Chapter 31

Price

GRIFFIN WAS DIALING HIS CELL PHONE, NAVIGATING HIS way furiously through tiny Providence streets to the I-95 on-ramp while Fitz clutched the dashboard and continued cursing colorfully under his breath. Jillian answered the phone, and Griffin immediately started talking.

“Jillian, I need you to tell me something and I need you to be honest.”

“Griffin? Good morning to you, too-”

“I know you're angry with the police,” he interrupted steadily. “I know you think we failed your sister and I know you haven't had a lot of incentive to cooperate with us. But I need your help now. I need you to tell me if you ever met a man named David Price. And don't lie, Jillian. This is deadly serious.”

Silence. He gripped the wheel tighter, wondering what that silence meant, and wishing that his stomach wasn't beginning to turn queasily while the ringing picked up in his ears. Breathe deep, release. Eighteen months of hard work. Don't lose sight of the ball now.

“The name sounds familiar,” Jillian said finally. “Wait a minute. Wasn't he your neighbor? Griffin, what is this about?”

“Did your sister ever mention his name?”

“No, not at all.”

“Ever get any correspondence? Maybe something in the mail?”

“No. Wait a minute.” There was a muffled clunk as she moved the receiver from her ear. Then he heard her voice shout out, “Toppi. Have you ever received anything from someone named David Price? Check with Mom.” Another muffled thunk, then Jillian was back on the line. “They both say no. Griffin, you arrested him, right? You sent him to jail… a long time ago. Why are you asking about him now?”

Griffin ignored her question, and instead asked one of his own. “What are your plans for the day?”

“I told Mom I would take her to see Trish. Griffin-”

“Don't.”

“Don't?”

“I want you to stay close to home. Or better yet. Load up Toppi and your mom and take them to the Narragansett house. I'll arrange for a pair of uniforms to meet you there.”

“Did he get out of jail?” Jillian asked quietly.

“No.”

“But you're targeting him. Is he involved in all this? Did David Price somehow hurt my sister?”

“That's what I'm trying to find out. Any word on Carol?”

“I was just about to call the hospital.”

“I should send uniforms there as well,” he muttered out loud, then wished he hadn't.

Jillian's voice grew even more somber on the other end of the line. “Something's happened, hasn't it? Something bad.”

“I'll be in touch,” Griffin told her. “And Jillian. Be careful.”

He flipped shut his phone. Mostly because he didn't know what else to say. Or maybe because he did know what he wanted to say, and now was not the time or place, especially with Fitz sitting red-faced and haggard beside him.

He took the on-ramp for 95 South, headed for the ACI and simultaneously tossed his cell phone to Fitz. “You're up.”

Fitz dialed the Pesaturo residence. Thirty seconds later, they both heard Meg's mother pick up the phone.

“Detective Fitzpatrick here,” Fitz said roughly, then cleared his throat. “I, uh, I need to speak to Miss Pesaturo, please.”

“Detective Fitzpatrick!” Meg's mother said warmly. “How are you this morning?”

Fitz kept his tone gruff. “Mrs. Pesaturo, I need to speak with Meg.”

Laurie Pesaturo faltered. From the driver's seat, Griffin could hear the confusion in her staticky voice as she asked Fitz to wait one moment. It was several more minutes, however, before she was back on the line. “I'm sorry,” she said stiffly. “Meg seems to have stepped out.”

“She's not home?”

“Not at the moment.”

“Do you know where she is?”

An even stiffer reply. “Not at the moment.”

Fitz cut to the chase. “Mrs. Pesaturo, have you ever heard the name David Price?”

A pause. “Detective, what is this about?”

“Please, just answer the question, ma'am. Do you know, or have you ever known, a man named David Price?”

“No.”

“Meg has never mentioned his name?”

“Not that I recall.”

“Has he ever sent anything to your home? Perhaps called?”

“If he had done that,” Laurie Pesaturo said crisply, “then I would know the name, wouldn't I? Now I'm asking you again, Detective. What is this about?”

“I would like you to find Meg, Mrs. Pesaturo. I'd like you to keep her close to home today. In fact, it might not be a bad time for your husband to take a day off, spend the afternoon with his family. Perhaps you could all pay Uncle Vinnie a visit, something like that.”

