Read Cold Hearted Online

Authors: Beverly Barton

Tags: #Private Investigators, #Women serial murderers, #Romance, #Serial murder investigation, #Suspense, #Fiction

Cold Hearted (39 page)

Rick chose the path, one that led away from the mansion. When they were no longer within earshot of anyone in or near the house, he paused and confronted Derek. “Who’s your number two suspect?”

“You know enough about profiling to know it’s not an exact science.”

“Yeah, but it’s a notch above looking into a crystal ball.”

Derek grinned. “If we actually have a serial murderer on our hands, then we start with the basics. Most serial killers can be divided into categories based on how they interact with their victims. Some rape or sexually torture. Some mutilate. I’d say your killer executes. He or she may get a thrill from the murder itself, but killing appears to be a means to an end.”

“Yeah, I got that. The killer believes he — or she — is taking care of Jordan, punishing those who hurt her or eliminating those who stand in the way of her happiness.”

Derek nodded. “If we assume that all or at least most of the men, and the first Mrs. Price, were murdered, then we look at each death. Was each murder premeditated, was it planned? Yes, each seems to have been, at least to some degree. What did the victims have in common? Jordan Price. What was the method of murder? It varied from person to person, but in each case, except for Jane Anne Price and Jay Reynolds, the other deaths appeared to be from natural causes, accidents and suicide. It all boils down to one fact — this person is no ordinary, run-of-the-mill, serial killer.”

“You’re giving me a Beginner’s Lesson in Profiling. Why?”

Derek chuckled. “Sometimes I just like to impress people with my knowledge.”

“Or maybe you don’t have a clue as to who might have killed Dan Price or any of the others.”

“Let me paint you a picture and see if you recognize anyone. Our killer is mission oriented. The murders occurred whenever our killer perceived that the victim was harmful in some way to Jordan. That fact dictated when the murders took place. As for where and by what method, where depended on being able to isolate the victim and the method seemed to be whatever could be disguised as anything other than murder.”

“With two exceptions,” Rick said.

Derek nodded. “Our killer is rational and calculating. He or she doesn’t have a specific MO except their single motive of protecting Jordan. These murders, be it two murders or seven, were all about Jordan.”

“The killer loves Jordan.”

“The killer is obsessed with Jordan,” Derek said. “My educated guess is that this person loves Jordan to the point of obsession. She is the beginning and end of their world. They need her the way they need the air that they breathe. If Jordan isn’t the killer, then find the person who thinks of the two of them as one. The killer has no life without Jordan and probably believes that Jordan has no life without him or her.”

“Crap! That tells me two things — you haven’t narrowed down the suspects list by much and we’re dealing with someone who is completely mental.”

“Our killer probably appears normal,” Derek said. “He or she lives a relatively ordinary life just like the average person. A person can be evil without being abnormal.”

“You’ve read over the files on each possible suspect. Does anyone send up a red flag?”

“The people in Mrs. Price’s life seem to be extraordinarily devoted to her. Her stepmother and stepsister, and to some extent her stepbrother. I wouldn’t rule out J.C. Harris, but I’d put him at the bottom of the list. Tammy Harris could be obsessed with Jordan. She loves being her sister and possibly identifies closely with her, but she wouldn’t head my list either simply because I don’t believe she’s smart enough to have gotten away with murder numerous times. Of the three members of the Harris family, Roselynne is the most likely.”

“What about Rene, Devon, and Darlene?”

“Rene is smart, calculating and one of Jordan’s best friends. I’d keep her on the list, along with Roselynne and Darlene Wright. Mrs. Wright appears to be totally devoted to Jordan. It’s possible that her devotion turned to obsession at some point along the way.”

“You’re forgetting Devon Markham.”

Derek shook his head. “I didn’t forget Devon, I simply left the best for last. I’d place him at the top of the list. He has known Jordan longer than any of the others. He loves her like a sister, like a best friend, perhaps loves her as the other half of himself. She has loved him, protected him, defended him, and sacrificed for him since they were children. It wouldn’t be a stretch to believe that he would do anything for her, just as she would for him. Even kill.”

Of all the possible suspects, Devon headed Derek’s list, just as he did Rick’s. And of all the suspects, Devon was the one Jordan loved more, trusted more, and would never believe guilty.

“I agree,” Rick said. “But why would Devon kill Dan Price? They were lovers. They had been in a committed relationship for twelve years.”

