Like all those dead in the school, thought Decker as he rose and followed his old partner down the steps.
Chapter 12
Schools should never be this quiet. That was Decker’s first thought as he walked down the hall next to Lancaster. His second thought was that this was the grimmest place he would ever visit.
He passed pictures on the wall of long-ago principals of Mansfield, including the man who had headed up the school when he was there. He glanced at rooms where he had sat in class, sometimes listening, sometimes taking notes, and sometimes sleeping while pretending to listen and take notes.
He forgot about the past when he saw the leg right at the juncture of two halls. It was a bare calf, which told Decker the body probably would be female.
As they made the turn, his deduction was confirmed. She was sprawled on the linoleum that looked old enough to have been there when Decker had trod these halls.
Photos and measurements had already been taken, and forensics gathered or nearly so, Lancaster had told him. The girl seemed posed, one hand out like she had been waving to a friend when someone had violently stolen the remainder of her life.
“Debbie Watson,” said Lancaster as Decker stared down at the girl. “Senior. Just turned eighteen. Her parents have been notified.”
Decker looked around. He had been working crime scenes for twenty years as a beat cop and then a detective. He should feel perfectly natural here looking for things he had looked for a thousand times before. But he did not feel natural. He felt like an outsider. He felt like all the air in the school was being sucked away from him.
He fought hard against this inner turmoil and said, “But they haven’t seen her?”
She shook her head. “You know the drill. Crime scene. No one gets in, including parents. Besides, why would they want to see her... like this?”
Decker had put on plastic booties and gloves Lancaster had given him. He knelt down next to Debbie Watson. As he did so his head started to spin. He cleared his throat and focused on her body.
She had taken what looked to be a round of buckshot full in the face. The result was she no longer had a face. He glanced at the wall behind her. It was splattered with bits of her. Books lay beside her; a notebook was soaked in blood. He looked down at a piece of paper that apparently had fallen out of a book. If these were the girl’s doodles she had been a good artist, thought Decker.
“You have the order of shootings yet?” he asked.
“From everything so far, it seems she might have been the first one killed.”
“Shooter’s entry?”
“This way.”
Lancaster led him a short distance away to what he recognized as the rear of the school. She pointed at the rack of doors. “They’re kept locked during the school day.” She pointed at a camera attached to the upper corner of a wall. “That camera gave us a nice view of the ingress.”
“Description?”
“I’ve got the image loaded on my laptop in the command center we set up in the library. But it was a big guy in full camouflage gear. Face completely obstructed by a mask and a face shield.”
“Belts and suspenders,” commented Decker. “Methodical.”
Lancaster continued, “We believe he walked in this way, turned the corner, encountered Debbie Watson, and shot her.”
“Wouldn’t there have been other people in the halls?”
“At that time of morning everyone was in their classes.”
“So why wasn’t Debbie?”
“She was going to the nurse’s office. She had an upset stomach. That’s according to the teacher who gave her permission to leave class.”
Decker looked around again. “Everyone was in class. So either the shooter was lucky or he knew the routine of the school.”
“That thought struck me too.”
“And after Debbie went down?”
“He went to the gym, killed Joe Kramer, the teacher there, reversed course, passed Debbie’s body, and headed toward the front of the school. By then the shots had alerted everyone, but people were more or less trapped in their classrooms. He shot one more student dead in a classroom. He went into a second classroom and opened fire. One more dead and one wounded, a teacher.”
“Andy Jackson? English? I heard it on the news.”
“Yes. Then he walked to the opposite corridor and entered another classroom. Another dead. Another classroom on the same corridor, a sixth person shot dead. He headed to the school office, where he shot and killed the assistant principal. He then shot and killed one more student in another classroom. All told we have eight dead. And Jackson’s in critical condition, so the death count could go up by one.”
“So six students and two adults?”
“Yes. And one critically wounded.”
“You said the shooter was dressed in cammies, mask, and face shield?”
“Right.”
“What else? Type of footwear?”
“The video shot is from the waist up. No one we interviewed noted his footwear. He was wearing gloves. Weapons were a shotgun and handgun. Ballistics guys are still searching and spreadsheeting all of it. A lot of the ordnance is still in the victims. When he used the handgun he fired multiple rounds into his victims.”
“To make sure they were dead,” said Decker. “Don’t really have that concern with a shotgun.”
“No, you don’t.”
“So hood plus a face shield?”
She nodded.
“Concealment was important for him. He might have been afraid he would be recognized. You said big guy. How big?”
She pulled her notebook. “Our video shot framed him with a poster hanging on the wall. We did some measurements. We’re looking at a guy at least six-two with very broad shoulders. Like yours. Strong. Definitely male. Over two hundred pounds.”
“So he walks all over the school and we only get one video shot of him?”
“Maybe he knew where the cameras were and avoided them,” said Lancaster. “Maybe he’s been here before doing some recon for this massacre.”
“But in one instance he didn’t avoid the camera,” rejoined Decker.
“Why do you think? Inconsistency? Mistake?”
“Too early to tell, but if it was deliberate, we need to find out why.”
Lancaster wrote down some notes.
“You said he entered classrooms?”
She nodded.
“But only killed one person in each before heading on?”
“That’s right. Except he wounded the teacher in one of them.”
“These people have anything in common?”
“You think he might have been specifically targeting folks?”
“Can’t rule it out yet.”
“He’d have to know what classrooms they’d be in at that time of the morning.”
“And he might have found out somehow.”
“I’ll check into that,” said Lancaster. “But it strikes me as doubtful with all the chaos going on that the guy would be able to run down a tally sheet of targets.”
“Maybe it was chaotic for everybody else. But not him. He had the guns.”
“But still, Amos,” she said doubtfully.
“And the exit?” he asked, ignoring her last comment.
“We haven’t nailed that down yet.”
He studied her. “By the time the guy was finished shooting, how much time had passed?”
“The prelim time frame we pieced together is ten minutes, maybe a bit more.”
Decker glanced out a window. The front of the school was set far back from the road, within its own grounds. Across the street were residential properties.
“Nobody over there heard anything? Shots, screams?”
“Still canvassing. He might have used a suppressor.”
“Not on a shotgun he didn’t. But my point is, how does a guy in cammies, hood, and face shield with at least two different weapons, and one of them a long barrel, walk out of here and nobody eyeball him? For that matter, how did he walk in and no one see him?”