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When he reported the call into the wiretapping switchboard, the answer was predictable: It came from a pay phone somewhere deep in Queens.
"You want us to send a car over?" the bored-sounding woman at the switchboard asked. There was a faint scratching sound in the background, as if she were filing her nails.
"No, thanks-he'll be long gone," Lee answered, and hung up.
He threw himself on the couch without removing his sopping clothes and stared at the ceiling, running possibilities through his mind. Finally, disgusted with the whole situation, he got up and took a shower. Afterward, he felt clean but not cleansed; the sound of that voice on his answering machine made him feel soiled. He wandered into the bathroom, broke a Xanax in two, and swallowed half. Then, just to be sure, he gulped down the other half as well.
He lay back down on the couch, a pillow over his head, as a welcome drowsiness settled over his limbs. He surrendered gladly, sinking into a deep slumber. He slipped through a series of dreams, shifting imagery of places and people he knew, until he found himself in a deep pool of water. He was in the middle of a mountain lake, treading water, the bottom far beneath him, the water itself crystalline and clear, the sun sparkling off its surface. He didn't know how he had gotten there, but decided to swim back to the shore. As he got closer, he saw a woman lying facedown, half in and half out of the water. He swam faster, and when he reached her, he turned her over, and saw that it was Ana Watkins. She was warm, but she didn't appear to be breathing, so he began giving her mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. As he did, her body began to dissolve in his arms, and he was holding a rotting corpse.
He awoke with a start to the sound of loud knocking. Leaping from the couch, he made his way to the front door, but before he got there, he heard a deep voice.
"It's me-Diesel!"
He opened the door to find Diesel standing in the hallway, draped in a dark oilcloth poncho, like a great black bird. Next to him stood Detective Butts, looking like a drowned walrus. His wet hair was plastered to his head so that his large ears protruded even more alarmingly; his bulbous nose dripped onto the straw doormat.
Lee stared at the unlikely pair. "What you doing here?"
"You gonna let us in or what?" Butts demanded.
He let them in and gave them towels to dry off. Outside, he could tell it was morning, which meant he had slept through the night, though the day was so dark he had no idea what time it was.
"What time is it?" he asked Butts.
"It's after ten," Butts replied, briskly toweling off what was left of his hair.
"So what's going on?"
In response, Butts handed him his cell phone. The text message read pls help, and the call was from Lee's cell number.
"I called back, but it bounced straight to voice mail," Butts said. "Then I called your number here and got a busy signal, so I called Diesel. He couldn't reach you either, so I got in the car and drove over."
"And picked me up on the way," Diesel added.
Lee groaned. He had forgotten to call Butts to tell him about giving his cell phone to Charlotte. He quickly explained the situation, then used Butts's cell to call his own. Again it bounced straight to his voice mail.
"My car's outside," Butts said.
"Let's go."
"I'm coming with you," Diesel said. "That's not-" Butts began, but Diesel interrupted. "I'm coming with you." The detective looked at Lee, who shrugged. "The more the merrier," Butts said, opening the apartment door.
Within ten minutes they were barreling down Varick Street, and within twenty had cleared the Holland Tunnel. Butts's car was a massive blue Ford, a rattling old gas guzzler the size of a small boat.
They used Butts's phone to call the Jersey police in Lambertville, the nearest station to Stockton. A patrol car was dispatched to the Perkins place. Repeated calls to Lee's cell had gone straight to voice mail-it was possible the battery had run down. He wished he had thought to give Charlotte the phone charger. Numerous calls to Perkins's office number were picked up by his voice mail recording.
"Nice wheels," Lee remarked as they swung onto Route 78. He was doing his best to keep his mind off what they might find when they reached Stockton.
"Don't knock it till you've tried it," Butts muttered, gnawing on a thumbnail. He always seemed to have something in his mouth-cigars, doughnuts, candy. Failing that, his finger would do. "I wanted to get a smaller car, but the wife was attached to old Blue Bertha, so we kept it. Now I've gotten kinda attached, you know?"
