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Synopsis
Everyone Has What He Wants
The killer picks her up in a Manhattan night club. Another trendy victim of the latest downtown scene. Young. Fresh. Healthy. Perfect. The police find her body in a Bronx park. Pale as a ghost. Peaceful in death. Her life has been drained away. Slowly. Methodically. Brilliantly. . .
No One Survives What He Takes
NYPD profiler Lee Campbell has seen the gruesome handiwork of the most deranged criminal minds. But this is something new. Something unbelievably twisted. A blood-obsessed lunatic who chooses his victims with deadly, loving care--and forces Campbell to confront the demons in his own life. No matter who wins this game, there will be blood. . .
Praise for C. E. Lawrence and Silent Screams
"Pulse-racing, first-rate. . .a wild ride down a dark road."–-John Lutz
"Lawrence delivers finely honed suspense with unique twists."--Katherine Ramsland
"A dark, intriguing thriller."--Publishers Weekly
"Lawrence nails you to your seat."--Gayle Lynds
Release date: May 26, 2011
Publisher: Pinnacle Books
Print pages: 320
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Silent Kills
Carole Lawrence
She especially liked the ankle-high boots with their spiky heels and lace-up buttonholes—sixteen of them in all. The only real problem with her outfit was the goggles, which kept slipping on her shiny hair, falling down to her forehead and over her eyes. She put her hand up and pushed the goggles back on top of her head. They weren’t meant to be worn over her eyes, Francois had told her—they were just decoration, part of the look.
Francois knew way more about steampunk than she did. Candy was a follower, and always had been, whereas Francois was an innovator. At least that’s what he called himself: an innovator, ahead of the pack, a trendsetter. There could be worse things, she supposed, than having a brother who was a trendsetter—or thought he was. She had learned that with Francois it was usually easier to go along with him than to argue.
And so here she was: in New York City’s “first bona fide steampunk club,” way downtown in the no-man’s-land east of Chinatown. Even the cabby had trouble finding it—and the entrance wasn’t marked, which was part of what made it so cool, according to Francois.
The room was dark, but the copper fixtures on the walls gleamed and she had to blink to adjust her eyes. A huge brass boiler in the center of the room dominated the space. Red leather banquettes lined the walls; in front of each was a low table that looked to be made of industrial steel. At the far end of the room a long bar of burnished walnut sported a polished brass railing; to either side of it thick tapestries hung from the ceiling. A lavish chandelier in the center of the room was the brightest source of light, though even with the gas-burning wall sconces, the atmosphere was dark. Plush Persian carpets covered the concrete floors, as deep and soft as summer grass. She took a few steps forward, searching the crowd for a sign of her brother.
She was pleased to see that she fit in—at least as far as her wardrobe was concerned. The room was filled with other people dressed in much the same fashion as she was. The men wore nineteenth-century waistcoats, vests, and cravats; the more elegant ones were dressed in tails and top hats. Some were dressed more informally, in knee breeches and leather aviator caps—always with the ubiquitous goggles. The women wore anything from long Victorian gowns to short skirts like hers, but the scene was just as Francois had described it: nineteenth-century elegance meets industrialized goth fashion.
A tall brunette in a red satin gown approached her and gave her an appraising look. Candy seemed to meet with her approval—a smile flickered across the woman’s face and she nodded grandly as she swept by. As she passed, Candy inhaled the aroma of an old-fashioned perfume ... was it patchouli? She wasn’t sure.
She turned to see a young man sidling toward her. He was tall and thin, but in the wiry way she liked, with long, stringy muscles and taut pale skin. He had shiny black hair that bounced when he walked, and full red lips. He wore his grey morning coat and striped stovepipe trousers with such ease he looked as though he had been born in them. A maroon cravat was tied rakishly around his throat, and he carried an elegant black silver-tipped walking stick.
“Why, hello,” he said in an affected English accent. “I say, I haven’t seen you around here before. What’s your blood type?”
She stared at him, then burst out laughing. “Does that really work for you as a pickup line?”
