Read By Reason of Insanity Online

Authors: Shane Stevens

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Psychological, #Suspense, #Crime, #Investigative Reporting, #Mentally Ill Offenders, #Serial Murderers

By Reason of Insanity (32 page)

As he waited for Spanner on the phone Amos Finch sought a name for his monster. He intended to include him in his next course at Berkeley and to write about him as well. But he had to learn much more about the Grim Reaper. The name came easily, in seconds. Where he was, what he did: the California Creeper.

Finch wondered what John Spanner would say about his monster.

 

ON AUGUST 22 a call was made from Kansas to Los Angeles. The man who answered said that Vincent Mungo had not yet been found. He indicated that the target might have left town.

 

THAT SAME afternoon someone in Los Angeles called New York. Derek Lavery reported that the Mungo story was ready to go. New York was pleased. He told them the story came out strong for legal execution. They were delighted. It would help to offset the unfavorable image Senator Stoner was giving them with the Chessman issue.

Afterward he read the rough draft again. Ding had done well on finding killers who had escaped death through an insanity defense, some of whom had been eventually released only to kill again. Included was the horror tale of Jed Smith of Oregon who killed half his family in a murderous rage and vowed in court to kill the other half. After five years he was released from a state mental hospital. Three days later he killed the rest of his family.

Ding ended his section with the calm observation that Charles Manson would be eligible for parole in five years. In 1978.

For the main body of the story Adam Kenton had combed through Vincent Mungo’s brief record at Willows. There wasn’t much.

Mungo had apparently become increasingly violent, more resentful, more afraid. No one seemed surprised that he had finally killed. A staff doctor believed that the mutilation of the face meant he hated his father. The man had deserted the boy of sixteen, committing suicide, which was the ultimate weakness. The boy had to become strong, had to have power over others, the ultimate power of life and death. In killing his only friend Thomas Bishop he was killing his father symbolically. Hence the facial destruction.

What about the murdered woman in Los Angeles?

He probably hated his mother too. She deserted him, died, when he was even younger.

But the face was left untouched.

Men who kill women in maniacal rage seldom harm the face. They destroy the body. It’s eminently sexual of course. An aberration.

Thomas Bishop was Mungo’s only friend at Willows; he stuck to Bishop like glue. No doubt planned all along to kill him at the right time. The poor sap. Probably looked like Mungo’s father.

Only two things in the article surprised Lavery. Vincent Mungo had told a doctor at Willows that he and the devil were blood brothers and would be together forever. This was just days before his escape and was, at the least, an odd choice of words. He then asked the doctor if he knew how to play chess.

The other surprise was Mungo’s place of birth; it was not Stockton, where he had lived all his life, but Los Angeles. And his parents got married a year after he was born in October 1948.

Lavery made a few deletions and indicated areas for clarification and sent the manuscript back to the fourth floor. He was satisfied. New York was waiting, eager to run the story in the next issue.

 

SENATOR STONER was getting used to television. He had made a half dozen appearances in the past three weeks. Now he was on again, this time in San Francisco: a half-hour news special about capital punishment. He wore the prescribed blue shirt and light suit and slim tie. He stood still for the makeup and loop cord. Then he spoke forcefully and with genuine emotion about the problem of crime control and restoration of the death penalty. He denounced Caryl Chessman and Vincent Mungo as terrorists, no different from the self-styled revolutionaries who terrorize whole cities. They had to be stopped, he insisted, before society was thrown into chaos.

“Crime is too important to be left to the police,” he declared passionately. Beyond a certain point it became a job for the politicians, who must revise laws in accordance with the will of the people. And it was their will that monsters like Mungo must die. Politicians ignored that will at their own peril. He did not intend to ignore it, and he hoped that the people would continue to support him. He would do his job no matter what. He was herewith serving notice on the criminals.

“If survival comes down to them or us, by God,” he thundered, “it’s going to be us.”

At the end of his portion of the program Stoner quietly announced that he had incontestable proof of Caryl Chessman’s guilt for those who still regarded him as a victim or hero. He didn’t mention
Newstime
, not wanting to give it any further publicity.