“Detective…”

“It's just a precaution,” Fitz added quietly.

Another pause. And then, “All right, Detective. Thank you for calling. Will you call again?”

“I hope to touch base again this afternoon, ma'am.”

“Thank you, we would appreciate that.”

“Find Meg,” Fitz repeated, and then they were turning into the vast facility that comprised the ACI.

Griffin found the red-brick admin building that housed the prison's Special Investigation Unit as well as the state police's ACI unit. He turned the car into a parking space, cut the ignition. He no longer looked at Fitz. He was focusing on the growing tension in his shoulders, that steadily building ringing in his ears. Breathe deep, release. Breathe deep, release.

“Hey, Griffin baby, you think this is bad? Let me tell you about your wife…”

Fitz got out of the car. After another moment, Griffin followed suit.


The ACI “campus” spreads out over four hundred acres of land. With brick towers and barbed-wire fence visible from the freeway, the facility is actually half a dozen buildings nestled among half a dozen other government institutions. Nearly four thousand inmates reside in the ACI at any given time, and they generate enough internal and external complaints to employ six ACI special investigators and two state detectives full time. The special investigators are the first responders, handling all inmate-to-inmate complaints. In situations, however, where there are criminal charges-serious assault, murder for hire, drug trafficking, etc.-the state police are brought in to lead the inquiry.

In between these cases, the state detectives spend their time receiving calls from various inmates looking to flip on various other inmates in return for various considerations. The detectives get plenty of calls. Very few of them, though, ever lead to anything.

That's what Griffin had been hoping for when he'd first learned of David Price's outreach. Now Griffin wasn't so sure anymore.

Corporal Charpentier met Griffin and Fitz in the lobby of the admin building, then led them down the one flight of stairs to the state's basement office. Griffin immediately wrinkled his nose at the stale air, while Fitz actually recoiled.

“I know, I know,” Charpentier said. “In theory, the building is now asbestos-free. As the people actually inhaling, however…” He let the rest of the thought trail off. Griffin and Fitz got the picture. They were also both getting a headache.

Charpentier came to the end of the hall, opened the door and led them into a tiny office. Two desks were set up face-to-face, topped with computer terminals, manila folders and a variety of paperwork. The remainder of the cramped space was taken up by two desk chairs and a wall of gunmetal-gray filing cabinets. No cheery office plants here. Just cream-painted cinder-block walls, gray industrial carpet and dim yellow lights. Police officers led such glamorous lives.

“They're bringing him down to the rear hall,” Charpentier said, taking a seat and gesturing for them to do the same. “They need another ten minutes.”

“All right,” Griffin said. He didn't sit. He didn't want anyone to see that his body was beginning to twitch.

“Personally, I don't think he knows jack shit,” Charpentier added, then gave Griffin an appraising look.

“How is he adapting?” Griffin asked.

“Better than you'd think.” Charpentier leaned back, shrugged. “He's young, he's small, he's a convicted pedophile. Frankly, he's got jail ‘bitch' written all over him. But I don't know. I heard this story from one of the corrections officers. Six guys surrounded David Price in the prison showers. Were going to give him a little prison indoctrination, show him the way this place works for small, flabby-muscled baby-killers. Then David started talking. And talking and talking and talking. The guards were running to the scene, of course, expecting to find carnage, and… And David Price was now surrounded by six laughing guys, not hitting him, not pummeling him, but slapping him merrily on the back. Basically, in three minutes or less, he'd turned them into six gigantic, brand-new friends.” Charpentier shook his head. “I don't get it myself, but in another year, he'll be running the place, the world's smallest prison warlord.”

“He's good with people,” Griffin said.

Charpentier nodded, then slowly leaned forward. His gaze went from Griffin to Fitz to Griffin again. “You want to hear something wild? Assaults in maximum have doubled since David was assigned there. I was just looking at the stats again this morning. Code Blue nearly every day for the last nine months. It's been open season over there. And the only new variable I can see is a man who could still buy his clothes from Garanimals.”

“You think he's responsible,” Fitz said bluntly.

