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Rizzoli & Isles [01] The Surgeon Page 13


  “We don’t know that.”

  “It was my birthday yesterday. He knew. And he knew I was scheduled to be on call.”

  “If he’s the one who wrote it.”

  “Don’t bullshit me. You know it was him.”

  After a pause, Moore nodded.

  They sat without speaking for a moment. It was already late afernoon, and most of the tables were empty. Behind the counter, cafeteria workers cleared away the serving pans, and steam rose in wispy columns. A lone cashier cracked open a fresh package of coins, and they clattered into the register drawer.

  “What about my office?” she said.

  “He left no fingerprints.”

  “So you have nothing on him.”

  “We have nothing,” he admitted.

  “He moves in and out of my life like air. No one sees him. No one knows what he looks like. I could put bars on all my windows, and I’ll still be afraid to fall asleep.”

  “You don’t have to go home. I’ll bring you to a hotel.”

  “It doesn’t matter where I hide. He’ll know where I am. For some reason, he’s chosen me. He’s told me I’m next.”

  “I don’t think so. It would be an incredibly stupid move on his part, warning his next victim. The Surgeon is not stupid.”

  “Why did he contact me? Why write me notes on . . .” She swallowed.

  “It could be a challenge to us. A way of taunting the police.”

  “Then the bastard should have written to you!” Her voice rang out so loudly that a nurse pouring a cup of coffee turned and stared at her.

  Flushing, Catherine rose to her feet. She’d embarrassed herself by that outburst, and she was silent as they walked out of the hospital. He wanted to take her hand, but he thought she would only pull away, interpreting it as a condescending gesture. Above all, he did not want her to think him condescending. More than any woman he’d ever met, she commanded his respect.

  Sitting in his car, she said quietly: “I lost it in there. I’m sorry.”

  “Under the circumstances, anyone would have.”

  “Not you.”

  His smile was ironic. “I, of course, never lose my cool.”

  “Yes, I’ve noticed.”

  And what did that mean? he wondered as they drove to the Back Bay. That she thought him immune to the storms that roil a normal human heart? Since when had clear-eyed logic meant the absence of emotions? He knew his colleagues in the homicide unit referred to him as Saint Thomas the Serene. The man you turned to when situations became explosive and a calm voice was needed. They did not know the other Thomas Moore, the man who stood before his wife’s closet at night, inhaling the fading scent of her clothes. They saw only the mask he allowed them to see.

  She said, with a note of resentment, “It’s easy for you to be calm about this. You’re not the one he’s fixated on.”

  “Let’s try to look at this rationally—”

  “Look at my own death? Of course I can be rational.”

  “The Surgeon has established a pattern he’s comfortable with. He attacks at night, not during the day. At heart he’s a coward, unable to confront a woman on equal terms. He wants his prey vulnerable. In bed and asleep. Unable to fight back.”

  “So I should never fall asleep? That’s an easy solution.”

  “What I’m saying is, he’ll avoid attacking anyone during daylight hours, when a victim is able to defend herself. It’s after dark when everything changes.”

  He pulled up in front of her address. While the building lacked the charm of the older brick residences on Commonwealth Avenue, it had the advantage of a gated and well-lit underground garage. Access to the front entrance required both a key as well as the correct security code, which Catherine punched into the keypad.

  They entered a lobby, decorated with mirrors and polished marble floors. Elegant, yet sterile. Cold. An unnervingly silent elevator whisked them to the second floor.

  At her apartment door, she hesitated, the new key in hand.

  “I can go in and take a look first, if that would make you feel better,” he said.

  She seemed to take his suggestion as a personal affront. In answer, she thrust the key in the lock, opened the door, and walked in. It was as if she had to prove to herself that the Surgeon had not won. That she was still in control of her life.

  “Why don’t we go through all the rooms, one by one,” he said. “Just to make sure nothing has been disturbed.”

  She nodded.

