The Night Stalker_ A Novel of Suspense - James Swain [59]
“I remember her,” I said. “She left home at age sixteen. Her father ran a moving and storage business. He called me every day for a few months.”
“So she was a runaway,” Whitley said.
“That’s right,” I said.
“Was she seen around Fort Lauderdale?” Whitley asked.
“Yes,” I said. “That was why I was looking for her.”
Whitley looked at Burrell, and I saw a knowing look pass between them.
“Like father, like son,” Whitley said.
“Do you think Jed Grimes did this?” Burrell asked.
“Yes, I do,” Whitley said. “He’s taking over his father’s legacy. I’ve seen a couple of cases like it in my career. It’s called savage spawn.”
I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. Whitley had decided that Jed Grimes had killed this woman, even though there was no evidence linking him to the crime. Worse, Burrell had fallen under his spell, and was going along with it. I exploded.
“Savage spawn,” I said. “That sounds like the name of a movie. Do you think you can get us all parts?”
Whitley placed the driver’s license into an evidence bag, then removed his gloves and tossed them on the ground. His eyes were on fire.
“You’re not funny,” he said.
“And you’re a jackass,” I replied.
We rushed each other at the same time. I got my hands on his windbreaker, and spun him around. Whitley’s legs got tangled up, and he fell onto a pile of garbage, ripping his pants and messing up his haircut. He cursed me.
Burrell grabbed my arm and pulled me over to her car. She wagged a finger in my face. “Stop this or I’ll cuff you, Jack.”
“Whatever you say,” I said.
Five minutes later an unmarked white van came rumbling into Section P, and disgorged a sheriff’s department excavation team consisting of six men. Each man wore rubber gloves and a surgical mask, and carried a black duffel bag filled with equipment.
A flatbed truck carrying a pair of bobcats came in behind the van. The bobcats were unloaded, and Burrell directed their drivers to start tearing apart the hill where I’d discovered the body. I stood off to the side with Buster and watched. My clothes stank of rotting garbage and sweat and death, and I guessed I’d have to throw them away.
Over the next hour, the bodies of five more women were discovered in the hills in Section P. The bodies were lined up next to Mary McClary’s body, and covered with blankets. The scene was starting to resemble a disaster area.
I heard a loud noise and looked to the sky. A helicopter circled overhead, the markings on its underbelly belonging to a local TV news station. Burrell had her hands full, and I didn’t want to be filmed or give her any more grief.
I hustled Buster into my car, and got behind the wheel. As I started to pull away, Burrell ran over to me.
“Jack!” she called out.
I hit the brakes, and made Buster climb into the back. Burrell opened the door, and slid onto the passenger seat.
“I want you back on the case,” she said.
“You do?” I said.
“Yes. I’m sorry about what I said earlier.”
“What about the mayor?”
“Fuck the mayor,” Burrell said.
I looked through my windshield at Whitley, who was helping the evacuation team examine the bodies. During our scuffle, a piece of rotten fruit had gotten stuck in his hair, and ruined the image that he seemed so bent on cultivating.
“What about Mr. Hollywood?” I asked.
“Believe it or not, Whitley wants you back on the case, too.”
“He does?”
“Yes. He thinks you have amazing instincts.”
“Even if I think Jed Grimes is innocent?”
“Yes. The fact that we disagree doesn’t mean we can’t work together. I need you, Jack. Please say yes.”
It had been a long time since anyone had told me that. I looked across the seat at Burrell, and saw that she meant every word of it.
“Okay,” I said.
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE
There is always a glimmer of light when I search for a missing person. That light is sparked by the hope that the person is still alive, and that I’m going to find them safe and unharmed, and reunite them with their loved ones.
There is no light when I’m dealing with the dead. The color is always black,