Murder Comes by Mail (2 page)

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Authors: A. H. Gabhart

Tags: #FIC042060;FIC022070;Christian fiction;Mystery fiction

BOOK: Murder Comes by Mail
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He glanced at her in the mirror, but she wouldn’t meet his eyes now. She was staring studiously out the window, her short steel-gray hair lifting off her forehead in the breeze from her open window. Her lips were set in a thin line that made Michael cringe, but Edith Crossfield prattled on, multiplying her words, letting the sheer volume of them steamroller her opponent.

Michael was so busy waiting for the explosion from Aunt Lindy that he didn’t notice the man perched precariously on the wrong side of the bridge railing, leaning toward the river below, until one of the ladies behind him gasped and pointed. After a shriek, even Edith fell silent.

The man had picked the middle of the bridge for his jump. People always picked the middle of the bridge. While he was working in Columbus, Michael and his partner, Pete Ballard, had talked down a few jumpers, but they’d lost a couple too. One a doped up sixteen-year-old boy, and another, a middle-aged woman. Michael’s stomach lurched at the memory.

Michael braked to a stop about fifty feet away from the man, who kept his eyes on the water and didn’t seem to note their presence.

On the bus, the ladies found their voices, with Edith speaking up first. “What’s he trying to do?”

“I think he means to jump,” another lady chimed in.

“Who is he?” Two women spoke that question in concert.

“What does that matter right now?” Aunt Lindy frowned at the other women and then looked toward Michael. “Do something, Michael.”

“I’ll try.” Michael watched the man through the windshield. The man looked stiff, as though his muscles were holding out against this idea of jumping. Maybe there was yet hope.

Michael winced at the noise the doors made when he slowly creaked them open. Who knew what might spook the man into answering the pull of the water?

“Aunt Lindy, call Betty Jean. Tell her to get the sheriff or somebody out here, and better have her send an ambulance.” He spared a glance back at the wide-eyed ladies. “Everybody, stay on the bus.”

He could only hope they would listen as he climbed down to the ground. Behind him, Aunt Lindy’s phone beeped as she punched in the number.

“I hope this doesn’t take too long,” Edith Crossfield said.

“Why, Edith! What a thing to say!” her seatmate responded.

“I don’t care. If a fellow wants to do himself in, he should choose somewhere that it doesn’t bother other people instead of coming out here and messing up everybody else’s plans. If we don’t hurry and get to Eagleton, we won’t have time for lunch before the play, and I didn’t eat all that much breakfast.”

Michael was glad when the woman’s voice faded away behind him. If he had to listen to much more from her, he might be crawling over the railing to join the poor sucker who suddenly jerked his head around to stare at Michael.

“Stop!” he shouted. “Don’t come any closer or I’ll . . . I’ll jump.”

“Okay, buddy. Take it easy.” Michael held up his hands and slid two steps closer before he stopped about ten feet away from the man. Still too far to lunge and grab him if he turned loose of the railing. Besides, even if he could grab him, he might not be able to hold him.

The guy wasn’t too tall, but probably weighed in at over two hundred pounds. His thinning hair that had been made to obey the comb with some kind of goop now stood up in points where he must have run his hands through it prior to climbing over the railing. His loose shirttail added to his disheveled look. Not that it mattered whether a guy had his hair combed and his shirt tucked in when he was ready to jump off a bridge, but the more serious ones generally did.

Michael inched a bit closer and tried to remember his suicide intervention training. “What’s your name, buddy?”

“What difference does that make?”

“None, I guess, unless you don’t want to end up a John Doe.”

The man jerked back from the words as though he’d been struck.

“Easy, fellow.” Michael kept his voice calm. “I was just asking your name.”

“Jack.” The man hesitated a moment, then added, “Smith. Jack Smith.”

A fake name for sure. That held out more hope of talking the man back over the railing. If he was intent on killing himself, he wouldn’t mind Michael knowing his real name.

“I’m Mike.” Michael leaned against the bridge railing as if they had all day to shoot the breeze. “You from around here, Jack?”

“You don’t know me, do you?” The man looked worried.

“No, should I?” Michael shifted on the rail and took a step closer to the man.

“No. Nobody knows me.” The man looked back down at the water. “I expected it to be bluer.”

