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Authors: Graham Masterton

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BOOK: The Devil in Gray
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Blood was streaming down his chin and spattering his shirt-collar.

“Jerry! Oh my God, what's happened?”

He was so stunned that all he could do was shake his head from side to side, so that droplets of blood flew across the tabletop.

Alison folded up one of the tea towels and held it to his face. “The knife, Jerry … where's the knife? What have you done to yourself?”

She pried open his left hand, sticky with blood, but it was empty, and he wasn't holding anything in his right hand, either. She looked on the floor, but there was no sign of his knife anywhere. How could he have cut himself, without a knife? She lifted the tea towel away from his face for a moment and she could see that the cut under his eye was so deep that it had exposed the yellow fat of his cheek and his cheekbone.

“Oh, sweetheart, what have you done?” she sobbed. There was so much blood in the kitchen that it looked as if they had been having a paint fight. But now she could hear the
yip-yip-yipping
of the ambulance siren, only two or three blocks away.

“Hear that, Jerry? It's the paramedics. Hold on, sweetheart, please hold on.”

Jerry rolled his eyes up and stared at her. He was shivering, and he had the numb, desperate expression of somebody who knows that they are not very far from death.

“Jerry, you're going to make it. You're going to be fine, sweetheart. The ambulance is right outside.”

Jerry had never felt so cold in his life—a dead, terrible, all-pervasive cold that was creeping into his mind and into his body and gradually freezing his soul. A few minutes ago the kitchen had been dazzling with afternoon sunlight, but now it seemed to be dimming, and all the colors were fading to gray.

“It's getting so
dark
,” he said, and his voice was thick with shock.

The door chimes rang. Alison said, “Hold on, sweetheart. The paramedics are here.” She stood up and started to walk toward the hallway. Jerry thought,
Please
,
God
,
let me survive. I have to survive, for Alison's sake, for the baby's sake
. They already knew that she was going to be a girl, and they'd already chosen the name Jemima.

Alison reached the hallway, but as she did so she unexpectedly stopped. Jerry stared at her, willing her to move, willing her to answer the door, but she didn't. She stayed where she was, in the colorless gloom; and she was swaying, like a woman who has suddenly remembered something dreadful.

“Alison?” he croaked. “
Alison?

She tilted—and then, in a succession of impossibly choreographed movements, like a mad ballet dancer, arms waving, knees collapsing, she began to fall to the floor. As she did so, she pirouetted on one heel, so that she turned back to face him. Her eyes were staring at him in amazement.

For a moment Jerry couldn't understand what had happened to her. But then her head dropped back as if it were attached to her body on nothing but a hinge. Her throat had been cut so deeply that she had almost been beheaded, and blood suddenly jumped up from her carotid artery and sprayed against the ceiling.

A minute later, when the paramedics kicked the front door open, they found Alison lying on her back in a treacle-colored pool of blood, and Jerry crouched down next to her, whimpering and whispering and trying with sticky hands to fit her head back onto her neck.

CHAPTER TWO

Decker sat up in bed and peered shortsightedly at his wristwatch. “Holy shit! Two-thirty already. Time I wasn't here.”

Maggie grinned at him from underneath a tent of sheets. “Can't you stay for dessert, lover?” She had a thick, husky voice, as if she had been smoking too many Havana cigars.

“Ex-squeeze me? What was
that
—what we just did? Wasn't
that
dessert?”

“That? That was only a little something to tickle your palate.”

“My
palate?
You were trying to tickle my
palate?
I'll tell you something about you, sweet cheeks. You are in
serious
need of anatomy lessons.” Decker swung his legs out of bed and retrieved his glasses from the carpet. “Listen, I have to be back at headquarters about forty minutes ago. What did you do with my shorts?”

“You've lost your appetite, Decker, that's your trouble. You're growing weary of me.”

He leaned across the bed and kissed her smartly on the forehead. He wasn't growing weary of her at all, but, Jesus, she was almost inexhaustible. She was a handsome, ripe, huge-breasted woman with skin the color of burnished egg-plants. Her eyes had a devilish glitter and her glossy red lips always looked as if they were about to say something outrageous, and mostly they did. She snatched back the sheets to give him a split-second glimpse of those tiny gold and silver beads she wove into her pubic dreadlocks. Then instantly she bundled herself up again and gave him a dirty laugh.

