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The 7th Victim - Alan Jacobson [34]

By Root 966 0
so it’s a pretty isolated type of activity. Database is going to be small.”

“Meantime, we keep plugging away and asking questions.”

“The day we stop asking questions,” Vail said, “is the day we should turn in our badges.”

TWO HOURS LATER, the task force members were huddled in their new base of operations, which had been haphazardly thrown together over the past two days.

It was an old brick house two miles from the latest victim’s home, on a mature street with seventy-five-year-old houses. The rooms were dark, lit only by incandescent lamps standing on the floor. Long shadows loomed across the walls, and everyone’s faces—being lit from below—looked like something out of a Bela Lugosi horror flick.

A couple of plastic folding tables had been opened in the middle of what had previously been a rectangular living room. There were no shades or blinds on the windows, and the continuous pelting of the glass by the wind and rain created streaks of water blown across the slick surface.

“We got a telephone here?” Mandisa Manette asked.

“Not yet,” Bledsoe said. He lifted a medium-size cardboard box from a stack in the corner of the room and dropped it on one of the card tables. He leaned back and swatted at the dust that rose from the box. “I ordered five lines. Four for voice and DSL, one for fax. Be here in a day or two. Till then use your cell.”

Bledsoe ripped open the box and removed a few rubber-banded markers. He looked around the room and craned his neck to catch a glimpse of the kitchen. “Who are we missing?”

“Hancock,” Vail said. “I say we start without him.”

Bledsoe smirked, then leaned close to Vail’s ear. “Lay off, okay? The guy may be an asshole, but I’d rather not poison the pool. Let the others find out for themselves. I don’t need any trouble, none of us do. Just cooperate with him.”

“Yeah, yeah, fine.”

“You okay, your knee? Hernandez said you twisted it.”

“Went down in the vic’s yard.”

“You need to go? Get it taken care of?”

“I’m good. Don’t worry about it.”

Bledsoe nodded, then spun around. “Okay, everyone into the living room. Let’s get started.”

The front door swung open and in walked Chase Hancock. He closed his umbrella and shook the water onto the linoleum floors that were already slick from the detectives’ muddy shoes.

Hancock glanced around, then crinkled his nose. “Who chose this rat hole?”

“We wanted to make you feel at home,” Vail said, “but we can’t get the stench right.”

“Cute, Vail, very cute.”

Bledsoe waited for everyone to situate themselves, then took his place at the head of the room. “This is going to be our home until we catch this guy. The accommodations are pretty crappy. I’ve got eyes, I can see. You don’t have to tell me. I’m having some stuff done on the place over the next week or so, to make it functional. One thing it won’t be is nice or comfortable. They don’t want us getting too cozy here. Feeling is, if we like our surroundings, we won’t be in any rush to solve the case.” Moans erupted. Bledsoe held up a hand. “I know it’s crap, but I’m just telling you how it is. Now, I know it’s late—what the hell time is it?” He pulled back his sleeve to see his watch.

“Eleven-thirty,” Bubba Sinclair said.

“Jesus. Okay then,” Bledsoe continued. “Let’s get started so we can all get home sometime before the sun comes up.”

Vail thought of Jonathan and remembered she had an appointment with an attorney in the morning. She had already called in to get the time off, and she would have to pull Jonathan out of school. But it was the first step in getting him out of Deacon’s reach.

“Our guy struck again this evening. Vic named Sandra Franks. Dental hygienist with a doc on the west side. Hey, Hernandez, you’re tall. Why don’t you write all this down on the whiteboard?” He tossed Robby the bunch of rubber-banded colored markers.

“What does being tall have to do with—”

“It’s late, let’s just get through this so we can go home.”

Robby stepped up to the whiteboard and wrote, “Sandra Franks, dental hygienist.”

“Dental hygienists are weird. They work P-T at lots of different offices,

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