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“Looks like she was suffocated,” Brian offered. “Just like the last one.”
The absence of outward signs of violence and the petechiae supported suffocation, and Kitt nodded. “Which means the killer applied the lip gloss postmortem.” She glanced at her partner. “What about the gown?”
“Same as the last. Mother says it’s not hers.”
Kitt frowned. It was a beautiful gown, white with ruffles and tiny pink satin bows. “And her father?”
“Nothing new. Neither of them touched the body. Mother came in to wake the girl up for school, took one look at her and screamed. Father came ru
She would have found the fact they hadn’t touched their child weird, but with all the press about the previous murder, the mother would have only needed one look to know her daughter had been a victim of the same monster.
“We have to check them out,” he said.
Kitt nodded. Overwhelmingly, fewer children were murdered by strangers than by their own family, a statistic that seemed impossible to most but was a grim reality for cops.
However, this time they both knew the chances of this being a domestic incident were slim. They had a serial child killer on their hands.
“Like last time, it appears he came in through the window,” Brian said.
Kitt glanced at her partner. “It was unlocked?”
“Must have been. Glass is intact, no marks on the casing. Snowe says they’re going to take the entire window.”
“Footprints on the other side?” Kitt asked, though since it hadn’t rained in a week, the earth below the window would be rock hard.
“Nope. Screen was cut, nice and neat.”
She brought a hand to the back of her neck. “What does it mean, Brian? What’s he telling us?”
“That he’s a sick prick who deserves to be ski
“Besides that? Why the lip gloss? The fancy nightgowns? Why the little girls?”
From the other room came a sudden, rending wail of grief. The sound struck Kitt way too close to home and she shuddered.
How would she go on without Sadie?
Brian looked at her, face tight with anger. “I have daughters. I could go to bed one night and the next morning find-” He flexed his fingers. “We need to nail this bastard.”
“We will,” Kitt muttered fiercely. “If it’s the last thing I ever do, I’m bringing this son of a bitch down.”
part two
3
Rockford, Illinois
Tuesday, March 7, 2006
8:10 a.m.
The shrill scream of the phone awakened Kitt from a deep, pharmaceutically induced sleep. She fumbled for the phone, nearly dropping it twice before she got it to her ear. “H’lo.”
“Kitt. It’s Brian. Get your ass up.”
She cracked open her eyes. The sunlight streaming through the blinds stung. She shifted her gaze to the clock, saw the time and dragged herself to a sitting position.
She must have killed the alarm.
She glanced at Joe’s side of the bed, wondering why he hadn’t awakened her, then caught herself. Even after three years, she expected him to be there.
No husband. No child.
All alone now.
Kitt coughed and sat up, working to shake out the cobwebs. “Calling so early, Lieutenant Spillare? Must be something pretty damn earth-shattering.”
“The bastard’s back. Shattering enough?”
She knew instinctively “the bastard” he referred to-the Sleeping Angel Killer. The case she never solved, though her obsession with it nearly destroyed both her life and career.
“How-”
“A dead little girl. I’m at the scene now.”
Her worst nightmare.
After a five-year hiatus, the SAK had killed again.
“Who’s working it?”
“Riggio and White.”
“Where?”
He gave a west Rockford address, a blue-collar neighborhood that had seen better days.
“Kitt?”
She was already out of the bed, scrambling for clothes. “Yeah?”
“Tread carefully. Riggio’s-”
“A little intense.”
“Territorial.”
“Noted, my friend. And…thanks.”
4
Tuesday, March 7, 2006
8:25 a.m.
Detective Mary Catherine Riggio, M.C. to everyone but her mother, turned and nodded to Lieutenant Spillare as he reentered the murder scene. None of their fellow officers who witnessed the exchange would guess that the two of them had a personal history-an ill-conceived affair during the time he had been separated from his wife.
The affair had ended. He had gone back to his wife, and she to her senses. She had been considerably younger, new to the force and starstruck. Brian Spillare, then a decorated detective with the Violent Crimes Bureau, had been larger than life, on his way up the RPD ladder. His on-the-job war stories had affected her like an aphrodisiac. Where most women reacted to “sweet nothings” whispered in their ears, stories about bullets, blood and busting the bad guys revved M.C.’s engine.
No one had ever accused her of being a typical girl.
She had come away from the affair, heart intact and an important lesson learned: playing hide-the-salami with a superior was not the way to be taken seriously. She’d vowed to never put herself in that position again.
M.C. crossed to the lieutenant and was immediately joined by her partner, Detective Tom White. Tom was a thirtysomething African-American, tall and slim with elegant features. He and his wife had just had their third child, and the nights of interrupted sleep showed on his face. All in all, Tom was a damn fine detective and a good man, and though their partnership was new, it was solid. He respected both her skills and instincts without any of that a
During her year in the Violent Crimes Bureau, M.C. had gone through a number of partners. She was, admittedly, intense and ambitious. She recognized that about herself. She recognized that a little softening around the edges would endear her to her fellow officers, but she just couldn’t bring herself to change. If she felt she was right, she fought for it-no matter who thought otherwise. Even a superior, like Brian Spillare.
Warm and fuzzy was for baby ducks and bu
“This looks familiar, doesn’t it?” she said.
The lieutenant nodded. “Unfortunately, very familiar.”
Five years ago, a series of three murders had sent the city, a town located ninety miles west of Chicago on the edge of corn country, into a panic. The nature of the crimes and the fact that the victims were all blond-haired, blue-eyed girls, murdered in their own bedrooms while family members slept nearby, had struck the very heart of the community’s sense of safety. M.C. had been working patrol at the time; they’d gotten calls for every bump in the night.
Then the killings stopped. And after a time, life had returned to normal.
Now it appeared he might be back.
She narrowed her eyes on Brian. He no longer worked in the Detective Bureau, but had been promoted and was supervisor of the Central Reporting Unit, or CRU for short. The CRU took all calls to the RPD, was responsible for all accident reports and registered all sex offenders.
But she understood his interest in this murder. He had been one of the lead detectives assigned to the original case. The other had been Kitt Lundgren.
M.C. struggled to recall the details of the case, of Detective Lundgren’s part in it. Solving the Sleeping Angel murders had been the department’s biggest priority; Lundgren’s leadership had been the talk of the RPD. The detective had become obsessed with catching the perpetrator. She’d let other cases slide, had defied her supervisor and was rumored to have let the killer slip through her fingers. M.C. recalled stories of bungled crime scenes, alcohol abuse and ultimately, forced leave.