Charpentier shrugged. “We can't prove anything. The guys always have their reasons for why they did what they did. But… David talks a lot. All the time. He's like some frigging politician, working the yard, passing notes along the cell block. And the next thing you know, we'll have trouble. A lot of trouble. Guys ending up in the infirmary impaled with sharp metal objects kind of trouble. I don't know what the hell Price says or does, but there's something scary about him.”

“He's very good with people,” Griffin said again.

“Let me tell you about your wife…”

The corporal's phone rang. He picked it up. “All right. They're ready for us.”


ACI's maximum-security building, aka Old Max, is a singularly impressive building. Built in 1878 from thick gray stone, the three-story structure is dominated by a gigantic white-painted center dome. In the old days, a light would burn in that dome, green light if everything was okay, red light if something was wrong. The folks in Providence would then send a horse and buggy to check things out.

The prison also boasts one of the oldest working mechanical systems in the nation. Most prisons are electronic these days. Push a button to buzz open cell door A or cell block B. Old Max still has working levers for operating the thick steel doors. The inmates probably don't appreciate these things, but it lights a fire under the history buffs.

Mostly, Old Max has sheer charisma. The thick stone walls look like prison walls. The heavy, steel-constructed six-by-eight cells, stacked three tiers high and thirty-three cells long, look like prison cells. The black-painted steel doors, groaning open in front of you, snapping shut behind you, sound like prison doors. The steady assault of odors-sweat, urine, fresh paint, ammonia, BO-smell like prison odors. And the rest of the sounds-men shouting, TVs blaring, metal clinking, radios crackling, water running, men pissing-sound like prison sounds.

Tens of thousands of men have passed through these gates in the past hundred years. Rapists, murderers, drug lords, Mafiosi, thieves. If these walls could talk, it wouldn't be words at all. It would be screams.

Griffin and Fitz signed in at the reception area. Civilians were required to pass through a metal detector. As members of law enforcement, however, they got to skip that honor, and they and Corporal Charpentier were immediately buzzed through a pair of gates into the main control area. Security was still tight. They had to wait for the gate to close behind them. Then a corrections officer who sat in an enclosed booth gestured for Griffin and Fitz to drop their badges into a metal swivel tray. The officer rotated the tray around to him, inspected the IDs, nodded once, dropped in two red visitor's passes and swiveled the tray back around.

Only after Griffin and Fitz had fastened the visitor's passes to their shirts did the white-painted steel gate in front of them slowly slide back and allow them to proceed into the bullpen. There they stood again, waiting for the gate to close behind them before a new set of gates opened in front of them. Then they had finally, officially arrived into the rear hall of Old Max.

Half a dozen guards sat around the red-tiled, white-painted space. Directly to the left was the door leading to the left wing of cells. Ahead of that was the lieutenant's office, where two corrections officers were monitoring the bank of security cameras. Straight ahead was the corridor leading to the cafeteria. And to the right was a visiting room, used by corrections officers for official business. Today, David Price sat shackled inside. Two other corrections officers sat outside. They looked up at Griffin, nodded once, then made a big show of looking away.

Did they think he was going to attack the kid again? Was this their way of saying that if he did, they didn't care? It sounded like Price had been keeping the whole facility hopping, whether the officers could prove anything or not. Even in maximum, inmates got a good eight hours a day outside their cell-eating, working, seeing visitors, hanging in the yard, etc. In other words, plenty of opportunities to mingle with other inmates and plenty of time to cause trouble.

This place really was too good for Price.

Corporal Charpentier opened the door. Griffin and Fitz followed him in.

Sitting in a tan prison-issued jumpsuit, David Price didn't look like much. He never had, really. At five eight, one hundred and fifty pounds, he wouldn't stand out in a crowd. Light brown hair, deep brown eyes, a softly rounded face that made him look seventeen when he was really closer to thirty-two. He wasn't handsome, but he wasn't ugly. A nice young man, that's how women would classify him.

Maybe that's even what Cindy had said, that first day he'd stopped by: “Hey, Griffin, come meet our new neighbor, David Price. So what's a nice young kid like you doing living in a place like this?”