He smiled down at her. “Don’t you think it’s better than asking what your sign is?”
“Not really.”
He shrugged and glanced around the room, twirling his ebony cane between his fingers like a baton. She couldn’t help admiring his long, delicate hands and perfectly manicured nails. She also noticed the handle of the cane was a grinning skeleton head.
“Well?” he said. “I’m waiting.”
“Why do you want to know?”
He tapped the top of his head lightly with the cane. “Call it ghoulish curiosity. Haven’t you heard? We’re all mad scientists here. Come along, humor me—there’s a good girl.”
“I’m O Negative,” she said, looking around the room for any sign of her brother. The crowd at the bar was thickening, and was now three bodies deep.
“Ah,” he said, “lucky you—the universal donor.”
“Hey,” she said, “do you know my brother, Francois?”
His face broke out in a grin. “Francois’s your brother? I should say I do know him!”
She smiled at the mannered British accent. That was an aspect of steampunk she found kind of—well, geeky. All these nerds and geeks walking around pretending to be English gentleman scientists and explorers ... it was actually kind of embarrassing.
“Is he here yet?” she asked.
“He jolly well is,” the young man replied. “He’s in the Boiler Room.”
She frowned. “The Boiler Room?”
“Oh, we just call it that,” he said. “It’s a separate room off the main one, and it’s a bit stuffy, so we call it the Boiler Room.”
“Oh,” she said, craning her neck to see through the crowd.
“I say, shall I take you there?” he asked cheerfully.
“Uh—okay.”
“Walk this way,” he called over his shoulder, striding away from the crowd toward a more secluded corner of the vast room.
Candy gave a last glance behind her at the swarm of people laughing and drinking and flirting at the far end of the room. The aroma of—mutton?—floated to her nostrils, and her stomach burbled with hunger. Saliva spurted into her mouth, and she had a sudden desire for whatever it was they were serving to the guests at the party.
“Come along, now!” he barked at her, tapping his cane impatiently on the floor. “Mustn’t keep Brother Franky waiting!”
“Coming!” she chirped, scurrying after him as fast as her spiky heels would allow. The notion registered dully in her head that no one who knew her brother ever called him “Franky”—he always insisted upon “Francois.” But the thought evaporated as swiftly as it had formed, like a soap bubble bursting in midair.
Later, no one at the party could remember having spoken with her, though one or two people vaguely remembered seeing her. One of the guests, an elegant woman in a red satin gown, remembered her and thought that perhaps she was the same girl who left the party early, looking very drunk, but she couldn’t say for certain. She was leaning on the arm of a tall young man, and appeared to know him—but the witness saw them leaving only from behind, and couldn’t positively identify either one of them.
“You gotta be kiddin’ me!”
Detective Leonard Butts leaned back in the heavily scarred captain’s chair and folded his stubby arms over his round stomach. They just barely reached. His pockmarked face, as deeply grooved as the carved arms of the chair he sat in, wore an expression of aggrieved disbelief. It was a look NYPD criminal profiler Lee Campbell had seen before, and he thought it suited Butts.
“I mean, come on!” the pudgy detective continued, scowling up at his commander, Chuck Morton, head of the Bronx Major Crimes Unit. “Cause of death exsan-guination? For god’s sake, what is this, The Bride of Dracula ?”
Chuck Morton tossed a manila folder at Butts, who caught it in one hand.
“Look at the lab report yourself,” he said, turning away to pour himself a cup of coffee from the Krups automatic machine on the windowsill. A fly buzzed halfheartedly on the ledge, a leftover from a summer that had seemed too long and wasn’t over yet. Chuck didn’t seem even a little bit perturbed by the detective’s reaction. By now, Lee figured, they both knew Butts well enough to let it slide until he calmed down—which he would eventually.
The three of them were gathered in Morton’s office to discuss the bizarre murder of a young woman found in the Bronx two days earlier. The original primary on the case, Detective Fernando Rodriguez, had taken a sudden leave of absence due to a family illness, so the case had been assigned to his colleague, veteran Bronx homicide detective Leonard Butts.
