She grabbed the letter, nodded and said, “Thank you.” Anita turned and went back to her house.
She locked the door behind her and wondered whether she should call her mother to let her hear whatever it was that Lyle had to say. She took a deep breath and began to tear at one edge of the envelope. Her fingers trembled so much it was hard to open. Her heart pounded.
The baby cried.
“Be right there, Ronnie…give mommy a sec.”
A mournful wail came from his room. “Coming, you probably had a bad dream.” She began to read aloud her husband’s handwriting as she walked toward the baby’s room: Dear Anita, if you’re reading this, chances are I’m dead. I want you to know that I always loved you. If nothing else, you got a real good insurance policy to help take care of yourself and Ronnie. The first thing you need to do is call the sheriff’s office…
Her hand trembled so much she had to hold the letter with both hands as she entered the baby’s room. He stood in his crib and cried. Blanket creases in the side of his red, tear-streaked face. She bent down to kiss his face. “Mommy is going to give you a bath and some lunch. Just a second, sweetheart.”
She continued reading. “Call them and tell them your husband has been killed. No, tell them he’s been murdered. I will spell out the killer’s name in print so there is no mistake as to his identity. He is the same man who killed Sam Spelling and…”
The baby screamed. Anita saw that he was looking to her right. Looking toward the door. She turned just as the man in a dark ski mask grabbed her in a strong headlock.
“Please don’t!” she pleaded. “Please don’t hurt me! I’ll give you anything you want.”
“Shhh,” he whispered. “You’re going for a long sleep now. Don’t resist and you will feel no pain.”
She fought with all her strength, clawing and pulling at the ski mask. He snapped her neck. Eyes tearing, disbelieving. Her body quivered as her heart pumped its final frantic beats. He let her body slump to the carpeted floor. Anita’s dying eyes locked on her crying child.
Reaching down, he removed the letter from her clinched fist and whispered, “You are the last link…the chain letter dies with you.”
EIGHTY
O’Brien pulled out of the Willows in the Wind subdivision and didn’t want to look back. He thought about Judy Neilson-now an alcoholic, drowning pain when it pooled in her spirit and left stains on the fabric of who she had become.
Was there something she wasn’t admitting? ‘ You can put your trust into the wrong people…even those people paid to protect you.’ He thought about the heroin connection-Judy finding Alexandria dead with seven stab wounds. Who had been that angry with Alexandria Cole?
O’Brien drove north, toward Daytona, and called Tucker Houston. “What’s the status with Judge Davidson?”
“Still in Seattle. I’ve got a call in to him. But he needs to sign the order in person and right now he’s about three thousand miles away. In the interim, I’ve spoken with Charlie William’s attorney, Robert Callaway. He’s a pleasant, if not somewhat defeated fellow. He emailed some of the information to me that I needed about the case. I’m writing the petition for a stay as we speak.”
“What are you throwing at them?”
“I call it collateral attack-a habeas corpus petition. I start in state court, where I know I’ll lose. Then the Fifth Circuit, where I know I’ll lose. Then the Florida Supreme Court…where I might get the ear of Governor Owen or the Florida Attorney General via the media. It could wind up on the docket of the Supreme Court in the very last hour. Call it a legal grandstand. Enough sawdust flying to start cutting through the system.
It’ll be up to you to add the real teeth to the saw, Sean. Until you do, I’m petitioning the court to halt the execution on the grounds that Charlie Williams wasn’t adequately represented the first time. He simply did not get a fair trail in view of the transcript I’ve read. He contends the sex between him and Alexandria was consensual. She was not raped, as the state alleges. There were many people in and out of the condo the day she was killed. Who’s to say there wasn’t a previous fight? Along comes bumbling Charlie, a love sick puppy trying to wrestle the only girl he’s loved out of the grip of vice. The cocaine, pills, booze, the-”
“Heroin.”
“Heroin?
“I just spoke with Alexandria’s former roommate, Judy Neilson. She told me two days before Alexandria was murdered they’d had a heart-to-heart. Came after Judy found Alexandria in the shower trying to scrub her skin to the bone because she felt dirty after having forced sex?”
“With whom?
“Says she doesn’t know. Probably the same guy who got her into heroin. Toxicology report after the autopsy didn’t reveal in heroin in her blood, but then if she hadn’t used in a while, it might not show up. When do you think you’ll hear something from the courts?”
“I’m hoping by end of the day. If national media jump on this, there could be time to have the courts consider the petition, and Charlie Williams could get a stay. But, Sean, right now neither you nor Williams can afford to assume this will get heard, and we’d all be greater fools to think that even if it is heard, the federal courts will do anything to stop it.”
“Call me as soon as you hear something. Thanks, Tucker.”
O’Brien hung up and called Lauren Miles. “Hear anything from Quantico?”
“Yes and no.”
“Lauren, I have enough riddles to solve. Just give it to me straight.”
“The straight talk is that Simon Thomas, the guy who is the world’s best at forensic 3D spectra-scope analysis, is probably landing at Reagan about now. He was the keynote speaker at a police forensics seminar in Las Vegas. I spoke with him before he boarded the flight. He’ll give it his best when he gets to the lab this afternoon.”
O’Brien said nothing.
“Sean, it probably comes down to the indentation that Spelling left. Like a fingerprint, if he didn’t touch it in the right way, the impression from his ballpoint pen will only leave so much. So we don’t know what Thomas may or may not get from it.”
“I understand, but Charlie Williams is down to hours now.”
“I’ve got a friend of mine in the bureau running Father Callahan’s blood letters and symbols though one of our so-called super computers. Nothing yet.”
“Tell your friend we have two of the parts of the code solved. But we still don‘t know what Father Callahan was trying to tell us. One of the symbols, the moon with the image on it, I believe is connected to a fifteenth century painting by one of the masters. The artist was Hieronymus Bosch. The painting is called Saint John on Patmos. I’m convinced the P-A-T Father Callahan wrote is Patmos, the Greek Island. He died before he could finish the word. That leaves us with Omega and six-six-six. Maybe the mark of the beast and the end of the universe. Let your super computer chew on that.”
“We want to do is help you solve these murders, not the fate of mankind.”
“I appreciate all you’re doing, Lauren, I’m just running on empty.”
“I know you can use more manpower. I was chatting with our chief, Mike Chambers and Christian Manerou, too. Christian has a break in his caseload. Said he’d be glad to assist anyway he can. Mike sighed but relented and said ok.”
“Excellent. If we get anything back on the letter maybe he can help find Spelling’s mother.”
“I’ll tell him.”
“I know Christian and your boss Mike Chambers were part of the team that put Russo away for the drug charges. Was heroin part of the mix?”
“Don’t think so. It’s been a while. Think it was a few kilos of coke. I’ll ask Mike or Christian.”
“Also, I don’t know for sure, but I believe Russo has ties to a gym in South Beach called the Sixth Street Gym. In a back warehouse, behind a large American flag on the wall, they’re operating bare knuckles fights. They amount to gladiator-style death matches. They tape it for black market sales. One of the steroids in charge is a big redheaded guy. Name’s Mike Killen. Uses an Irish accent when he wants to. I bet a background check on this guy would pull a long sheet. If you can find out when they hold one of these fights, a raid would put a stop to this.”