"Fogerdy!"
The old man cupped his hands around his
mouth and yelled for his dog over the howl
of the North Atlantic wind. The shepherd's
muted bark came to him from the distance.
At three in the morning, the stretch of
beach between Williams Landing and pier
twenty-eight was cloaked in impenetrable
darkness. The wind raged with particular
vengeance on the pre-dawn hours of November
12. It churned the waters of Chandler Bay
and spewed a biting mist off the swells
before the waves slammed onto the shore.
Still, the cold snap that swept across the
isolated section of beach was as expected as
Thanksgiving turkey and pumpkin pie.
Moist sand sunk under the weight of
the old man's steps. He staggered and leaned
into the gusts to keep his balance. He aimed
the flashlight beam deep into the night and
yelled for his dog again. Tiny pellets of
snow spat at an angle past the shaft of
light before disappearing into the darkness.
"There you are, you stinker."
Ten yards ahead, the dog stood poised
like a pointer barking incessantly at the
incoming waves.
"Crazy mutt."
The dog lowered his head and eased
toward the water's edge.
"Fogerdy. Here, boy." He clapped his
hands to get the pet's attention. "Get over
here."
The dog remained fixed; his hackles on
end.
"What's gotten into you?" he asked as
he bent to leash him. "You're never this …"
The man swept the light in the direction of
whatever had caught the dog's attention. He
squinted, leaned in for a closer look, and
recoiled. Disgust hit as hard as the stench
that rose from the decomposed body.
The Homicide
unit of the Chandler Police Department
expected the annual hike in crime that
seemed to always usher in the holiday
season. But the floater cases and a recent
outbreak of the flu among the officers had
crimped the department's roster. Three of
the eleven detectives were out on sick
leave; two were recuperating from injuries
sustained during a high-speed chase. Those
left to serve double duty were on the short
end of a fuse with no apparent escape from
the madness.
Sam Harper stirred and moaned at the
high-pitched ring of his cell. He frowned at
the phone's intrusive shrill. A familiar
sound that no longer jolted him out of bed
as it once had. He pried his eyes open,
tempted to throw the phone against the wall.
Instead, he remained face down with the
pillow wrapped tight around his head. Unable
to block the irritating disturbance, he
grunted and snatched it off the nightstand.
The congested voice on the other end of
the line belonged to Dave Mann, Harper's
partner of just over a year. Mann had a hell
of a cold and his usual laid-back demeanor
had given way to irritability. His patience
had vanished six murders ago.
"Didn't you hear me call? Twice. I let
the damned phone ring forever."
Harper winced as the red alarm clock
numbers came into focus. "It's four in the
morn-"
"Got another floater."
"Jesus." Harper didn't have to see the
body to know the victim was another teenage
boy. This was the third case in a matter of
weeks. He knew what they'd find - nothing.
They'd have a corpse and a cause of death,
but no motive or weapon, no time of death,
no trace evidence and no suspect.
"Where?"
"Beached a quarter mile south of
Williams Landing. Are you coming?"
"Yeah. I'm up."
"Sam?"
"I said I'm up. Just give me a minute!"
"It's colder than hell out here. Come
on, Jack's already done with the
preliminary. We're waiting on you."
Harper wiped the corners of his mouth
as he tried to block out Mann's rant. "I'm
on my way." He tossed the cell onto the bed,
rubbed his eyes and glanced at Kay's empty
pillow. His fiery six-month affair with the
city's assistant prosecuting attorney ended
abruptly with a single phone call she
received from the New York D A and his offer
to give her a shot at a high profile case.
The first teen's body surfaced days after
she left. Harper convinced himself that was
the only reason he was thinking of her now.
He slammed a fist into her pillow, swung his
legs out of bed, and forced her from his
mind again.
Harper parked
his Jeep along the shoulder of the road.
Jack Fowler's medical examiner's van, three
marked units, and Mann's Nissan were parked
a few yards ahead. Beams of portable
spotlights shone like beacons on the beach
below while the usual gathering of city
personnel crowded the scene.
Mann, an ex-college quarterback, was a
head taller than the two techs on duty
tonight and a hard target to miss from any
distance. When the first tech raised his
camera for a shot, Mann leaned in, and
pointed at the angle he wanted. By the time
Harper reached the beach, Mann had moved on
to inspect the other tech's initial
crime-scene sketches. Jack also stood out
among them like a smudge on a page. He was
the middle-aged guy with a '60s crew cut
sporting his trademark red sneakers. At his
feet, the black body bag stretched across
the wet sand.
Harper and Mann had chased after a
faceless killer since the end of October
when the first teenage boy bobbed up like an
apple in Chandler Bay. The corpse in the
body bag gave Harper reason to suspect they
were dealing with a serial killer. He held
that thought and jerked his collar snug
around his neck as he made his way down the
snow-covered embankment.