“Been a lot of rain upriver the last couple of weeks. Keeps the river sort of muddy. But Eagle Lake’s nice and blue. Maybe you’d like to go fishing out there.”

“I’m not planning on doing any fishing.”

“You don’t like to fish?” Michael didn’t wait for an answer. “I’m a big fisherman myself. It’s a good way to relax and get back to nature.”

The man glanced over at Michael with a dumb-joke kind of grin. “I was thinking of getting back to nature on a more basic level. You know, dust to dust.” He looked back at the water. “Or maybe mud to mud.”

Michael eased another step closer. He could almost reach out and touch the man now. Sirens wailed in the distance. The man’s head jerked around, the dumb-joke grin gone. Michael should have told Aunt Lindy to ask them to come in quiet.

“Cops. They’re always trying to spoil a party,” the man said.

3

“I just want to help you, Jack.” Michael kept his eyes on the man even though a car was coming up behind him. Not the ambulance or the sheriff. The sirens were still a mile or more away.

The man looked down at the river. “I thought it would be easier, you know.” He glanced over at Michael again. “If you really wanted to help me, you’d give me a push.”

“You know I can’t do that. So come on. Why don’t you just swing your leg back over the railing there. I’ll help you.” Michael moved closer.

“Get back!” The man teetered on the edge from the force of his words, but his hands were still clamped to the railing. So tight his knuckles were white.

Michael scooted his feet to make the man think he was shuffling back a couple of inches. “Okay. I’ll stay back, but don’t you want to tell me your story first?”

“If I told you, you’d tell me to go ahead and jump.”

“It can’t be that bad.” Michael kept his voice even, with no idea whether it was bad or not. The man looked like a regular Joe, but then so did the worst miscreants sometimes. “But whatever it is, we can talk about it.”

A car door slammed behind him, and Michael dared a glance over his shoulder. Not good. Hank Leland was headed toward them, camera in hand. The newspaper editor must have been on this side of town and tuned in to his police scanner. No other way could his old van beat the ambulance and sheriff, who were speeding down the hill with sirens screaming and lights flashing.

Poor Jack Smith, alive or dead, would be this week’s big story in the
Hidden Springs Gazette
. That and the snail-paced response time of the emergency vehicles. Hank never passed up an opportunity to get in a shot or two at the county officials. He claimed it boosted circulation.

The sirens cut off, and in the sudden silence the click of the camera was easy to hear. The man pulled his gaze away from the water to look past Michael.

He made a sound that might pass for a laugh. “I thought here in Hidden Springs a man could find a little peace and quiet to do himself in.”

Michael took another look over his shoulder. Things were going downhill fast. Hank was right behind him, focusing furiously. Even worse, some of the Sunday school ladies had climbed down from the bus and a couple of them, Sue Lou Farris and Judith Phillips, were tottering toward the bridge, their white hair flashing in the bright sunshine. They had their phones up and ready to capture all the action. The two pudgy Aunt Bea–sweet women competed for who could take the worst photos.

The sheriff climbed out of his car and moved purposely toward the two women to shoo them back as fast as his heavy frame allowed. He swiped at the sweat on his face while he talked to them. It took something big to pull Sheriff Potter out of his air-conditioned office on a hot, muggy July day like this.

At the ambulance, Gina and Bill bustled around opening doors, pulling out their equipment. Not that any of that would help if the guy jumped. Any minute they’d be rushing toward Michael and the man as though they expected the guy to climb back over the rail into all the commotion and lie down on their stretcher.

A few men in pickup trucks had chased after the sirens to be in on the action or maybe just to be sure the ambulance hadn’t been headed after their mother, father, sister, or brother. The ambulance didn’t go out all that often with sirens going full blast.

“I don’t believe this.” The man fixed his eyes on the two women protesting the sheriff’s pointing them back to the bus. “This is just too crazy. One of them could be my mother.”

“Your mother?” Michael jerked his attention back to the man.

“Tell her I’m sorry. That she wasn’t the reason I ended up bad.” With those words, something changed in the man. He was no longer a mass of fear unsure which way to lean.

Michael was already diving for him when Hank shouted, “He’s going, Mike.”

