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One
Deadly Rhyme
by dusty bunker
Prologue
HE
worked under a ragged lampshade the color of dead leaves. To his
left, a recent issue of Time magazine lay in shreds. Like
his past, he thought, scissors poised in midair.
His
eyes slid toward the shiny numbers and letters spread to his right
in neat rows and over the bottle of Elmer's glue and package of
generic white paper.
Focusing
once again, he cut around the letter G, held it at arm’s length,
and squinted.
Damn
it! The crossbar was uneven.
He
tossed it aside and pulled over the slashed magazine, recalling
his childhood fury at going outside the lines of his coloring book.
Not that anyone cared.
His
foot tapped as he jabbed at the bottom corner of the right page
with his forefinger.
His
finger slipped.
He
licked his finger and jabbed again.
Page,
after page, after page!
Then
he found it! An ad with a thick black border dotted with white fish
icons. Inside lay a message from Deuteronomy 8:11-20. "Be careful
that you do not forget..."
Right
on. They won't forget this.
"...that
you will surely be destroyed."
Ain't
that the truth.
The
'g' in forget was perfect. He placed it with the others, then reached
for his cigarette and took a tug.
He
gazed out the grimy window over the wheat-colored grass and the
dying crocuses his dead mother had planted at the corner of the
tool shed. Wraith-like arms of mist curled around the weathered
boards. Ghostly reminders. He visualized spring clawing up through
the cold New Hampshire ground.
Sizzling
in the frying pan behind him in the smoky room, a steak sucked at
his taste buds. He laid the smoldering cigarette in a mayonnaise
cap that served as an ashtray, and with his forearm, wiped the tiny
rivulet of drool from the corner of his mouth. Then he began murmuring
the words to "Pretty Woman" in synch with the foggy voice
of Roy Orbison that issued from the radio. He liked Roy. Even Elvis
had fashioned his style after the man in black.
Setting
the magazine aside, he pulled a piece of paper from a package and
smoothed it a few times, feeling the hard wooden surface beneath.
Through clear rubber gloves, he could see new hair sprouts on the
back of his hands. Time for another plucking session.
Gracie
watched his every move. Let her watch. She didn't bother him.
He
scratched the center of his chest.
This
note would be a work of art, word perfect. He snickered at the pun.
Yes, If you're going to do a job, do it right. He mumbled the message
his mom had pounded into him for more years than he wanted to remember.
Not that he’d ever listened.
An
excruciatingly pleasant tingle rippled from his scalp, over his
shoulders, and down to his groin. He waited for the hardness to
subside.
Then
he got up, stepped over to the avocado stove, and waved a hand over
the black skillet to dispel the smoke. Carefully turning the thick
steak with a long pointed fork, he laid in three slices of Bermuda
onion. With a padded oven mitt on his hand, he shimmmied the heavy
pan and watched the fat dance and sparkle like fireflies in the
gloom.
Satisfied,
he reached for the ruler and number one yellow pencil and marked
off both sides of the paper in one and one-quarter inch increments.
Seven light horizontal lines completed phase two. He held the sheet
before him.
Yes! You will approve.
From
the back of the book jacket propped against the wall, she smiled
back at him.
Placing
the sheet of paper back on the portable desk, he rolled his stiff
shoulders, then slowly cracked each knuckle.
Smoke
from the cigarette spiraled serpent-like in the diffused light.
He picked up the white cylinder, twisted it between his fingers,
stared at the ash gray tip. Mom never smoked. Mom detested the filthy
things. But mom never knew about this vice.
A
long drag brought on another coughing jag that nearly rendered him
unconscious, but he would never submit to those black fugues again.
He had learned control.
He
replaced the cigarette in the jar cap sitting on top of a stack
of magazines.
Gracie's
eyes were on him again. She wanted him. With an impatient sigh,
he went to her.
"What
is it? Are you hungry?"
She
didn't move. She liked toying with him.
He
sneered. If she didn't respond, she wouldn't eat. That's all there
was to it. It was her own fault.
Now
for the message that would set this New Hampshire town on its ear.
Back
at the table, he used a pair of tweezers to turn the first number
over onto a clean sheet of paper, spread a few drops of Elmer's
glue with a Q-tip, and watched the second hand on the greasy wall
clock lurch over black sexagesimal wedges.
Fifteen
seconds.
He
tapped his foot as he recited a nursery rhyme his mother had taught
him.
One
a penny, two a penny, hot cross buns.
If
you have no daughters, give them to your sons.
Laughter
bubbled up in his chest.
Time’s up. The glue will set better now.
Thus
began the satisfying job of lining numbers and letters evenly on
penciled lines.
Funny how strokes of ink on paper can send chills down your spine.
His eyes narrowed. Well, mom, what do you think of your son now?
When
he was done, he scooped up all traces of his work, placed them inside
the portable desk, and moved to his bedroom, where he slid the desk
under his bed. This was his room. No one was allowed in. He locked
the door.
He
returned to the kitchen where his steak awaited. Rare. The only
way to eat a fine cut of meat.
