Dirty Harry 06 - City of Blood Read online

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  The air made a slight, almost inaudible whooshing sound as the blade progressed down, but the sound it made on impact was, to Teddy’s ears, abrasively loud. The edge of the knife had, for a fraction of a second, met with resistance from the bone. But it was too slight to more than briefly interrupt the passage of the knife straight through so that it severed the jugular vein with something very much like surgical precision. And, because of the force that Teddy had invested in this blow, the knife did not stop when it had decapitated Mary but continued farther to a depth of nearly two inches in Doris’ right thigh, which just happened to be in the way.

  Doris had to scream for both of them because Mary never had the opportunity to utter a word. The pain must have been fierce but short-lived; Mary’s eyes were still closed in passion, her ingenious tongue still protruding from her lips, moist with the juices from Doris’ vagina. The blow had not only separated her head from her body but also had propelled it into space, hurtling it like a rocket in the direction of the window. It never quite got there, dropping down on the rug with a steady jet of blood still shooting out of the wound, like a flame from a turboprop engine.

  The blood that Mary’s headless body released mingled with the blood that bubbled up from the deep gash Teddy had incidentally carved in the flesh of Doris’ thigh. It was hard to tell whose blood was whose. Teddy himself was soaked in blood, but he scarcely paid heed to it.

  Doris was not so badly wounded, however, that she’d become immobilized. But there was no question she was shocked. In her eyes was horror compounded by disbelief. She sought to clamber off the bed, throwing her body onto the floor, whimpering. Her voice was strangled. After that first anguished scream of horror she could not get another out.

  Teddy, were he not so fearful of her cries alerting people in neighboring rooms, might have enjoyed pursuing her about for a few minutes longer. But he realized that once begun, this enterprise would have to be completed with speed.

  So, by simply placing his bare foot on the swell of her buttocks, pinning her hard against the rug, he prevented her from escaping. “No, no, no, no, don’t,” she mumbled, fitfully sobbing.

  Teddy knelt down on her back. She was squirming desperately below him, but she seemed capable of doing nothing more than claw at the threads of the rug. But when Teddy placed the knife against her neck, prepared to saw through rather than duplicate the cleaner strike he’d employed on Mary, Doris half-turned, bucking, almost forcing Teddy off of her.

  She managed to free one arm sufficiently so that she could use it against her assailant. With more skill than Teddy had given her credit for, she jabbed him in the left eye with her hand, making best use of her long sharp fingernails.

  “Bitch! Fucking bitch!” Teddy said, his eye stinging like crazy, suddenly filled with pain. He reeled back, half-blinded, but still he kept her pinned to the ground.

  And, more importantly, he still had control of the knife, which he used, only dimly aware of where it was he was striking. He slashed and slashed until he met with only enfeebled resistance. When he could adequately see what was happening he glimpsed a woman who, while still alive, was crisscrossed by dozens of cuts that yawned open to let out ever more blood from the imprisonment of veins and arteries.

  Teddy returned to his original objective: the neck. The problem was that Doris was turning this way and that, moving so often, groaning no longer with pleasure but with the immensity of pain from twenty or thirty locations, that it was difficult for him to cut evenly and true. And by her very movement, she ended up cutting herself, slicing additional skin from under her Adam’s apple as she strained to get out from under the knife’s constant threat.

  Teddy decided that enough was enough and by pressing his entire body weight against the knife he forced it far enough down her throat to extinguish her life. Then, mindless of the geyser of blood that sprayed his face, he continued on, cutting, sawing, carving until, with a final tearing of skin, Doris’ head was removed from her splendid body.

  The savagery concluded, Teddy still had a final bit of business to attend to. Namely, the hands. These he detached with little problem; there was no one to resist him now. Then scooping up the hands in the bottom sheet from the bed (for the top one was simply too messy to be of any use), he wrapped the four of them and deposited them in his accommodating satchel. Naturally, he would have to take the heads along; he hadn’t cut them off just for the sheer hell of it, though in truth he had rather enjoyed the task. With his blade, he cut substantial parts of the curtains to provide temporary shelter for these heads; then they too were added to the gory contents of the satchel.

