“We found us a whore, Billy,” Winters continued after waiting patiently for Shannon to respond, “just a young thing, no more than eighteen. A cold, unhappy, frightened little girl. And she was exactly what we were looking for, Billy. Exactly what we were looking for. And in a way we were exactly what she was looking for.
“A knife just wouldn’t do for tonight. Not the way we were feeling. For tonight we needed something special. You remember all the things we used? You remember what we pushed into her until she hemorrhaged and died? Think hard and try to remember. Try and remember how long it took.”
Shannon looked like he was deep in thought. Winters grin turned darkly obscene. “Think harder, Billy Boy. Give it everything you got.”
“That smell,” Shannon murmured.
Winters laughed. “Just like fresh gardenias, huh?”
“Earlier today. That smell…”
“What the hell are you talking about?”
“It was in Elaine’s car. We both smelled it when we got in. I thought an animal had died under her hood.”
Winters blinked twice.
“It was much fainter than this. But it’s the same smell.”
The little color in Winters’s face drained out of it. His slit mouth froze into a forced grin. “You’re confused, Billy.”
“No, that smell-”
“Yeah, you are, you little shit. You’re losing your mind, Billy Boy. You don’t know whether you’re coming or going anymore.”
“I know about that smell.”
“You know why you know it, huh?” There was a long pause. “You want to know why you know it?”
Winters stopped, a caginess momentarily pushing his lips into a small circle. When he continued his soft doughy features were relaxed, his grin again playful.
“You know it because it’s from inside you, Billy. Deep inside you. It comes out when you let me out and sometimes even a few hours before me. And you did let me out tonight. Liza Keenan would attest to it if she could. If rigor mortis hadn’t frozen that cute little mouth of hers, she’d tell us all about it, if she still had a tongue that is. Remember that name, Billy Boy. Liza Keenan. Try and remember all the fun we had with that whore.”
Winters’s image started to drift away. Shannon stood and watched as it floated off into the distance and then disappeared completely. Then there was nothing but blackness. A moment later there wasn’t even that.
When Shannon woke later, he thought about his dream. He played it back in his mind slowly, analyzing each detail of it. What Winters had told him about the smell was bullshit. It had been in Elaine’s car before either of them had gotten into it. The rest of the dream was bullshit, also. He could account for every minute from when he left Elaine to when he showed up at home. The dream was nothing but crap.
Still, he wondered about that smell. About what it was doing in Elaine Horwitz’s car.
Joe DiGrazia showed up later that morning. As Susan opened the door for him, he looked through her, his face showing as much compassion as a granite block.
“I need to talk to your husband,” he told her.
“Hi, Joe. Bill’s in the bed-”
DiGrazia brushed past her. Susan, surprised, followed him to the bedroom. Shannon propped himself up as his partner walked in.
“I’d like to talk to your husband alone,” DiGrazia grunted over his shoulder.
“Is this about Rose?” Susan asked.
“Rose Hartwell?”
“Yes.”
DiGrazia slowly turned to face her, his granite face clouding ominously. “Why’d you ask that?”
Susan tried to smile but it got stuck halfway. “I-I don’t know. I guess because Bill hasn’t said anything to me about it.”
“That’s kind of odd, isn’t it? Your neighbor gets murdered and your husband, who’s a cop, doesn’t tell you anything about it. Why do you think that is?”
“Joe, leave her alone.”
“No, I want to hear what Susie has to say.”
“I said leave her alone,” Shannon ordered. He turned to his wife and suggested maybe it would be better if he and Joe talked in private. Susan looked apprehensively at him, doubt wrecking her mouth. She nodded and left the room.
“What’s going on with you, Joe?” Shannon asked after the door closed behind his wife.
“Come on, buddy boy, you should know better than that.”
“What are you here for?”
“What do you think I’m here for?”
Shannon sighed wearily. “I’m not in the mood for this. Cut the crap, okay?”
“No, come on. You’re a bright guy. Tell me what I’m here for.”
“I have no idea.”
“You’ve been with me on enough murder investigations. Come on, make a guess.”
Shannon didn’t say anything.
“You disappoint me, partner,” DiGrazia said, shaking his head as he showed his disappointment. “I want to search your apartment. If I have to, I’ll get a warrant.”
“Why?”
“I have my reasons. Do I have to get a search warrant?”
“Joe, I didn’t kill those women.”
DiGrazia shrugged nonchalantly. “I believe you, but we don’t know what happens when you black out. We don’t know who takes over then.”
Shannon felt himself trying to swallow. “What are you talking about?”
“Maybe you got another personality inside you. Maybe he’s the one who killed those women.”
“W-why do you think that?”
DiGrazia shrugged again and let a smirk form over his lips. “Let’s call it a hunch, partner.”
Shannon felt very cold around his temples. He only half heard himself ask DiGrazia what he was looking for. DiGrazia started to say something but stopped himself. His smirk disappeared. Doubt softened the hard ridges around his eyes. He pulled an envelope from his inside coat pocket and handed it to Shannon. Inside were the photostatic articles that had been left outside of DiGrazia’s apartment. As Shannon read through them he felt his heart turn to cold sludge and then sink to his feet. Before DiGrazia had showed up he had half convinced himself that Herbert Winters was somehow still alive, that he didn’t really leave Winters with his head hanging by a thread, and that Winters was now out there committing these murders. It was the only thing that made sense. At least it explained that smell in Elaine’s car and the dreams he’d been having. The articles ended that possibility. It stuck a goddamn stake right through it.
“How’d you get these?” Shannon asked.
“They were left outside my apartment.”
“Any idea who left them?”
“I got a pretty good idea.”
“Joe, they didn’t come from me,” Shannon said. One of the articles showed a wedding shot of his mother, Lily. She couldn’t have been more than twenty in it. It was the first time since her murder he could imagine her without a knife sticking out of her mouth, without her dead eyes staring up at him. Without rigor mortis hardening her skin. He had forgotten how beautiful she was, how alive she once was. He had forgotten how much he missed her.
“I was hospitalized for six months after the murder,” Shannon said, his eyes transfixed on his mother’s picture. “I never saw any of these.” He felt a grittiness on the paper. “You dusted for prints?”
“Yeah. There was nothing. I’d like to search your apartment.”
“I told you I never saw any of these.”
“Yeah, I know you did.” DiGrazia started to rub his knuckles impatiently. “Maybe you didn’t. Maybe you got other personalities that collected them for you. I’ve got to know if the originals are here.”
Shannon felt himself choking up as he looked at his mother’s picture. “Go ahead,” he said. “Search all you want.”
DiGrazia started on the bureau, methodically searching through each drawer and then pulling them out and checking the inside of the wooden frame. Shannon watched for a while and then laid back down on the bed and closed his eyes. He tried to imagine his mother the way she had been in her wedding picture, but each time her image would shift into a grotesque death mask. After a while Shannon stopped fighting it.