“No, no, no. We’re all many people. We simply have to accept and integrate our various selves. I help people to do that.” Beeker stood up behind his desk. “But if someone does have a
It had. And Quinn had been fooled by it too long and people had died. Beeker must know that.
“You seem to have researched me,” Quinn said.
“Somewhat. I’m interested in whoever’s interested in Zoe. As you are. Why pretend otherwise?”
“I do believe you’re practicing your dark art on me, Doctor.”
“I specialize in dialectical behavior therapy, Detective Quinn. It requires the cooperation of the patient. I don’t believe you’re capable of that.”
Quinn knew it was time to go. He hadn’t come here to physically assault Beeker, but things were moving in that direction.
He moved toward the door. “Delete the photos, Dr. Beeker.”
“Have Zoe call me.”
“You’re a stubborn one.”
“Notice I’m not the type,” Beeker said.
The slow smile was forming as Quinn turned away.
Quinn was perspiring when he left Beeker’s office. He knew he’d lost a round, and he didn’t like it.
He didn’t like it that there were more, and more explicit, photographs of Zoe. He didn’t like what Dr. Beeker had told him, which was, in effect, the same thing Helen Iman had told him about contradictory behavior.
If they were right about reformers, Bible-thumpers, and gay-bashers, were they right about serial killers?
And weren’t serial killers supposed to be
65
Renz had Quinn, Pearl, Fedderman, and Helen the profiler in his office. The door was locked, and Renz had left word not to be disturbed unless it was urgent.
When everyone was more or less settled, Renz sat down behind his waxed and uncluttered desk. “I have an idea,” he said.
Quinn was seated in one of the chairs facing the desk. He could think of several things to say to Renz’s statement, but he chose the relatively safe, “And you want to try it out on us.”
“Exactly,” Renz said. “I will say before I go into it that Helen approves.”
“I think it might work,” Helen said.
“Helen thinks, and I think,” Renz said to Quinn, “that the killer sees you, even
“We think he’ll challenge you,” Helen said. “And in some manner give himself away.”
“And if he doesn’t give anything away?” Pearl asked.
“Then it’s up to Quinn whether to accept the challenge.”
“If the killer’s smart,” Quinn said, “he’ll simply ignore the letter.”
“He’s smart and mentally ill,” Helen said.
“When do you want this letter?” Quinn asked.
Renz leaned over his desk, a folded slip of paper extended in his right hand. “With Helen’s help, I’ve already written it.”
Quinn accepted the paper and looked at it.
“It’s not so much a taunt,” Quinn said, “as an offer of a deal.”
“Believe me,” Helen said, “he’ll consider it a taunt, and he’ll respond as he must. There’s always the chance that unforeseen circumstances might interfere with this plan, but the psychology of it is sound.”
“And if he doesn’t respond,” Renz said, “we’ve lost nothing. Those are the kind of odds I like.”
“You’re not the one taunting a maniac with a gun,” Pearl said.
Quinn gave her a look that was obviously meant as a caution signal, but Pearl saw green lights where others saw red.
“The letter doesn’t mention the Slicer,” Quinn said.
“We’re trying to appeal only to the hunter side of the killer,” Helen said. “The sportsman with a code. That’s the part of him that will respond to the letter.”
“It isn’t in our contract with the city that we fight duels,” Pearl said.