Читать книгу Cruel - Jacob Stone - Страница 11

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Chapter 3

Culver City, 1984

The killer known as the Nightmare Man entered the bedroom and saw that Mary Beth Williamson was sleeping on her stomach. He got a pair of socks from a dresser drawer and forced them into her mouth so she wouldn’t be able to scream. Before she could sputter awake and realize what was happening, he flipped her on her back and tied her wrists and ankles with nylon rope. He then used a razor-sharp hunting knife to cut off her cotton pajamas.

As she lay naked in the semidarkness of the room, her eyes met his, and he could see first fear and then defiance flooding her eyes. That would change soon enough. Once he started pulling off her fingernails there would only be a desperate pleading for him to stop. Later, she’d be lost completely in her pain. He sorted out the contents of his gym bag, picked up the needle-nose pliers, and went to work.

The other night he had watched Live and Let Die on video with his wife and sons. For his money, Sean Connery was the only true Bond, but the movie’s title song had stuck in his head, and as he used the hunting knife to carve away thick pieces of Mary Beth’s flesh, he found himself absently singing the line “When you got a job to do you got to do it well.” So true.

Later, when he was using a cigarette lighter to heat up the end of the thin metal rod that he used to brand his victims’ wounds, he caught the look in her eyes. She was no longer pleading for him to stop but instead was desperately trying to ask him a question. Why her?

It was a good question, because he could’ve picked thousands of other women in LA. So why her? Opportunity was one of the reasons. Her husband was an intern at Cedars-Sinai, and when the killer had gotten into their house three weeks ago using the spare key that they kept hidden in a fake rock, he found the husband’s work schedule and knew the husband wouldn’t be getting off work until eight in the morning. The killer had also used the opportunity to break the latch on one of the windows in the spare bedroom, so even if the wife started using the chain door locks while her husband was gone because of the Nightmare Man, the killer would be able to enter the house without making any noise. But the truth was, he’d have little trouble getting into any house or apartment, and it wouldn’t much matter if he found a husband or boyfriend in bed with his victim.

So why her? Mary Beth Williamson was twenty-eight. On the plump side, but pleasingly so, as the killer’s mother might’ve said. Medium-length brown hair, pleasant enough face, a curvy and attractive body even with the added thirty pounds she carried. The killer had spent time watching her. He knew she worked as a nurse and that she appeared to be a pleasant and friendly woman. The killer had to admit there was really no particular reason why he chose her. It was just bad luck on her part, plain and simple. But what would’ve been the point of telling her that?

Cruel

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