have. Oh, and Gannet says sheâs been dead two to four months.â
âThanks, Neil.â
âYep. Iâll update you immediately on anything new we can come up with.â
âGreat.â
Jake hung up the phone and pulled out the file on the last of the victims who had been killed five years before. A picture of a young woman with a shy smile was clipped to the right of the page.
Dana Renaldo.
She, too, had been in her mid-twenties. Twenty-seven, actually, five foot six, one hundred and twenty pounds, an eager, attractive young woman. Her parents had been deceased. She had been reported missing by a cousin almost a year before her body had been discovered. Sheâd come from Clearwater. The police had investigated at the time but hadnât followed up on the missing persons report because of the findings of their investigation. She had packed up her bags and cleaned out her bank accounts. Three months prior to her disappearance, she had gone through a messy divorce. There had been no children involved, soâuntil her body had been discovered in Miami-Dadeâit had appeared to her local authorities that she had chosen to take off and start over again. It was legal for an adult to be missing if that person so chose. Prior to her disappearance, Dana had worked in real estate and insurance, and, immediately before she had left, she had been a paralegal at a law firm in Tampa. She had sent a letter of resignation and it was in her handwriting, according to the lawyer for whom she had been working.
Their Jane Doeâor Cinderella, as the forensics guys were calling herâsounded very similar in appearance.
He switched files.
Eleanore âEllieâ Thorn had been nothing like Dana Renaldo or their latest victim. Sheâd hailed from Omaha, and had failed to return home after a vacation in Fort Lauderdale. She hadnât taken a job, had cleared out her bank account at a local branch, and had been seen now and then around town. She had attended Bordonâs prayer services. She had often stayed at the communal property. Nearly five feet ten, she had been blond and athletic. Like the others, she hadnât been found until both time and the elements had wreaked havoc on her remains.
The first of the earlier three victims had earned a degree in architecture at Tulane. She had been bright and, according to friends, determined. Sheâd been an orphan, raised from an early age in foster homes. Sheâd gotten through school with hard work and scholarships. Twenty-six at the time of her death, sheâd been petite, five foot two, and a bare hundred pounds. Sheâd been living on Miami Beach and had loved the architecture of the area. Deeply religious, in need of spiritual solace, she had probably been an easy mark for Peter Bordon, a.k.a. Papa Pierre.
As he hung up, Marty arrived in front of him, tossing a manila folder on his desk. âPeter Bordon is still very definitely locked up in the middle of the state.â
âMarty, I never suggested that he wasnât.â
âBut listen to this. Heâs been a model prisoner. Heâs due for release soon. Exemplary behavior. And, of course, heâs in there for a nonviolent crime. Everyone whoâs worked with him there has found him courteous and polite. Read the report. No, maybe you shouldnâtâitâll probably make you want to vomit. Well, hell, vomit or not, youâve got to read it. Thereâs a section from the prison psychologist youâre really going to like. âMr. Bordon is a man regretful of his assumption that his method of bookkeeping did society no harm. His manner is that of a person determined to pay his debts. He is certainly no danger to society. He is deeply religious, has been a friend to many in extreme circumstances, and is a favorite among his fellow inmates.ââ
Jake just stared at Marty, feeling the muscles in his neck tighten as if he were being throttled.
L. E. Modesitt Jr.
Tymber Dalton
Miriam Minger
Brittney Cohen-Schlesinger
Joanne Pence
William R. Forstchen
Roxanne St. Claire
Dinah Jefferies
Pat Conroy
Viveca Sten