  Together they walked through the living room, the kitchen. And last, the bedroom. She knew the Surgeon had taken souvenirs from other women, and she meticulously went through her jewelry box, her dresser drawers, searching for any sign of a trespasser’s hand. Moore stood in the doorway watching her sort through blouses and sweaters and lingerie. And suddenly he was hit with an unsettling memory of another woman’s clothes, not nearly as elegant, folded in a suitcase. He remembered a gray sweater, a faded pink blouse. A cotton nightgown with blue cornflowers. Nothing brand-new, nothing expensive. Why had he never bought Mary anything extravagant? What did he think they were saving for? Not what the money had eventually gone to. Doctors and nursing home bills and physical therapists.

  He turned from the bedroom doorway and walked out to the living room, where he sat down on the couch. The late afternoon sun streamed through the window and its brightness stung his eyes. He rubbed them and dropped his head in his hands, afflicted by guilt that he had not thought of Mary all day. For that he felt ashamed. He felt even more ashamed when he raised his head to look at Catherine and all thoughts of Mary instantly vanished. He thought: This is the most beautiful woman I’ve ever known.

  The most courageous woman I’ve ever known.

  “There’s nothing missing,” she said. “Not as far as I can tell.”

  “Are you sure you want to stay here? I’d be happy to bring you to a hotel.”

  She crossed to the window and stared out, her profile lit by the golden light of sunset. “I’ve spent the last two years being afraid. Locking out the world with dead bolts. Always looking behind doors and searching closets. I’ve had enough of it.” She looked at him. “I want my life back. This time I won’t let him win.”

  This time, she had said, as though this was a battle in a much longer war. As though the Surgeon and Andrew Capra had blended into a single entity, one she had briefly subdued two years ago but had not truly defeated. Capra. The Surgeon. Two heads of the same monster.

  “You said there’d be a patrol car outside tonight,” she said.

  “There will be.”

  “You guarantee it?”

  “Absolutely.”

  She took a deep breath, and the smile she gave him was an act of sheer courage. “Then I have nothing to worry about, do I?” she said.

  It was guilt that made him drive toward Newton that evening instead of going straight home. He had been shaken by his reaction to Cordell and troubled by how thoroughly she now monopolized his thoughts. In the year and a half since Mary’s death, he had lived a monk’s existence, feeling no interest whatsoever in women, all passions dampened by grief. He did not know how to deal with this fresh spark of desire. He only knew that, given the situation, it was inappropriate. And that it was a sign of disloyalty to the woman he had loved.

  So he drove to Newton to make things right. To assuage his conscience.

  He was holding a bouquet of daisies as he stepped into the front yard and latched the iron gate behind him. It’s like carrying coals to Newcastle, he thought, looking around at the garden, now falling into the shadows of evening. Every time he visited, there seemed to be more flowers crammed into this small space. Morning glory vines and rose canes had been trained up the side of the house, so that the garden seemed to be expanding skyward as well. He felt almost embarrassed by his meager offering of daisies. But daisies were what Mary had loved best, and it was almost a habit for him now, to choose them at the flower stand. She’d loved their cheery simplicity, the f
ringes of white around lemony suns. She’d loved their scent—not sweet and cloying like other flowers, but pungent. Assertive. She’d loved the way they sprang up wild in vacant lots and roadsides, reminders that true beauty is spontaneous and irrepressible.

  Like Mary herself.

  He rang the bell. A moment later the door swung open, and the face that smiled at him was so much like Mary’s, he felt a familiar twinge of pain. Rose Connelly had her daughter’s blue eyes and round cheeks, and although her hair was almost entirely gray and age had etched its mark on her face, the similarities left no doubt that she was Mary’s mother.

  “It’s so good to see you, Thomas,” she said. “You haven’t been by lately.”

  “I’m sorry about that, Rose. It’s hard to find time lately. I hardly know which day it is.”

  “I’ve been following the case on the TV. What a terrible business you’re in.”

  He stepped into the house and handed her the daisies. “Not that you need any more flowers,” he said wryly.

  “One can never have too many flowers. And you know how much I love daisies. Would you like some iced tea?”

