by James Hunt
The room was dirty and bare save for an unmade bed on the floor with no box spring surrounded by empty beer cans. Most of the rust-red carpet was stained, and what wasn’t was covered in dirty clothes. The walls were lined with posters, and the atmosphere was more akin to a college dorm room than that of a man in his early fifties.
Two thuds echoed from downstairs, and Cooper shifted her eyes to the bedroom door. Once out of the room she crept quietly to the stairs, the thumps growing louder. The muscles along her arms, shoulders, and back tensed as she steadied the weapon and took her first slow step down the staircase. She kept close to the wall, letting it guard her back on her descent.
Halfway down the staircase a shoulder came into view, then old VHS tapes and magazines being stacked in small piles. A few more steps down, and Cooper nearly had a look at the man’s face, but the next stair moaned as she applied her weight, and the man jerked his head up. The sunglasses had been ditched, and his eyes grew wide as he stared down the gun’s barrel.
“Freeze!” Cooper screamed, but Marks already had one foot out the door. She cursed and took chase. She squinted into the sunlight once outside and watched Hart sprint after the suspect around the back side of the house. She followed, reaching for her radio. “This is Detective Cooper. We are in pursuit of Zane Marks. Suspect is on foot, possibly armed, and should be approached with extreme caution. I need all units in the area to respond. Suspect is heading north along South Hampton Street.”
Cooper crashed through the fence door and saw Hart darting behind another house down the road. She paused and glanced at the zigzagging maze that was made up of the side lanes between homes, knowing it would slow them down. She sprinted in the opposite direction, heading back toward the main street.
Cooper glanced down the alleyways she passed, catching brief glimpses of both Hart and Marks as they darted through the side yards of the run-down houses in the neighborhood. She kept a straight path, looking ahead to the cross street to cut them off. Sharp stabs ran up from her heels that pounded into the sidewalk, and her legs and lower back stiffened in the prolonged chase.
After a few houses she finally passed Hart, and three more after that she had caught up with Marks. The cross street was only another twenty yards away, and Cooper dropped into another gear, burning what was left of her energy.
Fire filled her lungs, and her body whined from the exertion. She rounded the street corner without breaking stride and pulled her pistol. A quarter way down the road the suspect emerged from between two homes, and Cooper discharged her weapon. The bullet sprayed a cluster of grass and dirt less than a foot away from Marks’s left ankle, and the distraction caused him to slow and turn around, which provided the extra time to close the gap.
Cooper tackled Marks to the pavement, and the two rolled, elbows and knees smacking against concrete. She winced from the harsh scrape of road burn but managed to land on top of Marks, her pistol still in hand. “Put your hands on your head, now!”
Hart emerged from between the homes and cuffed Marks while Cooper caught her breath. She holstered the weapon and forced the rising vomit back down her stomach. Once she finally composed herself she radioed dispatch. “We have Zane Marks in custody. Notify the Maryland DOC. We’re bringing him in.”
***
Through the entire car ride to the station, the booking process, and even after being questioned in the interrogation room, Zane Marks never said a word. He wore his apathy like a shield of armor, and the icy, blank stare refused to crack, no matter what Cooper threw at him.
“Things will go a lot easier for you if you cooperate, Zane.” Cooper slouched lazily in the chair across the table from where Marks was cuffed. “You answer my questions, and it’ll go a long way with the parole board. It’d be a shame for you to have to go back on the inside for something like this.”
Marks grimaced, and Cooper leaned over the table, finally touching on a subject he didn’t like. She rubbed her hands, shaking her head sympathetically. “I can’t imagine what it was like for you in there. Surrounded by big, overaggressive men, not a single helpless woman in sight. It must have been so hard.”
Marks finally made eye contact with Cooper. “I want my phone call.” His voice was deep, and he strained against the chains that kept him in his seat. But even with the few feet between them, Cooper could smell the stink of his breath.
“You get your phone call when our lines get back up and running,” Hart said, his arms crossed as he stood in the corner. “It could be a while, though.”
