t said why. Hey, Mitch? Mitchell? You hear me? Tell us why.”
The raggedy man named Mitch didn’t answer. He had zoned out again, his drawn face going blank, his pale, rheumy eyes losing focus. He stared out the window of the moving car at a blur of strip malls and burrito stands, a trickle of saliva on his chin.
Roy Shepherd sighed. This wasn’t the guy. He was sure of it.
Almost sure.
He didn’t put a great deal of faith in psychological profiles. They were mostly guesswork, and often not very good guesswork at that. He’d worked the streets long enough, first as a patrol cop and now as a plainclothes detective, to know that human nature was too complicated, too multifaceted, to be reduced to a series of simple formulas.
Still, the profiles were reliable in some respects. If the killer was careful and methodical, leaving few clues or none at all, covering his tracks, defying capture, then he almost certainly was not schizophrenic.
The schizos could be violent—oh, yes, Shepherd knew about that—but their violence was apt to be spontaneous, frenzied, splashy. They weren’t organized in their thinking. They were inept at concealment.
Whoever had killed Sharon Andrews in the White Mountains five months ago—killed her and cut off her face and taken it as a grisly souvenir—was surely crazy, a psycho, but not a schizophrenic like glassy-eyed Mitch.
Mitch might have killed somebody, though. He seemed to think he had.
Shepherd settled back in the rear seat of the unmarked car. Two other detectives, Janice Hirst and Hector Alvarez, sat up front. Hirst was driving. Alvarez was rather noisily chewing gum. He always had a stick of Juicy Fruit in his mouth. Shepherd had never seen the man actually eat anything.
He glanced out the window. After fifteen years in Tucson, his whole professional life, he knew the town better than most cabbies. He didn’t even need to check the street signs to know that the unmarked car was crossing the intersection of 22nd Street and Park Avenue.
The warehouse was two blocks away. If there were faces or any other body parts in Mitch’s possession. Shepherd and his colleagues would know soon enough.
“I steal their faces,” Mitch mumbled in a sleepwalker’s voice, and a smile briefly animated his expression.
He’d said the same thing to the patrol cops who arrested him for creating a public disturbance at 6:30 this morning, after Mitch was found directing traffic on Wilmot Road.
I steal their faces.
It had gotten the cops’ attention, at any rate.
Shepherd had taken their report at 7:15. Possible