by P J Parrish
“Up until the eighties, Michigan had a law that said if a defendant pleaded insanity, it was up to the prosecution to prove he wasn’t,” Dr. Seraphin explained.
Louis started to question her, but then he remembered something like that from his prelaw classes. It was a crazy law, asking the state to prove sanity in a man who acted insane by the very nature of his crimes.
“I remember that,” Louis said. “It was almost impossible to prove back then. People didn’t want to think a man who committed the worst of crimes could be as normal as they were, so it was easy to label him as insane.”
“Yes.”
“But still,” Louis said, “why here? Why not in a state mental hospital?”
“Those grew full very quickly. We absorbed the overflow,” Dr. Seraphin said. “Of course, with a financial supplement from the state.”
“Must have been a nice extra income.”
“It was never enough,” she said, looking down at the folder in her hand. Louis sensed she was tiring.
“How much longer you want to go?” Louis asked.
“Let’s go one more year.”
Louis found the next box and they started again. His hands were growing stiff from the cold. He glanced up at her. Her face was expressionless, and he wondered what she was feeling right now, suddenly thrust back into the lives of those she knew in the most intimate of ways, lives that were lost and empty and unsalvageable.
“Earl Moos,” she said. “He was committed by his family,” she said. “He spoke of fantasies of rape and torture.”
“Did he ever follow through?”
“Not to my knowledge. He was here until 1969, and would be about . . . fifty-eight now.”
A weak suspect, but Louis wrote down the name anyway. They finished up the folders for 1956 and Louis rose again to his feet, his knees creaking.
“Can you come back another time?” Louis asked.
“How do you know you won’t get lucky and find your killer among the names I gave you?” she asked.
Louis stuck the notebook in his pocket. “I don’t put much stock in luck, Doctor.”
“No,” she said. “I don’t suppose you would.”
He held the door for her. They paused in the corridor. “Where’s your driver?” Louis asked.
“He wouldn’t leave the building,” Dr. Seraphin said.
“He’s not far, I assure you. Why do you ask? Are you afraid your killer will get him?”
“This is no game, Doctor,” Louis said. “The man has been inside this building and he is dangerous.”
Dr. Seraphin’s eyes swept over the graffiti-scarred walls and the shadowed doorways.
“I think we better go look for him,” Louis said.
CHAPTER 29
They went to the front entrance first, but there was no sign of Oliver in the lobby or outside. Louis started back down the hall, Dr. Seraphin close behind. They were near the back of the ground floor when Louis stopped suddenly.
Smoke. A bare whiff of it in the cold air.
Louis put out a hand to keep Dr. Seraphin back. He moved forward slowly toward the room at the end of the hall. With a quick glance back at the doctor, he stepped inside.
Oliver was standing in the corner, a cigarette frozen in his hand.
“Jesus,” Louis breathed.
A moment later, Dr. Seraphin was at his side. She stared into the room at Oliver.
“What are you doing?” she demanded.
“I just wanted a smoke, ma’am,” he said. “It was too cold to go outside.” Oliver had snuffed out the cigarette and was standing there like a boy caught in a dirty deed.
Dr. Seraphin gave Oliver a frown, but slowly her eyes began to wander over the plastic tables and stainless steel countertops.
Louis realized the room looked cleaner than the last time he had been in it. He guessed that the state cops had searched the building after Rebecca Gruber was found. He noticed dark fingerprint powder smudges around the windowsills and door frames.
As he took a step into the room, something caught his eye in the faint light. It was a large can, and he knew it hadn’t been here before.
He walked to it. It had been opened with a can opener, but the top was pushed down inside. He got out a pen and used the tip to lift it open.
The can was half-full of creamed corn, a large serving spoon stuck in it. Louis used the lid to turn it so he could read the label. Southern Michigan Food Supply. Hidden Lake Hospital.
“Doctor,” Louis said, “any idea where this might have come from?”
Dr. Seraphin came up behind him. “The hospital kitchen, I would presume.”
Louis pushed the lid back down to see if there was any stamping or embossing on top. There was none, and he grabbed an old paper towel from the floor and used it to lift the can up so he could see the bottom. In small print, stamped on the bottom, he saw a series of letters and numbers, and the date April 1987. Over a year ago.
“I’d bet there are a lot of these missing from the kitchen over the past few years,” Louis said.
“The police didn’t think to take that?” Dr. Seraphin asked.
Louis set the can down and stood up. “It wasn’t here when they searched. I’d bet it’s been here less than a day or two.”
“But that young man, the guard we saw outside, missed it,” Dr. Seraphin said.
“The guard isn’t a cop. He has no idea what to look for,” Louis said.
“Maybe the police don’t either,” Dr. Seraphin said. “If they knew what they were looking for, they’d be as convinced as you that the key to this man’s existence is this building, and they’d have people here.”
Louis was quiet, not wanting to tell the doctor she was right. There was a cold breeze drifting in from somewhere and Louis looked around for a new broken window. He found it near the back of the room. But he was surprised to see it wasn’t broken but just lifted open. The steel grating on the outside was screwed to the bricks, but the screws were loose, easily removed and replaced by hand.