David Price was smiling at him.

“You look good,” Price said. He didn't seem to notice either Corporal Charpentier or Detective Fitz. They were irrelevant to the matters at hand. Griffin understood this, probably they did, too. God, please keep him from killing David Price.

David was still smiling. A nice, friendly smile. The kind a kid might give his older brother. That was Price's thing. He never challenged directly, particularly larger men. He'd play the sidekick, the loyal student, the good friend. He'd be respectful but never gushing. Complimentary but never insincere. And at first you simply dismissed him, but then he kind of grew on you, and the next thing you knew, you were looking forward to his company, even eager for his praise. And things started to shift. Until it was never really clear anymore who was in charge and who was the sidekick, but you didn't think about it much anyway, because it seemed as if you were doing what you wanted to do, even if you didn't really remember wanting to do those kinds of things before.

Men liked David-he was the perfect unassuming friend. Women liked David-he was the ideal nonthreatening male companion. Children liked David-he was the favorite uncle they never had.

Man, Griffin should've just killed him when he had the chance.

“Have you replaced Cindy yet?” David asked conversationally. “Or is no other woman good enough? I imagine it can't be that easy to find another soul mate.”

“Shut the fuck up,” Fitz snarled.

“Tell us about Sylvia Blaire,” Griffin said. He pulled out a chair but didn't take a seat.

David cocked his head to the side. He wasn't ready for business yet. Griffin hadn't thought that he would be. “I miss having dinners at your house, you know. I used to love watching the two of you together. Cindy-n-Griffin, Griffin-n-Cindy. Gave me faith that there was something worthwhile in life. I hope someday I get to fall in love like that, too.”

“What's his name?”

“Hey now, Griff, that's sorta rude, don't you think?”

“I want the name of the man who raped and murdered Sylvia Blaire.” Griffin placed his hands on the table and leaned forward pointedly.

David merely smiled again and held up his shackled hands. “Hey now, no need to get physical, Griff. I'm quite helpless. Can't you see?” Another one of those goddamn sugary smiles.

Griffin's voice rose in spite of himself. “Give me the name.”

Instead, David looked at Fitz. “You don't look the type to bail a guy out,” he said matter-of-factly. “Now Mike Waters, he was a guy. Leapt forward and took the hit, so to speak. And your buddy Griff here, he can pack a punch. Have you ever seen the pictures of Mike's face?” The kid let out a low whistle. “You would've thought he'd gone ten rounds with Tyson. I imagine he got some first-rate plastic surgery when all was said and done, and probably at taxpayer expense. You might want to bear that in mind, Mr. Providence Detective. You look like you could use a little plastic surgery, or at least some liposuction here and there. And there and here. Say, I don't suppose french fries are your favorite food or anything?”

“Give us the fucking name,” Fitz snarled.

David sighed. Blatant hostility had always bored him. He returned to Griffin. “I thought you'd at least write.”

“You're going to tell us what you know,” Griffin said quietly. “We both know that you will. Otherwise, you can't have any fun.”

“Did you get my letters?”

Griffin shut up. He should've done this sooner. For David to play his game, he had to have input. Take away your participation, and there was nothing left for him to manipulate. No more happy reindeer games. No more jolly schoolboy fun.

“It's not so bad in here, you know,” David said, switching strategies. “Food's actually pretty good. I gather the fuckers in charge have figured out it's best to make sure the animals in the zoo are well fed. Keeps us from sharpening our fangs on one another-or maybe on them. I'm learning inner peace through quality time in a lotus position, and wouldn't you know it, I have a natural gift for carpentry. I know, I'll make you a table, Griff. Carve your initials in the base. For old times' sake. Come on, any size.”

Fitz opened his mouth. Griffin shot him a look, and the detective frowned but fell silent.

“Ooooh, just like a trained seal,” David said. He was smiling joyfully, all smooth round cheeks and big brown eyes. Back with his favorite kind of audience, he was happy. He was horrible. Jesus Christ, he looked like he was barely sixteen.

“Who raped and murdered Sylvia Blaire?” Griffin said quietly.

“Eddie Como.”

“How did you meet?”

