‘And that’s how you found him,’ Nina prompted.
‘No. We found nothing that tied all the girls together. We never came close to finding the man because we could never work out where he’d first seen the girls. That’s why, when Karen disappeared, I ended up falling back on the places the girls had been taken from. They were the only sites we knew were linked to the killer. It was all I had left. There’s no link. No way of finding one. Except … last time he did come back. He came back to visit a site, and I thought it was to relive what had happened there. And once I’d seen him at two of them, I believed he was the man. And so I tracked him, and I found him.’
‘But then,’ Nina said, choosing her words carefully, ‘you discovered that he wasn’t the man after all.’
‘Wrong. The man I killed was the man who abducted some of the girls.’
‘Are you saying the one now is a copycat?’
‘No. I’m saying I killed the waiter, not the man who ordered the beer.’
‘I don’t understand.’
‘The man who sent the parcels was different from the one who abducted the girls.’
Nina stared at him. ‘The Upright Man decides he needs a girl, and he just puts in an order? And then this guy just goes out and snatches them to order? Like a fucking pizza delivery?’
‘That’s why no more girls disappeared after Karen, even though someone delivered the package. The man who abducted them was gone. The killer was still alive.’
‘But serial killers don’t work that way. Okay, there’s been a few who worked in pairs. Leonard Lake and Charles Ng. John and Richard Darrow. The Wests, depending how you look at it. But nothing like this.’
‘Not until now,’ he agreed. ‘But we live in a changing world, where everything is bigger, brighter and better. Convenient. On-demand.’
‘Then how come there were no links between all of the girls? The abductor must have had a standard MO, like you said. We should have been able to find it.’
‘If it was the same man each time.’
Nina just looked at him, and blinked. ‘There were two abductors?’
‘Maybe more. Why not?’
‘Because, John, because The Upright Man has only taken one potential victim in the last two years. Sarah Becker.’
‘Who says it’s just him?’ He picked up the wine bottle, found it was empty. ‘You must have some more wine somewhere.’
Nina followed him as he walked back into the house. He opened the fridge, stared with disbelief at its emptiness.
‘John, I don’t have anything more to drink. What do you mean, who says it’s just him?’
‘How many serial killers you got working in California at this time?’
‘At least seven, maybe as many as eleven. Depends how you define …’
‘Exactly. And those are the ones you know about. In one state, and a state that comes way down the rankings. Call it a hundred and fifty nationwide, and say ten to fifteen of them can afford twenty thousand a pop. Maybe more. Maybe a lot more. That’s a client base. A big one. You could get a fucking bank loan on the back of that business plan.’
‘Even if you’re right, which frankly remains to be proved, how does this help us find Sarah Becker?’
‘It doesn’t,’ he admitted, and his nervous energy abruptly disappeared. He rubbed his forehead with his fingers, hard. ‘I assume the Feds are still running down any lines leading from the family?’
Nina nodded.
‘Well,’ he said, sounding tired and defeated. ‘Then I guess we just wait.’ He was watching the mute television. They were still doing a wrap-up of recent mass murders, background to the high street massacre in England. ‘Have you been following this?’
‘I’ve tried not to,’ she said. They stood in the kitchen and watched it together awhile. There was no real news. They still didn’t know why the man might have done it. A search of his house had turned up some generic hate literature, another gun, a computer full of porn, and a very bad painting of a number of dark figures against a white background, like wraiths in front of snow.
None of it was judged to be important.
‘You have to give me something more than water,’ Sarah had said.
Her voice sounded weak, even to herself. She had repeated this sentence many times. It had become the first thing she said every time the lid was removed.
‘Don’t you like the water?’
‘I like the water. Thank you for the water. But I need something more. You have to give me something more than water.’
‘What do you want?’
‘I need food. Something to eat.’ She coughed. She seemed to be coughing a lot now, and when she did it made her feel nauseous.
‘We eat too much these days,’ the man said. ‘Far too much. It’s killed for us and grown by the ton and then delivered to our door and we sit like pigs at the trough. We’re not even hunters any more. Just scavengers. Hyenas with coupons who pick through the shrink-wrapped leavings of people we’ve never even met.’
‘If you say so. But I have to eat.’
‘I have to eat I have to eat I have to eat,’ the man chanted. He seemed to like the sound the words made, and continued repeating the sentences for some minutes.
Then he was silent for a while, before observing: ‘Once we would go for days without food. We were lean.’
‘Right, the Great Depression. Dust Bowl years, blah.’
The man laughed. ‘That was yesterday and of no interest to us. I meant before the invasion.’
‘The invasion?’ Sarah asked – thinking: Okay, here we get to it. Little green men. The Russians. The Jews. Whatever. She coughed violently again, and for a moment everything went white in front of her eyes, and when he answered his voice sounded as if it was coming from a long way off or as if he was using one of those things like Cher did when she sang ‘Believe’.
‘Yes, invasion. What else would you call it?’ he asked.
She swallowed, screwed her eyes shut and then opened them again. ‘I wouldn’t call it anything. I’m too hungry.’
‘You can’t have any