“For the same reasons men kill their wives and women kill their husbands. Infidelity. Money. Freedom. And there are always incidents where a spouse kills a terminally ill mate who is suffering. If Devon Markham knew about his lover’s Alzheimer’s—”

“He didn’t. Supposedly no one knew, except the senator’s doctor.”

“Supposedly,” Derek said. “All you have is each person’s word that Dan Price didn’t share that information. If the senator would tell anyone about the diagnosis, don’t you think it would be his partner?”

Rick nodded. He had really hoped that Derek’s profiles would point the finger of suspicion at someone other than Devon. If any one of her family and close friends turned out to be the murderer, it would break Jordan’s heart; but if it was Devon, Jordan would be devastated.

“Did Griff tell you anything about the idea of our setting a trap for the killer?” Rick asked.

“He mentioned it.”

“And?”

“It might work. But on the other hand, you have to know you could be risking your life. And there’s always the chance that he won’t take the bait. That is assuming Devon is the killer.”

“You think he is.”

“I think it’s possible, especially if he thinks like a woman.”

“What do you mean?”

“My initial conclusion was that the killer is female, but I altered that assumption when I saw that Devon Markham fit all the other criteria. I think he’s the most likely suspect out of the six that you offered me. But you cannot rule out any of the others, especially not Roselynne, Rene, and Darlene.”

“When I asked Roselynne for permission to have her husband’s body exhumed, she refused. Maybe she didn’t want anyone to find out that his heart attack wasn’t really a simple heart attack, but actually murder.”

“You’d think she’d want to do anything to help prove Mrs. Price innocent of past crimes, wouldn’t you? What about Darlene Wright? Did she refuse to give you permission to have her son’s body exhumed?”

“No. Actually Jordan told me, in no uncertain terms, not to ask her.”

“Ask her anyway and see what she says. If she’s willing to have his body exhumed and an autopsy performed, I’d say that means she believes her son’s death was an accident and neither she nor Jordan has anything to hide.”

“I should have asked her. But Jordan is our client and as a general rule, Powell’s does what the client wants.”

“I believe Ryan Price actually hired you, didn’t he? If I understood correctly, Jordan Price joined him in the request after the fact.”

“That’s right, but she’s been as determined as Ryan to find out the truth.”

“What about Ryan Price?”

“What about him?” Rick asked.

“He’s not among the suspects you listed. Why not?”

“As you said, he hired us to prove the senator’s death wasn’t suicide. If he’d killed his brother, he wouldn’t have questioned the ME’s findings, would he? Besides, his relationship with Jordan doesn’t go back far enough for him to have had anything to do with any of the deaths before the senator’s.”

Derek nodded, apparently agreeing with Rick.

“If you want details in writing, I can send you everything by e-mail,” Derek said. “I need to get going. I’m supposed to be in Atlanta by one. Griff’s got me on speed dial, so if there’s anything else I can do, just let me know.”

Rick walked Derek to his car, shook his hand, and thanked him. Now that he had a professional profiler’s opinion, which just happened to match his own, Rick felt more confident about their plan to trap Dan Price’s killer. All he had to do was convince a ruthless murderer that he, Rick Carson, was a threat to Jordan.

 

 

Rick set things in motion later that day by questioning each suspect individually, masking his inquiries under the guise of wanting to help Jordan. He’d said the same things, asked the same questions, made the same observations with each of them, beginning with Roselynne. She had defended Jordan and even scolded him for questioning her innocence; then practically in the same breath, she had encouraged Rick to romance Jordan.

“You’ve got a thing for my girl,” Roselynne had said. “And as her mama, I’m giving you permission to make your move. I know it doesn’t seem like the right time, but Lord knows Jordan’s been in need of a real man for quite some time.”

Apparently, despite the fact that he’d all but come right out and told Roselynne he believed Jordan might be a murderer, she saw him as a potential lover for Jordan, not her captor.

He had fared a little better with Rene, who had told him off in no uncertain terms. “How can you possibly still think Jordan killed Dan? And Boyd? And even Robby Joe? I thought you knew her better than that by now. I thought you honestly cared for Jordan. What’s going on? Are you pretending to be her friend so you can trap her into confessing? Well, forget it. Jordan is not a killer!”

Questioning Devon had been like walking a tightrope. Rick wanted him to believe that he suspected Jordan had killed Dan, Dan’s ex-wife, her first husband and all the others, too, while the truth was that he actually thought Devon could be the murderer.

