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"Do you know who I am?" he asks, his voice beginning to ascend with fear.

"Let me guess," I say. "You're the guy who usually plays the second heavy, am I right?"

His face looks appropriately mystified. I don't expect him to get it. "What?"

"You're the guy who stands behind the villain of the piece and tries to look menacing. The guy who never gets the girl. Well, sometimes, but it's never the beautiful girl, is it? If at all, you get that hard-looking blonde, the one who drinks her bottom-shelf whiskey neat, the one who's going a bit thick around the middle. Kind of the Dorothy Malone type. And only after the villain gets his."

"You're crazy."

"You have no idea."

I step in front of him, examine his face. He tries to struggle away but I take his face in my hands.

"You really ought to take better care of your skin."

He stares at me, speechless. That won't last long.

I cross the room, take the chain saw from the case. It is heavy in my hands. All the best weaponry is. I smell the scent of oil. It is a well- maintained piece of equipment. It is going to be a shame to lose it.

I pull the cord. It starts immediately. The roar is loud, impressive. The chain saw blade rumbles and belches and smokes.

"Jesus Christ, no!" he screams.

I face him, feeling the terrible power of the moment.

"Mira!" I yell.

When I touch the blade to the left side of his head, his eyes seem to register the truth of the scene. There is no look quite like the look people get at this moment.

The blade descends. Great chunks of bone and brain tissue fly. The blade is very sharp and in no time at all I have cut all the way down to his neck. My raincoat and face mask are covered in blood and skull fragments and hair.

"Now the leg, eh?" I scream.

But he can no longer hear me.

The chain saw rumbles in my hands. I shake the flesh and gristle from the blade.

And go back to work.

53

Byrne parked on Montgomery Drive and began to make his way across the plateau. The city skyline winked and sparkled in the distance. Ordinarily, he would have stopped and marveled at the view from Belmont Plateau. Even as a lifelong Philadelphian, he never tired of it. But tonight his heart was laden with sadness and fear.

Byrne trained his Maglite on the ground, looking for a blood trail, footprints. He found neither.

He approached the softball field, checking for any sign of a struggle. He searched the area behind the backstop. No blood, no Victoria.

He circled the field. Twice. Victoria was not there.

Had she been found?

No. There would still be a police presence if this was a crime scene. It would be taped off, and there would be a sector car protecting the site. CSU would not process this scene in darkness. They would wait until morning.

He retraced his steps, finding nothing. He crossed the plateau again, passing through a copse of trees. He looked beneath the benches. Nothing. He was just about to call in a search team-knowing that what he had done to Matisse would mean the end of his career, his freedom, his life-when he saw her. Victoria was on the ground, behind a small clump of bushes, covered in filthy rags and newspaper. And there was a lot of blood. Byrne's heart shattered into a thousand pieces.

"My God. Tori. No."

He knelt next to her. He pulled the rags away. Tears obscured his vision. He wiped them away with the back of his hand. "Ah, Christ. What did I do to you?"

She had been cut across the stomach. The wound was deep and gaping. She had lost a lot of blood. Byrne dry-heaved. He had seen oceans of blood in his time on the job. But this. This…

He felt for a pulse. It was faint, but it was there.

She was alive.

"Hang on, Tori. Please. God. Hang on."

His hands shaking, he took out his cell phone and called 911.

Byrne stayed with her until the very last second. When EMS rescue pulled up, he hid among the trees. There was nothing more he could do for her.

Except pray.

Byrne did his best to maintain calm. It was difficult. The wrath inside him, at this moment, was bright and brass and savage.

He had to calm down. Had to think.

Now was the moment when all crimes went bad, when the science went on the record, the moment when the smartest of the criminals screwed up, the moment that investigators live for.

Investigators like himself.

He thought of the items in the bag in the trunk of his car, the artifacts of dark purpose he had purchased from Sammy DuPuis. He would take all night with Julian Matisse. There were many things, Byrne knew, that were worse than death. He intended to explore each and every one of them before the night was out. For Victoria. For Gracie Devlin. For everyone Julian Matisse had ever hurt.

There was no way back from this. For the rest of his life, no matter where he lived, no matter what he did, he would wait for the knock on the door; he would suspect the man in the dark suit who approached him with grim determination, the car that slowly pulled to the curb as he walked up Broad Street.

Surprisingly, his hands were steady, his pulse even. For now. But he knew that there was a world of distance and difference in that hairbreadth between pulling the trigger and staying your finger.

Could he pull the trigger?

Would he?

As he watched the taillights of the EMS rescue disappear up Montgomery Drive, he felt the weight of the SIG-Sauer in his hand, and had his answer.

54

"This has nothing to do with Mr. Diamond or his business. I'm a homicide detective."

Cedric had hesitated after finding the wire. He had patted her down roughly, torn it off. It was clear what was coming next. He had put the gun to her forehead, and made her get down on her knees.

"You're pretty fucking hot for a cop, you know that?"

Jessica just stared. Watched his eyes. His hands. "You're going to kill a gold-badge detective where you work?" she asked, hoping her voice didn't betray her fear.

Cedric smiled. Incredibly, he wore a retainer. "Who says we'd leave your body here, bitch?"

Jessica considered her options. If she could get to her feet, she could land one shot. It would have to be well placed-the throat or the nose- and even then might only give her a few seconds to get out of the room. She did not take her eyes off the gun.

Cedric stepped forward. He unbuttoned his pants. "You know, I never fucked a cop before."

As he did this, the barrel of the gun pointed away from her momentarily. If he took his pants off, it would be the last opportunity to make her move. "You might want to think this through, Cedric."

"Oh, I'm thinking about it, baby." He began to unzip his zipper. "I been thinking about it since you walked in."

Before he got his zipper all the way down, a shadow crossed the floor.

"Drop the gun, Sasquatch."

It was Nicci Malone.

From the look on Cedric's face, Nicci had a gun to the back of his head. His face drained of all color, his attitude of all menace. He slowly put the weapon on the floor. Jessica picked it up. She trained it on him. It was a.38 Smith amp; Wesson revolver.

"Very good," Nicci said. "Now put your hands on top of your head, and interlace your fingers."

The man shook his head slowly, side-to-side. But he didn't comply. "You ain't gonna make it out of here."

"No? And why is that?" Nicci asked.

"They're gonna miss me any minute now."

"Why, because you're so lovable? Shut the fuck up. And put your hands on top of your head. Last time I'm going to tell you."

Slowly, reluctantly, he put his hands on his head.

Jessica got to her feet, keeping the.38 pointed at the man, wondering where Nicci got her weapon. They had been searched with the metal detector on the way in.