  Now he had to go about the tedious business of washing up. He was confident enough to take a long shower, whistling a song as he soaped himself and cleaned the blood from his body. And though a great deal of blood had spattered on the closet door, none of it had penetrated, so his clothes were as clean and as fresh as he.

  Only one thing remained to be done. From out of his satchel he extracted a can of gasoline. It was a big enough can and the gas inside plentiful enough so that Teddy could sprinkle the entire room and adjoining bathroom with it. He even made sure to douse the torsos of Doris and Mary who had not yet finished bleeding.

  Then, just before he left the room, Teddy snapped open his lighter and pressed it close to the gas-saturated rug. A bright yellow flame shot out, touched the fibers of the rug, and instantly a blaze roared into the air, almost singeing Teddy’s hair and eyebrows. But Teddy didn’t mind. On the contrary, he was quite pleased. “Good-bye,” he called, “Good-bye!”

  With satchel in hand, Teddy let himself out. The satchel was heavier than before, but Teddy was a strong man, and his step was as light as a man who woke up one spring day to find himself in love.

  C H A P T E R

  O n e

  “This is some piece of art this fucker put together” muttered Al Bressler who in his years as a lieutenant on the San Francisco Police Force had witnessed many such artworks, though seldom one so macabre.

  You had the feeling that Lieutenant Bressler stood a bit in awe at the spectacle that greeted him and his entourage. Here, in the rubble of what had once been a rentable room, practically nothing remained that was whole or wasn’t charred or consumed entirely by the fire. Firemen were busy extinguishing what was left of the blaze. Three of them had had to be taken to the hospital, suffering from smoke inhalation. For the fire, which had begun in Room 358, had spread down half the third floor corridor, forcing those trapped in their rooms to either leap to the ground or else risk losing their lives after the fire had taken their oxygen. Four elderly residents, too intimidated to make the jump despite the nets the firemen had out for them, had met their death this way. Another had attempted to escape by dashing through the flames. He had managed to make it to the stairway but had sustained such terrible third-degree burns that little hope was held for his survival.

  That meant five deaths, not counting the two the fire had evidently been set to cover. Not much was left of those two, not much had been left of them even before the fire had started from what investigators could determine. No fire could be so devastating that it would obliterate absolutely all evidence of heads and hands. But there could be no doubt; the blackened forms that lay in the middle of the room had been deprived of heads and hands before the fire.

  Sergeant Reineke, who stood directly behind Bressler, coughing from the noxious fumes in the air, had to see for himself. He went and looked, then ran to the door and out of it, searching for someplace he could throw up in solitude. No such place existed in the vicinity, so he vomited right there in the hallway, disgorging his insides on the scorched floor.

  Bressler had more of a stomach for these things, but even he was disgusted.

  “Carson,” he said, turning to another detective who’d accompanied him, “any chance we’re going to get anything out of this?”

  Carson, who generally excelled at digging up evidence where others had failed, shook his head sa
dly. “The fire’s done a pretty good job of wiping out just about anything we could use.” He gestured to the ceiling, then to the walls. “Look, there’s nothing here the fire hasn’t touched. For Chrissakes, there’s a good chance we’ll never be able to identify these bodies. No hands, no fingerprints. No heads, no dental plates. Whoever did this wasn’t just a maniac. He knew what he was doing. Though it sickens me thinking there’s some jerk walking around out there with a couple of heads and a quartet of loose hands. Gives me the willies, you know what I mean.”

  Bressler knew exactly what he meant.

  The investigators adjourned to the lobby; the smoke was too dense to linger in the room, and it was obvious they weren’t going to accomplish much until the firemen had finished with their work.

  The lobby was crowded with members of the press who, denied access to the third floor, occupied themselves shouting questions at the fire department’s arson squad chief, who was being exceptionally unhelpful. The news photographers and the TV mobile-camera units, having nothing of great interest to capture on film, aimed their cameras at the lobby’s interior. Flashbulbs popped continuously. The Tocador Hotel would be famous by the time the eleven o’clock news was over, but not in the way the hotel’s management would have hoped.

