The Fourth Monkey: A twisted thriller you won’t be able to put down. J.D. Barker
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Название: The Fourth Monkey: A twisted thriller you won’t be able to put down

Автор: J.D. Barker

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Ужасы и Мистика

Серия:

isbn: 9780008217020

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ invisible. He only saw the black body bag and the small package lying beside it. It had been tagged with NUMBER 1 by CSI, no doubt photographed dozens of times from every possible angle. They knew better than to open it, though. They left that for him.

       How many boxes just like it had there been now?

      A dozen? No. Closer to two dozen.

      He did the math.

      Seven victims. Three boxes each.

      Twenty-one.

      Twenty-one boxes over nearly five years.

      He had toyed with them. Never left a clue behind. Only the boxes.

      A ghost.

      Porter had seen so many officers come and go from the task force. With each new victim, the team would expand. The press would get wind of a new box, and they’d swarm like vultures. The entire city would come together on a massive manhunt. But then the third box would eventually arrive, the body would be found, and he’d disappear again. Lost among the shadows of obscurity. Months would pass; he’d fall out of the papers. The task force dwindled as the team got pulled apart for more pressing matters.

      Porter was the only one who had seen it through from the beginning. He had been there for the first box, recognizing it immediately for what it was — the start of a serial killer’s deranged spree. When the second box arrived, then the third, and finally the body, others saw too.

      It was the start of something horrible. Something planned.

      Something evil.

      He had been there at the beginning. Was he now witnessing the end?

      “What’s in the box?”

      “We haven’t opened it yet,” Nash replied. “But I think you know.”

      The package was small. Approximately four inches square and three inches high.

       Like the others.

      Wrapped in white paper and secured with black string. The address label was handwritten in careful script. There wouldn’t be any prints, never were. The stamps were self-adhesive — they wouldn’t find saliva.

      He glanced back at the body bag. “Do you really think it’s him? Do you have a name?”

      Nash shook his head. “No wallet or ID on him. He left his face on the pavement and in the bus’s grill. We ran his prints but couldn’t find a match. He’s a nobody.”

      “Oh, he’s somebody,” Porter said. “Do you have any gloves?”

      Nash pulled a pair of latex gloves from his pocket and handed them to Porter. Porter slipped them on and nodded toward the box. “Do you mind?”

      “We waited for you,” Nash said. “This is your case, Sam. Always was.”

      When Porter crouched and reached for the box, one of the crime-scene techs rushed over, fumbling with a small video camera. “I’m sorry, sir, but I have orders to document this.”

      “It’s fine, son. Only you, though. Are you ready?”

      A red light on the front of the camera blinked to life, and the tech nodded. “Go ahead, sir.”

      Porter turned the box so he could read the address label, carefully avoiding the droplets of crimson. “Arthur Talbot, 1547 Dearborn Parkway.”

      Nash whistled. “Ritzy neighborhood. Old money. I don’t recognize the name, though.”

      “Talbot’s an investment banker,” the CSI tech replied. “Heavy into real estate too. Lately he’s been converting warehouses near the lakefront into lofts — doing his part to force out low-income families and replace them with people who can afford the high rent and Starbucks grandes on the regular.”

      Porter knew exactly who Arthur Talbot was. He looked up at the tech. “What’s your name, kid?”

      “Paul Watson, sir.”

      Porter couldn’t help but grin. “You’ll make an excellent detective one day, Dr. Watson.”

      “I’m not a doctor, sir. I’m working on my thesis, but I’ve got at least two more years to go.”

      Porter chuckled. “Doesn’t anyone read anymore?”

      “Sam, the box?”

      “Right. The box.”

      He tugged at the string and watched as the knot unraveled and came apart. The white paper beneath had been neatly folded over the corners, ending in perfect little triangles.

       Like a gift. He wrapped it like a gift.

      The paper came away easily, revealing a black box. Porter set the paper and string aside, glanced at Nash and Watson, then slowly lifted the lid.

      The ear had been washed clean of blood and rested on a blanket of cotton.

       Just like the others.

       4

       Porter

       Day 1 • 7:05 a.m.

      “I need to see his body.”

      Nash glanced nervously at the growing crowd. “Are you sure you want to do that here? There are a lot of eyes on you right now.”

      “Let’s get a tent up.”

      Nash signaled to one of the officers.

      Fifteen minutes later, much to the dismay of oncoming traffic, a twelve-by-twelve tent stood on Fifty-Fifth Street, blocking one of the two eastbound lanes. Nash and Porter slipped through the flap, followed closely by Eisley and Watson. A uniformed guard took up position at the door in case someone snuck past the barricades at the scene perimeter and tried to get in.

      Six 1,200-watt halogen floodlights stood on yellow metal tripods in a semicircle around the body, filling the small space with sharp, bright light.

      Eisley reached down and peeled back the top flap of the bag.

      Porter knelt. “Has he been moved at all?”

      Eisley shook his head. “We photographed him, and then I got him covered as quickly as I could. That’s how he landed.”

      He was facedown on the blacktop. There was a small pool of blood near his head with a streak leading toward the edge of the tent. His dark hair was close-cropped, sprinkled with gray.

      Porter donned another pair of latex gloves from a box at his left and gently lifted the man’s head. It pulled away from СКАЧАТЬ