Chapter 4 #2
“Don’t know.” Her pulse was tripping with the knowledge that the handlers had been provided with the pajamas Alyssa had slept in the night before she disappeared, which meant the animals could be on to her scent.
As they started across the cemetery, McBride called back to the caretaker, “Double-check your records on the sealing of the tombs. We’ll get back to that.”
Holcomb looked a little flustered or perplexed, but Vivian didn’t have time to analyze his problem since McBride had taken hold of her arm and was tugging her along with him. She had to practically run to keep up with his long strides.
He jerked his head toward the street. “Looks like word’s out that we’re here.”
Vivian glanced in that direction. The news vans and reporters had gathered in force.
Birmingham PD was keeping them outside the cemetery gate, but that wouldn’t stop their intruding zoom lenses.
She understood that the media was part of this business, but she didn’t have to like it.
The call letters of one station in particular, WKRT, caught her eye, which meant that Nadine Goodman was on the scene already.
There wasn’t an agent or a cop in Birmingham who liked the lady.
She had earned her reputation of cutthroat reporting by stepping on and over anyone necessary.
Vivian and McBride pushed through the crowd of cops when they reached Pratt’s location.
“In here,” Pratt said. He gestured to the open mausoleum.
“Was it unlocked when you got here?” McBride assessed the rusty iron door that stood partially open.
Pratt nodded. “The dog nudged the door open a little farther, but it was already unlocked and ajar. The handler had to restrain the animal.”
The dog had settled now that he had their attention.
“We’ll check it out,” McBride told him. “You and the handler stay put but get the rest of these folks back to the search. It’s getting dark fast.”
Vivian looked up at the sky; he was right about that. She reached into her jacket pocket and passed McBride a pair of gloves. When she’d tugged her own into place, she unholstered her weapon and followed him into the mausoleum.
She grimaced at the pungent odor. Blood .
. . decomp. The deeper they moved inside, the more the foul smell worsened.
This mausoleum was larger than the last. Two tombs stood on raised stone platforms. The floor was clean, as if someone had swept it.
The cobwebs and dust on the walls and every other surface indicated the floor shouldn’t have been so clean.
Their unsub wasn’t leaving anything to chance, not even his shoeprints in the dust.
“He’s been here,” McBride muttered.
With no immediate threat visible, she reholstered her weapon. “Looks that way.” As convinced as she had been that this was too easy, that there had to be a mistake, looking around now she admitted that McBride was right: He had been here. Something in her peripheral vision stopped her.
“Oh God.” She pointed to the corner on her right. She had to lean slightly in that direction to see it better, but there was no mistaking what it was. “A burlap bag,” she said aloud. Pain snarled deep in her chest. “Possibly bloodstained.”
McBride eased between the two tombs, headed for that corner. She took care to follow his exact path to avoid disturbing any evidence that might be invisible to the naked eye on the cleanly swept floor.
“Should we get a forensics team in here first?” All the rules of procedure she had learned were suddenly missing from her readily accessible gray matter. Dear God, she couldn’t bear the thought of what that bag might contain. Damn it! Why did it have to turn out this way?
McBride looked from her to the bag. “If the kid’s already dead, we need to know it now.” He shook his head slowly, his face grim. “I hate these bastards.”
She couldn’t agree more.
As he crouched down to inspect the bloody bag, images of what might be inside flared in vivid color before her retinas.
Vivian told herself to move. To get over there and do what she could to assist him .
. . but she couldn’t prompt her body into action.
Something she couldn’t brand as fear but couldn’t rule out as exactly that had paralyzed her.
And then, as if some mental door had suddenly swung open, the memories came.
Flashes of darkness . . . whispered words seared through her brain. And she was suddenly back there . . . in the dark . . . with him whispering in her ear . . . her every instinct warning that she was going to die.
A gasp drew dank, dusty air into her lungs.
“Agent Grace?”
McBride was staring at her.
Vivian blinked, wrestled for composure. “I’m . . .” She licked her lips, forced her legs to move. “I’m okay.” She crouched down next to him. “Let’s get it over with.”
Focus, damn it! Analyze the details. Do your job! “The bag isn’t large enough to hold a six-year-old girl unless . . .” She gulped back the bile rising in her throat. More of those flashes from the past bombarded her senses. Body parts . . . missing pieces . . . half-eaten flesh.