Cooper smiled, impressed how the rookie had handled himself in the room. His size and clean-cut appearance gave him the look of a federal agent, and he’d mastered his interrogation stare, though Cooper wasn’t sure if that was intentional or not. She leaned back in her chair. “Sounds like we have some time to kill.” She picked at one of her fingernails lazily. “You do know that since you broke parole you’ll be summoned to a hearing. And the arresting officer is always called to testify.” Cooper cocked her head to the side, scratching her temple. “I wonder what I’ll say?”
Marks rolled his eyes and straightened himself in his chair. “I was away on vacation.”
“Where?”
“Out of the city. I didn’t have cell reception, and the day we were supposed to drive back down was the night of the storm. When we got in this morning the cell’s battery died, and power was still out in most of Baltimore. I was going to call and explain to my parole officer what happened.”
“You know you’re not supposed to leave the state, right?” Hart asked, stepping from the shadows. He pressed his knuckles into the table, staring Marks down. “That’ll land you back in county.”
Marks smirked like an adolescent child who thought he could one-up his parents. “I didn’t leave the state, asshole. I was up in North Point, camping.”
“You said we,” Cooper interjected. “Who went with you?”
“My girlfriend.”
Cooper raised her eyebrows. “And this girlfriend of yours, she’s aware that you’re a convicted rapist? Or did you choose to leave that detail out on your match.com profile?”
“She fucking knows, all right?” Marks slammed his back into the chair, rattling the chains, the cool demeanor he displayed earlier erased from his features and replaced with the irritated annoyance of a criminal who’d been caught.
“Why’d you run?” Cooper asked.
Marks kicked the leg of the table but only hard enough to slide it forward an inch. “What the hell would you do if someone sneaks into your house with a gun pointed at you?” He matched Cooper’s sarcasm with an added bite and yanked at his chains in frustration. “I didn’t fucking do anything! All right? I ran because I didn’t want Rose to see me hauled away in handcuffs. That doesn’t exactly breed trust in a relationship that’s already walking on eggshells. Fucking Christ. It’s hard enough to meet someone with a record hanging over my head.”
“Yeah, it’s such a tough racket for convicted rapists.” Cooper’s overexaggerated face matched the sarcastic tone that dripped from her lips. “I’m sure you have everyone’s sympathies.”
“If you let me call Rose, she can explain. She was with me the whole trip. I even got my parole officer to sign off on it.”
“Why didn’t he record your trip in the database if he knew about it?” Cooper asked.
“How should I fucking know? Do I look like his supervisor? Maybe he got backlogged with paperwork, maybe he forgot?” Marks shifted uneasily, the color and rage draining from his body, and his tone shifting to a whine. “Look, just let me call Rose. Let me speak with my parole officer. We can get this figured out.”
“I want a DNA sample.” Cooper thrust her right index finger into the table. “And we want to keep you here until we have it analyzed.” She walked to the door then paused and glanced back at Marks before she left. “Then you can get your fucking phone call.”
Hart followed her out of the room, and the two watched him sweat from the view of th
e one-way glass. “You think he’s telling the truth?”
“Check the tags on the sedan that dropped him off. See if they belong to someone named Rose, and see what she has to say about Mr. Marks.” Cooper tilted her head to the side. “I think there’s something in his apartment that he didn’t want us to find. Let’s get a tech in here to swab the DNA sample then get a unit over to Marks’s residence and comb the place. It shouldn’t be difficult to get a warrant for that. We’ll compare his results to the samples from our other victims, see what matches up.”
“If he did it, you know he wouldn’t submit to a test,” Hart said.
“Well he did something. And this will at least narrow the field of suspects.” Cooper headed back to the office while Hart borrowed one of the empty desks in the bull pen. On the way, the normal chaos of the precinct was interrupted by a woman’s shrieks. Heads turned at the sight and sound of the woman struggling against three officers as she barreled her way through the halls.