“Griff, buddy, I never met Eddie. That's what I keep saying. It's his roommate, Jimmy Woods. We've spent some time together here in good ol' Max.”

“I'm not interested in your patsy, David. I want to know about the real College Hill Rapist. Tell me, which one of you thought of the douche?”

For the first time, Price faltered. He disguised it well, recovering swiftly and smiling again. On his lap, however, his fingers were beginning to fidget with his shackles. “You like this case, don't you, Griffin? It's complicated. Clever. You always appreciated that. Which one of the three women do you think hired Eddie Como's assassin? Or was it a member of their families? Personally, I got my money on the cold one. What's her name? Oh yeah, Jillian Hayes.”

“David, you have ten seconds to say something useful, or we're all walking out that door. Ten, nine, eight, seven, six-”

“I know who the real College Hill Rapist is.”

Griffin shrugged. “I don't believe you. Five, four, three-”

“Hey, hey, hey, don't be too hasty, man. Haven't all those months of therapy taught you anything? Slow it down. Take it easy. It wasn't my idea to yank your chain. He came to me.”

Griffin finally paused. “The College Hill Rapist came to you?”

“Yeah. Sure.”

Griffin already knew he was lying. “Why?”

“I don't know. Maybe he heard about my rep. Maybe he just desired a decent conversationalist. I can't read some guy's fucking mind. But he came to me, and we, uh, we talked about a few things.”

“How to commit a crime?”

“We both had an interest.”

“How to fuck with the police.”

David Price smiled. “Oh yeah. We both had an interest.”

“Congratulations, Price,” Fitz spoke up. “You just became an accessory to multiple rapes and murders. Now you're going to have to keep talking just to save your dumb-ass hide.”

David shot the detective a look of disdain. “Save my ass from what? The life in prison I'm already serving? Hey, buddy, haven't you heard about me? I'm the guy who befriends little kids on the playground. I hand them some candy, I push them on the swings. And then I take them home, down into my soundproofed basement, where I strip off their cute little clothes and-”

“You still haven't said anything new yet,” Griffin said. “Three, two, one-”

“He puts Como's little swimmers into each douche.”

“Fuck it, David. I told you that.”

“It was my idea,” David said seriously. “That DNA is troubling stuff. Hell, that's why I had to bury my pretty treats. Let decomposition do its nasty work. And then it occurred to me. DNA so likes to be up there in those deep, dark places… Why not let it have its way, man? Why not go with the flow? Don't hide DNA, own it. Man, bring it to the fucking game.”

Griffin stood up. “Thanks for repeating my own theory back to me. You're a shithead, David. Always have been. Always will be.”

Griffin headed for the door. And behind him, David Price said, “He knew Eddie Como. Eddie probably didn't know him. But he met the great Eddie Como. Met him one afternoon, probably for no more than ten minutes, just enough time for poor dumb Eddie to mention that he worked for the blood center. After that, my friend, his fate was sealed. The College Hill Rapist had his man.”

Griffin turned slowly. “He stalked Eddie Como?”

“He did his homework.”

“And what, stole old condoms out of Eddie's trash can?”

David had that sly look back on his face. “I won't answer that. But it is the key question, isn't it? How do you steal a man's mambo jambo? It's not like we lose track of it.”

“I don't believe you.”

“What's so hard to believe, Griff? That I'd help someone attack young college coeds? Or that you still can't do a thing to stop us? You got a serial rapist on the loose, Detective Sergeant Roan Griffin. Someone who looks like Eddie Como, sounds like Eddie Como and tests as Eddie Como. In other words, you have absolutely no fucking idea who he really is. So you sit down. And you listen up. Because I do know his goddamn name, and you're going to give me something for it. You're going to give me whatever I want, or you'll get to see my face on the five o'clock news, telling the frightened public how some overpumped, overranked state trooper is willfully disregarding critical evidence which could stop the bastard murdering their precious daughters. Now how do you like that?”

Griffin came forward. Then he took another step, and another step. Breathe deep, part of his mind said. The rest of him didn't give a flying fuck. His hands were fisted, his muscles were tensed and his face was mean. He should've killed David that day. He should've pounded his own friends into the ground, just so he could've gotten to David and ripped off his too-cute, too-smart, lying head.