“Unless she’s been dismembered,” McBride finished for her, his expression questioning. “Not enough blood for that, Grace. Excluding the possibility,” he qualified, his tone cool and analytical, “the dismembering took place at a different location.”
Don’t look at the past! Pay attention. This wasn’t easy on McBride either. As collected as he sounded, when he reached for the tie of the bag his hands shook.
Details, Grace. Look at the details. Twine. Carefully knotted. A minute-plus was required for him to get the knots undone. Every second aged her a decade. Had the rage inside her building toward an eruption. Please don’t let this be that little girl. Please. Please. Please.
When the bag was open, she leaned forward just as he did. Peered inside. Shit! She jerked back. Her butt slammed onto the floor.
“Is that . . . ?” She dragged in a bumpy gulp of air, looked to McBride for confirmation.
“Rats,” he muttered as he stared into the bag. “A whole bag full of rats.”
Not the child . . . not the child.
Thank God.
Grabbing back her courage, she levered up from the floor.
“Hold this,” he ordered.
Easy for him to say. Her hands shaking, her legs a little rubbery, Vivian crouched next to him once more and held the bag open. He used the Maglite to get a better look.
Why the hell would this creep kill all those rats? As much as she disliked the rodents, torturing any living creature was just sick.
“What do we have here?” McBride lifted a rat from the pile. What appeared to be a toe tag hung from its hind leg.
Vivian shuddered, felt her traitorous stomach do another of those warning flip-flops.
“UAB Medical Research Center,” McBride read off. His profile hardened. “Andrew Quinn.”
Vivian tilted her head to read the name written on the toe tag. “Isn’t that your old supervisor?”
McBride heaved a mighty breath. “The one and only.”
“Wait.” She leaned closer, nudged one corner of the tag with a gloved finger. “There’s something written on the back.”
No more rats.
A muscle flexed in McBride’s jaw. He carefully placed the tagged rat back in the bag.
“We’ve got a whole tribe of rats in here, but nothing human as far as I can tell.
” His eyes locked with hers. “He’s playing with us, Grace.
He knew we’d use the K-9s. He must have had the bag in contact with the girl at some point to lock in her scent. ”
Vivian couldn’t see a connection. And if there was no connection, why the hell was this bastard wasting the time he had given them? The theory that this was some kind of revenge McBride had plotted for being terminated by the Bureau kept rearing its ugly head.
“What would any of this have to do with Alyssa Byrne?” she asked, trying not to sound openly suspicious. She was determined to give him the benefit of the doubt until he no longer deserved it . . . or until they found the child.
“Nothing,” McBride admitted. “This is about me.” He studied the way the bag sat against the wall.
Picked up the twine and considered how it had been tied.
“Whatever his game, this whack job wants to draw out the anticipation. He probably gets off on the risk of playing in the shadow of authority.” He turned his face to hers.
“And you know what? He’s not afraid of us or of getting caught. Not the least bit.”
She hoped he wasn’t right about that last part. Fear was what kept most people in line—and what made most criminals screw up. They needed for this nutcase to screw up—fast.
“What now?” Vivian wanted to scream in frustration.
If the child wasn’t at this cemetery . .
. where did that leave them? Time was running out and they had nothing.
Her stomach roiled. The putrid smell was getting to her.
She kept seeing flashes of the old movie Killer Rats, the images twisting with the pictures she had seen of Alyssa Byrne .
. . and with mental snapshots from the past she had thought was behind her once and for all.
McBride tossed the twine aside and stood. She rose, her legs liquid. This wasn’t the time to allow the past to catch up with her and throw her off balance. She’d completely overreacted to this scene. That kind of behavior did nothing but work against her determination to be the best agent possible.
With one last look around the mausoleum, McBride said, “We’ll need to find out if those rats came from the research center listed on the toe tag.
” He considered the bag a moment longer.
“Were they stolen before or after being euthanized? Maybe we’ll get lucky and our guy got in a hurry and left some DNA behind. ”
Vivian nodded. Wished she hadn’t. The movement had her gag reflex kicking in. “I need some air.” She couldn’t get out of there fast enough.
Outside she gasped for a breath that didn’t reek of rotting rodents.