"Doesn't it eat up gas?" Diesel asked from the backseat.
"Not as much as you'd think," Butts said. "It does okay on the highway. The trick is to keep it tuned up and all. One of my sons works for a mechanic, so we get a family rate."
"Hey," Lee said suddenly. "Why did both of you show up at my place?" He craned his neck to look at Diesel in the backseat. He was so enormous that even in this roomy old car he looked cramped. "Have you added law enforcement to your other gigs?"
"No-I was on my way to see you when I ran into Detective Butts."
"What for?"
"I just thought you might need my help."
This wasn't the first time Diesel had turned up at an opportune moment-he seemed to have a nose for trouble.
"One thing surprises me," Butts remarked as they reached the turnoff for Route 202 South. "I wouldn't think that-uh, Charlotte-would know how to do a text message, y'know?"
"That's true," Lee said. "She did tell me she used a cell phone at the hospital where she works. She must have learned how to do it there."
"What do you think the chances are Krieger's still alive?" Butts asked as he steered the big car onto the exit ramp.
"Based on how quickly he's killed the others, not very good," Lee said grimly.
At that moment Butts's own cell phone rang. It was the patrol cop calling from the Perkins house to report that he was sitting in his car outside the place, but it all was quiet inside the house. There had been no answer when he knocked on the door, and no sign of life in the house. There was a car parked outside, however, and when he ran a check on the plates it came up as belonging to Martin Perkins.
Lee didn't know if that was good news or bad, but he asked the officer if he could possibly wait until they arrived to go in, and he said he would try.
Butts didn't need any help finding the way to Stockton-they'd traveled it enough times by now. As they zigzagged down the winding road that led to the town's main street, Lee's stomach twisted with anticipation. He had zoomed down this road so many times on his bike, flying along with the wind rushing in his ears-and now he was driving down it in search of a murderer.
The big car rattled down the modest main street, past Errico's Market, the gas station and liquor store, and the little clump of restaurants around the Stockton Inn. The rain had stopped, and the street was quiet. A couple of kids were playing Hula-hoop on their front lawn, and a young mother was pushing her baby in a stroller on the way to the grocery store. The sun had come out, and the street was bathed in a golden glow. It looked as though nothing could ever be wrong on such a street on such a summer's day. The air of normalcy wasn't convincing. Though he hoped he was wrong, Lee had a bad feeling as they approached the Perkins place.
The police cruiser sat in front of the house. A couple of small boys had stopped by on their bikes to talk to the officer behind the wheel. As soon as he saw Butts pull up, he got out of the car and strode over to greet them. To Lee's surprise, it was Officer Lars Anderson, the young cop they had met at Ana Watkins's house.
"Hi there," he said. "I heard it was you two and volunteered to come on over. You think we have probable cause to go in?"
Lee showed him the text message on Butts's cell phone and explained that, in all likelihood, it came from Charlotte Perkins.
"That's good enough for me," Anderson replied, and led the way up the steps to the front porch. He paused and glanced at Diesel, then back at Butts.
"Undercover," Butts said in a confidential tone, and the trooper nodded.
A round of knocking also brought no response, so Anderson whipped a towel out of his car's trunk, wrapped it around his arm, and broke the bottom pane of glass on the door with one deft punch.
"Looks like you've done that a few times before," Butts remarked as he reached around to unlatch the lock from the inside.
"That's why I keep a towel in the trunk," Anderson replied. "You never know when it'll come in handy."
They followed him into the front hall, which was dark and deserted.
"Anybody home?" Anderson called out, but was met with silence.
They walked through to the living room, where everything looked to be in order. The piano keys gleamed ivory white in the morning sun. There was no sign of life in the first-floor parlor, the kitchen, or the butler's pantry to the side of the kitchen. On the other side of the kitchen was an office that evidently served as a consulting room as well. It contained a couch and several armchairs, as well as a desk and built-in bookcase.