Chuck’s office was small and, as usual, rather stuffy. Slices of midmorning sunshine slid in through the grimy Venetian blinds, heating up the dust drifting in through the cracks in the window. The ancient air conditioner rattled and puffed energetically, cranking out only a meager semblance of cool air, which smelled of dirt and exhaust fumes.
Butts studied the report, frowning, the pockmarks on his forehead merging into a single deep crevice. “Okay,” he admitted, “you got me. That’s what it says here. So unless this is some kind of practical joke”—he glanced at Lee—“accordin’ to this, we got someone who likes to drain victims of their blood.”
“Or most of it,” Chuck corrected.
“Whatever,” Butts said. Heaving his thick body from the chair, he lumbered over to the desk and slapped the lab report down on it. “What we got here is some kinda high-tech vampire—right, Doc?” he asked Lee.
Lee looked at Chuck, who raised a single eyebrow. That could mean many things, as he knew from their days as roommates at Princeton, but this time he figured it meant he should humor the detective, whose scowling face resembled a grumpy English bulldog. Lee rested his lean body on the front of Chuck’s desk and ran a hand through his curly black hair.
“The method of killing is bizarre enough that we have to consider the possibility this is the work of a—”
“Yeah, Doc, I know—a serial offender,” Butts interrupted. “Otherwise, you wouldn’t even be here—right ?”
“Right,” Chuck said.
Lee Campbell was the only full-time criminal profiler on the NYPD. This unique position was both an asset and a liability. He didn’t carry a gun or a badge, and was essentially a civilian employee, albeit one who dealt with the most dangerous of criminals. Some of the beat cops didn’t think much of him or his position on the force, while others, like Detective Butts, respected him, even if that respect was tinged with condescension.
“Where was she found?” Lee asked.
“Van Cortlandt Park,” Chuck said. “Not far from Woodlawn—Gun Hill Road. Any significance to that, you think?”
Lee shook his head. “Too early to tell.”
“Okay, let’s have it,” Butts said. “Whadda we got here?”
Lee picked up one of the crime scene photos and studied it. The girl lay on her back, face peaceful, arms at her sides. There were no obvious signs of assault—she might appear to be napping if it weren’t for the grey pallor of her skin. She was young—too young—with soft brown hair and a sweet, angelic face. She looked to be about seventeen, but he caught himself hoping she was older. What a desultory thought, he mused—she was dead now, so what did it matter? She wore an odd costume—at least that’s what it looked like, though Halloween was almost two months away.
He perched on the other captain’s chair and spread the photos out on Chuck’s desk. The victim wore a thick leather corset over a tiny silk skirt. The corset was festooned with half a dozen little metal flywheels and gears, like something from the interior of an old machine. On her head was a pair of leather goggles, and on her feet were ankle-high lace-up boots. The whole outfit gave the impression of Victorian fashion gone awry.
“What’s with the getup?” Butts said, poking his head over Lee’s shoulder.
“That’s steampunk fashion,” said Chuck.
Butts picked at something between his teeth with his thumb and forefinger. “What’s that?”
Chuck opened the door and called out into the hall.
“Sergeant Ruggles, can you come in here, please?”
He barely had time to turn around before his ever-attentive sergeant appeared at the door, pressed and polished as a new penny.
Ever since Ruggles had taken over as Morton’s desk sergeant, Lee noticed that things at the station house ran more smoothly. Telephone calls were returned promptly, the duty roster was met with less griping, and—most important—his old friend seemed more relaxed, better rested, and happier. Not that happiness was a liqueur Chuck Morton allowed himself very often. He was a creature of duty, and had been ever since Lee had known him. But Lee was grateful for Ruggles, and thought Morton was too, even if he would never allow himself to show it.
Ruggles stood at attention, the morning sun gleaming on his shiny pink head. He couldn’t be older than thirty, yet he was bald as a piglet. His small blue eyes shone brightly in his bullet-shaped face.
