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Authors: Jack Kilborn

BOOK: 65 Proof
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“Phil would have caught that. I think Wyatt actually leapt to his death and landed on carpeting.”

“I’ve got it,” Herb said. He explained.

“Herb, that’s perfect! But there’s no way you can put black marker on something that isn’t here. What else do we have?

“Got me. That revelation taxed my mental abilities for the month.”

“The only other obvious clue is the Swedish Fish candy.”

Herb pulled the box out of his pocket. The package, and contents, seemed normal. So normal that Herb ate another handful.

I racked my brain, trying to find something we’d missed. So far, all the clues made sense except for that damn candy.

“I’m going back upstairs,” Herb said. “Want to order a pizza?”

“You’re kidding.”

“I’m not kidding. I have to eat something. We might be here for the rest of our lives.”

“Herb, you can’t have a pizza delivered to a crime scene.”

“How about Chinese food? I haven’t had Mu Shu Pork since Thursday. You want anything?”

“No.”

“You sure?”

“I’m sure.”

“You’re not getting any of mine.”

“Get me a small order of beef with pea pods.”

“That sounds good. How about a large order and we split it?”

“What about the Mu Shu pork?”

Herb patted his expansive belly. “I’ll get that too. You think I got this fat just looking at food?” He turned, heading for the stairs. “Where’s Wyatt’s phone book?”

“It’s on his desk.” Insight struck. “Herb! That might be another clue!”

“Chinese food?”

“The phone book! It’s open to a page.”

I squeezed past my portly partner and raced up the stairs. The phone book was where I left it,
BURGLAR ALARMS
covering the left-hand page. I went through each of the listings, put there was no black marker. I checked the other page, and didn’t see anything unusual. But on the very top of the right hand page was spillover from the previous entry. A listing called
CHARLIE’S
, with the phone number 847-209-7219.

When I noted what subject came alphabetically before
BURGLAR ALARMS
in the phonebook, I grinned like an idiot. Then I pulled out my cell and called the number. After four rings and a click, a male voice answered.

“This is Charlie.”

“This is Lieutenant Jack Daniels of the Chicago Police Department.”

“That was fast. Edward would have been pleased.”

“You helped murder him?”

“No. He killed himself. I helped set up all of the other stuff, but I had nothing to do with killing him. I’ve got proof, too. Footage of him jumping to his death.”

“Off of your crane. Or platform. What is it you use?”

“A hundred foot platform. He went quick—in less than four seconds. He preferred it to the agony of cancer.”

Herb sidled up to me, putting his ear next to the phone.

“How did Wyatt find you?” I asked Charlie.

“The want ads. He saw I was selling my business. I guess that’s how he came up with this whole idea. Pretty clever, don’t you think? He bought me out, plus paid me to assist in setting up the scene. Nice guy. I liked him a lot.”

“You know, of course, we’ll have to arrest you.”

“I know. Which is why my office phone forwarded this call to my cell. I’m on my way out of the country. Edward paid me enough to lay low for a while.”

“One hundred and eighty-eight thousand dollars.” I remembered the number from the empty bank account.

“No, not nearly. Edward lived very well for the last month of his life. He spent a lot of money. And good for him—what good is a life savings if you can’t have some fun with it?”

“Not much,” Herb said.

I shushed him.

“Can I assume, Lieutenant, that you’ve figured everything out? Found all the clues? If you know everything, I’m supposed to give you a reward. Edward has this list of questions. Are you ready?”

Not knowing what else to say, I agreed.

“Okay, question number one; how were the doors locked from the inside?”

“You removed the entire door and frame while the door was already locked. Edward, or you, used a reciprocating saw to cut around the door frame. Then one of you glued new trim to the inside of the frame. When the door was pulled back into place, the trim covered the inside cut marks. Then you nailed the frame in place from the outside, and put more trim around the edges to cover the outside cut.”

“What gave it away?”

