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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‘Can it be disturbed? Evidence or something?’ she asked. ‘Paul said he went up there after – I guess it’s been awhile – and it was still roped off, taped off, I think he said.’

‘Should be OK now.’ Gratelli looked puzzled. ‘Are you going up there?’

‘Yes,’ she nodded but seemed to be thinking of something else. Then she focused again on Gratelli’s presence. ‘Just some things to wrap up. Papers, cleaning. Get it ready to sell. Despite what you may think, I don’t want to live there.’

‘You could have someone else do it.’

‘I don’t want it haunting me.’

‘I could go up with you,’ Gratelli said.

‘No, that’s all right.’ She knew she was being stubborn. But it wouldn’t help if she couldn’t face life on her own terms, without her father, without Paul even and certainly without the police.

‘We could talk on the way,’ Gratelli said.

The two of them talked for another forty-five minutes. Gratelli picked up nothing else that was helpful, not even permission to go up to the River with her.

Earl’s day at the dock wasn’t going well. He’d gotten in late and suffered a barrage of remarks from his supervisor. When he buried himself in his work, his fellow dockhands thought he was trying to show them up.

‘You’re moving too fast Falwell,’ said a pot-bellied redhead.

Earl said nothing, but slowed down some. He was trying to get some thoughts out of his head. For a while, after getting out, Earl was able to work hard, come home tired and forget. Forget the girls, forget the guy on the telephone and the fucking woman who could I.D. him and his Camaro, forget Cobra, forget that kid he killed on the back steps of the apartment building. But last night stirred things up again. Not just the phone call. There was the Chinese guy spying on him and Earl spying on the Chinese guy. The possibilities. What would have happened? What did Earl want to happen?

The pattern Earl had before getting locked up and screwed over was part of then, not of now. What was now? He didn’t fucking know.

‘What’s it gonna take to slow you down, fuck up?’ asked the redhead, his face in Earl’s.

A couple of others came toward the two of them.

‘I don’t want any trouble,’ Falwell said. ‘I just want to do my work and when it’s time to go home, go home. So leave me alone.’

‘You keep working at that pace, you might have an accident,’ the redhead said.

‘You are an accident, you fat ass. Beat it.’

This wasn’t the first time they’d been rude to him. But it was the first time he’d been rude to one of them.

The redhead was in his face. Earl couldn’t understand what the guy was saying after the first few obscenities. What the redhead was doing was sweating and spitting. His mouth became an ugly gaping hole and his tongue just a wiggling piece of red flesh. The guy’s breath smelled like garbage. It was like the gaping garbage mouth was going to eat him.

Earl punched him. Seemed like he punched him before he even thought about punching him. The guy’s face spurted blood. The face didn’t go away and Earl punched it again. He didn’t know how many times he punched the face. Suddenly he was being pulled backward by tentacles curling around his body, tightly around his arms and his neck and his waist, tugging at him, pulling him away.

It didn’t matter what the weather was in San Francisco. More than likely, a few miles north or south, the sun would be shining and all those who believed California was the land of golden light generally had their preconceptions reinforced.

The light came in with some force, through the blues, yellows and reds of the stained glass window. It was a small church. McClellan’s body was not there. His family was. Beth and her two college-aged kids, a blond boy and a blonde girl – the ones whose photos were in McClellan’s wallet that night – sat in the front pew.

There were others in attendance. Aside from the dozen members of Homicide and the lieutenant, there were maybe a dozen more. Gratelli guessed them to be family.

It was Gratelli’s time to speak. He hadn’t wanted to, but Beth had indicated if he didn’t, no one would. And it was important, she said, that someone say something.

‘Despite the raunchy, hateful words he had for the general population and every single adult member in it, he held out hope for the young, the very young. He was able to see the last glimmer of innocence in the eyes of children. That was enough to keep him going. He thought perhaps this one or that one would make it. Maybe this one or that one wouldn’t be corrupted by greed or stupidity or fear. For all his pessimism, he still held out hope that the world would be what it was supposed to be. He ran out of hope.

‘Mickey McClellan is dead. He wasn’t as tough as you thought he was, as he tried to be. The world didn’t turn out right and he lost all hope that it ever would.

‘I wish I could tell you otherwise.’

Gratelli sat down. The minister stood, went to the front of the congregation.

Gratelli heard only the first few words before he tuned out. ‘We must all have hope, Inspector…’

TWENTY-FOUR

T he building wasn’t remarkable. Big, brick and slightly down from the peak of Nob Hill. It had been a men’s club. Still was for the most part, though now you could see women scattered about at the tables. If you looked more closely, the older men still sat together, accepting the inevitable women members but not in the depths of their old-family, old-moneyed hearts.

The interior was quality but had never been trendy. Because both Thaddeus Maldeaux and David Seidman were far from first generation members, they seemed oblivious to the power around them and uninterested in the menu open before them.

‘We didn’t do anything, David.’

‘She fell for you,’ Seidman said.

‘No. Not really.’

‘You have that way about you, Teddy.’

‘What way.’

‘Getting what you want.’

‘I don’t want Julia.’

A young black man in a white jacket filled their water glasses.

‘I’m a smart guy,’ Seidman said. ‘Reasonably bright, I mean.’

‘More than reasonably. Look at you. Look at your record in court. Look at your political standing. You’re going to be mayor, I’m sure. Then maybe governor or senator. If we can get you out of those little tanning booths, the sky’s the limit. Maybe president.’

Seidman wasn’t smiling.

‘If you’re going to get cancer, you might as well get it right on the beach. As you know San Franciscans aren’t too keen on guys with tans.’

There was another long, dark, brooding silence.

‘I’m not seeing her, David,’ Maldeaux said sternly. ‘Get that through your little obsessed brain.’

‘I know. I’m over it. Day by day it’s easier. I’m not even angry with you. But you pointed out to me… oh nothing. It’s so strange, you and me. It’s like you skip through life. Wherever you go, the rain falls on the other side of the street. Somehow, somehow I’m always struggling to keep up.’

Both went silent as the waiter came, took their order.

‘Police have any leads on this strangler?’ Maldeaux said after the gentleman left and in a tone that indicated he wanted to change the subject.

‘He’s not a strangler,’ Seidman said. ‘He breaks their necks.’

‘The paper says…’

‘Homicide doesn’t want to correct the general impression. We’ve gotten a dozen confessions. Only the killer knows how it was really done.’

‘Oh. No leads, though?’

David sighed. He seemed uninterested. ‘No more deaths.’

‘You were saying something about a Jerry Falwell?’

‘No, no. Not Jerry. Earl, I think.’ Seidman shook his head, trying to dispel something from his brain. ‘Doubt it. Boy just came through again. Just like last time, he got in a fight, pounded some guy’s face until it looked like raw meat. Homicide still gets an alert – as do we – when he comes through the system.’

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