That wasn’t the way you treated people. There would be retribution; that was not only her right, but her duty too.
She recited to herself the words of Exodus 21: 23. ‘And if any mischief follow, then thou shalt give life for life, eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot, burning for burning, wound for wound, stripe for stripe.’
Burning for burning. Stripe for stripe.
Jesslyn realized she was heading towards Muncy; reflex, perhaps, or providence. Ahead, she saw signs to the DuBois travel plaza, where she’d stopped yesterday.
She pulled off the interstate, parked the Camry, and went back into the burger bar.
Esmerelda wasn’t on duty today. At the counter was a guy with acne and eyeglasses who could barely have been out of his teens. His nametag proclaimed him not only to be ‘Kevin’, but also the manager.
‘Help you?’ he said, in exactly the same tone Esmerelda had used the day before. Must have been something they taught at burger college.
Jesslyn couldn’t remember feeling as demeaned as she did now. Only her faith that God would provide, and that He moved in mysterious ways, forced the index finger of her right hand up and in the direction of the EMPLOYEES WANTED sign.
‘I’d like a job, please,’ she said.
Monday, October 18th. 6:53 p.m.
‘You don’t recognize me?’ I ask.
Michael Redwine shakes his head. He can’t speak, as I’ve put duct tape across his mouth; and he can’t take the tape off or lash out at me, as I’ve cuffed his hands behind his back. The cuffs are those thin plastic ones, good for one use only.
One use only is all I need.
Besides, the plastic won’t last long, not with what I’ve got in store for him; but by the time he’ll be able to break them off, he’ll be long past doing anything at all.
His mouth moves furiously around the gag, spilling saliva down his jaw. It takes me a moment to work out what he’s saying.
‘You’re praying?’ I ask.
He looks at me with wide eyes and nods.
‘That’s funny,’ I say. ‘I didn’t think people like you believed in a higher power.’
His brows contract in puzzlement.
I look round his apartment again.
Nothing much wrong with it, truth be told. He lives in The Pennsylvanian, about the most luxurious apartment block in all of downtown. It’s built on the site of the old Union rail station, and the arched canopy which covers the main entrance is often cited as the most captivating architectural arrangement in all of Pittsburgh.
The Pennsylvanian has thirteen stories, the apartments getting ever grander the higher you go. Redwine’s apartment is on the tenth floor, where the building’s loft homes are located: all elegant arched windows, crown moldings, wood paneling and intricately detailed, fifteen-foot ceilings. The windows give on to warehouse roofs and overpasses swooping towards the Strip. Far below me, streetlights glow low sodium.
This, all this luxury, is what you get when you’re one of the premier brain surgeons in all Pennsylvania, possibly in the entire United States.
And all this luxury means nothing when you’ve done what Michael Redwine did, and you’re going to be punished like I’m about to punish him.
I open my bag and bring out a red plastic container. It can take a gallon, and pretty much everyone in the world recognizes its shape and what it’s designed to hold.
Redwine is screaming mutely behind the duct tape even before I open the lid and let him smell the gasoline.
‘Remember what you did?’ I ask, beginning to pour the gasoline over his head.
He jerks his body across the floor and tries to stand; anything to get away from the pulsing glugs that mat his hair to his forehead and run into his eyes.
He kicks at me, but I skip easily out of reach, still pouring.
The gasoline is drenching his shirt now, rivuleting down his trousers.
‘Remember what you said to me?’ I ask.
He throws himself against the wall; to knock himself out and spare himself the agony of what he knows is coming, perhaps, or as a last desperate call for help.
Neither works. He’s still conscious, and no one’s coming.
‘And remember what I said to you?’
When the plastic can’s empty, I put it back in my bag.
I take out the juggling torch and the lighter. Then I put the bag by the door, the easier to grab it fast on my way out if I have to make a sharp exit.
I light the torch’s wick and look at Redwine. I don’t think I’ve ever seen anyone more terrified in my entire life.
‘Isaiah chapter fifty-nine, verse seventeen,’ I say. ‘“For I put on righteousness as a breastplate, and a helmet of salvation upon my head; and I put on the garments of vengeance for clothing, and am clad with zeal as a cloak.”’
The torch flares in my hand like the fount of justice. I take a step towards him.
He backs away until he reaches the far corner and can go no further.
He curls himself into a ball and turns his face away from me.
I lower the torch to his shoulder.
From the point of view of a homicide detective, fire scenes are among the most difficult of all to work. What fire doesn’t destroy, it damages; and what it damages, the firefighters tend to destroy in their efforts to extinguish the blaze. None of this bodes well for the preservation of evidence. Only bomb sites boast more destruction and disorder.
The fire department had been on the scene within four minutes of first being called, when one of Redwine’s neighbors had smelt burning, looked out of the window, and seen large black clouds billowing from Redwine’s apartment. The firemen had evacuated the entire apartment block and set to putting the fire out.
It had taken them two and a half hours, but they’d managed it, and had kept it contained to the apartment of origin, more or less. There were scorch marks in the apartment above and those to either side, but nothing worse than that, and no serious structural damage, except to Redwine’s apartment itself.
The senior fire officer on site having declared the building safe, Patrese and Beradino pulled on crime-scene overalls, shoe covers and latex gloves, in that order, and entered Redwine’s apartment.
They’d been called in the moment the firefighters had discovered both the body – presumed to be Redwine’s, though obviously not proved as such yet – and the demarcation line on the carpet next to him.
A demarcation line, in fire terms, marks the boundary