Part 14 (1/2)
”Yeah, I understand you had some headaches back then or something,” Avery said as she walked closer to him, trying to seem sympathetic. She looked down at the garden gnomes and realized that there was something almost morbidly comical about them-about this entire situation, in fact.
”I did,” Lutz said. ”But not anymore. I'm taking medicine for them.”
”I see,” Avery said. ”But tell me, please...I also hear that you got in trouble for starting small fires in the burner. Is that right?”
”Yeah,” Lutz said.
”Why were you doing that?”
Lutz s.h.i.+fted uncomfortably. He picked up his paintbrush and absently dipped it into his paint. ”I was only trying to understand it. The fire, I mean. I don't know...it's pretty. Well, it was.”
”And it's not anymore?”
Lutz shook his head and raised his left arm. She looked at his hand and saw scarring along the palm and last two fingers. They were very bad burns that had not healed very well.
”No,” he said. ”Now it's scary. I don't like it. So I just paint now. I like mixing it and repainting my yard friends.”
”I see,” Avery said and with that, she was certain that George Lutz was not the killer. He did not have the capacity for such a thing. And although she was far from a psychologist, she recognized his fear of fire as a real thing. He had trembled slightly when showing her his burns.
”So you've had no more trouble with headaches or starting fires?” Avery asked.
”Nope. I still think fire can be pretty...but it's too mean. It breaks stuff. Destroys stuff. Think about house fires and forest fires. Did you know that sometimes when people die, their families will burn them? That's...messed up. Why would you do that?”
Avery made a hmm sound of agreement. But her mind was elsewhere. She was thinking of urns and crematoriums...and broken fragments of a ceramic or gla.s.s urn at the first site where they had found the body of Keisha Lawrence.
When she had spoken with Sandy Ableton, the dental forensics expert, Avery had realized that crematoriums might be worth looking into but probably were not a priority.
Maybe I was wrong, she thought. I overlooked it because it was too obvious. But after the trash plant and speaking to poor George Lutz...everything is pointing in that direction.
”Well, George...thank you for your time. I'll leave you to your painting.”
”Would you like to join me?” Lutz asked. ”I've got to paint this guy and all of his friends. They're getting filthy out here.”
”Thanks for the invitation, but no,” Avery said. ”I need to get going.”
Lutz gave her a simple little nod before turning back to his work. She barely saw it, as she was lost in thought.
The urns, she thought. The broken urn fragments...that should have been a dead give-away. Did I overthink this one?
George Lutz was still painstakingly working on the same set of suspenders when Avery pulled her car away from the curb and pulled up directions for the closest crematorium.
CHAPTER TWENTY THREE.
The ash and burn smears were cleaned away and his chamber was clean again. Something had gone wrong with the last one and he'd had to extinguish the fire before the body had been completely burned. He wasn't sure if it had to do with the ventilation of the chamber or something he had done wrong while starting the fire. Whatever it had been, the end result had been grisly and gruesome. He wasn't about to let that happen again.
He had installed an additional layer of mineral wool behind the panels. He had also created several mats of wicker, which he had discovered several years ago was one of the most highly combustible household materials available that would go undetected in lab tests. That's why he tended to stay away from liquid accelerants. He always used a bit of propane to get things started, preferring it over gasoline because it was harder to detect in tests. Sometimes he'd use a standard tin of lighter fluid, something he usually kept on hand at the edge of his desk.
He held the tin now, as he stared into the chamber. With the chamber ready to go, he peered into the box of materials he had prepared for the next body. He thought he'd had the process perfect until that last body had been so terribly uncooperative. He a.s.sumed most people thought there was nothing to burning a body. Set a fire to it and be done with it.
But there was much more to it than that. There was a process-an art to it.
He looked into his box and counted out his materials for the sixth time. There was extra wicker and several sheets of foam insulation. The insulation was one of the most hazardous household accelerants...so much so that he had seen research where people selling home insurance had actually referred to it as ”solid gasoline” and required other fail-safes for construction in order to offer affordable insurance rates.
With an itch of antic.i.p.ation, he plucked one of the folded sheets of insulation from the box and carried it into the chamber. He laid it in the center of the chamber and then went to his small desk and retrieved a single Post-it note and a lighter. He folded the Post-it in quarters, spritzed it with a bit of lighter fluid from the can, and set it aflame with the lighter.
He carried the Post-it carefully to the chamber. When the little flames licked at his fingers he smiled. Yes, it stung...but it was a pleasant sting. He was giggling to himself as he finally reached the chamber.
He carefully plucked the burning Post-it into the chamber and quickly closed the door. By the time he had it bolted securely, he could hear the whisperlike whoosh of flame being born on the other side. He placed his hands against the door and imagined he could feel the heat already, the power of it trying to eat its way out.
He smiled as he listened to the growing flame and ran his hands sensually along the door. He waited for fifteen minutes, standing perfectly motionless against the door. He then carefully opened the door, reveling in the wave of heat that rushed out at him.
As he expected, the foam had been burned down to little more than dust. A few tufts of its original form remained but he knew they would also crumble to dust when he swept them out.
He had twenty-five more sheets of the foam, several handmade sheets of wicker, and an oil-based accelerant he had created himself that he would splash onto the victim. He had worked very hard before beginning his work to create a starter accelerant that was virtually untraceable. He wondered, perhaps, if he had been too lenient with the oil on the last victim; perhaps that was why she had not burned completely.
Whatever the reason, he had failed. And he had lived his life in a constant state of fear of failure. It was, he supposed, what had driven him to this point.
He took the single broom from the small closet on the right side of the room and swept the meager burnt offerings from the foam out of his chamber. He was meticulous, making sure he did not leave the slightest bit of ash.
When it was clean again, he stared into the chamber and wondered for an agonizing moment what it might be like to be inside while the fire was reaching its maximum strength. He peered into that empty and waiting s.p.a.ce, wondering what it might be like to burn.
CHAPTER TWENTY FOUR.
Avery was sitting in the waiting area of Wallace Funeral Home and Crematorium, doing her best not to feel too unsettled by the funeral parlor atmosphere. Due to her line of work, the fact and reality of death did not bother her. But ever since childhood, something about the idea of a place that was built only for the housing of the dead and their mourners had seemed eerie. It was a feeling that still haunted her even now.
With the way the day had gone, she was starting to feel almost like a tourist or a kid on some sort of morbid field trip. First a tour of a recycling and trash-burning center and now this. A few quick calls had bought her some time with the owner of Wallace Funeral Home and Crematorium. She had not spoken with him directly but a receptionist had set it all up.
Everything seemed to be happening quite fast now, as the door to the back of the building opened up. A man dressed in a tasteful gray suit entered the waiting room and gave her an uncertain smile.
”Detective Black?” he asked.
”Yes.”
”Pleased to meet you. I'm Sawyer Wallace. I heard there was some pressing business I can help you with?”
Avery took a moment to go over the more minor details of the case, treading carefully as she was not sure what he had already seen on the news.
”I'm tracking down a suspect that is kidnapping his victims-all women, to this point-and burning them. He is burning them in a way that makes me think he really knows what he is doing. He's going right down to the bone in most cases. At each scene so far, there have been fragments of what looked to be broken urns.”
With each detail she spilled, Wallace seemed to sit a little more upright in his seat. By the time Avery was done, he was as straight as a board and his eyes were wide with terror.