Sign Of The Cross - Sign of the Cross Part 21
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Sign of the Cross Part 21

More typing. 'And why are you calling us instead of the actual renter?'

'Well, that's just the thing. I don't know who it belongs to. I assume it's someone at the hotel, since it was parked in their lot, but I don't know who. I came inside and asked the manager if he knew, but he didn't. That's when he suggested that we call you to find out.'

The clicking of keys continued. 'And you're sure it's one of our vehicles?'

'I think so. When I checked to see if anyone was inside, I noticed a pamphlet on the front seat with your company's name on it. That's how I got this phone number to begin with.'

Silence engulfed the line for the next few seconds. 'Do you have any other information, sir? The make of the truck, the registration number, the '

'I wrote down the license plate. Will that help?'

'Yes, sir, that would be great.'

Jones read off the digits and waited for her reply.

'Sorry, sir, there seems to be a discrepancy here. The license you gave me belongs to one of our vehicles, but its itinerary says nothing about Milan. That's where you are, right?'

'Yes, ma'am.'

'Then I don't see how you could have hit this truck. The vehicle with this particular license should be in Orvieto, not not Milan.' Milan.'

'Orvieto?' he said, feigning confusion. 'Is that near here?'

'Not at all. That's why I'm guessing you've made a mistake.'

'But I'm not. There's no doubt in my mind I hit this truck. If you don't believe me, I can put the hotel manager back on the phone. This truck is sitting twenty feet from us.'

The sound of clicking started up again. 'Hold on, sir. I'll double-check my records if you'd like. Can you give me that license plate again?'

Jones repeated the numbers, even though he started to doubt his plan. He figured, if she was reluctant to believe that the truck was even in Milan, then there was little chance that she'd answer any of his questions about Boyd.

'Sir,' she finally said, 'while I was rerunning the license plate, something caught my eye. The customer you're looking for is obviously in Milan, just like you suggested.'

'Really? Why's that?'

'I noticed on my computer that she just rented a second vehicle.'

'Excuse me?' It took a few seconds for things to sink in. 'Wait a second! Did you say she she?'

'Yes, sir. The driver of the truck just rented a Fiat from our Linate Airport office.'

Jones mouthed holy shit holy shit to Payne before he talked to Gia. 'And how long ago was that?' to Payne before he talked to Gia. 'And how long ago was that?'

'About a minute, sir. The order just came up on my screen.'

40

Fenway Park, Boston, Massachusetts

Nick Dial had always wanted to see Fenway Park. There was something about the Green Monster, the thirty-seven-foot left-field wall, that captivated his imagination. His obsession started when he was a boy, during the summer he lived in New England. He and his father used to listen to games on the radio, then they'd go in their backyard and imitate their favorite Red Sox players.

Dial smiled as he thought about the ballpark on his flight to Boston. He imagined what the grass was going to smell like, the dirt was going to feel like, and the Monster was going to look like. He'd been waiting for this moment his entire life and couldn't wait to get there.

All that changed, though, when he walked out of the tunnel and saw the crime scene spread before him. The playground of his dreams had been stained by the reality of his job.

Dial wasn't there for a baseball game. He was there to catch a killer.

The cross had been planted on the pitcher's mound with the victim facing home plate. His muscular arms stretched toward first and third, while his feet were angled toward the pitching rubber. A garbage bag had been slipped over the victim's head to protect his identity from the news choppers that hovered over the field. Meanwhile, several officers searched around the cross for physical evidence.

Strangely, Dial saw a second team of cops standing in front of the Green Monster. He tried to figure out what they were doing, but the fence was over 300 feet away, and his already shitty vision was being obscured by the spotlights. Throw in the wattage of the stadium lights, and Dial felt like he was standing in the harsh glare of the afternoon sun, even though it was midnight in Boston.

'Hey you,' a cop yelled in an accent thicker than chowder. 'Get outta here. This field is off-limits.'

Dial whipped out his credentials. 'Where can I find the man in charge?'

'Probably takin' a leak in the dugout. Captain's got a wicked large prostate. Can't last ten minutes without hittin' the crapper.'

Dial nodded, pulling out his notebook. 'What can you tell me about the vic?'

'He was an asshole. Wicked bat, wicked arm, but nothin' more than a cock tease. Can you imagine him in our lineup? No way the Yanks beat us.'

'Hold up. The vic was a ballplayer?'

The cop stared at Dial with a mixture of amusement and disgust. 'That's right, Frenchie. He was a ballplayer. You guys have baseball over there in Paris? Or are you too busy eatin' cheese and watchin' Jerry Lewis movies to play sports?'