“Sawdust on the outside matt, a receipt from the hardware store, a new electric saw in the basement, and extra trim in the closet. Plus, the door didn’t open all the way.”

“Edward purposely left all the clues except that last one. The door was heavy, and I couldn’t fit it back in the hole perfectly. Question number two; how did it appear Edward jumped to his death in his living room?”

“He’d been drawing his own blood for a few weeks, using the catheter in his arm, and saving it in the refrigerator in mason jars. Then he used a turkey baster to fill a super soaker squirt gun with his blood, and sprayed the living room. I assume he read enough mysteries to know how to mimic blood spatters. He even faked the bounce that happens when a jumper hits.”

“Excellent. How did the carpet fibers get on the body?”

“He visited Charlie’s Bungee Jumping Emporium in Palatine and did a swan dive onto a pile of carpet remainders. We found carpet padding in the basement, but no remainders, and usually the installers give you all the extra pieces. A clue by omission.”

“Very good. Question number three; where did the gunshots come from?”

“The stereo upstairs. That was also a new purchase. The stereo faced the window, so you must have hit the
PLAY
button from the street, using the remote.”

“I did. The remote is in a garbage can next to the payphone I called from, if anyone wants it back. Did you find anything else interesting?”

I explained the suicide note, the Clue game, and the puzzle magazines.

“How about the Swedish Fish candy?” he asked.

“We have no idea what that means.”

“That was Edward’s favorite clue. I’d tell you, but I’m sure you’ll figure it out eventually. Anyway, there’s a surprise for you in John Dickson Carr’s book The Three Coffins. Don’t bother calling me back—I’m throwing away this phone as soon as I hang up. Good-bye, Lieutenant.”

And he was gone.

We found the Carr book without difficulty. In the pages were a folded cashier’s check, and another flash card. We played the card on Herb’s computer.

Edward Wyatt, standing atop a large bungee platform, smiled at the camera, winked, and said, “Congratulations on figuring it out. In order to make absolutely, positively sure that there’s no doubt I’m doing this of my own free will, without assistance or coercion, I give you this proof.”

He jumped. The camera followed him down onto a pile of beige carpet remainders. I winced when he bounced.

“So that’s it?” Herb whined. “We spend our entire afternoon, without any food, on a plain, old suicide?”

“I don’t think this one qualifies as plain or old. Plus, a twenty grand check for the KITLOD Fund is a nice return for our time.”

“I think I’d rather be killed in the line of duty than forced to go through one of these again. And he didn’t tell you the reason for the Swedish Fish?”

“No. It doesn’t seem to fit at all. Almost as if…” I began to laugh.

“What’s funny?”

“Don’t you get it? Wyatt planted a box of little red candy fish, knowing it would confuse us. It was meant to throw us off the trail.”

“I still don’t get it.”

“You need to read more mysteries, Herb.”

“So, you’re not going to tell me?”

“You’ll figure it out. Now let’s go grab that Chinese food.” I smiled, pleased with myself. “Preferably a place that sells herring.”

I’ve been a longtime David Morrell fan, so when he co-founded the International Thriller Writers organization and asked me to join, I complied even though I’m not much of a joiner. I’m glad I did, because they published an anthology called
Thriller
, edited by James Patterson, and I won a wild card spot among the many bestselling authors in the collection. This story was later nominated for a British Dagger award, but what excited me most was to share the covers with F. Paul Wilson’s Repairman Jack, Phin’s literary ancestor.

T
here’s an art to getting your ass kicked.

Guys on either side held my arms, stretching me out crucifixion-style. The joker who worked me over swung wildly, without planting his feet or putting his body into it. He spent most of his energy swearing and screaming when he should have been focusing on inflicting maximum damage.

Amateur.

Not that I was complaining. What he lacked in professionalism, he made up for in mean.

He moved in and rabbit-punched me in the side. I flexed my abs and tried to shift to take the blow in the center of my stomach, rather than the more vulnerable kidneys.