Cooper hurried past the gawking stares and intercepted the woman’s path. Her face was beet red, the vein along her forehead throbbed wildly as she screamed at one of the officers. “What do you mean I can’t see him? I know he’s here.” She waved her phone in the air, pointing to it. “I just got off the phone with his parole officer! Let me speak to him now!”
Before the woman used the phone as a projectile weapon, Cooper stepped into the line of fire. “It’s all right, Jim. I’ll take her back.” She reached for the woman’s arm, but she pulled it away.
“Where’s Zane? What is he doing here?” The woman’s large hooped earrings dangled wildly as she shook her head back and forth. “I want to see him!”
“You’ll speak with him soon,” Cooper said, gesturing down the hall. “I just need to ask you a few questions. The quicker we do this, the quicker you can see Zane.”
The woman tapped her foot impatiently, but when she realized that Cooper wouldn’t budge she rolled her eyes, and walked down the hall. Cooper opened the door to one of the spare rooms on the opposite side of where Marks was being held. Once inside, the woman stood by the table, again tapping her foot. “Well?”
“Why don’t you have a seat?” Cooper gestured to the chair and sat down first. “I promise this will only take a few minutes.”
Rose eyed the chair suspiciously but eventually sat down. She set her purse on the floor, and the silence gave Cooper a few minutes to look her over. Her hair was greyed, and she had plastered her makeup on thick in an attempt to hide the age lines, which were only highlighted by her attempt to conceal them. Her fingernails were painted though chipped and discolored from the original hue.
“Ms. Steeves, are you aware of Zane Marks’s background? His past?”
Rose shifted in her chair, unfolding her arms, her mouth twitching with irritation. “He’s not like that anymore. He’s changed. That’s why they let him out. That’s why he’s on parole.” Her Jersey accent was faded, but enough remained to connect its origins, giving her voice the sophistication of a high schooler upset with the principal.
“Where were you last night?”
“Me and Zane was over at the park. We’d been there all week.” She held up a finger, the bangles around her wrist jingling as she reached into her purse and pulled out a crumpled piece of paper. “Look, we had his parole officer sign off on the trip.”
Cooper looked over the form and then narrowed her eyes as she glanced back up at Rose. “And how did you know to come here? Mr. Marks hasn’t been able to notify anyone since his arrest.”
Rose stuttered, shaking her head and waving her hands around as if she could conjure up an answer from the air around her. “I-I followed you, all right? Look, Zane and I knew he was going to miss his check-in with his parole officer, so we thought something like this would happen.” Her cheeks grew pallid. “That’s why I have that note.”
Cooper remained quiet for a moment, letting Rose sweat before she answered. “I’ll need to check on a few things.” Rose opened her mouth, but Cooper slammed the door shut before she had a chance to speak. Hart was already in the interrogation’s anteroom, watching. “Did you find anything on her?”
Hart flipped through the printed papers he managed to collect. “Rose Steeves. Aged fifty-three. She has four low-level misdemeanors for drug use. The last charge happened almost twelve years ago. According to her tax receipts she’s a waitress at—” Hart stopped and sprung forward in his chair. “Holy shit.”
“What is it?” Cooper asked.
“This is the same diner that Kate Wurstshed ran to after she left the storage unit.”
“Son of a bitch.” Cooper looked back into the interrogation room. “Get units over to both Marks’s and Steeves’s residences. I want their cars checked, their phone records checked, and I want another look at the security footage at the diner.”
“Yeah, okay.” Hart glanced at his notes, remaining in the anteroom.
Cooper raised her eyebrows. “Hart?”
“Yeah?”
“Let’s do that now.”
“Right.”
Cooper followed Hart out of the room and she reexamined the notes from the conversation Hall had with Kate Wurstshed then grabbed a cluster of crime scene photos of their Jane Doe in the storage unit. She entered Marks’s interrogation room first. He rattled his chains, shifting uncomfortably in his seat as Cooper sat down. She remained quiet, shuffling through some of the pictures, paying him no mind, letting him squirm.