  “I’d love some, thank you.”

  They sat in the living room, sipping their tea. It tasted sweet and sunny, the way they drank it in South Carolina where Rose was born. Not at all like the somber New England brew that Moore had grown up drinking. The room was sweet as well, hopelessly old-fashioned by Boston standards. Too much chintz, too many knickknacks. But oh, how it reminded him of Mary! She was everywhere. Photos of her hung on the walls. Her swimming trophies were displayed on the bookshelves. Her childhood piano stood in the living room. The ghost of that child was still here, in this house where she had been raised. And Rose was here, the keeper of the flame, who looked so much like her daughter that Moore sometimes thought he saw Mary herself gazing from Rose’s blue eyes.

  “You look tired,” she said.

  “Do I?”

  “You never went on vacation, did you?”

  “They called me back. I was already in the car, heading up the Maine Turnpike. Had my fishing poles packed. Bought a new tacklebox.” He sighed. “I miss the lake. It’s the one thing I look forward to all year.”

  It was the one thing Mary had always looked forward to as well. He glanced at the swimming trophies on the bookshelf. Mary had been a sturdy little mermaid who would happily have lived her life in the water had she been born with gills. He remembered how cleanly and powerfully she had once stroked across the lake. Remembered how those same arms had wasted away to twigs in the nursing home.

  “After the case is solved,” said Rose, “you could still go to the lake.”

  “I don’t know that it will be solved.”

  “That doesn’t sound like you at all. So discouraged.”

  “This is a different sort of crime, Rose. Committed by someone I can’t begin to understand.”

  “You always manage to.”

  “Always?” He shook his head and smiled. “You give me too much credit.”

  “It’s what Mary used to say. She liked to brag about you, you know. He always gets his man.”

  But at what cost? he wondered, his smile fading. He remembered all the nights away at crime scenes, the missed dinners, the weekends when his mind was occupied only by thoughts of work. And there had been Mary, patiently waiting for his attention. If I had just one day to relive, I would spend every minute of it with you. Holding you in bed. Whispering secrets beneath warm sheets.

  But God grants no such second chances.

  “She was so proud of you,” Rose said.

  “I was proud of her.”

  “You had twenty good years together. That’s more than most people can say.”

  “I’m greedy, Rose. I wanted more.”

  “And you’re angry you didn’t get it.”

  “Yes, I suppose I am. I’m angry that she had to be the one with the aneurysm. That she was the one they couldn’t save. And I’m angry that—” He stopped. Released a deep breath. “I’m sorry. It’s just hard. Everything is so hard these days.”

  “For both of us,” she said softly.

  They gazed at each other in silence. Yes, of course it would be even harder for widowed Rose, who had lost her only child. He wondered whether she would forgive him if he ever remarried. Or would she consider it a betrayal? The consignment of her daughter’s memory to an even deeper grave?

  Suddenly he found he could not hold her gaze, and he glanced away with a twinge of guilt. The same guilt he’d felt earlier that afternoon when he’d looked at Catherine Cordell and felt the unmistakable stirring of desire.

  He set down his empty glass and rose to his feet. “I should be going.”

  “So it’s back to work already?”

  “It doesn’t stop until we catch him.”

  She saw him to the door and stood there as he walked through the tiny garden to the front gate. He turned and said, “Lock your doors, Rose.”

  “Oh, you always say that.”

  “I always mean it, too.” He gave a wave and walked away, thinking: Tonight more than ever.

  Where we go depends on what we know, and what we know depends on where we go.

  The rhyme kept repeating in Jane Rizzoli’s head like an irritating childhood ditty as she stared at the Boston map tacked on a large corkboard on her apartment wall. She had hung the map the day after Elena Ortiz’s body was discovered. As the investigation wore on, she had stuck more and more colored pins on the map. There were three different colors representing three different women. White for Elena Ortiz. Blue for Diana Sterling. Green for Nina Peyton. Each marked a known location within the woman’s sphere of activity. Her residence, her place of employment. The homes of close friends or relatives. Which medical facility she visited. In short, the habitat of the prey. Somewhere in the course of her day-to-day activities, each woman’s world had intersected with the Surgeon’s.