“Yes, sir?” he said, his accent pure North Country—England, not New York state. “What can I do for you?”
“Tell Detective Butts and Dr. Campbell about steampunk,” Chuck said.
“Very good, sir.” He turned to Butts and Lee. “Well, you see, sir, it’s a recent variation on cyberpunk. It started out as a literary movement of science fiction and fantasy, and has its own set of aesthetics. They’re all into Victorian clothing by way of Jules Verne and H. G. Wells—that kind of thing.”
Butts scratched his chin. “Why ‘steam’?”
“The stories take place in an era when steam power is still widely used, sir,” Ruggles replied, “but they tend to have fantastical or science fiction storylines. They have their own music, too, and there’s a theme of rebellious outsiders—that’s the ‘punk’ element, you see.”
“Jeez,” Butts said. “How do you know all this?”
The ruddy hue of Ruggles’s face deepened. “Well, you see, sir, I, uh—”
“It’s all right, Ruggles—you can tell them,” Chuck coaxed.
“I played in a steampunk band myself, you see, sir—back home.”
“In England?” Lee asked.
“Yes, sir.”
“What was it called?” Butts said.
Ruggles bit his lip.
“Go on,” said Chuck, with a little smile, obviously enjoying his sergeant’s discomfort. “What was the name of the band, Ruggles?”
Ruggles cleared his throat. “The Dastardly Gentlemen.”
Butts stifled a cough. “Really?”
“Yes, sir,” Ruggles said miserably, staring at his polished black shoes.
“Thank you, Sergeant,” Chuck said, releasing him from his torment. “That’s all for now.”
“Very good, sir,” Ruggles replied, and fled.
“So,” said Lee, “this outfit means the victim is a steampunk fan?”
“Or at least she’s tryin’ to be,” Butts remarked.
“Why do you mean ‘trying’?” asked Chuck.
Butts poured himself a cup of coffee from the white Krups machine. He heaped in two large spoonfuls of sugar and stirred thoughtfully. “There’s somethin’ about her that doesn’t ring true. Can’t quite put my finger on it. Like she’s just pretending or something, you know?”
“That’s interesting,” said Lee. “So maybe she’s a newcomer to the scene?”
“Yeah, somethin’ like that. I dunno,” Butts said, taking a large gulp of coffee. “Ow—that’s hot,” he said, fanning his mouth.
“I’d be inclined to trust your instincts, Detective,” Morton remarked.
“I think I know what he means,” Lee said, leaning in toward the photo. “Everything she’s wearing looks brand new—like she bought it just for the occasion.”
“Yeah—you’re right,” Butts agreed. “That’s it! Hey, we make a good team, Doc.”
Lee smiled. This was their third case together. After an initially rocky start, he had developed a fondness for the chubby detective, and had to admit they did work well together.
“How did he get the blood out of her?” Lee asked. “I don’t see any sign of trauma.”
“There was a small puncture wound in her right arm.”
“Jeez,” Butts said. “What kind of damn vampire takes blood out of a vic’s arm?”
“Someone who really wanted her blood,” Chuck remarked. He turned to Lee. “What do you make of it?”
“Well, obviously he’s got access to the technology to do this.”
“I coulda told you that,” Butts said, yawning. “Sorry,” he said, looking sheepish. “Wife and I were up late cleaning last night—we got in-laws comin’ ... uh, on Wednesday.”
Lee knew what he meant, and why he was having trouble saying it. It was the first anniversary of the attack on the World Trade Center. In New York City, everyone’s emotions were still raw—and a year later, the ruins at Ground Zero had only recently stopped smoldering. Thousands of families were facing the fact that they would never know exactly how their loved ones died, or what had become of their remains. Most of the victims—the ones who weren’t incinerated—lay beneath piles of debris, twisted metal, shattered glass, and rubble. The cleanup operation continued, slowly, laboriously, as workers picked bits of bone and clothing from the almost unimaginable layers of crumbled steel and concrete, all that was left of the once-proud towers.