Ouch! Dial wondered, Dial wondered, Where did Where did that that come from? come from?

The truth was, he'd been told very little about the case from Henri Toulon, only that a third victim had been found. Dial knew if he wanted to see the crime scene, he needed to take the quickest route to Boston, even if it meant not being fully briefed on the case.

Unfortunately, now he was paying for his haste.

At least until he decided to do something about it.

Dial took a step toward the cop. 'First of all, you Beantown piece of shit, if you were half the cop that I am, you would've noticed that I can speak English better than you. So your theory that I'm French is as misplaced as my assumption that you're drunk just because you're a Boston cop. Secondly, I grew up in New England, so I know more about the Sox's history than half the players on the team, which isn't saying much, since most of them aren't American. Finally, if you would've taken the time to read my badge, you would've noticed that I run run the Homicide Division at Interpol, which means if someone dies on planet Earth, the odds are pretty good that I'm in charge. You got that? Now why don't you run off like a good little batboy and tell your captain that the Homicide Division at Interpol, which means if someone dies on planet Earth, the odds are pretty good that I'm in charge. You got that? Now why don't you run off like a good little batboy and tell your captain that his his boss is here.' boss is here.'

The cop blinked a few times, then did what he was told. Five minutes later Captain Michael Cavanaugh was introducing himself with a firm handshake. 'Sorry about our lack of hospitality. We're spread a little thin right now. Hell, if we had known a bigwig was coming to town, I'm sure the mayor would've greeted you himself.'

'I'm glad he didn't. I'm here to find a killer, not get my ass kissed.'

Cavanaugh laughed and patted Dial on his shoulder. 'Then you'll fit right in with me. Just tell me what you want to know, and I'll be happy to help.'

'We can start with the vic's name. I understand he's an athlete.'

'Yes, sir, a helluva athlete. Truth be told, we were kind of looking forward to booing the bum all weekend. I guess the good Lord decided to protect him from the abuse.'

This was protection protection? Holy shit! That meant the victim could only be one person. The most hated man in Boston: Orlando Pope. Stunned, Dial tried to figure out how a Yankee fit in with the others. First a priest, then a prince, now a Pope. Maybe the killers had something against the letter P? If so, the plumbers of the world should be very afraid. 'Mind if I take a look?'

'I don't mind if he don't mind.'

Dial nodded, his eyes searching for anything that seemed out of place. He dealt with copycat crimes on a regular basis, so his first order of business was figuring out if Pope was victim number three or just a copycat corpse, someone's sick way of stealing the spotlight from the real killer.

Most investigators would've started with the body, but not Dial. He knew most copycats got the body right at least until the forensic experts got involved with all their high-tech toys and found fifty things that didn't belong. But the place they normally screwed up was in the minutiae, the small facts that were never released to the press, all the things that couldn't be known by simply looking at a picture that had been published on the Internet.

In his world, the trivial was sometimes more important than the significant.

Dial started with the construction of the cross, making sure that the wood was similar in color and age to the African oak. Then he examined the three spikes, eyeing their length and making sure that the victim was positioned in the same way as the others.

When that checked out, he turned his attention to the body, first looking at the wounds on his back, the way his skin had been sliced open with repetitive blows of a metal-tipped whip during the scourging process, then examining his rib cage, probing his puncture wound with a gloved finger, hoping that the tip of the blade had fractured and remained imbedded in his chest.

'Whatcha lookin' for?' Cavanaugh wondered. 'The wound's clean.'

'Just doing my job. I tend to double-check everything.'

'Yeah, I noticed.'

Dial smiled, then glanced at the choppers still hovering overhead. 'Can't you do anything about them? I need to remove the bag to see the handwriting on the sign.'

Cavanaugh stared at him like he was crazy. 'There ain't no sign under there. Just Pope's ugly mug, which we're trying to keep out of the papers.' He chuckled to himself. 'He's been crucified enough in our sports pages.'

Dial ignored the joke. It was typical police humor. 'I'll be damned. The most famous vic yet, and they eliminate the sign. Why would they do that?'

Cavanaugh shrugged. 'Then again, I don't know what you're talking about. What type of sign were you expecting? I didn't hear anything about a sign.'

'That's because we've been keeping it quiet.' Dial took a step toward Cavanaugh, making sure no one else was listening. 'The first two bodies had signs that referred to the cross. "IN THE NAME OF THE FATHER" was on the first. "AND OF THE SON" was with the second. I was kind of expecting the third one tonight. Makes me wonder if this is a copycat.'