After the show he told reporters of Chessman’s admission of guilt to Don Solis. He knew the story would make all the media. It would confuse the enemy camp and demoralize the Chessman old guard. Best of all, it would keep the issue alive and Stoner’s name in print.

 

THE NEXT morning all the major newspapers carried items about the senator’s startling revelation concerning Caryl Chessman. Newsmen talked to Solis at a 10:30 conference in Stoner’s Sacramento office. Solis filled in the details. He seemed hesitant and unsure of himself in the glare of publicity but generally told his story as planned. As he spoke he began to visualize the talks he had with Chessman all those years ago. He remembered one time Chessman had said he was the Red Light Bandit and he talked about some of the women and how he was going to beat the rap and what he’d do when he got out. As Solis remembered these things he came to see them happening in his mind’s eye, and he himself began to believe as he heard Chessman once again tell him about the girl he got in the back seat of the car and how he forced her to lie down on the seat on her stomach …

It was obvious to the senator and his press secretary that the story would be good for days, perhaps as much as a week with any luck. Now, if only Mungo could keep the ball rolling!

 

CARL HANSUN was pleased. On August 29 he read in the Idaho papers about Stoner’s newest headline-grabber in his capital-punishment and personal publicity campaign. That evening he watched excerpts from the interview with Don Solis on the TV news. Between the two he made and received a number of phone calls.

The idea had been a good one and was worth the added $10,000 Solis would cost. The senator was their kind of man, a businessman. So were the others. Anything spent to help them get reelected the following year would be returned with considerable interest.

Hansun just hoped his friend didn’t get too cute with his story. If anything went wrong Solis would have to take all the blame himself. He’d know better than to trace it back to Idaho.

 

ON THE last day of August a tan Buick hardtop with a “Save the Whales” bumper sticker was spotted in the sprawling parking lot at San Francisco International airport. The license plates matched those of the car belonging to Velma Adams of Los Angeles, slain six weeks earlier. In the trunk police found the woman’s pocketbook and clothing. Examination revealed no bloodstains in the car’s interior. A fingerprint check failed to turn up any suspects. The Buick was towed away and a report filed with the Los Angeles police.

 

SEPTEMBER 1 was a Saturday, and Amos Finch drove north out of San Francisco toward Hillside and John Spanner. The weather was warm, the air clear. Traffic was heavy at times on this Labor Day weekend, and Finch finally arrived in Hillside at 1 P.M. He was an hour late, much to his annoyance.

He found Spanner waiting for him at home. The lieutenant seemed unruffled and immensely affable. Finch liked him immediately, even more so after learning that he had read
The Complete Mass Murderer’s Manual
. The two men soon discovered they shared a passion for finely prepared fish as well as aberrant criminal behavior, and they spent a mutually delightful several hours discussing both.

Spanner had never married, much to his regret at times. When confronted by male friends he would simply say he never found the right one. But it was more than that of course, He had a solitary quality about him that made women uneasy, at least those who might have had designs on him. He enjoyed being by himself and didn’t seem to need the constant companionship of others. His fishing and his work occupied most of his waking hours, and whenever he felt the need of a woman he afterward soon again felt a desire for solitude. It was a pattern that had held through most of his adult life. As he grew older he found the need for women lessening. But he was still sometimes dismayed that no one cared especially for him. At these times he believed himself too selfish, and the thought bothered him even more than the loneliness.

Now, however, he had no such thoughts as he listened to Amos Finch describe his theory of a second homicidal maniac. He was impressed by Finch’s knowledge of the psychopathic mind, a knowledge certainly deeper than his, though sadly lacking in practical experience. For example, Finch seemed blissfully unaware of the statistical rarity of the coincidence he was suggesting. Two killers were just too much. Then, too, he accepted without proof the idea that both mutilations were committed with no reasonable motive.