When
he was through eating, he’d lock Gracie in his room and clean up
the kitchen real good so nobody could tell he'd even been there.
The kitchen was a woman's place, after all.
He
sliced a piece of meat into a perfect triangle, speared it with
the fork, and held it before his eyes. He examined its grain. Saliva
collected at the corners of his mouth as he anticipated the tangy
feral taste.
He
held the fork before his eyes for a long time. Discipline, restraint,
and anticipation carried their own rewards.
Slowly
he put the meat in his mouth as interior cells rose up to embrace
the raw flesh like a black widow welcoming her mate.
He
chewed it slowly, sensually.
He
cut another triangle.
Wait.
Eat.
Another.
And
another.
He
seemed unaware of the blood dribbling down his chin. As he got into
a rhythm, his thoughts shifted to the note hidden in the portable
desk under his bed.
His
groin moved.
He
grinned.
This
was what he was born for.

Chapter 1
"Sam.
We got a problem. A big one."
"What's
wrong, Charlie?" Samantha Blackwell sank back into the sofa
cushions on her sun porch. Nick had just left for work, and she
was munching an apple and gazing out into their wooded back yard,
trying to quell an uneasy feeling that had arisen moments before
the phone rang.
"It'll
be all over the papers tomorrow," Charlie said, "and for
certain on Channel 9 tonight. And you're right in the middle of
it."
Lifting
drowsy lids, she responded, "What did I do? Forget Selket's
leukemia shot? Is that a police problem?"
She
pulled an ash blonde hair from the arm of her nightshirt and watched
it float to the floor. She didn’t want to hear any bad news.
"Forget
the cat, Sam. I'm serious. It's Doug Hammand. Lenny and I found
him dead in the frozen fish section of McCutty's Market. With a
note pinned to what was left of his suit jacket."
The
apple fell from her hand as she bolted upright. "No! What happened?"
The
cat periscoped up, her head swiveling.
A
note pinned to Hammand's chest. That had to mean murder. Doug, a
model of plaid and chino, wasn't the kind of man to run to the grocery
store in his one suit with a note attached to his lapel.
Crazily,
Sam thought back to the time when her two daughters had climbed
the steps of the school bus with those identifying manila tags attached
to their buttons as if, in case they got lost, they could be dropped
into the nearest mailbox. She pulled herself back to the present
as a 5.8 registered across her shoulders.
Charlie
was still talking. "McCutty went back to the store last night
around 11:00 because he thought he forgot to turn on the alarm.
You know he had that alarm installed a few years ago when he noticed
problems with shoplifting. Well, he took a walk around the store
like he always does, just to double-check things, and that's when
he found Hammand, fish-eyed with the frozen flounder. Had some kind
of flower stuck in his buttonhole. McCutty almost had a heart attack.
Called 911, then fainted dead away behind the cash register. That's
where we found him."
"My
God! Doug Hammand." She unconsciously patted her chest as if
that would still her quaking heart. Selket, sensing danger had abated,
settled down once more.
"Yeah,"
Charlie said. "I got the call around 11:30. Found Doug with
his legs sticking out of the freezer case, colder than a witch's
teat, wearing a cowberry necklace. He was strangled." His voice
wavered a bit. "And cut up some. By the time we finished with
the crime scene, it was 2:00 A.M. Didn't think you'd appreciate
a call at that time in the morning."
Sam
wondered why Charlie would call her from the crime scene,
but all she could say was "Cowberries?" Her childhood
friend was now the chief of police in their town, but he didn’t
consult with her on cases.
"Well,
they're fake, but they're definitely cowberries. Probably got them
from one of the lampposts in town."
The
windows of her mind fogged. Why are we talking about cowberries?
"What about the note, Charlie? What did the note say?"
"Here's
the kicker, Sam. The note mentions you."
Sudden
clarity! An 8.1 rumbled. Sam clutched at her nightshirt as the blood
drained to her feet. "Me? Why me?"
"The
note is in some kind of code. Numbers and letters, glued on a piece
of white paper, cut out of a magazine most likely. At the bottom,
it says: ‘Catch me if you can, Sam Blackwell.’"
"Oh,
my God!" She swallowed hard and scanned the doorways, her mind
searching for a place to hide.
"Sounds
like some kind of psycho that reads your numerology column or books.
Not that people have to be nuts to read your stuff," he added
quickly.
Her
knuckles were white around the phone. "You think it mentions
me because of the code?"
"Don't
know. There’s no rhyme or reason with some of these guys. Maybe
this guy’s got a crush on you from that sexy picture on the back
of your book jacket. Maybe he wants to match wits with you. Maybe
he likes blondes or wants his picture in the paper. Maybe he's one
of your clients. Who knows? I've been through a thousand reasons
why since midnight."
Sexy, all right, Sam thought, relieved to switch gears, if only
momentarily. Good thing the picture was taken before she gained
the thirty extra pounds. She looked down at the mound of red plaid
belly resting on her lap then berated herself for thinking about
her looks when poor Douglas would never have to worry about such
things again. Her mind ping-ponged between fear and disgust.
"Gonna
be there for a while?" Charlie asked. "I want to show
you this note."
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