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to shock him with some outrageous accusations and see how he reacts. At least then maybe we’ll know if he’s involved.”

“Yeah, but we might find ourselves on the wrong end of one of his lawsuits.”

*

The big red convertible had traveled down FM-2208 to Loop 281. They would soon hit Interstate 20.

Cynthia thought it was about time to confess. “Greg, I need to tell you something. And I hope you won’t hate me.”

Was she about to confess to killing Troy? Perhaps Greg had misjudged her. He was already falling for Cynthia. Not that he was certain she had any feelings for him. But could he really allow himself to be drawn in? If she was a killer, how could he live with that? “What is it, Cynthia?” He braced himself.

“On Monday when I came to see you I was trying to seduce you.”

And you were doing a great job of it, he thought. It had been all he could do to contain himself.

“I was threatened by some man on the phone that morning. He told me that I must do whatever he said, or my mother would have a terrible accident. He sounded mean. I believed him.”

“What?”

“He told me that you would be selected as a juror on the murder trial—I don’t know how he knew that. But he said to flirt with you to get your attention and then influence you to fight for the defendant. He told me if Kantrell Jamison was found guilty, my mother would die.” Tears were welling up in her eyes.

Now it made sense. She was not flirting with him because he was a good-looking, sexy guy. It was because somebody was forcing her to do it.

“Now, don’t get me wrong. I really like you—even more as I’m getting to know you. But on Monday I was acting.”

How could he have been such a fool? “What about when you called me Monday night saying Troy was beating you up—was that fake too?”

“No—it was real. He was drunk and he was hitting me, so I decided to use the situation to get your sympathy. I’m sorry.”

“But then Troy called me. He sounded like a madman. What if he had come over to my house and blown my head off?”

“I know—I’m sorry. I had to try to protect my mom. I didn’t know what else to do. But I knew Troy would forget everything by morning. He always forgot what happened while he was drunk.”

Greg calmed down as he reflected on the state of his relationship with this woman. “I guess it worked. I fought Troy and the other jurors long and hard. I was determined to return a ‘Not Guilty.’ I can’t believe I was being manipulated.”

“I am so sorry. And now I still don’t know if my mother’s safe. When I talked to her yesterday, she said she was going to stay with a friend for a while. I think she was talking about her high school friend who lives in Texarkana. I sure hope he can’t find her there.”

“So, maybe this man who called you is the one who killed Troy and Dorothy Spokane. And maybe even Arabeth Albertson.”

“I thought that was an accident. Didn’t she fall down the stairs?”

“I’m not sure I believe that story anymore. Someone might have tripped her. I don’t know if that would leave any evidence.”

They rode for several miles without speaking. The redhead sitting next to Greg looked different now. She was still beautiful. And he wanted to believe her story about the mysterious caller. But how could he know what to believe? And what if she had killed Troy? Did he even know if the abuse was real? He wanted to trust her, but doubts were racing through his mind.

Chapter 22

His real name was John Smith. It sounded like a fake name for a hit man anyway, so he opted for a cooler sounding name: John X. He had relocated from Amarillo to Arlington when he was 22, and had established himself as a well-to-do bachelor over the three years he had lived there.

He wore expensive Italian suits and drove a new Jaguar. Nobody really knew him, but the people in his neighborhood, at the grocery store, the bank, and at restaurants seemed to think highly of the image he had created for himself.

He was sitting on a Greyhound bus, traveling to Shreveport, Louisiana. How he detested wearing ordinary clothes. And what was that awful smell—the old man in the seat in front of him?

There were a few rough-looking characters on the bus. They had probably sized up John X, and at 5′6″, 160 lbs., he looked easy. They would think they could take whatever money and jewelry he had. If the thugs had known how much cash John was carrying, they would not have hesitated to jump him. But they would have been very sorry. The revolver under his jacket, and his skill of using it, would more than compensate for his lack of stature.

The bus trip was unpleasant, but necessary. He would steal a car in Shreveport, drive it to Coreyville, and do the job. When the police connected that car with the murder, it would lead them to Shreveport—not to Arlington. Some poor sap would have his car stolen, and if he didn’t report it right away, would be investigated in connection with the murder. If the guy were lucky, he’d have some kind of alibi.

Earlier, John X had walked to a 7-Eleven and called for a taxi to take him to the bus station in Dallas. It was departing at 12:45 PM, and he was cutting it close. Buford had wanted the job done right away. If the taxi got there soon, he would make it.