Cavanaugh nodded, like something finally started to make sense in his mind. 'No, this isn't a copycat. I can promise you that.'

'Really? How can you be so sure?'

'Because of the sign.'

Dial winced. 'What sign? I thought you said there wasn't a sign.'

'Not under the bag, at least.' Cavanaugh searched Dial's face, trying to figure out if he was kidding. 'I guess you haven't made it to the outfield yet.'

'The outfield?' Just then it hit Dial. 'Ah, son of a bitch. Not the Monster.'

Dial took a deep breath and shifted his gaze to the left-field wall, which was blurry to him. Several cops were still out there, and Dial finally knew why. They were taking pictures of the message, debating if they should hose the blood off the wall or rip it down as evidence.

Plus they were trying to figure out what the killer meant when he wrote, 'AND OF THE HOLY.' 'AND OF THE HOLY.'

Disgusted, Cavanaugh sighed, 'After tonight, it's gonna be called the Red Monster.'

41

The Linate Airport was about four miles from the Universita Cattolica Universita Cattolica campus. Frankie told Payne and Jones the fastest way to get there, which they hoped would be fast enough to grab Boyd, if he even appeared. Since a female had rented both vehicles, they knew there was a good chance that Boyd wouldn't show his face. If he did, great. They'd take him down quickly before he knew what hit him. But if he didn't, they'd follow his accomplice, hoping she led them to his hideout. Payne asked, 'Do we know what color the car is?' campus. Frankie told Payne and Jones the fastest way to get there, which they hoped would be fast enough to grab Boyd, if he even appeared. Since a female had rented both vehicles, they knew there was a good chance that Boyd wouldn't show his face. If he did, great. They'd take him down quickly before he knew what hit him. But if he didn't, they'd follow his accomplice, hoping she led them to his hideout. Payne asked, 'Do we know what color the car is?'

Jones shook his head. 'The lady said it was a '98 Fiat. And since Fiat stands for Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino Fabbrica Italiana Automobili Torino, there's bound to be plenty of 'em floating around Italy.'

Due to the early morning hour, they got to the rental office in less than five minutes. They parked across the street and spotted the female instantly. She was wearing a silk scarf over her dark brown hair, but the rest of her clothes were the same as they were in the surveillance photo.

This would be easier than they thought.

Paranoid, Maria glanced in her rearview mirror and saw nothing that concerned her. Traffic near the airport was virtually nonexistent, and the only visible light was from the iron lampposts that lined the roads of the desolate textile district. If all went well, she figured she'd be out of the city before the streets filled with the prying eyes of the Milanese workforce.

At least that was her plan.

The return trip to the abandoned warehouse was an uneventful one. As an extra precaution, she drove around the block two extra times, making sure that no one was following her. Once she was certain, she pulled her yellow Fiat down the cobblestone alley near the warehouse and parked behind a Dumpster, where she left the headlights on in order to find her way back inside.

'Professore,' she called as she entered the building. 'I'm back.' she called as she entered the building. 'I'm back.'

Boyd emerged from the shadows and greeted her with a warm smile. 'Thank goodness, my dear. I've been worried sick. I kept having these dreadful thoughts that you were apprehended.'

She shook her head as she removed her silk scarf and replaced it with a ball cap. 'Are you ready? We need to take advantage of the darkness while we can.'

'Yes, by all means. Let me gather our things, and we can depart. Just give me a moment.'

Earlier that morning she'd wanted to take Boyd with her to the rental agency, although after much discussion, they decided it would be best if she went alone. It would've been faster if he'd tagged along, but he assumed the polizia polizia would be staking out the airports and figured the farther he stayed away from the place, the better. And it was a good thing, too, for she noticed a number of officers near the terminal, and most of them were carrying Boyd's picture. would be staking out the airports and figured the farther he stayed away from the place, the better. And it was a good thing, too, for she noticed a number of officers near the terminal, and most of them were carrying Boyd's picture.

'Professore!' she urged. 'We have to get going. Please hurry.' she urged. 'We have to get going. Please hurry.'

But unlike before, he didn't respond. In fact, the only noise she heard was the beating of her own heart, a sound that suddenly increased in volume and rapidity.

Curious and slightly concerned, Maria crept past several wooden crates and headed toward the area where they'd slept. Unfortunately, the deeper she ventured into the building, the darker it got, and before long she found herself struggling to see even a foot in front of her.

'Professore? Where are you? What's wrong?' Where are you? What's wrong?'

When she heard no response, her curiosity was replaced with fear. What if someone had found him? What if he'd tripped in the darkness and hurt himself? What if someone...?