Ronald Tierney - Good To The Last Kiss - Crimes of the Depraved Mind Series

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An Inspector Vincent Gratelli mystery – San Francisco Inspector Vincent Gratelli is charged with finding the killer of young women – all murdered in the same way, all left with an intimate mark. The most recent victim was beaten and raped in her weekend cabin. There appears to be only one difference – she is still alive. Which leaves Gratelli with two questions: how can these murders be stopped… and how does the killer feel about unfinished business?

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Earl slammed the guy back down on the hood of the Honda, his knuckles coming down hard on the guy’s forehead, right over the eyebrow. Blood was coming from somewhere. Now horns were honking. Earl and this guy were the only ones out of their cars. There were screams in the midst of the smell of auto exhaust.

People were telling Earl to stop. The guy was trying to say something, but all he could manage was the gurgle of bloody spittle.

Earl could see himself in the reflection of the hood of the Honda. He could see splatters of blood there too. And that just seemed to make him angrier.

FIVE

G ratelli, on his second visit, guessed the woman who left Julia Bateman’s room as he came in was a social worker, some kind of rape therapist. He couldn’t be sure. His dominion the last eight years was homicide and a lot of things had changed in the way the police handled sex crimes.

When he saw Bateman, she was sitting up in bed staring down at her hands. Her head was still swollen. Hard to tell whether the condition was a result of the surgery or the beating. Beside her, in a chair pulled up close to the bed, was David Seidman, the assistant D.A.

David was telling her that he didn’t know what to say. She didn’t offer to write his lines.

Gratelli had seen Seidman in court. Seidman, in front of a judge, was a sharp, confident prosecutor. Jurors were impressed with his courtroom demeanor, his conservative good taste in clothes, and the handsome head of dark hair with gray temples almost too perfect to be anything other than hair salon magic.

His prosecutions were flawless. Since Seidman often took the capital offenses, the big cases, Gratelli witnessed the smooth and simple way the young prosecutor laid out difficult and complex cases. Unlike many, he had a full grasp of every, intimate detail. He’d always done his homework. The police liked him. The media respected him. The public was beginning to hear of him. There were rumors he would be mayor, perhaps governor some day, despite his surprising lack of charisma.

This was a different guy altogether, hunched over, embarrassed.

‘Professional visit?’ Gratelli asked, startling Seidman.

‘Not exactly.’

‘Miss Bateman,’ Gratelli said to Julia. She didn’t look up.

‘She’s been like this,’ Seidman said. He reached down and touched her hand.

She didn’t respond.

‘I thought you were homicide, Inspector. This is sex crimes or General Works, right?’

Gratelli shrugged noncommittally. He wasn’t in the mood to explain anything – let alone the serial homicide connection – to Seidman. He’d know sooner or later. But like the press, it was better later.

‘I want to talk with her,’ he said to Seidman in a tone that couldn’t be mistaken for anything but official.

There was an awkward moment when it appeared Seidman would insist on staying for the conversation. But Gratelli’s disapproving look must have changed the lawyer’s mind. Seidman got up slowly and went to the door.

‘If there’s anything I can help you with, let me know.’

‘You and I probably need to have a little chat too,’ Gratelli said.

‘Inspector Gratelli?’ Seidman said at the door.

Gratelli turned.

‘She didn’t know, I think.’

‘Know what?’

‘What happened to her. The woman told her.’

‘What did happen to her?’ Gratelli asked, wanting to know what the assistant D.A. knew.

‘That she’d been raped,’ Seidman said, a puzzled look on his face.

‘Was she?’ Gratelli asked.

‘Wasn’t she?’

Gratelli shrugged.

‘What in the hell do you mean?’ Earl said, staring across the table at the little red-headed lawyer who unburdened his tattered briefcase of a half dozen manila folders.

‘What I said,’ the guy replied. ‘They won’t do your bail.’

‘You talked with them?’

‘Yes, I talked with them.’

‘What did they say? Exactly.’ Earl asked, pushing the anger down. He’d already screwed up by letting his temper get the best of him. That’s why he was sitting here.

The lawyer rolled his eyes. ‘Exactly, your father said…’

‘My fucking stepfather!’

‘Your fucking stepfather said… exactly , he said: “Let the little asshole rot.”’

‘Was she there? My mother?’

‘Yes.’

‘What did she say?’

‘She said exactly nothing.’

Earl looked away, then up. His eyes locked on a corner where the walls met the ceiling.

‘That guy’s gonna live isn’t he?’

‘Appears so.’

‘You don’t like me, do you?’

‘I have to defend you. I don’t have to like you. Now, tell me again, who got out of the car first?’

Inspector Mickey McClellan sat at the Formica topped table in the Stockton Street noodle joint when Gratelli came in. Chinatown used to be McClellan’s beat when he first came on the force and he hung out there whenever he had the chance.

‘So what’d she say?’ Mickey asked.

‘Nothin’.’ Gratelli sat down. Though it would make his bladder work overtime for a few hours, the police officer ordered tea. The coffee was lousy there.

‘Couldn’t, wouldn’t, what?’

‘Dunno,’ Gratelli replied. There was a long pause while Mickey slurped some noodles off the chopsticks. ‘Maybe in shock. Maybe brain damage,’ Gratelli continued. ‘Mouth wired shut, vacant stare and I doubt if she could hold a pen even if she knew what the hell was going on.’

‘A zombie,’ Mickey said. The Inspector’s insensitivity was legendary. He called blacks ‘jungle bunnies’ and gays, ‘those little winged creatures.’ Women were ‘babes’ unless they possessed the qualities he imagined all female police officers had. Then they were members of the ‘lesbo squad.’

Gratelli took very little notice of Mickey’s apparent prejudices. The balding, potbellied Inspector McClellan held everyone at the same level of disgust. It was equal opportunity bigotry. His prejudice was universal. Vietnam, years of vice, drugs and homicide brought him into contact with the baser elements of every category of humankind. The only difference between Mickey and a good percentage of the other cops who felt a kind of generalized hate as personal defense, is that he never bothered putting on a public face.

His hate, however, was no longer full of passion, no longer malevolent. Calling Chinese ‘slants’ was a way to keep people at a distance, keeping them as lifeless objects so he wouldn’t puke or have nightmares when he saw some Asian kid floating in the bay.

‘We get a victim who could tell us something and the lights are out on the top floor,’ McClellan said.

‘Yeah,’ Gratelli said looking out of the corner window seeing the stream of Chinese faces flowing by.

‘Bateman’s a P.I., right?’ Mickey asked. ‘Maybe she made some nasty enemies if I can guess what you’re thinking.’

‘That wasn’t what I was thinking.’

‘You don’t seem to buy into the idea that this Bateman gal gets a serial number like the others. Copycat maybe?’ McClellan asked.

‘Dunno. She was beat up. None of the others were.’

‘Same guy,’ McClellan said. ‘Something goes wrong. Maybe she freaks out. Asshole loses his nerve, beats her up, but not so fucked up he leaves without the tattoo.’

‘What makes you think so?’

‘I don’t know. Same kind of chick.’

‘Julia Bateman is not the same kind of ‘chick’,’ Gratelli said. ‘She’s not poor. She’s not helpless…’

‘She is now…’

‘She’s not that young.’

‘Well, Bateman was within the drive time. Two hours from the city. Old or young, beat up or not, she’s got the mark. Nobody knows about the mark.’

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