  “What’s his name?” Bressler asked, looking at the hapless man who sat in the office that was located just off the lobby. The man was hard of hearing and cupped his ear, straining to hear. He was pale and trembling; possibly he expected to be accused of the barbarous crime that had just been committed or else blamed for allowing it to occur.

  “Melvin Tessel. He’s the day clerk. Only one on duty.” The detective who had just provided this information seemed heartened to see Bressler; probably glad to be relieved of the responsibility for interrogating a man who seemed to be half-deaf.

  Bressler pulled up a chair next to where the clerk was sitting and addressed him as he would a not terribly bright schoolboy. “Now, Mr. Tessel, you say that you never saw anyone who might have followed the two ladies—” he glanced down at the report he had in his hands—“Doris Paine and Mary Nold.”

  Melvin Tessel shook his head worriedly. “I’m sorry, sir, you see I was busy watching As the World Turns, and I had it turned way up loud because of my ears, you understand.”

  “I understand, Mr. Tessel,” Bressler said impatiently. “And you never saw anyone suspicious leave?”

  “No, sir. Somebody strange would have caught my eye, but I didn’t see no one.”

  “And it was only when one of the residents, a Mr. Tully in Room 372, called down to complain of smoke that you became aware there was a fire on the third floor?”

  Melvin Tessel nodded in the affirmative.

  “That will be all, Mr. Tessel. Tomorrow some of my men will probably want to take a statement from you, but if between now and then you remember anything else, anything at all no matter how unimportant it may seem, get in touch with me immediately.” He thrust his card into the clerk’s hand.

  Then he strode out into the crowded lobby, refusing to speak to the reporters who badgered him for a comment. “I’ll have something for you in the morning,” he asserted, hoping that would satisfy them.

  Actually, Bressler did not know what he’d have in the morning. It did not surprise him that a preliminary check with the authorities in Palm Springs had not yielded anything substantive regarding the identities of Misses Paine and Nold. No such names were listed in the telephone directory, and the poor bureaucrat who had been roused from bed and sent to study the municipal records and tax and electoral rolls could find nothing either.

  It did not surprise Bressler; he’d assumed from the outset that the names were fraudulent. The girls could have come from anywhere in the country.

  The case promised to be nothing but ugly and sordid and, worst of all, futile. The best forensic pathologist in the world was not going to find any useful leads from the charred, headless, handless remains he was saddled with. Unless the psychopath who was responsible for this butchery had committed similar crimes in the past or intended to repeat himself in the future, they might never solve the murders at all.

  When such cases came his way Bressler invariably chose the same person to investigate them. A man whom he felt was absolutely appropriate for something like this: Inspector #71, Harry Callahan.

  Harry didn’t need to be told. He had an instinct about these things. As soon as he heard the news of what had happened at the Tocador Hotel he resigned himself to being assigned to the investigation. The more pitfalls a case held for a detective the more likely it was that Bressler would pick him in the hope that he would fuck up, and fuck up so catastrophically that he could be busted down to traffic cop. Harry had fucked up in the past, occasionally it was unavoidable, but generally he’d avoided the more unspeakable punishments that Bressler had in mind for him.

  He had no sooner entered the Homicide Department, on the seventh floor of the Justice Building, than he was informed that Bressler was waiting to see him. It was ten minutes of nine in the morning, a day which up to now had shown no sign of ever clearing up enough to let the sun shine through. The murkiness of the atmosphere was reflected in Harry’s face.

  “You’re going to burn out before your time, Harry,” Bressler said, taking a good look at him.

  “It’s possible it’s already happened,” Harry wearily conceded.

  “You know what they say about burning your candles at both ends.”

  “Speaking of burning, is this about the Tocador?”

  “Yes, this is about the Tocador. You got a feel for this business, Harry.” Sarcasm lay heavy in his voice.