"Hold it, Doc." Harper shoved his hands
into a pair of latex gloves.
"About damn time. What took you so
long?"
"Got here as fast as I could."
"I've got more bodies than hours in a
day to do them." Jack did nothing to
disguise his irritation. "I don't have
time-"
"Give me a break, will you? You're not
the only one pulling double shifts. What do
we have?" Harper reached for the tab on the
body bag's zipper and pulled it open while
Jack described the obvious.
"Another male, looks to be in his
mid-teens. Has a trace of a tattoo left on
his chest, just like the others." Jack
paused and gave his watch a quick glance.
"The killer's playing with you, Harp. Look
at the throat - slit this one wide open."
Harper frowned and leaned forward for a
closer look at the three-inch gash. "Okay,
so he beats the crap out of vic number one,
strangles the second, and slices up the
third. What the hell's pushing this guy's
buttons?"
He swept a glance over his shoulder
toward the bay. Every officer on the force
knew the water temperatures dropped by early
September; the colder the water, the slower
the putrefaction process. That single fact
meant the murders were weeks old when the
bodies rose from the bottom. To Harper, it
meant only one thing - a snag.
"What difference do motives make when
we don't have a suspect?" Mann asked. "The
guy's probably three states away by now."
"Or right in our backyard watching
every move we make." Anything was possible.
Harper understood Mann's frustration, but
the worse thing they could do was second
guess the killer.
"Then how do we find him? We have no
prints and no trace. Any viable DNA got
flushed off the bodies the minute they hit
the water. If you've got a new theory, let's
hear it."
"We follow the trail."
"What trail? We've got nothing."
"He'll make a mistake. They all do."
"Not this guy. He's thorough. Empties
their pockets, doesn't leave anything
behind," Mann said. "Damn near a perfect
crime."
"But not quite." Jack pointed a gloved
finger at the caps on the victim's two front
teeth. "This one's had some fine dental work
done, and where there's a cap, there's a
dentist with records."
"So we'll ID the vic and the doc who
drilled him. He'll have an old address and
phone for the kid, landing us right back
where we started. Nowhere." Mann turned
away.
"He can't hide forever," Harper said.
"If he left the state, the shortest way out
is north, to New Hampshire. We'll send out
another BOLO."
"And tell them what? What are they
supposed to be on the look out for?" Mann
asked.
"The killer's calling card is his
choice of victims and location. If he's
moved on, you can bet some other detective
unit is scratching their heads or worse, not
making a connection between murders."
A frown rippled across Mann's brow as
he studied the victim's face. "I say we're
looking at this all wrong. Somewhere there's
a kid trying to make a name for himself.
That's what this is all about."
"I don't think so," Jack said.
"Sure it is. It's a territorial thing.
No different than a drive-by shooting only
this one is up close and personal."
"We would have heard something by now,
someone would have talked. These are
anything but random murders." Harper turned
his back to the wind and shifted his weight
from one foot to another. "The killer chose
his victims - street-smart kids without
loyalties. Hundreds of kids to choose from,
why these three?"
"It's gang related. Nothing else ties
them together." Mann pressed his point.
"I don't buy it. If that's what the
killer wants us to think, he just made his
first mistake."
Mann and Jack seemed to hang on those
words.
"The murders were premeditated -
thought out, and that tells me one thing.
There was a connection among his victims.
Figure that out," Harper said, "and maybe
we'll find him before he kills again."
"We're out of leads, Sam. We have no
suspects."
"Sure we do."
"Who, damn it? Face it, we've got a
thumb up our ass on this one."
Harper studied his partner for a
moment. The case had gotten to the entire
detective unit. But now wasn't the time to
let tempers blow like pistons.
"We'll go back and re-examine each of
the cases. We've missed something. The kids
on the streets don't get tight-jawed for
nothing."
"You think they're protecting the
killer?" Mann asked.
"No, their skin. They're scared, you
can bet one of them knows who did this and
why."
"That puts us back on the serial killer
theory." Mann shook his head. "It doesn't
fit the profile."
Harper knew the FBI's description of a
serial killer concluded offenders were
usually white males between the ages of 18
and 32. He also knew there were as many
exceptions to the profile rules as there
were offenders. No one, including the FBI,
wanted to risk misidentifying a serial
killer based on a minor point like not
fitting a typical profile.
"The best lead we had was the tattoo
artist down by the docks," Mann said, "and
you know where that led us - zilchville." He
paused to raise his hand to his temple.
"This reminds me of the Cromwell case."
