job.” Marsh opened another folder and began to spread out photographs of the dead men. They were glossy, full color. Crime-scene photographs. Autopsy photographs. They stretched across the table like a fan of cards: blood and blank eyes and shattered bone. “You went alone into an abandoned house.” He touched the photographs as he spoke. “There was no power. Reports of screams. You went alone into the basement.” He straightened the edges of the photographs until he had a perfect line. “Did you hear anything?”
Elizabeth swallowed.
“Detective Black? Did you hear anything?”
“Dripping water. Rats in the walls.”
“Rats?”
“Yes.”
“What else?”
“Channing was crying.”
“You saw her?”
Elizabeth blinked, the memory collapsing into something dimmer. “She was in the second room.”
“Describe it.”
“Concrete. Low ceilings. The mattress was in the corner.”
“Was it dark?”
“There was a candle on a crate. It was red.”
Elizabeth closed her eyes and saw that, too: melted wax and flickers of light, the hallways and doors and shadowed places. It was as real as in her dreams, but mostly she heard the girl’s voice, the broken words and prayer, the way she begged God to help her, please.
“Where were the Monroe brothers at this time?”
“I don’t know.” Elizabeth cleared her throat. “There were other rooms.”
“And the child?” Marsh pushed a photograph forward. It showed the mattress, the wires. Elizabeth blinked again, but the room around her remained blurry. Only the photograph was sharp. The mattress. The memory. “How was Channing?”
“She was as you might imagine.”
“Frightened, of course.” He placed a single finger on the photo of the mattress. “Wired to a mattress. Exposed. Alone.” He removed the photographs, touched two that showed the dead men, their bodies broken and bent and shredded. “These are the ones that interest me the most.” He pushed them toward her. “The bullet placement, in particular.” He touched one man and then the other. “Both knees shot away.” He slid forward a close-up of the shattered knees. “Multiple shots to the groin. Again, both men.” Another close-up hissed across the table, this one an autopsy photo, stark and bright. “Did you torture these men, Detective Black?”
“It was dark.…”
Another photograph slid across the table. “Titus Monroe. Shot in both knees, both elbows.”
“Not intentional.”
“But painful. Nonfatal.”
Elizabeth swallowed, nauseous.
Marsh noticed. “I’d ask you to look at each photograph.”
“I’ve seen these.”
“These are not random injuries, Detective.”
“I thought they were armed.”
“Knees. Groins. Elbows.”
“It was dark.”
“Eighteen shots.”
“The girl was crying.”
“Eighteen shots placed to cause maximum pain.”
Elizabeth looked away. Marsh leaned back, his eyes blue and cold. “Two men are dead, Detective.”
Elizabeth turned her head slowly, her own eyes so flat and emotionless they, themselves, looked dead. “Two animals,” she said.
“I beg your pardon.”
Her heart beat twice. She spoke with care. “Two animals are dead.”
“Liz! Jesus!”
Marsh held up a hand as Dyer seemed to lurch forward. “It’s okay, Captain. Stand where you are.” He turned his attention back to Liz, hands spread on the table. “Did you torture these men, Detective?” He lifted a bloody photograph, placed it gently in front of her. Elizabeth looked away, so he put down two more. They were autopsy photos, close-ups. The wounds were immediate and full color. “Detective Black?”
Elizabeth stood. “We’re done here.”
“You’re not excused.”
She pushed back her chair.
“I’m not finished, Detective.”
“I am.”
She turned on a heel.
Hamilton stood, but Marsh said, “Let her go.”
Elizabeth pulled open the door and was outside before Dyer could touch her arm or say a word to stop her. She pushed through the crowd
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