THE MAZE by Catherine Counlter

4

SAVICH LOOKED AS IF HE wanted to jump on his desk and dance. He couldn’t stop grinning and rubbing his hands together.

“The Toaster, sir?”

“Oh yes. On this one, I had feelers out with everyone. Excuse me, Agent Sherlock.” He lifted the receiver on his phone and began to punch in numbers. He put it down and cursed softly. “I forgot. Ellis’s wife is having their baby; she just went into the hospital an hour ago and so he’s not available. No, I won’t ask him. He’ll insist on coming, but he needs to be with his wife. It’s their first kid. But he’s going to be really pissed to miss this. No, I just can’t. He’s gotta be there.” He looked down at his hands a moment, then back up at her. He looked just a bit worried. “What do you think of trial by fire?”

Her heartbeat speeded up. She was so new she still squeaked, but he was going to take a chance on her. “I’m ready, sir.”

She looked ready to leap out of her chair. He didn’t remember being this eager on his first day. He rose. “Good. We’re leaving this afternoon for Chicago. Bottom line: We’ve got a guy who killed a family of four in Des Moines. He did the same thing in St. Louis three months later. After St. Louis, the media dubbed him the Toaster. I’ll tell you about it when we’re in the air. That was Captain Brady in the Chicago Police Department, homicide, and he believes we might be able to help him. Actually, he’s praying that we can do something. The media wants a sideshow, and he can’t even give them a dancing bear. But we can.” He looked at his watch. “I’ll meet you at Dulles in two hours. We should be there no more than three days.” He rolled down the sleeves of his white shirt and grabbed his jacket. “I really want this guy, Sherlock.”

The Toaster. She knew about him as well. She scoured all the major newspapers for monsters like this one. Yes, she already knew the details, at least the ones that had made the papers.

He opened the office door for her. Her eyes were positively glistening, as if she were high on drugs. “You mean you know how to catch him?”

“Yes. We’re going to get him this time. Captain Brady said he had some leads, but he needs us to come out. You go ahead and pack. I’ve got to update some people in the unit. Ollie Hamish is in charge when I’m unavailable.”

They flew on United in Business Class. “I didn’t think the Bureau let its agents fly anything other than tourist class.”

Savich stowed his briefcase beneath the seat in front of him and sat down. “I upgraded us. You don’t mind that I have the aisle?”

“You’re the boss, sir.”

“Yeah, but now you can call me Dillon or Savich. I answer to either one. What do most people call you”‘

“Sherlock, sir. Just plain Sherlock.”

“I met your daddy once about five years ago, just after he was appointed to the bench. Everyone in law enforcement was tickled to have him named because he rarely cut a convicted criminal any slack. I remember his selection didn’t go over too well with liberals in your home state.”

“No,” she said looking out the window as the 767 began to taxi down the runway. “It didn’t. There were two serious efforts to have him recalled-neither succeeded, of course. The first try was after he upheld the death penalty for a man who’d raped and tortured two little boys, then dumped their bodies in a Dumpster in Palo Alto. The second was when he wouldn’t grant bail to an illegal Mexican alien who’d kidnapped and murdered a local businessman.”

“Hard to believe there are people who’d want to rally behind those kinds of killers.”

“Oh, there are. Their rationale in the first case was that my father showed no compassion. After all, the man’s wife had died of cancer, his little boy had been killed by a drunk driver. He deserved another chance. He’d been pushed to torture those little boys. He had shown remorse, claimed grief had sent him out of his mind, but Dad said ‘bullshit’ and upheld the death penalty. As for the illegal Mexican, they claimed Dad was a racist, that there was no proof the man would flee the U.S. Also they claimed that the man had kidnapped the businessman because he had refused to give him a job, had threatened to call Immigration if the guy didn’t leave the premises. They claimed the man hadn’t been treated fairly, that he’d been discriminated against. It didn’t matter that the businessman was an immigrant-a legal one. I also seriously doubt that he made that threat.”

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