Harper shook his head. Cromwell had
worked as a cabby for twenty-three years
when he lost his job. He systematically
killed every person he blamed, including the
doorman at the Hyatt Regency for giving his
fares to the other cabs. He knew each of his
victims well enough to use a different
method to kill them according to their
fears.
"Cromwell snapped; he lashed out,"
Harper said. "Whoever killed these boys was
precise and deliberate."
"I agree," Jack said. "No
seventeen-year-old I know is sophisticated
enough to plan an elaborate scheme like
this. Kids act on impulse. They leave their
victims where they drop." He nodded at the
corpse. "This isn't your classic gang
killing." Jack stooped next to the body and
carefully lifted the boy's arm. "Look at his
skin; same rough, pimple-like texture as the
others. It's a normal change of
decomposition. It happened in cold water -
out there - in the deep and you can't dump a
body in the middle of the bay without a
boat. How many boys have access to the type
of vessel needed to maneuver these waters?"
Mann looked away and rubbed his eyes
with the heels of his hand. "I'll call the
port authorities again. See if anyone
reported any unusual activities at the docks
since the last murder."
"I found traces of drug use on the
other two kids," Jack said. "If I were you,
I'd keep looking for a high-end dealer."
"That's not all those two had in
common. They both had rap sheets; this one
probably does too. We need to look at their
records again." Harper methodically examined
the victim's face and hands. "Bloated,
fingertips are puckered. Aside from the
missing flesh around the face, there's not
much sign of decay."
"Like I said, twenty-degree water temp
acts like a preserving agent. The body fat
turns into that soap-like consistency he's
covered in. A shot of saline into those
fingertips will pop them right up. If not,
we have his teeth imprints."
"How long do you think he's been dead?"
Harper asked.
"You know the process."
"Right, Jack, would you cut me some
slack here? Just answer the question."
"Can't even come close. You know that.
Too many variables."
"Then damn it, toss me your best
guess."
"Hypothetically, same as the others -
weeks. Look at his skin, Harp. He's not the
first floater you've looked at. Soft tissue
of the nose and ear lobes are gone,
adipocere - that soap like substance is over
eighty percent of the body. It takes weeks
for that to happen."
Another strong gust of wind cut in from
the bay. It threatened to topple the
portable spotlights and sent a ripple of
snow flurries across the beach.
"What about those?" Harper stooped down
to examine the laceration across the top of
the victim's head.
"This kid floated in face down, head
hanging; got rammed against the rocks," Jack
said. "In floaters, the blood flows down to
the head. If it wasn't for the obvious cut
across the throat, I'd say those would be a
toss-up between ante- or post-mortem
injuries. As it is, I'll wager post-mortem.
Want to bet another steak dinner I'm right?"
"I quit betting against you, remember?"
Harper tilted his head and continued to
study the corpse.
Jack looked at his watch again and
stifled a yawn. "All right. You guys done
here? I have five others to do before I cut
him open. Which one of you wants to watch?"
"I'll do it. Call when you're ready."
Harper peeled off his gloves and shoved them
into his pockets.
A moment later, Jack and his assistant
struggled to carry the body up the snowy
embankment to the city van. While the techs
took care of the lights, Harper turned his
attention to Mann. His partner's hacking
cough sounded worse than it did the day
before.
"Who found him?"
Mann tried to suppress another cough as
he thumbed over his shoulder at the squad
car where the dog and his owner were
waiting. "Last name, Zirmack, Gene Zirmack.
Lives up the road. Retired. Works part-time
as caretaker at St Paul's Church. Said his
dog got loose. He was chasing after him when
he found the vic."
"Did he notice anything unusual?"
"Besides the stiff? No. He said if it
hadn't been for his dog running off, he
wouldn't have been down this far."
"Must be his lucky day."
"Yeah, well, we're taking him in for a
statement."
Harper reached for the door handle of
his Jeep when the sound of the waves lapping
against the rocks below made him shift his
attention. The sun wouldn't crest for
another half hour. Chandler Bay and the
distant horizon were indistinguishable from
the black of night.
"You think Jack's right?" Mann asked.
"About what?"
"That the killer's playing with us. You
believe that?"
"These kids weren't killed to impress
us. Whoever did this made damned sure the
murders couldn't be traced back to him."
"Then why toss the bodies in the bay?
He had to know they'd wash back to shore."
"Yeah he did. The question is, did he
do it because he wanted them to be found or
is he cocky enough to think we'll never
catch him?" Harper asked himself the same
question a number of times. He swung open
the car door and again looked over his
shoulder toward the bay.
"Three bodies in eighteen days.
Assuming they all decayed at the same rate,
he's killed one kid every week. If he's
still at it, we're already too late to
prevent … Jesus, who knows how many more."
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