This Spanner refused to grant without further evidence. The mutilation of the face might have been done to prevent identification, the destruction of the girl’s body to suggest insanity instead of deliberate murder by someone known to her, perhaps a relative or lover. There were other possibilities. Maybe only one of the killings was an act of rage. Spanner still held a suspicion that something strange had occurred at Willows in the early morning hours of July 4, still had a feeling that Vincent Mungo might have been the victim of a diabolical plot. But he didn’t know what or how or even by whom. The body had been Bishop’s right down to the scar. He felt he had exhausted all possibilities of investigation.

When Finch had said over the phone that Mungo did not kill the Los Angeles girl, Spanner’s ears had opened. They were still open but his eyes were seeing something different.

He told Finch about Mungo’s sadism. As a youngster he had poured kerosene on cats and set them afire. In a house a few miles from Willows, Mungo had found fresh clothes on the night of his escape. He probably also had taken the kerosene with which he later burned his hospital uniform. In that house were four cats. With kerosene in hand he let them alone. Perhaps he was just in a hurry. But in Los Angeles the killer was in no hurry; he could easily have butchered the cat as well as the girl. Instead he apparently fed the cat.

Another oddity was Thomas Bishop’s missing jacket. Assuming he took it with him that night because of the heavy rain, where was it? Why would he have given it to Mungo before he was killed? If it had been taken from him afterward, it would’ve been soaked with blood. The first blow must have been struck suddenly, without warning, so Mungo couldn’t have demanded it from Bishop under threat. They were friends until the axe fell.

Finch recognized the problem of inconsistencies, especially in aberrant behavior. Loose ends, things left unanswered, riddles unsolved. But he regarded these as minor compared to his theory of two killers. It covered, in his opinion, all the known facts.

At the end the conclusions were several. There were two killers of similar purpose, or Mungo had killed Bishop and destroyed the face for unknown reasons. Or someone, Spanner suggested mysteriously, had devised an incredibly complex and brilliant scheme.

After an excellent fish dinner the two men promised to keep in touch and work together should new thoughts arise. Both reluctantly agreed that the next move was up to the killer, or killers.

 

BY LABOR DAY the September 4 issue of
Newstime
had been on the stands for several days. Sales were good, well above average. The cover was a real shocker, with the composite picture of Mungo and the murdered girl’s disemboweled body. The photo of the body had been bought from someone in the medical examiner’s office and handed personally to Derek Lavery for a goodly sum of money. It was worth the cost.

Sheriff Oates read the story over the weekend. It confirmed his growing suspicion that Vincent Mungo was somehow much smarter than all the doctors who had examined him; otherwise he could never have lasted this long.

Senator Stoner also saw a copy over the weekend. He immediately began fuming. He wanted a target to flail against, as long as he held the upper hand. Now
Newstime
had stolen some of his steam by demanding death for Vincent Mungo. But to come down hard on them he would have to appear soft on Mungo. That was out of the question.

He decided to do nothing for the moment, hoping the source of the idea would be obvious to all. Having no confidence in the public’s intelligence, he doubted it.

 

SOMETIME LATE on the evening of September 6 Bishop found what he had been seeking in Phoenix, Arizona. His two days in town had seemed like two years. The city was still an oven. He had bought a map and driven to all the local points of interest, filling a day. At night he cruised the E. McDowell area of topless bars and prostitutes but nothing appealed to him and he soon returned to the hotel room. It was air-conditioned.

His second day was spent driving in the surrounding desert. The land had a barren beauty that intrigued him, it was somehow different from the deserts of Nevada and California. He stopped often along the deserted roads to take a mental stretch. After a lifetime at Willows, unlimited space made him feel a bit claustrophobic. Darkness engulfed everything by the time he got back to Phoenix. He ate a quiet dinner before continuing his search.

It was late and she was temporarily inactive but he looked like such an easy mark. She was sure she could get him in and out fast.

In her apartment, to which they had come unseen, he told her what he wanted. Right there in the living room, with all his clothes on.

She had guessed it. A real fast mark! “Sure, honey,” she said in her sexiest drawl, “I’m always ready to put my love where my mouth is.” She smiled sweetly, her eyelids fluttering. “Just as soon as you put your money where yours is.”

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