THE MAZE by Catherine Counlter

“No shit,” Dubrosky said as he tapped a pen on the wooden tabletop. “The Des Moines cops wasted hours and hours going off on that tangent. They dragged in every man in a three-block radius of the house, but there wasn’t a single dweeb who could possibly fit the profile. Then it turned out that the Toaster wasn’t just a little-time killer, he’s now a serial killer. Thank God we didn’t waste our time going through that exercise. You people aren’t infallible.” Dubrosky liked that. He looked jovial now. “No, this time you were so far off track that you couldn’t even see the train. Like the captain said, we did talk to all the neighbors. Not a weirdo in the bunch.”

“Actually, on this case, we’re not off track at all,” Savich said. “Believe me, it’s astounding how often the profiles are right on the money.” He was silent a moment, then said, “Now, everyone agrees that the same guy murdered all three families. It makes sense that he had to visit each of the houses to ensure that there were both a toaster and a classic full-size stove/oven combo that sat on the kitchen floor. And not an electric stove, a gas one. There were delivery people all over the neighborhoods in both Des Moines and in St. Louis, but the truth is no one is really certain of anything. By the time they acted on the profile theory of the killer living in the neighborhood, there wasn’t much certainty anymore about any repairs or deliveries. Nobody remembered seeing anybody.”

“Good summary, Savich,” said Dubrosky.

“Bear with me, Detective.” He took another drink of coffee. “This stuff is so potent, I bet it breeds little cups of coffee.”

There was one small smile, from Sherlock.

Savich said, “You guys have done hours of legwork here and you did it immediately. You’ve proven that there wasn’t a repairperson or a salesman or even a guy whose car broke down and wanted to phone a garage near the Lansky house. So then we come back to the basic question. How then did he get into the Lansky house? Into the kitchen specifically so he could make certain they had all the props he needed?”

Dubrosky made a big show of looking at his watch. “Look, Savich, we thought of all that. We found out that all the houses were older, not just here, but also in Des Moines and St. Louis. To me it means that chances are excellent that you’d have a big low gas oven in the kitchens. And who the hell wouldn’t have a toaster? This is all nonsense. Our perp is a transient. He’s nuts. None of the shrinks agree on why he did this. Maybe God told him to strangle every mother with the toaster cord. Maybe God told him that kids are evil, that he was the evil witch out of Hansel and Gretel. Who the hell knows why he’s whacking families? Like I said, the fucker’s crazy and he’s traveling across the U.S., probably killing at whim, no rhyme or reason.”

Mason said, “Buck’s right. We don’t know why no one saw him in the Lansky neighborhood, why a single dog didn’t bark, but maybe he disguised himself as the postman or as that old woman who lives across the street from the Lanskys. In any case, he got lucky. But we’ll find him, we’ve got to. Of course with our luck, the bastard’s long gone from Chicago. We’ll hear about him again when he murders someone in Kansas.”

And that was truly what they believed, Sherlock thought. It was clear on all their faces. They believed the guy was long gone from Chicago, that they didn’t have a prayer of ever getting him.

“Let me tell you about the magic of computers, gentlemen,” Savich said and smiled. “They do things a whole lot faster than we can. But what’s important is what you put into them. It’s a matter of picking the right data to go into the mixer before you turn it on to do its thing.” He leaned down and picked up his laptop and turned it on. He hit buttons, made the little machine bleep, all in all, ignored the rest of them.

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