“It’s up to each and every one of us to insist that these killings receive top priority. We must be adamant. We must urge our brothers and sisters in government and law enforcement to don the armor of God and fight the Prince of Darkness. We must join hands and hearts to cleanse our great city and county of this cancer.”
The broadcast cut back to the anchor. He talked of Anton LaVey, founder and high priest of the Church of Satan until his death in 1997, and author of the Satanic Bible. A list of Web sites scrolled behind him.
Kids and Teens for Satan
Synagogue of Satan
Church of Satan
Superhighway to Hell
Satanic Network
Letters to the Devil
Birdie nudged my leg.
Dropping the undies, I scooped and hugged my cat to my chest, a sense of foreboding rippling through me.
The coverage wrapped up with footage from LaVey’s 1993 documentary, Speak of the Devil.
The clip had barely ended when my landline rang.
“You talk to Lingo?”
“Of course I didn’t talk to Lingo.” I matched Slidell’s outrage with outrage.
“The pompous old lizard just held a press conference.”
“I caught most of it.”
“Accused the cops of a cover-up. Told Joe Citizen to ready up his noose for lynchings in the name of the Lord. Won’t that just stir up a freakin’ hornets’ nest.”
Though Slidell was exaggerating, in large part, I agreed.
“How’s this asshole get his information?”
“As I was leaving the scene today I saw Allison Stallings driving toward it.”
“The dame what was creeping around on Greenleaf Avenue?”
No one but Slidell had said “dame” since the fifties. On the upside, at least he knew one other French expression besides ex-cuse-ay-moi.
“Yes,” I said.
“I made a call. Stallings don’t work for the Observer. ”
“So why’s she showing up at my scenes?”
“I damn well intend to find out.”
For a moment, no one spoke. In the background I could hear Slidell’s TV mimicking mine.
“You think Stallings is tipping Lingo?”
“It’s possible.”
“What’s in it for her?”
“The guy’s a grandstander. Maybe she’s a wannabe, or a freelancer selling pics here and there to the press. Maybe she thinks Lingo will blow the situation into a bigger story than it might otherwise be, score her some fame and fortune.”
I waited while Slidell chewed that over.
“So where’s Stallings get her info?”
“She could have a police scanner.”
“Where’s a little girl like that gonna come up with a police scanner?” Slidell said police with a very long o and a whole lot of scorn.
“RadioShack.”
“Get out. How’s she gonna know to operate a gizmo like that?”
Slidell’s ignorance of technology always astounded me. I’d heard rumors that Skinny had yet to make the move to touch-tone dialing at home.
“It’s not rocket science. The thing sweeps through a group of frequencies searching for one in use, then stops so you can listen. Like the SCAN button on your car radio.” I couldn’t believe Slidell was hearing this for the first time. “Stallings could have picked up on Rinaldi’s request for a cadaver dog. Or maybe Lingo has a scanner of his own.”
I waited out more mental mastication. Then, “Who’s this Antoine LeVay?” Slidell’s tone had edged down a notch.
“Anton. He founded the Church of Satan.”
“That’s real?”
“Yes.”
“How many members?”
“No one really knows.”
“Who’s this other kid Lingo’s talking about?”
“Anson Tyler. Lingo’s way off base there. Tyler’s whole upper body was missing, not just his head.”
“Missing where?”
“When a corpse floats, the heavy parts hang down. A human head weighs about four to five kilos.” I stopped. Could Slidell convert metric? “About the same as a roaster chicken. So the head detaches early.”
“That don’t answer my question.”
“The missing parts are wherever the current took them.”
“So you’re saying there’s no link between this Catawba River kid and the kid we found today?”
“I’m saying Anson Tyler lost his head due to natural processes, not intentional decapitation. There wasn’t a single cut mark anywhere on his skeleton.”
“What about the skull in the cauldron?”
“That’s a tougher call.”
“You find tool marks on that?”
“No.”
“On the leg bones?”
“No.”
“That bit about the kid in London, that true?”
“Yes.”
“Tell me ’bout that.”
“In 2001, the headless, limbless body of a four-to-six-year-old boy was pulled from the Thames below the Tower Bridge. The cops named him Adam. The postmortem showed he’d only been in that part of the world a short time.”
“Based on what?”
“The food in his stomach and the pollen in his lungs. It also showed that he’d ingested a potion containing poisonous Calabar beans in the forty-eight hours prior to his death.”
“And?”
“Calabar causes paralysis while keeping the victim conscious. It’s used commonly in witchcraft rituals in West Africa.”
“Go on.” Slidell’s voice was pure steel.
“Adam’s bones were also analyzed to determine geographical origin.”
“How’s that play?”
“Foodstuffs bear traces of the soil in which they were grown or reared.” I kept it simple. “Samples taken from Adam and compared to places around the world suggested he came from the vicinity of Benin City, in Nigeria. Investigators went to Africa, but discovered little.”
“Any arrests?”
“No. But there are persons of interest. Mostly Nigerians, some of whom have been linked to human trafficking.”
“But there’s insufficient evidence to bring charges.” Skinny has never been a champion of individual civil liberties. His disgust was evident.
“You’ve got it.”
As dual voices reported sports scores in my bedroom and across town in a condo I didn’t want to picture, I debated in my mind. Tell Slidell the most worrying element and risk sending him off in the wrong direction? Keep it to myself and risk impeding the investigation?
“There’s more,” I said. “Authorities in London claim that in recent years some three hundred black boys have gone missing from the system and not returned to school or reappeared. Only two have ever been traced.”
“Where the hell are the families?”
“When questioned, caregivers and relatives say the boys have left the UK to return to Africa.”
“And no one can confirm.”
“Exactly.”
“Cops think these kids have been murdered?”
“Some do.”
My eyes drifted to the clock radio. Six thirty. I was naked, sans makeup, with tangled wet hair that looked like seaweed.
And due at Charlie’s in thirty minutes.
I needed to hurry. But I wanted to know what Slidell and Rinaldi had learned about the property on Greenleaf.
“What did you find out about Kenneth Roseboro?”
“Kenny-boy’s some kinda musician living in Wilmington. Claims the minute Aunt Wanda went belly-up and the place was his, he ran an ad and rented the dump out.”
As Slidell talked I tried donning the panties one-handed.
“Roseboro never lived in the house?”
“No.”
“How many tenants occupied the premises?”
“One. Upstanding citizen name of Thomas Cuervo. T-Bird to his friends and business associates.”
“What business?”
“Pissant little shop out South Boulevard.” Slidell snorted. “ La Botánica Buena Salud. Natural cures, vitamins, herbal remedies. I can’t believe people blow money on that horseshit.”
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