When they had secured the first floor, they proceeded upstairs. The two small bedrooms in what must have originally been the servants' wing were clear, but as they approached the master bedroom, they saw the blood. There were crimson fingerprints on the wall, as well as high-velocity splatter in all directions; some blood had even landed on the windowsill on the other side of the corridor. It was clear that someone had been viciously attacked in this hallway. The four of them stopped walking, and Officer Anderson put a finger to his lips. There was no need for silence, though; it was clear from the heavy stillness of the air that the violence had occurred hours ago. A trail of blood led into the master bedroom, apparently ending behind the slightly open door.
Lee's heart beat wildly as Anderson and Butts drew their revolvers. Butts waved to Anderson to indicate that he should continue down the hall to make sure the far bedroom was clear. The young cop nodded and crept down the hall, holding his gun stiffly in front of him.
Moments later, he emerged from the room and called, "All clear."
Holding his revolver in both hand, Butts pushed open the door to the master bedroom with his foot.
"Stay here," he called over his shoulder as he went in. There was no need-Lee had no desire to enter what was obviously a crime scene. Through the open door, he and Diesel could see into the room-and Lee felt a shiver of relief when he saw the dead body on the floor. The sight that greeted them, disturbing as it was, was not Charlotte Perkins. His relief was followed by shame and disgust-shame at having been relieved, and disgust at what lay before them. Though his worst fears had not been realized, the murder scene was not a pretty sight.
Martin Perkins lay on his back, arms and legs akimbo, his head smashed in by what looked to be a series of blows from a heavy blunt object. Though his face was bloody and disfigured, his eyes had not been removed, and there was no sign of a suicide note. There were, however, signs of frenetic rage and overkill. The expensive-looking carpet he was lying on had soaked up a tremendous amount of blood-no doubt the blood loss alone would have been enough to kill him. It was hard to tell how many times he had been hit, but it was clear that the amount of force used was far in excess of what was needed.
Vines, twigs, and leaves had been piled on top of his body, some arranged in such a way that they looked as if they were growing out of his mouth and ears.
"Okay, Doc," Butts said, looking at Lee. "What's with all the foliage? What does it mean?"
All at once, Lee realized saw the connection.
"He's the Green Man," he said. "His killer is mocking the whole idea of it, by turning Perkins into one after killing him."
"Oh, yeah," Butts said, bending down to examine the body. "I think you're right."
What Lee wasn't prepared for was the smell. The odor of blood-so much blood-was unlike anything he had experienced. It seemed to penetrate a part of his brain, causing an aversion, a deep-seated feeling of distress that he thought must be genetic, ancestral. Ancient hominids, coming across this terrible and terrifying smell, must have taken flight immediately, knowing instinctively that death lurked around the corner. But he couldn't flee, much as he wanted to. He continued to stare at the body until he heard Officer Anderson come up behind him.
"Jesus," Anderson said softly, and Lee realized this was his first murder scene. He looked at Butts for help, and the burly detective took charge at once. He beckoned them all to stay out of the room; putting his gun back in its holster, he proceeded to investigate the crime scene.
Butts was in his element. Lee watched with admiration as the detective examined the body without touching anything, then managed to move around the room without transferring any of the blood to his shoes or in any other way compromising the evidence.
After a few minutes he joined the rest of them in the hall.
"No sign of the murder weapon," he said, "though from the shape of the blows I'd say it was somethin' long and narrow-a cane, or a thick stick of some kind. No sign of defensive wounds-looks like he wasn't expecting this attack. You got CSIs on duty around here?" he asked Anderson.
"Uh, in Trenton-that's the nearest city," the young officer replied, obviously shaken.
"Then I suggest you call it in ASAP," Butts said. Looking down at Perkins, he shook his head. "Whoever did this wasn't looking to make a statement," he said. "He just wanted Perkins dead."
Looking at the body sprawled on the floor in front of them, Lee had to agree. If ever he had seen a rage-driven homicide, this was it. Whoever had killed Martin Perkins was now spinning dangerously out of control.