Ceremonies and concerts were taking place all over the five boroughs. Lee wasn’t looking forward to going through the emotional wringer of reliving that terrible day, and he didn’t imagine Butts was either. Like many people in the tristate area, the detective had known someone who perished in the conflagration—a young woman who had gone to SUNY Purchase with his son. A finance major, she had been working at Cantor Fitzgerald, the investment bank that sustained more losses than any other company.
Chuck cleared his throat. “Okay, so the UNSUB has some kind of medical background, then?”
Lee shook his head. “Not necessarily. He might—but he could just as easily be a lab technician, or—”
“A med school dropout,” Butts said.
“That counts as a medical background,” said Chuck.
“Actually, I was going to say veterinary assistant,” Lee continued. “But I guess that counts as a medical background too.”
“Could he learn to do this on the Internet?” asked Butts.
“Maybe,” Lee answered. “Who did the postmortem?” he asked Chuck.
“Russell Kim.”
Kim was one of the best pathologists in the medical examiner’s office, a model of thoroughness and efficiency.
“We should talk to him,” Butts remarked.
“I agree,” said Lee.
“But meanwhile, is there anything you can tell me about his—psychology, his motivation?” Chuck asked him.
“Well, I’d say it’s a fantasy he’s played out over many times in his head, probably for years.”
“But never acted on—”
“Until now.”
“So,” Butts said, “that begs the question: why now?”
“Exactly,” Lee agreed.
On the windowsill, the fly ceased its buzzing and lay in a stupor. Its feeble effort to live had at last given way to the inexorable, sweet pull of death.
The victim’s brother had already been interviewed by the original detective assigned to the case, but, after reading the case notes, Lee and Butts wanted to speak with him themselves. A meeting was arranged for later that day at the precinct house, after his classes at Hunter College. According to the case notes, he was a math and physics major.
Francois Nugent was a cocky kid, but it was all a pose to hide his insecurity. He was also too smart for his own good. He showed up at the station house fifteen minutes late, the arrogant swing of his narrow shoulders only emphasizing his youth and vulnerability. He wore a leather vest over a pressed white shirt, straight old-fashioned-looking trousers, and patent leather shoes—a subdued version of the steampunk look. With his square wire-rimmed glasses and slicked-back hair, he suggested a Russian literature student or an apprentice to an accounting firm, circa 1890. Instead of the ubiquitous student knapsack, he carried a leather satchel; on it was a button that read, TESLA WAS RIGHT.
Detective Butts thrust out a broad hand. “Detective Leonard Butts, Homicide. This here is my colleague, Dr. Lee Campbell.”
The boy stared at Lee. “You’re the profiler. I read about you in the paper.”
“That’s great,” Butts remarked, gesturing to a chair. “Mind if we get down to business?”
Nugent took the chair Butts offered, but continued to stare at Lee. “Are you going to help find my sister’s killer?”
“That’s the idea,” Butts said. “Now, if you don’t mind—”
The boy’s lower lip quivered and he took a deep, shuddering breath. “Do you think it’s someone she knew?”
“We think he met her at that club,” Lee said.
Francois Nugent slammed his fist down on the table. The sudden outburst of rage was startling. “Damn! I got there late—she was gone by the time I—”
“Look,” Butts interrupted. “You mind if we ask the questions? The sooner we get some answers, the sooner we track down the sicko who did this.”
Nugent looked up at him, startled. “Yeah—whatever,” he said, gazing out the window, his mood abruptly sulky. Lee glared at Butts, but the detective pointedly ignored him.
“Okay,” Butts said. “Now, it says in the case notes that you’d been to this club before, but she—”
“It was her first time.” He spat the words out bitterly. “I’d been trying to get Candy to come with me for months, and she finally agreed. Her first goddamn time,” he said softly, the anger leaking out of him, replaced by a bewilderment Lee recognized only too well. Fate had reserved a special corner of hell for everyone, he thought, and this boy was just coming face-to-face with this truth. As his life tumbled down around him, the only thing he could respond with was existential puzzlement, the universal response to evil or great misfortune. Lee knew every stage of that journey. Sometimes he thought he was finished with it and had come out the other side, and sometimes the blackness of despair descended so viciously it took his breath away.