“Well?” Marks spread his arms as far as the cuffs allowed, his eyes wide. “Did you call my parole officer? Did he tell you what happened?”
Cooper reached into her pocket and pulled out a piece of gum. She chewed it over a few times, letting the mint roll around her tongue, filling her senses. “I find it odd that a man such as yourself is able to get a girlfriend. How’d the two of you meet?”
“What does that have to do with any of this?” Marks tightened his hands into fists, closing his eyes and swallowing what would have been an outburst. His next words were calmer, slower. “Just call my parole officer. He will explain what happened. He knows that I went on a trip.”
“Call me a hopeless romantic, but I do enjoy a good love story.” Cooper leaned forward. “So, Romeo. How’d you and Rose meet?”
“I met her at work.”
“The diner off of Highway 86?” Cooper asked, keeping the pictures close to her chest and running her fingers over the edge.
Marks furrowed his brow, glancing down at the back of the file, his voice slightly shakier than before. “Yeah.”
“That diner’s been getting a lot of traffic lately,” Cooper said. “Not sure if the tips have been good though, especially with all the dead women coming through.” She flung one of the pictures across the steel table, and it glided to a stop at Marks’s hand.
“Jesus Christ.” Marks jerked backward, his chains and chair rattling from the quick motion. Cooper flung the pictures across one at a time, each new image triggering a moan from Marks. With all of the pictures on the table Cooper rose from her seat and Marks shook his head, mumbling to himself. “I didn’t do any of that shit. I swear I didn’t.”
“Must have had a lot of pent-up rage after all those years behind bars, right?” Cooper circled him, picking up the gruesome pictures of the woman’s beaten face, the gaping hole of smashed bone and brain, dripping blood. She held it close for him to see, forcing him to look. “What was it this time, Marks? She didn’t enjoy it like the others did? Said something that finally set you off? Why’d you do it? Why her? Your girlfriend wasn’t enough? She wasn’t satisfying the fantasy that ran through that sick mind of yours?” Cooper slammed her fist into the table, and the sudden burst of strength caused Marks to flinch. “Why’d you do it?”
“I didn’t fucking touch her!” The chains locking Marks into his chair tightened, and his face flushed a blood red from his scream, while the vein along his neck pulsed quickly. “I don’t know who she is, and even if I did I wouldn’t
do that.” He cried, his cheeks and upper lip growing wet with tears and snot. “I swear to God I didn’t do that.”
Cooper backed off as Marks’s sobs turned to frantic cries. She kept the hard stare as she collected the pictures from the table but left one behind, the most gruesome of the images. She leaned in close as he buried his face in his hands, his shoulders trembling. “You’re an animal. Nothing more, and when things don’t go your way your true nature shows. You’re done.”
Another wailing moan erupted through Marks’s hands just before Cooper slammed the door shut behind her. In the hallway she felt her body flush with heat, and she waited a moment before heading into Rose’s room, where she worked over the same angle and allegations, though her reaction was less dramatic than Marks’s, and when it was all said and done Rose simply sat there frozen and said she wanted to speak with a lawyer.
After the questioning, Cooper found Hart. “It’s almost four o’clock. I’m gonna go process Marks’s paperwork and get in touch with his parole officer. Get Forensics to grab his DNA, and follow up with Barnesby’s secretary. Let me know if you find anything.” She started to leave, but Hart stepped in her path.
“You think they did it?”
“I think they did something. Whether it’s murder or not, we’ll know when we get Marks’s DNA sample back and compare it to what the lab finds on our Jane Doe.”
“All right.” Hart stepped aside, and Cooper returned to her office. She eyed the box of Hart’s things wearily and turned on her computer. Paperwork was the well-heralded evil of police work. Logging evidence, processing suspects, requesting tests, warrants, crossing all the T’s and dotting all the I’s. It was tedious, but it provided the airtight lock that was needed to close cases.