  Where we go depends on what we know, and what we know depends on where we go.

  And where did the Surgeon go? she wondered. What made up his world?

  She sat eating her cold supper of a tuna sandwich and potato chips washed down with beer, studying the map as she chewed. She had hung the map on the wall next to her dining table, and every morning when she drank her coffee, every evening when she had dinner—provided she got home for dinner—she would find her gaze inexorably drawn to those colored pins. While other women might hang pictures of flowers or pretty landscapes or movie posters, here she was, staring at a death map, tracing the movements of the deceased.

  This is what her life had come to: eat, sleep, and work. She’d been living in this apartment for three years now, but there were few decorations on the walls. No plants (who had time to water ’em?), no stupid knickknacks, not even any curtains. Only venetian blinds on the windows. Like her life, her home was streamlined for work. She loved, and lived for, her job. Had known she’d wanted to be a cop since she was twelve years old, when a woman detective visited her school on Career Day. First the class had heard from a nurse and a lawyer, then a baker and an engineer. The students’ fidgeting got louder. Rubber bands shot between rows and a spitball sailed across the room. Then the woman cop stood up, weapon holstered at her waist, and the class suddenly hushed.

  Rizzoli never forgot that. She never forgot how even the boys gazed in awe at a woman.

  Now she was that woman cop, and while she could command the awe of twelve-year-old boys, the respect of adult men often eluded her.

  Be the best was her strategy. Outwork them, outshine them. So here she was, working even as she ate her dinner. Homicide and tuna fish sandwiches. She took a long pull of beer, then leaned back, staring at the map. There was something creepy about seeing the human geography of the dead. Where they’d lived their lives, the places that were important to them. At yesterday’s meeting, the criminal psychologist Dr. Zucker had tossed out a number of profiling terms. Anchor points. Activity nodes. Target backcloths. Well, she di
dn’t need Zucker’s fancy words or a computer program to tell her what she was looking at and how to interpret it. Gazing at the map, what she imagined was a savanna teeming with prey. The color pins defined the personal universes of three unlucky gazelles. Diana Sterling’s was centered in the north, in the Back Bay and Beacon Hill. Elena Ortiz’s was in the South End. Nina Peyton’s was to the southwest, in the suburb of Jamaica Plain. Three discrete habitats, with no overlap.

  And where is your habitat?

  She tried to see the city through his eyes. Saw canyons of skyscrapers. Green parks like swaths of pastureland. Paths along which herds of dumb prey moved, unaware that a hunter was watching them. A predatory traveler who killed across both distance and time.

  The phone rang and she gave a start, tipping the beer bottle on its side. Shit. She grabbed a roll of paper towels and dabbed up the spill as she answered the phone.

  “Rizzoli.”

  “Hello, Janie?”

  “Oh. Hey, Ma.”

  “You never called me back.”

  “Huh?”

  “I called you a few days ago. You said you’d call back and you didn’t.”

  “It slipped my mind. I’m up to my eyeballs in work.”

  “Frankie’s coming home next week. Isn’t that great?”

  “Yeah.” Rizzoli sighed. “That’s great.”

  “You see your brother once a year. Couldn’t you sound a little more excited?”

  “Ma, I’m tired. This Surgeon case is going round-the-clock.”

  “Have the police caught him?”

  “I am the police.”

  “You know what I mean.”

  Yeah, she knew. Her mother probably pictured little Janie answering the phones and bringing coffee to those all-important male detectives.

  “You’re coming for dinner, right?” said her mother, sliding right out of the topic of Jane’s work. “Next Friday.”

  “I’m not sure. It depends on how the case goes.”

  “Oh, you can be here for your own brother.”

  “If things heat up, I may have to do it another day.”

  “We can’t do it another day. Mike’s already agreed to drive down Friday.”