“Hey,” Decker protested, tapping his forehead. “I'm not weary up here but I'm worn out down there. Give me a break, will you?”

“Just showing you what's on the bill of fare, lover. If you don't want it … well, that's your choice.”

“Listen—I have to go or Cab will assassinate me.”

“He'd assassinate you even more if he knew where you were.”

Decker switched his cell phone back on. Then he found his shorts under the bed and hopped into them like a one-legged rain dancer. He lifted his scarlet necktie and his crumpled white short-sleeved shirt from the back of the chair and retrieved his black chinos from the other side of the room. Maggie lay back on the pillow watching him dress. “So when am I going to see you again? And don't give me that ‘whenever' stuff.”

“I don't know. Whenever. You know what my caseload's like.”

“Oh, you mean Sandie in dispatch.”

“Sandie and me, that was over months ago.”

“What about Sheena?”

“Finished.
Kaput
. I haven't seen Sheena since Labor Day.”

“Naomi?”

“What is this, the third degree?”

“More like every woman in the Metro Richmond telephone directory, lover man.”

Decker went into the bathroom to comb his hair and straighten his necktie. He would have been the first to admit that he didn't exactly look like a love god. But he was lean and rangy, with thick black hair in a rather bombastic pompadour, sage-green eyes, and a kind of etched, half-starved look about him that seemed to appeal to practically every woman he met. He liked his nose, too. Narrow. Pointed: Very Clint Eastwood.

His cell phone played the opening bars of Beethoven's Fifth. Maggie mischievously reached across the bed and tried to snatch it off the nightstand, but Decker got there first. “Martin,” he said, and touched his finger to his lips to tell Maggie to stop giggling.

“Martin, where the hell have you been?”

“Oh, hi, Cab.” To Maggie, “It's Cab, for Christ's sake. Yeah, I'm sorry I'm running late, Cab. I had to swing by Oshen Street and talk to Freddie Wills. Well, he said he had something on that business on St. James Street. But listen, I'll be there in five.”

“Forget coming back to headquarters. There's been a stabbing on Davis Street. I want your ass over here now.”

“Anybody dead?”

“Unless you know of a cure for missing head, yes.”

“Jesus. Give me fifteen minutes. I'll pick up Hicks on the way.”

“Hicks is already here. Just haul your rear end down here as soon as you can.”

Decker sat down on the end of the bed to pull on his loafers. Maggie rose out of the white sheets behind him like a gleaming black Venus rising from the foam and wrapped her arms so tightly around his neck that she almost throttled him.

“Cab's going
fishing
this weekend,” she said, her breath thundering hot in his ear. She smelled like cinnamon and honey and sexual juices and sweat. “Maybe you'd be a dutiful fellow officer and come around for dinner on Saturday evening, keep me company.”

“Dinner with dessert?”

“Of course dinner with dessert. Dinner with
three
desserts.”

Decker unwound her arms and stood up. He buckled on his shoulder holster with its absurdly huge nickel-plated Colt Anaconda .45. He lifted the revolver out, opened the chamber, and emptied out all of the shells. Then he kissed the tips of them, one by one, and thumbed them back in again.

“You never told me why you do that,” Maggie said.

“Hmm? Oh … superstition, that's all.”

With an operatic chorus of tires, Decker pulled up outside 4140 Davis Street and climbed out of his shiny black Mercury Grand Marquis. This was an elegant, expensive district, with redbrick sidewalks and shady trees and nineteenth-century houses with white-pillared porches. Usually, at this time of day, it was soporific and almost completely deserted, with no sign of life except for sleeping cats and American flags stirring idly in the breeze, but this afternoon there were four squad cars parked diagonally across the street with their lights flashing, an ambulance, a van from the Richmond Coroner's Department, two TV crews, a crowd of uniforms and forensic investigators and reporters and all of those people who turn up at homicide scenes shouting on cell phones and looking harassed, even though Decker could never work out what most of them actually did. He even recognized Honey Blackwell from the mayor's office, all 235 pounds of her, in a daffodil-yellow suit and a daffodil-yellow bow in her hair.