I exhaled hard when his fist landed. Saw stars.

He stepped away to pop me in the face. Rather than tense up, I relaxed, trying to absorb the contact by letting my neck snap back.

It still hurt like hell.

I tasted blood, wasn’t sure if it came from my nose or my mouth. Probably both. My left eye had already swollen shut.

“Hijo calvo de una perra!”

You bald son of a bitch. Real original. His breath was ragged now, shoulders slumping, face glowing with sweat.

Gang-bangers these days aren’t in very good shape. I blame TV and junk food.

One final punch—a half-hearted smack to my broken nose—and then I was released.

I collapsed face-first in a puddle that smelled like urine. The three Latin Kings each took the time to spit on me. Then they strolled out of the alley, laughing and giving each other high-fives.

When they got a good distance away, I crawled over to a Dumpster and pulled myself to my feet. The alley was dark, quiet. I felt something scurry over my foot.

Rats, licking up my dripping blood.

Nice neighborhood.

I hurt a lot, but pain and I were old acquaintances. I took a deep breath, let it out slow, did some poking and prodding. Nothing seemed seriously damaged.

I’d been lucky.

I spat. The bloody saliva clung to my swollen lower lip and dribbled onto my T-shirt. I tried a few steps forward, managed to keep my balance, and continued to walk out of the alley, onto the sidewalk, and to the corner bus stop.

I sat.

The Kings took my wallet, which had no ID or credit cards, but did have a few hundred in cash. I kept an emergency fiver in my shoe. The bus arrived, and the portly driver raised an eyebrow at my appearance.

“Do you need a doctor, buddy?”

“I’ve got plenty of doctors.”

He shrugged and took my money.

On the ride back, my fellow passengers made heroic efforts to avoid looking at me. I leaned forward, so the blood pooled between my feet rather than stained my clothing any further. These were my good jeans.

When my stop came up, I gave everyone a cheery wave goodbye and stumbled out of the bus.

The corner of State and Cermak was all lit up, twinkling in both English and Chinese. Unlike NY and LA, each of which had sprawling Chinatowns, Chicago has more of a Chinablock. Blink while you’re driving west on 22nd and you’ll miss it.

Though Caucasian, I found a kind of peace in Chinatown that I didn’t find among the Anglos. Since my diagnosis, I’ve pretty much disowned society. Living here was like living in a foreign country—or a least a square block of a foreign country.

I kept a room at the Lucky Lucky Hotel, tucked away between a crumbling apartment building and a Chinese butcher shop, on State and 25th. The hotel did most of its business at an hourly rate, though I couldn’t think of a more repulsive place to take a woman, even if you were renting her as well as the room. The halls stank like mildew and worse and the plaster snowed on you when you climbed the stairs and obscene graffiti lined the halls and the whole building leaned slightly to the right.

I got a decent rent; free—as long as I kept out the drug dealers. Which I did, except for the ones who dealt to me.

I nodded at the proprietor, Kenny-Jen-Bang-Ko, and asked for my key. Kenny was three times my age, clean-shaven save for several black moles on his cheeks that sprouted long, white hairs. He tugged at these hairs while contemplating me.

“How is other guy?” Kenny asked.

“Drinking a forty of malt liquor that he bought with my money.”

He nodded, as if that was the answer he’d been expecting. “You want pizza?”

Kenny gestured to a box on the counter. The slices were so old and shrunken they looked like Doritos.

“I thought the Chinese hated fast food.”

“Pizza not fast. Took thirty minutes. Anchovy and red pepper.”

I declined.

My room was one squeaky stair flight up. I unlocked the door and lumbered over to the bathroom, looking into the cracked mirror above the sink.

Ouch.

My left eye had completely closed, and the surrounding tissue bulged out like a peach. Purple bruising competed with angry red swelling along my cheeks and forehead. My nose was a glob of strawberry jelly, and blood had crusted black along my lips and down my neck.

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