  Bressler raised his eyes to the clock on the wall. “In exactly one hour I am going to hold a news conference. The mayor will be there. And what I will say to the members of the press is that we will have the murders solved by the end of the month, that we have some significant leads, and that right now we have men out on the streets, watching for anyone who might be attempting to dispose of evidence of the crime.” He regarded Harry almost sorrowfully. “In fact, only the last part is true. The rest of it is bullshit. There is, however, a pressing need to make an arrest in this. It would be one thing if you got two hookers stiffed. That’s stuff for the National Enquirer. Nobody worries. But what we have here is five additional stiffs, elderly residents of the damn hotel, respectable people eking out a living from Social Security checks.”

  He lifted a folder off his desk and held it up as though it were a trophy he’d just won. “What we got here is the Mission Street Knifer.”

  “What’s he got to do with this?”

  “We went through our records, ran everything through our computers, this is what we came up with, the only known murderer-mutilator we got actively running around town.”

  “But his victims are usually derelicts, winos. From what I can recall he’s never gone in for women, never beheaded anybody.”

  Bressler did not seem disconcerted by this. He had expected Harry to raise the point. “What you’re saying is on the one hand, we have a middle-class, maybe upper-class, mutilator who goes in big for chopping hands and heads off. Now our lower-class mutilator, he goes in big for hearts and genitals. A difference in class, and I suppose you’d say a difference in anatomical preference. People don’t worry about your lower-class mutilator, no sex appeal to offing winos and junkies nodded out by the tracks. Pretty girls aren’t likely to be his victims. Well, suppose our demented friend just decided to confuse the issue, change his M.O.?”

  “I don’t buy it,” Harry said simply. “There are two different people involved.”

  Bressler sighed. As much as he wished he could disagree with Harry he recognized that only by a great deal of tortured reasoning could one arrive at the conclusion that the Mission Street Knifer was the same man as the one who had struck at the Tocador.

  “Yeah, well, to tell you the truth, I don’t buy it either. But you’re going to find me the Mission Street Knifer anyhow because
that’s the only option I’ve got right now. Otherwise what do I have? Two stiffs, no prints, no dental plates, fake I.D.s. And no murder weapon, no witnesses, no nothing. About all we’ve really got is some shreds of clothing the stiffs were wearing. People expect action, I’m going to give them action.”

  This sounded like sheer madness to Harry. “You’ve already got half a dozen men on the Knifer, Collins and Bonfiglio, what good is adding me going to do?”

  “Just bring me the Knifer, Harry. Let me worry about the assignments.” Bressler stepped to the door, opened it, and called out, “Would you show Officer Owens in please?”

  What was this about? Harry sat gloomily, waiting to see who this Owens was and what part Bressler intended him to play in this affair. He doubted very much he’d care for it, no matter what it was.

  Drake Owens looked like an actor, not a lead actor, not somebody whose name you’d see up on a marquee, but more like a character actor, the handsome, perennially boyish type who’s always holding his hat in his hands in Westerns, saying, “Yes ma’am,” almost apologetically because he is so attractive to women. He was slender, of solid build but not strapping. His hair was an unruly mop of dirty blondness, his eyes were as blue as San Francisco Bay on the sunniest of days. He gave Harry a polite, almost sheepish smile as if to say, I don’t know what I’m doing here either, don’t blame me for any of this.

  “Harry, Drake Owens.”

  “Pleased to meet you, I’ve heard a great deal about you,” Owens said.

  “Not much of it good, I suppose.”

  “You said it, not me,” Bressler interjected.

  “Oh, I don’t know about that,” said Owens, whose voice was as smooth and calming as his appearance. “I’ve seen you at the shooting range. I’ve watched what you can do with a .44.”

  “I’d like to see what he could do with a mind,” Bressler said, apparently incapable of resisting the dig. “Not that he doesn’t have one understand, it’s just that he seems only occasionally inclined to use it. Stay, Harry, I’m not finished.” So as not to allow Harry a chance to argue he continued, “Officer Owens will be your partner on this case. That is, he will aid you in capturing the Mission Street Knifer.”