“I’ve seen the way you look at Jordan,” Devon had said. “And the way you are when you’re with her. You care about her and I don’t believe it’s an act. So how can you possibly believe that she’s capable of murdering seven people?”

“I don’t want to think it,” Rick had told him. “But all the evidence points to her. No one else has a motive for each murder. Only Jordan. If she did kill Dan and the others, she needs help. As her oldest and dearest friend, you should want to know the truth and if she’s guilty, get her the help she needs.”

“Does Jordan know that you still suspect her? My God, she trusts you and you’re betraying that trust!”

His talk with Devon had ended abruptly when Devon, eyes flashing with outrage, had walked out on him. If he’d wanted to make Devon angry, he had achieved his goal.

Three down and one to go.

He found Darlene alone in the kitchen, sitting at the table by the windows, a cup of what he assumed was tea in her hand.

“Good afternoon,” he said as he approached her.

She glanced at him and smiled. “Good afternoon, Mr. Carson.”

“May I join you?” he asked.

“Would you like a cup of tea?”

“No, thanks. But I’d like to talk to you, if you have time.”

“Won’t you sit down.”

He joined her at the table, taking the seat across from her. “You want to help Jordan, don’t you?”

“Yes, certainly.”

“You know that she’s considered the most likely suspect in Dan Price’s murder.”

“Yes, I know, and it’s absolutely ridiculous.”

“Some people believe she not only murdered the senator, but also her first husband, her father, a former boss and even your son.”

Darlene eyed him speculatively. “I think I know where this is going. Roselynne told me that you asked her for permission to have Wayne Harris’s body exhumed and an autopsy performed.”

“She refused,” Rick said. “Powell’s thought if an autopsy proved Mr. Harris died of natural causes—”

“I’m sure he did. And I know, without a doubt, that Robby Joe died from injuries he received in the car wreck and that the wreck was an accident.”

“If we could prove—”

“You can,” Darlene told him. “I had what was left of the car inspected thoroughly at the time. I had planned to sue the manufacturer if the accident had been caused by any type of default. There was none. So you see, if your theory is that there might have been tampering, there wasn’t.”

“Do you still have that report?” Rick asked.

“Yes, I do. And if you believe that it’s possible Robby Joe was drugged or poisoned and his condition either caused the wreck or the wreck was a cover-up, then an autopsy might prove otherwise. Is that right?”

“Yes, ma’am.”

“Then you have my permission to exhume Robby Joe’s body and have an autopsy performed.”

“No!” Jordan cried.

They turned and stared at Jordan standing in the doorway, a stricken expression on her face.

“Yes,” Darlene said. “You didn’t kill Dan or anyone else. Certainly not Robby Joe. If allowing them to do an autopsy will prove he wasn’t murdered, then let them do the autopsy.”

“No. You don’t have to do this.” Jordan came into the room, her gaze searing Rick with her barely restrained anger. “I thought I told you not to ask her. I believed you understood—”

“Don’t blame Mr. Carson.” Darlene rose to her feet and held out her hand to Jordan. “He didn’t ask me. I made the offer because I want to help you, because it’s what Robby Joe would want me to do.”

 

Chapter 29

 

During the next few days, Rick came to understand something important about Jordan, something he had sensed about her for weeks now. The lady had an uncanny ability to hide her true emotions. Although she had been angry with him since this past Thursday and was still upset with him, she played her part in their public charade. But in private, she barely spoke to him. He could deal with her coldness even if it did piss the hell out of him. What he had real difficulty dealing with were his doubts. Jordan’s reluctance to have Robby Joe Wright’s body exhumed worried him. Did that mean she had something to hide, that if an autopsy was performed on Robby Joe, it would reveal that he had been drugged or poisoned?

When Devon had learned that Darlene had given Powell’s permission to have her son’s casket unearthed, he had reacted just as Rick had thought he would, with a great deal of hostility, all of it directed at Rick. But committed to their plan of trapping Dan’s killer, Jordan had defended Rick to Devon and the others, pretending she agreed with Rick.

Other books

The Accidental Scot by Patience Griffin
Daring Masquerade by Margaret Tanner
In the Shadow of Death by Gwendolyn Southin
A Waltz for Matilda by Jackie French
Counterfeit Bride by Sara Craven
Lakota Renegade by Baker, Madeline
The Bone Garden: A Novel by Tess Gerritsen
The Bad Baron's Daughter by Laura London
Invisible Romans by Robert C. Knapp


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024