He had studied the lunchtime customers as he waited. The Indian guy behind the counter had three people standing in line. There was a fat woman with a cigarette hanging out of her mouth, bouncing around like a conductor’s baton, as she demanded a carton of Virginia Slims. Next in line was a construction worker type. Behind him was an impatient young executive wannabe in a cheap suit, holding a diet Coke and a Snickers bar. He appeared to have already consumed more than his daily allowance of caffeine.

On one of the isles was a young woman holding a crying baby on her hip while scolding her toddler, who had just successfully toppled a giant display of microwave popcorn.

The first bullet would go to the Indian, before he could press an alarm button or go for a gun under the counter. Next, he would take out the construction worker before he could react. The big hulk could have ripped off John’s head with his bare hands. But he would never get the chance. One clean shot to the head and he would hit the floor like one of those huge bags of dog food you buy at Wal-Mart.

The young guy would be peeing in his cheap pants. He would be easy to do. The young mother would frantically try to shield her kids. No way she could make it to the exit in a hurry. The fat woman might take a run at him, but he doubted that she could move very fast. The biggest threats from her would be cigarette burns, or suffocation under her gigantic butt.

Too bad all of them would have to die. He really only wanted to kill the construction worker, who reminded him of Peter, Jackie, and Phillip. He had wanted to kill that trio every day of his life since high school. Good thing he didn’t get his hands on a gun until after graduation.

A lot of teachers and students could have died. But he didn’t have any intention of going to prison. His killings must all be done in such a way that he could escape cleanly. None of his corpses would ever lead the police to him.

He would never actually kill Peter, Jackie, or Phillip. He would get caught if he killed them, because he would want the world to know he did it. He would want his entire graduating class to know that he finally got revenge on those three football player punks who mercilessly picked on him, beat him up and made him the biggest joke of his school. But if he could have, maybe it would have finally ended the laughter that still echoed in his ears.

Instead, he played his favorite video game over and over: High School Retaliation. He figured that the people who wrote the game must have been abused in school, just like he was. In the game, he was a character named Johnny who showed up at school one day with a .44 Magnum. Presumably, the game writers were Dirty Harry fans.

As Johnny went from classroom to classroom, he would seek out the punks who had beat him up, pulled his pants off and stuffed him in a locker the day before. A crowd of students had cheered them on. He could blow away some of them too.

John always felt the adrenalin rush when he blew their heads ‘clean off,’ as Harry Callahan would say. Sometimes he would wait until his victim was standing in front of a window so he could watch the head fly off and crash through the glass, leaving the body standing headless for a brief moment before it collapsed to the classroom floor, jerking hopelessly.

Nothing gave John X more pleasure than playing the game—except real killing with real guns. And yes, he even owned a .44 Magnum. But he had never used it on a job. Yet.

The taxi had arrived in time, and John had made it to the bus station, paid the $35.00 fare and got onboard. He had just murdered five adults and two babies—but only in his mind. Killing them would have served no purpose—other than the sheer joy of it. But it would have been too risky.

And besides, he had a job to do. Marty would be a sitting duck. But John would occupy his mind on the four-hour trip with devising some interesting new way to kill Marty. That was the real fun of it for him. Each murder had to be a little different in some way. He liked being creative with his craft.

*

Marty had decided to wait at the Holiday Inn for Cynthia Blockerman to return, as Buford had requested. Her car was still in the parking lot, but he didn’t expect to see her any time soon. He did expect Buford to send somebody to kill him. He knew the killer would come soon, but he didn’t know whether his death would be by gunshot, poison, an explosion, or some other means.

He was not too worried about it. He would take reasonable precautions, but wouldn’t lose any sleep over it. Marty knew he was a dead man. Buford would keep sending hit men until somebody got him. Or he would just call his buddy on the parole board, and Marty would eventually be found and thrown back into prison. If he couldn’t be fishing, he’d just as soon be dead anyway. Years of killing and prison life had numbed his senses.

He had been surprised a few years earlier when a new cellmate’s sad story actually revived something in a deep, long-forgotten place in his heart. It was a young black man, who at age 12, had seen his older brother brutally and senselessly murdered. It had destroyed his life. The young man’s story had stirred a righteous rage within Marty. He would have hunted down that murderer and slaughtered him if he had known the killer’s name.

Marty wanted revenge

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