“So she wasn’t into this—this ‘scene’ before?” Butts said.
Nugent looked at him, pity layered with contempt. “No, she wasn’t into steampunk, if that’s what you mean.”
“Right,” Butts said.
He might appear clueless to this boy, Lee thought, but he knew Butts was sniffing around like a bird dog on a scent. It might take time, but he would get what he wanted. Butts’s nose for evidence was good, and Lee always suspected he put on the awkward act to put witnesses at ease. Then he would zero in for the kill when they least expected it.
“What about your parents?” Butts asked. “Do they approve of this—hobby of yours?”
Francois rolled his eyes. “First of all, it’s a lifestyle, not a ‘hobby,’ and secondly, they don’t even know about it.” He kicked at the table leg with the tip of his polished leather shoe. “They don’t even know about Candy yet.”
“Why not?”
“They’re somewhere in Kenya—no one’s been able to reach them.”
“What are they doin’ there?”
“They’re defending some rare tiger from poachers or something ... I don’t know. Or fighting to save orphans. They love orphans. Christ,” he said, his fists tightening until his knuckles turned white. “They’re off protecting some kids they don’t even know, halfway around the world, but they can’t be bothered to look after their own—” He broke off and stared at the ground again, his eyes hard. “Sorry—what were you saying?”
“Oh, nothin’ much—just asking about your parents.”
“Like I said, Maman and Papa are off doing good works in faraway lands. I’ll have them call you when they return.” He snorted. “Some homecoming that will be.”
“I take it you don’t like your parents very much?” Lee said.
Francois picked at one of the brass buttons on his vest. “I don’t dislike them. I just think they should be here while Candy’s still—was still so young.”
“Who looked after you when they were away?”
“Flossie.” He looked at Lee and Butts as if expecting a reaction. “I know—that’s her name, right? Flossie. Like something out of the damn Bobbsey Twins. Except her last name is O’Carney—Flossie O’Carney, from County Cork. Has a nice ring to it, doesn’t it?”
“Is she your—” Butts appeared to be searching for the right word.
“She’s our nanny,” Francois broke in. “Though she’s really more of a surrogate parent. She’s completely devastated. I think the news hit her harder than it will Maman and Papa.”
“Why do you call them that?” Lee asked.
“Our dad is French, and our mom—well, let’s just say she has her pretensions. That’s what we’ve always called them.”
“Is there anyone you’ve seen at the club who you might suspect of doing something like this?”
Francois stopped fidgeting and looked Butts straight in the eye. “I have thought of nothing else for two days,” he said, “and I swear to God if I even suspected any of them, they wouldn’t be alive right now.” The level of commitment in his voice was chilling.
“That’s no way to handle justice,” Lee said. “You can’t take the law into your own hands.”
“Yeah, right,” Francois retorted with disgust. “You wouldn’t say that if you had lost your only sister.”
“He has,” Butts said angrily.
Francois’s face fell and he flushed. “Oh, Jesus, I forgot. I read about it in that article about you, but I just—oh, God, I’m sorry.”
“Never mind,” said Lee. “I know how you feel, but you have to let us deal with whoever did this. I need you to promise me that.”
Francois’s grip tightened on the strap of his satchel, and his jaw worked, clenching and unclenching.
“I need your promise,” Lee repeated.
Francois shook himself as a dog might shake water from his coat. “Okay—I promise.”
“Good.”
“It’s not like I know every one of them, anyway,” he muttered. “People come and go all the time in that crowd.”
“Yeah,” Butts said. “We’re tryin’ to track down everyone who was there that night.”
Detective Rodriguez had already done quite a lot of that work, using credit card receipts to track down the club patrons, though a few people had paid for their drinks with . . .
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