“He has a new entrance, too,” Louis said.
“And again,” Dr. Seraphin said, “the guard heard nothing, saw nothing.”
She was right again. Once he told the state police about the corn and the open window, they would have no choice but to put cops out here twenty-four hours. And do hourly walk-throughs. Maybe they could somehow push this man back into the open and leave him with nowhere else to go. Then maybe, just maybe, he might make a mistake.
Louis made a mental note to make sure he went back around to this window to tighten the screws before he left. Better yet, he’d find a way to keep the grating permanently fastened. And when he could, he’d do that with all the windows and shut this bastard out of the hospital completely.
He turned to see that Dr. Seraphin and Oliver had left the room. He followed them, deeper down the hall. He was trying to place where he was, and he realized they were near the narrow caged staircase that led to the upper floors.
“Do you smell that?” Dr. Seraphin asked.
Louis stopped, inhaling. It was urine. And not stale. And there was something else far more putrid.
Dr. Seraphin pushed open a plain white door.
It was a small bathroom. The white walls were splashed with spray-painted red graffiti and pentagrams. The floor was littered with soiled toilet paper, beer cans, and cigarette butts. The toilet was full of yellow water and feces.
“I find this man fascinating,” Dr. Seraphin said, walking away from Louis. “He moves about this building with extreme comfort, despite the constant presence of the guards, the workers, and the staff.”
“Is he smart?” Louis asked. “Or just gutsy?”
“He is neither,” she said. “It’s just that he operates with a logic you cannot. He sees this as his world and he moves with such ease and confidence in it I’m sure he feels he’s invisible to everyone else.”
“Explain,” Louis said.
She shook her head, and he sensed she was annoy
ed at his ignorance.
“I need any help I can get, Doctor,” Louis said, trying to be patient.
“His feeling of invisibility started when he was very young,” she said. “Either he was ignored and grew up believing he was in some way invisible to his parents or he was abused, which forces a child to wish he were invisible to prevent further harm.”
“If he thinks he’s invisible, why doesn’t he just walk in the front door, right past the guard?” Louis said.
Dr. Seraphin smiled at his question. “You’re thinking too literally. His belief is far more abstract. Because he’s learned to behave in ways that keep him invisible, he will not do anything to change that.”
Louis didn’t want to admit to her he wasn’t following. There was something else in his head, and he tried to push it away but the images kept playing.
A foster home, the last one before he had come to live with Phillip and Frances. That two-story brick house on Strathmoor, owned by Moe and the woman with the brassy red hair.
A closet. Small. Dark. And thick with the smells of dirty clothes and urine-stained sheets from the bunk bed under his that belonged to a tiny, brown-skinned boy whose name Louis couldn’t remember.
There was a rope tied to the inside doorknob of the closet, and Louis was holding the rope with both fists to keep the door from being opened from the outside.
But he could hear Moe looking for them. Hear him throwing things and shouting for the little boy to come out and take his whipping for peeing the bed.
And Louis was holding the rope with all his might, but the door jerked open, ripping the rope from Louis’s hands, and Moe’s big body stood over them, a silhouette against the sunlit bedroom window, his kinky black hair a raging explosion around his head.
Moe jerked the little boy from the closet and threw him onto the lower bunk, and Moe’s hand started coming back in long, vicious strokes, the leather snapping every time it hit skin.
And Louis remembered cowering back against the clothing and sheets, knees against his chest, eyes closed, praying Moe would not see him. Praying that just for once, he could be invisible.
“Mr. Kincaid.”
He looked at Dr. Seraphin. “What?”
“Let’s go on and see what else this man left us,” she said.
Louis followed her farther down the hall. Ahead of him on his right, he saw the green door with PASSAGE 12 stenciled on it. Only now, a strip of yellow tape was strung across it.
Louis stepped to it quickly.
The yellow tape had MICHIGAN STATE POLICE stamped on it and hung loosely from the metal door frame. The frame had been pried away from the wall and the door had been forced open. It was now ajar and Louis pushed it inward, opening it the rest of the way.
The slim light illuminated dirty yellow tile walls and a concrete ramp that sloped downward. Once level, the floor turned to a gray tile that disappeared into the darkness ten or twelve feet deeper in.
“Where does this go?” he asked.
Dr. Seraphin was standing a few feet behind and she didn’t come to the door. “It’s a tunnel, Mr. Kincaid. There’s a network of them connecting the buildings. We used them in the wintertime to transport food, supplies, patients, whatever we needed to.”
He looked at her, stunned. “Why didn’t you tell me about these before?”
“Excuse me?”
His voice grew sharper than he intended, but he couldn’t help it. “This man gets in and out of these buildings like a ghost and you didn’t think to mention there are tunnels here?”
“As you can see,” she said, motioning to the pried door frame, “this door was not accessible to anyone before the police opened it. It was sealed in the late seventies because the tunnels had been declared unsafe. And we didn’t have the money to repair them.”
Louis stepped down the ramp and looked at the inside of the door. There was no handle there, either. Only a thick, steel latch that had once been welded to the frame. It was not something that could have been easily removed by someone without tools, and now that it had been opened, the door no longer closed flush.