At the very instant the man turned loose of the rail, Michael grabbed him in a kind of sideways tackle. A half second later the man would have been gone, but in that vulnerable moment of unbalance, Michael managed to topple him back over the railing onto the road. The man groaned when his head banged hard against the pavement.

Michael stayed astride the man, afraid to turn him loose, while at the same time wondering if he might have killed the poor guy in the process of trying to save him. Behind him, Hank Leland’s camera still clicked. Michael looked around straight into Hank’s viewfinder. “Put that fool camera down and grab his shoulders, Leland, so I can see if he’s breathing.”

Hank dropped the camera to let it dangle by its strap around his neck. He had the grace to look a little shamefaced as he moved over to grab the man’s shoulders. “Sorry, Mike, but you know real news doesn’t show up often in Hidden Springs, and half the time when it does, I’m on the other side of the county covering a pig calling contest or whatever.”

Michael slowly lifted up off the man. He didn’t want to chance the jumper scrambling to his feet and taking a leap yet. One thing he had learned while working in the city was to never underestimate a person’s strength or quickness. Adrenaline was a powerful stimulant.

“Is he dead?” Hank whispered beside him. “He cracked his head pretty hard.”

“I hope not. That would make some headline. ‘Deputy Kills Man, Trying to Save Him.’” Michael looked down at the man’s closed eyes and then his chest. It was rising and falling. “He’s alive,” he said to nobody in particular.

“Good.” Hank sounded relieved. “‘Deputy—Hero of the Day’ will sell more papers. Especially here in Hidden Springs where the citizens all already think you’re a hero just ’cause you’re so good-looking.”

The stretcher wheels clattered on the roadway as Gina and Bill ran toward them. Sheriff Potter lumbered along behind them. Michael kept his hold on the man’s legs, pinning him to the road. Even though the man hadn’t moved a muscle since he’d fallen, Michael sensed a resistance in the muscles under his hands.

Bill knelt beside the man and opened his kit. “Move back,” he ordered. Gina squatted down on the other side of the man, and Hank cheerfully relinquished his hold on the man’s shoulders to pull his camera up again.

Michael turned loose of the man at last. He was about to stand up when the man’s eyelids popped open to reveal blank, empty eyes, almost as if the man’s spirit had made the jump and all Michael had saved was the empty baggage of his body.

But then his eyes focused on Michael. “You should have let me go. It would have been over then.”

“Whatever’s wrong, fellow, we can get you help,” Gina told him as she shined a light in his eyes. “Jumping wasn’t the answer.”

The man didn’t act as if he heard her. Instead he kept his eyes directly on Michael. “You’ll wish you’d pushed me.”

4

Michael drove the ladies on to Eagleton to see the play. There was no reason not to go. That was what the ladies kept telling one another the rest of the ride. After all, the tickets had been pricey and they’d lose their money if they didn’t see the play. It was too late to give the tickets to anyone else, and it wasn’t as if the man had actually jumped. Everything had turned out fine. Michael had seen to that, and then they would beam his way.

Michael felt their beams even with his eyes firmly fixed on the road as he guided the old bus through the traffic in Eagleton. Once, when he glanced up at the mirror, he’d even caught Edith Crossfield looking at him kindly. He squirmed a little in the driver’s seat under all the benevolence and discovered a broken spring.

They were trying to make him out as some kind of hero, and what had he done, really? He hadn’t crawled out on a ledge or over the railing to rescue the man. He simply sneaked up close enough to jerk him back from the edge, giving the poor chump a concussion to boot. That didn’t make him a hero. Keeping people from slipping off the edges was part of his job as an officer of the law.

Not that all that many people in Hidden Springs danced on the lip of danger, or even trouble. A few did, of course. While Hidden Springs might be a little town time seemed to have forgotten, regular folks, not saints, still lived there. So, as a matter of course, trouble showed up now and again. The good thing was that in Hidden Springs, folks generally managed to deal with one round of trouble before another round started.

Michael liked it that way. He liked being able to keep things under control, maybe even make a difference in the town. His friends from back in the city told him he was deluded. They said he was wasting the best years of his life in a lazy little town that wasn’t likely to make headline news unless one of its citizens happened to buy the winning jackpot lottery ticket. That did have a one-in-several-million chance of happening, since people in Hidden Springs slapped down their money for the opportunity to strike it rich here the same as any other town.

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