“Afternoon, Ms. Blackwell.”

“Afternoon, Lieutenant. Tragic business.”

“Must be, if it took you away from Ma-Musu's.” He was referring to her favorite restaurant, Ma-Musu's West African restaurant on Broad Street.

“You have a sharp tongue on you, Lieutenant. One of these days you're going to cut your own throat with it.”

“Not a very tasteful remark to make, Ms. Blackwell, under the circumstances.”

Captain Cab Jackson came down the front steps of 4140, closely followed by Sergeant Tim Hicks. “Come by way of the heritage trail, did you, Decker?” Cab demanded, checking his watch. Cab was huge, over six feet five inches, with a dented bald head like one of the bollards where the stern-wheelers tied up by the James River. All the same, his face was chubby and his voice was unexpectedly high, so he had grown himself a Little Richard—style moustache in the hope of investing himself with some extra maturity. He wore a red-and-yellow-striped shirt with rows of pens and pencils clipped in the pocket, and his buttocks stuck out so far at the back that Detective Rudisill had famously described them as “Mount Buttmore.”

Hicks himself was short, handsome, young, and bouncily fit, like a human basketball. He had been transferred to Richmond's Central Zone only three months ago, from Fredericksburg, upstate, and he was still pepped up about working in the city. “We the
elite
,” he kept repeating, as they drove around town, slapping his hand rhythmically on the car door. Decker didn't have the heart to tell him that his transfer had probably had far less to do with the excellence of his service record than it did with the interim chief's urgent need to fill her quota of detectives of color.

“So what's the story?” Decker asked. “Pretty upscale neighborhood for a stabbing.”

“You'd best come inside and see for yourself.”

Decker followed Cab's buttocks up the front steps and in through the glossy, black-painted front door. He noticed that the frame was splintered, where the paramedics had kicked it open. Hicks bubbled, “I never saw anything like it. I mean, the
blood
, Lieutenant. It's like
all over
.”

“Well, remember that you can decorate an entire living room with the blood from a single person's circulatory system. Two coats, if you use a roller.”

Alison's pregnant body was still lying in the hallway, one shoe on, one shoe off. She was staring at the skirting board, her blue eyes wide open. She looked more baffled than horrified, even though her head was three inches away from her neck. Hicks was right about the blood. It was all over the polished oak floor, in splashes and smears and handprints. It was up the walls, all over the doors, spattered all over the cream linen blind. There was even a fan-shaped spray of blood on the ceiling.

Decker knew from experience that blood had a way of getting everywhere. You could shoot somebody in an upstairs bedroom and tiny specks of blood would be found on the walls in the hall.

A sallow, acne-pitted police photographer called Dave Martinez was taking pictures, and the intermittent flash gave the optical illusion that Alison was still twitching. Decker hunkered down beside her and looked into her wide blue Doris Day eyes. She looked back at him, her expression pleading,
What's happened to me?

Decker glanced at her blood-drenched smock. “How far gone?” he asked Cab.

“She was due on the twenty-first, according to her mother. But she was stabbed at least six times in the stomach. Baby didn't stand a frigging chance.”

“Uncanny, don't you think?” Hicks said, breathing down Decker's neck. “She looks as if she's just about to say something.”

“Oh yeah? You'd crap your pants if she did.” Decker abruptly stood up again, so that Hicks had to step back out of his way. He collided with one of the kitchen chairs and almost lost his balance.

Cab sniffed and said, “Victim's name is Alison Maitland, aged twenty-eight, wife of Gerald Maitland, aged thirty-three, who's a junior partner with Shockoe Realty, 1818 East Cary Street.”

“Where's Maitland now?”

“Still out in the ambulance. Arrested. Mirandized. They're giving him first aid for some serious lacerations to his arms and face. Don't worry … Wekelo and Saxman are with him.”

“Talked to him yet?”

Cab shook his head. “I tried, but he's pretty shaken up. He said, ‘It just kept cutting us.' I asked him what he was talking about,
what
kept cutting them, but he didn't give any response. Well, nothing that made any damn sense.”

BOOK: The Devil in Gray
2.47Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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