Peter Decker 3-Book Thriller Collection: False Prophet, Grievous Sin, Sanctuary. Faye Kellerman

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Peter Decker 3-Book Thriller Collection: False Prophet, Grievous Sin, Sanctuary - Faye  Kellerman

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table cluttered with magazines—Newsweek, Time, Life, and People as well as Teen, Sixteen, Seventeen, Tiger Beat, and Rip. A linoleum floor in a burnt-orange brick pattern. Decker had to use the extra illumination from the flashlight to find the trail of blood on that.

      Marge’s eyes fell on the magazines. “Catering to a young crowd.”

      “Looks that way.”

      “What’s Rip?” Marge asked.

      “Heavy metal,” Loomis said. “That’s music.”

      Decker said, “Something for the teenage daddies.”

      He focused the beam onto the floor, on smears of blood that trailed up to a door punched into the back wall. Next to the door was a sliding pane of frosted glass and a ledge for writing out checks. Instructions printed on a sign resting above the frosted glass: PLEASE ANNOUNCE YOUR ARRIVAL TO THE RECEPTIONIST and PAYMENT DUE AT TIME SERVICES ARE RENDERED.

      Decker tried to open the window but it was locked. Marge pushed the door with her foot and it yielded.

      “Yo, police!” she shouted. “Police officers!”

      Silence.

      They went through the door into a hallway. Decker scanned the walls until he located the light switch.

      To the right was the receptionist’s office. Small affair—one desk for the secretary, one desk for the computer, and a small filing cabinet. The odor of blood was stronger, but not as powerful as the smell of formaldehyde—so overwhelming it was making all of them dizzy. Loomis coughed. Out came the handkerchiefs for nose and mouth protection. They walked down the hallway, the path of blood thickening to blotches and dried puddles.

      Doors off the hallway leading to examining rooms. Long paper-coated padded tables with stirrups at the ends. A doctor’s stool. Shelves of chemicals and supplies. Nothing ransacked, nothing out of place.

      The formaldehyde permeated every cubic centimeter of air. Decker felt his eyes water, his nose and mouth burn. Marge let out a hacking cough.

      More examining rooms. Then, three doors at the end—one in the middle, the other two on either side of the hallway. Side doors leading to the operating rooms, stapled with placards. ABSOLUTELY NO SMOKING ALLOWED. Decker entered the surgery on the left and found the lights.

      Pale-green walls, crater-shaped overhead spotlights focusing down on a center steel table fitted with stirrups. Next to the table, a four-foot stand clamped with steel tubes. Gas—blue label for nitrogen, green for oxygen. Another stand to the table’s right, this one bearing calibrated instruments for measuring gas levels in the blood. Strung across its top bar were a stethoscope and a blood-pressure cuff. Resting on the tile floor, at the foot of the operating table, was a tympani-sized vacuum attached to a clear five-foot hose, six inches in diameter. The plastic tubing had become discolored from repeated use.

      The back wall held locked cabinets filled with bottles of IV medications and glucose. In the drawers were surgical instruments—elongated forceps, oversized scissors, hypodermics, foot-long needles, scalpels and spoon-sized curettes with sharpened edges.

      Nothing appeared out of place.

      The final door, blood seeping out from under the wood, the stench of formaldehyde damn near knocking Decker over. He turned the knob, then staggered backward, coughing and gagging.

      Once a personal office, it was in complete disarray. Papers, notebooks, and thick medical tomes were tossed and strewn about. Drawers had been opened and dumped, shelves emptied of their contents. A large rosewood desktop was completely cleared. Walls and furniture were spattered with blood. An area rug was crumpled into a corner. Cushions from the couch were slashed open, bits of foam piling around a freestanding hat rack like snow sloughed from a Christmas tree.

      Lots of broken glass, the shards intermingled with tiny doughy pale dolls. Wee, two-inch creatures with far-set eyes, extra-wide mouths, pudgy hands, and legs pushed up to the bellies.

      Fetuses.

      At least a dozen, maybe more, carelessly scattered through the room except for a few lucky ones who still swam unmolested in unbroken jars of formaldehyde.

      In the center of the office was a contorted body resting in a pool of blood—as lifeless as the things floating in the jars.

      Loomis gagged, then composed himself. “Want me to call it in, Sergeant?”

      Eyes burning, Decker swallowed back the bitter taste of bile. “Yeah, do that. Use your car radio.”

      “Sure thing.” Loomis ran out.

      Decker placed his glove over his covered nose. “Shit, this is bad!”

      Marge coughed, then cleared her throat. “Fucking sick!”

      “Merritt?” Decker asked.

      Marge nodded. “Yeah, it’s Merritt.”

      21

      Marge yawned and rubbed her hands together. It was still dark, dawn a good half hour away, as she sat in the passenger seat of the unmarked and listened to static coming over the squawk box. Not a lot of calls at this hour. Even perps got tired.

      She stared out the windshield. The Mercedes 450 SL now had company—three cruisers flashing their blues, a meat wagon, the police photographer’s Camry, a lab-tech van, and Pete’s old unmarked.

      “You want your dinosaur mug back?” she said to Decker. “It’s in the trunk.”

      Decker reclined the driver’s seat as far back as it could go. “Keep it.”

      Marge said, “Prelim hair analysis of Ness and company should be done today. Maybe between that and this scene, we’ll come up with physical evidence that points a finger.”

      “That’d be nice.” Decker put his hands behind his head. “Someone should search Merritt’s premises ASAP—his main office and his condo. See if we can’t find something. As far as questioning the family goes, Burbank will probably do that. It’s their jurisdiction. It’s a small department but they’ve got seven people in Crimes Against Persons who rotate into Homicide.”

      “Homicide’s part of CAPS?”

      “Yeah. The division’s too small for a separate Homicide detail. Anyway, the bureau’s sending out a duo. Guy I spoke to definitely wants it, but he’s happy to cooperate, especially after I explained the circumstances. They should be here in a few minutes.”

      “What are their names?”

      Decker pulled his notebook from his pocket. “I talked to a Justice Ferris.”

      “Justice or Justin?”

      “Justice—as in blind.” Decker sat up. “What a mess!”

      “Should I go through all of Merritt’s patient files?”

      “Yeah, we should start fresh … even though I think the crimes are related.”

      “We

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