William Bernhardt - Cruel Justice

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A ten-year-old case puts Ben Kincaid on a collision course with a serial murderer Ben Kincaid's air-conditioner is on the fritz, his staff is on half-pay, and his sister has just disappeared, leaving him holding her baby. He needs fast money, and a quick-and-dirty personal injury suit could do the job. But what looks like a sure-fire case turns out to be something far more complicated. His prospective client hopes to rescue his son—a twenty-eight-year-old with the mind of a child. Ten years earlier, Leeman was accused of murdering a woman with a golf club, and he has been locked in a mental institution ever since. Now he is finally about to come to trial, and Kincaid sees no way to save him. But when a young Tulsa boy goes missing, Kincaid senses a connection between the two cases. Finding the abductor and could mean saving lives—Leeman's, the kidnapped child's, and those of the countless victims to come.

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Mike peered down an alley beside the building. It was dark, even though the sun was blazing overhead. The alley was littered with trash and debris. Mike found a huge pile of broken booze bottles stacked against one wall, along with spoiled food and human waste.

He spotted a burlap bag that looked as if it were someone’s bedtime blanket. A homeless person must be using the alley for shelter.

Holding his breath, Mike trudged onward. About halfway down the side of the building, he found the hole. A large hole, as big as a door, in the side wall.

And then we walked through the wall.

Mike looked inside.

There was no movement, no sign of life. Of course there wasn’t, he told himself. What were you expecting? Shake out of it. He was not in danger here. He was just poking around.

Mike stepped through the hole. There were no signs of life, true enough, but there were many taxicabs. Old yellow cabs, most on blocks, the tires having long since been lifted.

Mike looked under one of the hoods. Nothing. Anything of value must’ve long since been removed. Still, there was something about this place. …

Mike snapped his fingers. He was looking at this all wrong. He was thinking like an adult, viewing it as an adult would. Abie was only ten; he had an entirely different perspective on the world.

Mike crouched down and surveyed the room from a height of, oh, say, four feet. The view was very different. You didn’t focus on the cars, because you weren’t looking down on them. All you saw were the doors.

Yellow doors. With numbers.

Mike raced through the building: 54-28X. 54-76X. 64-99C. The numbers flew past.

Abie had been here.

Mike checked the opposite wall. Sure enough, there was a hole in it, too, even larger than the other one. They must’ve passed through this building as a shortcut.

Mike ran through the second hole. His excitement was mounting. If there had been any doubt before, it was gone now. He was close.

The hole led to the back end of the block. On the opposite side, Mike spotted a row of low-income houses.

Mike tried to concentrate. Why would it make sense to go through that building?

He checked his map. The deserted building in Rockville where he found Abie was due north from his current position. Someone could stay away from the major streets and still get there from here in half an hour easily. But they wouldn’t cut through this building unless they were coming from …

Directly south, Mike spotted the backyard of a white plasterboard home. The yard was barely big enough for the clothesline strung across it. Extending out from the house on the upper level, though, Mike saw some sort of … attic? No.

Extra room. With a separate set of stairs.

That was it. That’s why the police weren’t finding him. They were looking for apartments. There was probably no way to tell from the front of that house that it had an extra room. The police wouldn’t even stop.

Mike jumped over the chain-link fence. He was happy to find there was no dog. The staircase allowed the tenant to come and go without communicating with the people who lived in the main house. Perfect for a kiddie pervert. He could go about his business … well, unmolested.

Complications would arise only when he was bringing a boy home and thought there was a possibility of some … noise. That was undoubtedly when he used the abandoned building in Rockville. He would walk there to prevent anyone from spotting his car. And once inside, the boy could scream and cry as loud as he was able. …

No one would hear him.

Mike checked the garden by the staircase. Eureka!

Statues of two dwarfs. Or trolls, if you prefer.

Mike ran up the stairs to the private room. He pressed his ear against the door. At first, he didn’t hear anything. Then he did. Someone was talking in a low voice, barely audible.

Mike reached inside his coat and withdrew his Bren Ten automatic. By all rights, he should get a search warrant, then come back and knock politely

Aw, screw it. For all he knew, there was another exit. The pervert could get away, and he would never come back.

Sorry, no warning today. Mike knew he was violating about thirteen different judicial decisions, but this time he just wasn’t taking any chances. What had the Supreme Court done for him lately, anyway?

Mike took a running leap and threw himself against the door. It splintered like dried twigs. He crashed down inside the room, then rolled. He sprang to his feet, gun clutched in both hands.

“Freeze!”

He looked left, then right. He whirled around.

Nothing.

There was another room. A kitchenette. Slowly, gun still poised, Mike stepped through the passageway. …

Still nothing. There was no one else here. There was no other way out, either. But he was sure he had heard voices. Was he totally hallucinating?

When Mike returned to the front room, he saw it. The radio.

The son of a bitch had left the radio on.

Mike checked it out. It was an alarm radio. The alarm probably started while the boarder wasn’t here to turn it off.

Where was he?

Mike fumbled with the radio, trying to shut off the noise. He punched all the buttons. Nothing worked. Finally, in frustration, Mike picked it up and threw it across the room.

That worked. And now, in addition to breaking and entering, he could add property damage to his list of crimes.

Mike took a long slow breath. He really needed to get a grip. He was letting this search get to him, letting this case get to him. It was just so horrible. Little boys. Total innocents. They don’t know what’s going on. They can’t protect themselves. They’re helpless. And alone. How did that line by Olive Schreiner go? “The barb in the arrow of childhood suffering is this: its intense loneliness, its intense ignorance.”

He searched the outer room and the bathroom, but found nothing of interest. Then he tried the bedroom.

The room was dark. The curtains were drawn, and the overhead light didn’t work. Consequently, he almost missed it at first. Then, when his eyes made contact, he gasped.

He had read about this, of course. He had read that pedophiles loved to look at pictures. That they kept souvenirs. Abie had even mentioned that the creep had pictures. But Mike had no idea.

Wallpaper could not have covered the wall more efficiently. From floor to ceiling, the wall was layered with pictures of little boys.

They didn’t vary much. All were in the eight-to-ten range. All were dark-haired, dark-eyed, pretty. Some of the pictures had obviously been torn out of catalogs—underwear ads and such.

But most of them were photographs. Slick, professional work. Big smiles, cheesy grins. Bland backdrops.

They were school photos, most of them, anyway. Did the creep know the photographer—or was he the photographer?

Mike had to find out. He began jerking drawers out of the desk in the bedroom. When he drew open the fourth drawer, photos slid out from the back.

Mike picked them up, then suddenly felt as if someone had squeezed his heart in their fist. It was not until some minutes later that he realized he was weeping.

Mike recognized the boys at once. They were the victims. Andy Harden. Jimmy Whalen. The Connell boy.

These were Polaroids, and they had been taken at that goddamned building in Rockville where the pervert kept his mattress. The boys were naked, or stripped down to their underwear. They had been arranged in a variety of sickeningly obscene poses. But that wasn’t the worst of it.

All the photos except Mickey Connell’s were smeared with blood. Mike knew with instant certainty that the blood was the blood of each child. Smeared on by his killer.

That was why the Connell boy’s didn’t have any. The car had gotten him before the killer could.

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