Louis shoved the door all the way open to gain as much light as possible and started down the ramp.
The air grew cold with a dirty dampness that made it hard to breathe. He could hear water dripping, see rusty streaks on the walls.
Louis stopped. Damn it. He needed a flashlight. He needed backup, too. He had no business going down here alone.
He started to turn back when something ahead caught his eye—a splash of gray in the faint shifting light. He went forward a few more feet. The darkness came down around him, and he felt his heart quicken as his eyes adjusted. Then it came into focus.
A cinder-block wall.
He moved to it, running his hand over the cold blocks from one end to the other. The wall filled the width and height of the narrow tunnel.
He pushed on it, but it didn’t give. Then he shoved forward on individual blocks, making sure none of them was loose. It was solid. Louis dusted his hands on his jeans and backed away, still looking around. The side walls looked intact, and the ceiling was water stained but in one piece, a string of electrical sockets still in place. There were no other entrances. He walked back to the ramp.
Dr. Seraphin stood near the door, arms crossed. She looked amused.
“You should have told me it was bricked off,” Louis said.
“And what good would it have done?” she asked. “You still would have gone down there to see for yourself.”
He pulled the door closed as far as it would come. He couldn’t believe the state police hadn’t sealed it back up. The killer could easily smash away a few of the blocks, giving him access to other tunnels to hide in.
“Are all the buildings connected by these tunnels?” he asked Dr. Seraphin.
She nodded.
“Are they all bricked off like this?” he asked.
“Yes.”
“Is there any way into the tunnels other than from the buildings?”
Dr. Seraphin had her hand on her chin, one finger pressed into her cheek. “Your mind is interesting. There’s always another question to be answered, isn’t there?”
“Yes, ma’am. And you haven’t answered it.”
“No, the only entrances are from the buildings,” she said. She ran a hand over her cropped gray hair. “Mr. Kincaid, if you have no more need of me, I really need to get going.”
Louis’s eyes went to Oliver standing vigil behind her. “Thanks for your time, Doctor.”
She smiled slightly, picking up on his irritation with her. She headed back down the hall toward the entrance, Oliver trailing.
He waited until they had left; then he backtracked to the records room. He picked up the police case files for Rebecca Gruber and Sharon Stottlemeyer, then paused.
The folders of the four men Dr. Seraphin had singled out were sitting alone near the stool. He already had their names in his notebook, but he needed more information. History, addresses, relatives, release dates. Anything that could help him find them.
Taking the files was illegal. But no more illegal than what Dr. Seraphin had already done. And he would never be able to reveal how he got the names anyway.
He picked up the four folders and his umbrella. Tucking the folders in his jacket, he went outside.
There was no sign of Zeke, the security guard. He’d been gone for more than two hours. Probably still on break in the administration building. Louis hurried to his car, dumped the folders in the backseat, and trotted to the administration building.
He stopped inside the door to shake the water from the umbrella. He needed to call the state police to tell them about the corn can and to convince them to come back and weld the tunnel doors closed.
There was a small room off the lobby that the security guards had commandeered as their break room, and when Louis went to the door, there were two guards sitting at a table sharing a thermos of coffee. He put in a call to the state police. The guy who to
ok his message promised it would get to the right person, but as he hung up the phone Louis doubted it would. He made a mental note to call Dalum and tell him to put on some pressure.
Louis turned to the two guards at the table.
“You guys seen Zeke?” Louis asked.
“He was here about an hour ago when I came in,” one of the men said. “I think he went back out.”
Louis pulled Zeke’s keys from his pocket. He was about to hand them over to the guard when the thought hit him. It could take days for the state police to get back down here to close the tunnels back up. The killer could have already found his way back in. Maybe the guy was down there now. And if they acted quickly, they could have him trapped.
Louis pocketed the keys and went back outside. At the Impala, he grabbed a flashlight he had stowed in the trunk yesterday and the diagram of the hospital grounds from the backseat.
Then he popped the glove box and took out his Glock. He hooked it on his belt and started off toward the nearest building.
CHAPTER 30
He was only going to check to make sure the cinder-block walls in the tunnels had not been compromised. That was all.
It was logical that the administration building would be connected to the tunnels, so that is where he would begin.
He didn’t tell anyone what he was doing. He just walked the ground floor, looking for steel doors with no handles. Finally, he found one, painted green like the one in E Building, with PASSAGE 2 stenciled on it. Also like the one in E Building, it had been pried open and had yellow tape on it.
Louis pulled it open, flicked on his flashlight, and went down the sloping ramp. The tunnel had the same damp smell as the other one, and about twenty feet in Louis came to an intact cinder-block wall. Making sure it was secure, he backtracked. At the back of the building, he found a second tunnel door marked PASSAGE 1. It, too, was taped and securely bricked off. After he was positive there were no other tunnel entries in the building, Louis went outside.
He unfolded Spera’s map and pulled a pen from his jacket. He made marks on the administration building outline where he had found the tunnel doors, numbering them 1 and 2.