“You're not getting out,” he said harshly. “No matter what you say, you're not getting out.”

“College coeds are dying-”

“Ten kids are dead!”

“I can guarantee you a new body by tonight. Count on it.”

“And I can guarantee you a transfer to Super Max. No more carpentry classes, yoga or cafeteria hours. Just the rest of your life, rotting alone in a six-by-eight cell.”

“Do you want to punish me, Detective Sergeant, or do you want to stop the man preying on pretty brunettes? Think carefully before you answer. The parents of all the College Hill Rapist's future victims breathlessly await your reply.”

“You little fucker-” Fitz snarled.

Impatiently, David cut him off. “Six o'clock,” he said crisply, eyes on Griffin's face. “Standard hardship leave for three hours. I get to have street clothes, you get to put me in shackles. I get to go into the outside world, you get to supervise. That's the deal.”

“No.”

“Oh yes. Or I go straight to the press and tell them that the same detective who tried to break my face eighteen months ago, now won't protect their precious little girls out of spite. Think about it, man. You don't deal with me, and another girl dies. You don't deal with me, and the public will eat you for dinner.” David glanced at the overhead clock. “It's ten A.M. now. You have until noon to decide.”

“We don't make deals with pedophiles.”

“Sure you do. You make deals with whoever has the fucking information. Now ask the question, Griff. Come on, man. Ask me what you really need to know.” David leaned forward. He stared up at Griffin with that wide beaming smile, that round choirboy face.

“You didn't hurt her,” Griffin said abruptly.

David Price blinked.

“You like to think you did. But you didn't. Cindy was better than you, David. Let's face it. She was better than me.”

“Ask the goddamn question!” David barked.

“Why do you want a three-hour leave, you little psychopathic shit?”

David finally sat back. For the first time since the interview started, he appeared satisfied. He glanced at Fitz, he glanced at Charpentier and then he looked at Griffin. “I want to see my daughter. No prison suits, no interview rooms. Just her and I, face-to-face. It's probably the only time I'm ever going to see her, so I want it to be good. Let's face it, man, her grandparents are never bringing her here.”

“Her grandparents?”

“Tom and Laurie Pesaturo. Or didn't Meg tell you? Molly Pesaturo is my kid. See, I didn't kill all the little girls, Griff. Some I let breed.”


Five minutes later, Griffin, Fitz and Charpentier were back in the parking lot. They were all taking in huge lungfuls of crisp, outside air. Later, they would shower until their skin was raw.

“He doesn't get out,” Griffin said flatly. “Not at six P.M., not at any time, not for three hours, not for any hours. The man doesn't get out, period!”

Griffin's arms were moving on their own volition, his left leg twitching, ears ringing. Yeah, ringing, ringing, ringing. Fuck it all, he might as well go crackers. Insanity was probably what it took to deal with the likes of David Price. He turned on Charpentier.

“I want lists, lots of lists. Names of anyone who visited, wrote, called David Price. Names of all the inmates who could've come into contact with David in any way, shape or form. Names of all known friends, families and associates of said inmates, especially those with a criminal past. And then I want a list of which of those inmates have recently been released. Got it?”

“It's going to take some time,” Charpentier said grimly.

“You have two hours. Commandeer whatever resources you need.”

Charpentier nodded. He got into his car and headed for his dank basement office. That left Griffin and Fitz alone in the parking lot.

“He doesn't get out,” Griffin said again.

“We'll work on it.”

“He doesn't get out!”

“Then find the fucking rapist!”

“Then I fucking will!” Griffin thumped the top of his Ford Taurus. Fitz pounded it right back.

Griffin yanked open the driver's-side door. “He's got a plan.”

“No shit.”

“He's thought of this. Set it all in motion. Don't be deceived by those peach-fuzz cheeks. He doesn't give a rat's ass about his daughter. He has something else in mind.”

“You think?”

“He doesn't get out,” Griffin said again. “Not now, not ever.” But as they pulled out of the maximum-security parking lot, they both saw the white Channel 10 news van roll in.

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