Pain and panic were simultaneous. Anna gasped desperately, sucking in nothing because her body wouldn't respond to her mind's command. It was impossible for her to breathe out, because she had no breath to exhale. She was made mute by her lack of oxygen and by her agony.
Even in her terror, she tried to gather her thoughts. Tried to comprehend what was happening.
Who was he? Why had he done this?
What's he going to do now?
The man was maybe slightly older than she was, handsome in a regular way. Studying him through her tear-blurred eyes, she was sure they'd never met. Not formally, anyway. But there was still that feeling that she'd seen him somewhere before.
He placed her gently on the sofa and she drew up her legs even tighter and groaned as she attempted again to draw air. She was going to suffocate; she knew it.
Her cheek pressed to the sofa, she watched the intruder go to the front door and make sure it was locked, and then fasten the chain. He stooped to pick up the white box and carried it nearer the sofa, then laid it on the end cushion where her drawn-up feet didn't reach it.
Her feet were pressed together and she realized she couldn't separate her ankles. She heard a loud ripping sound.
Her clothes being torn?
No. She recognized the sound now. It had been made by tape being ripped. He'd taped her ankles together. Now she felt the tape wrapping tightly around her calves.
He propped her up on the sofa, maneuvering her so she was on her knees. She'd hurt her neck turning her head sideways so her face wasn't pressed into the soft cushion. I don't want to suffocate! Please! She was still gasping, making wheezing sounds, struggling to recapture the great gift of being able to breathe. She knew her rear end was jutting up in the air. Was he going to rape her? Take her from behind?
She didn't think so, not with her legs taped so tightly together. And that frightened her even more.
Something worse?
Her arms were yanked behind her back and her wrists were taped. It had been accomplished quickly and expertly.
He's done this before. More than once.
He turned her around so she was seated on the sofa, bent forward and unable to move.
Anna was breathing in great gulping gasps now, and glimpsed the man in profile. She understood why he didn't seem a complete stranger. He looks familiar because he's been following me!
In her new sitting position she could see into the white box at the other end of the sofa.
Suddenly she knew who the man was. Why he'd been stalking her.
She took a deep breath, managed the brief beginning of a scream, before there was another loud ripping sound and a rectangle of gray duct tape was slapped across her half-opened mouth and pressed firm.
He approached her with something metal then, worked his thumb on it, and a razor blade appeared.
She began to tremble as slowly, with practiced skill, he began slicing and removing her clothes.
The muted shrill scream of a dentist's drill in Nothing but the Tooth made its way through the wall, followed by three loud thumps.
Seated at his desk, Fedderman said, "We could give somebody the third degree in here and nobody'd notice."
"Tempting," Pearl told him. She glanced over at where Quinn was seated behind his desk, studying a sheet of paper she figured was the killer's tantalizing note.
Fedderman had been studying the same thing. "The 'gold' in the note might mean blondes," he said, making a sour face after sipping his morning coffee. "Our sicko's been killing brunettes. Maybe he's hinting to us he's gonna start murdering blondes."
"That wouldn't fit the profile," Pearl said. "He wouldn't be set off by blondes the same way he is by brunettes."
Quinn said, "Hmm." She wondered if that was agreement.
"You're assuming it's the hair that's triggering his choice of victims," Fedderman said. "Maybe he's focusing on something else about these women."
"Such as?" Quinn asked.
Fedderman shrugged. "In what other ways are the victims similar? Eyes, legs, the way they dress, their noses, height, boobs? There are lots of possibilities."
Pearl felt somewhat offended but couldn't say why. "A bit of a reach," was what she said.
"It is," Quinn agreed, "but it might be true that his next victim doesn't necessarily have to fit the profile."
Pearl knew how little faith Quinn put in profilers. She didn't quite agree, but now wasn't the time to argue with him.
"He might have read all those books and watched those TV shows about serial killers and he's decided to run counter to type," Quinn said. With his free hand, he absently toyed with a wrapped cigar in his shirt pocket. Pearl knew he didn't dare.
"It's happened before," Fedderman said. "Blondes," he repeated thoughtfully. "Gold…blondes. The time when he displayed the pubic hairs to make sure we knew he'd really killed a brunette, maybe that's when he started to deliberately change his profile. First make-believe blondes, then on to the real thing. He wouldn't be the first."
"What the hell does that mean?" Pearl asked.
Fedderman sipped coffee and shrugged.
"There's enough to what you say about the possibility of some commonality we haven't struck on," Quinn told him, "that I'm going to study the morgue shots and photos of the women while they were alive to see if they might share something other than general type and hair color." He laid the killer's note on the desk. "You and Pearl take another look at where they were killed."
"Their apartments?"
"See if there might be some common denominator there. Their tastes in art, the way the places are furnished. And if it's still possible, look at their wardrobes. Maybe there was something about the way they dressed that turned them into victims."
"I thought I'd talk again to some of the victims' friends or neighbors," Pearl said. "When they get tired enough of us, they might remember something just so we leave them alone."
Quinn thought about it. "Okay. Catch up with Feds later. I'm going to worry over this note a while longer, then go see if Renz has anything new. He's got a meeting this morning with the profiler, so it'll probably be mostly bullshit."
Pearl went into the washroom and waited until Fedderman had left, then returned to where Quinn was still seated behind his desk.
"You check on that Wormy guy?" he asked, organizing the Marilyn Nelson murder book before closing it.
"We don't have a sheet on him. I contacted Buffalo, where he grew up. He's clean there, too. Might as well be an Eagle Scout."
"He looks like a damned junkie. If he's not a known user, he must be on something legal, like glue or gasoline." He bowed his head and gazed thoughtfully at the killer's note lying in the center of his desk. "Some of them just don't get caught."
Pearl didn't know if he meant junkies or serial killers. "I had another talk with Lauri," she said.
He glanced up at her, surprised. "Duty above and beyond. Thanks."
"It was her idea."
Quinn leaned back in his chair so he could see her without craning his neck and began to swivel inches this way and that, as if experiencing the beginning of uneasiness. "Lauri's idea?"
"Yeah. We met at a restaurant near the Hungry U and had sodas, then walked around the Village a while. She's a great kid, got more sense than most her age."
"But not enough sense."
"Well, at that age, no. Even thee and me. If you can remember back that far."
"She told me she likes you," Quinn said. "Really admires you."
"She used those words?"
"Verbatim."
"That's nice to know." Pearl was surprised by how pleased she felt. "It partly explains why she wanted to tag along with me while I work."
Quinn stopped swiveling gently back and forth in his chair. He looked mystified. "Tag along?"
"That's what she wanted. Why she phoned and asked to meet with me."