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Authors: Mary Logue

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“Yes. We’re not sure of much more.” Claire debated for a moment, then decided she might as well tell Colette what she knew. “Late last night Chet called and asked for help. When I arrived on the scene, your sister was already dead from a gunshot wound. Chet was in a state of shock. I have to tell you that there is the slight chance that Anne killed herself, but we’re really not sure yet of anything.”

“Anne has been low lately, but I can’t see her doing something like that. Not in her nature. But I’d be surprised if it’s Chet. If you knew them at all you know that he doted on her.”

They pulled into the parking lot of the hospital. Claire asked her, “Why do you say that Anne wasn’t doing so well recently?”

“She’s been hinting that they’ve had problems. She never told me exactly what was going on, but she did let on that something was wrong. I asked her to come stay with me for a while, but she said she couldn’t leave Chet. Not really like her. If only …” Colette stopped and started to shake, sucking back tears.

Claire reached out and touched her arm while Colette calmed herself.

Colette rubbed a hand through her hair and wiped her eyes. “Sorry about that. I’m really not much of a crier, but I just can’t believe she’s gone. It’s like it shoots through me. I forget for a moment, then—blam—I get hit with it again. Anne’s dead. My little sister’s dead.”

Hearing Colette say the phrase, “my little sister,” Claire’s mind flew right to Bridget and how she would react if anything happened to her own little sister. A stabbing sorrow hit her too.

“I can’t imagine how you’re feeling,” Claire said, trying to regain her composure. “It has to be a nightmare.”

“I just can’t believe it.”

Claire got out of the car quickly so Colette wouldn’t see her wiping tears from her own eyes. When Colette stood on the sidewalk, still crying, Claire slipped an arm under hers and led her into the hospital. They walked down a long hallway and took the elevator down a floor to the morgue.

Holding onto Colette’s arm felt like the least she could do to comfort the woman. Sometimes just having someone touch you was all that was needed when the going got rough.

Claire sat Colette down, went into the morgue and arranged to have the gurney wheeled into a private room. A few minutes later, they were standing over the covered gurney that held Anne Baldwin. Colette was holding a smashed Kleenex in her hand. She looked up at Claire and nodded her head.

Claire gently lifted the sheet off the woman’s face, pulling it down to her shoulders. In death, Anne looked cold and tired, face just a shade warmer than the sheet. A lot of her energy had been in her eyes and they were shut. The round bullet hole in the middle of her forehead looked unreal, more like an ornament than a wound.

At this sight, Colette pulled her breath in and clamped her hands over her mouth.

“It’s hard. I know,” Claire said, surprised at how much it was affecting her to see her friend like this. It was as if she had

forgotten who was under the sheet, who this dead woman was.

Colette shook her head with a jerk, then burst out, “Now I know for sure she didn’t do it. No question.”

Claire looked down at the white face of Anne more carefully. “Why do you say that?”

Colette’s hand hovered over Anne’s forehead, pointing down at the bruised hole in the middle. “Anne would never shoot herself in the face. She loved the way she looked. She took such good care of herself, her skin and all. She would never have shot herself there. In the heart, yes, but never the face.”

CHAPTER 9

A
crumpled piece of rusty-red fabric tucked into a cardboard box is what had caught her eye. Since the edge of the dumpster was over her head, Amy asked Bill to lift her up so she could reach down into the dumpster and see what it was. She didn’t want to admit to him that she was hoping it was a blood-soaked rag or sheet.

“Gross. What’s down there?” he asked.

“You are the most finicky cop I’ve ever known. I’m not sure, but I think what I’m seeing is something sort of reddish.”

He bent over and cupped his hands together, offering her a boost. She stepped into his hands and was amazed, as always, at how easily he lifted her weight. Amy hung over the rounded metal side into the interior of the dumpster, trying not to breathe, and managed to hook a finger around an edge of the fabric. Once she got a firm grip on it, she put her weight back into Bill’s hand-stirrup and let him lower her back down to the ground.

“What’ve you got there?”

“Let’s see,” Amy gently shook out the red fabric and saw the she was in fact holding a t-shirt. Not stained red, but obviously dyed a rusty-red. Amy held up the red t-shirt and they both

looked it over. The garment was a very large and fairly dirty red t-shirt. When she scrutinized the label, she read 100 percent cotton and then XXL. The shirt was turned inside out so Amy couldn’t tell yet if anything was printed on the front or back.

“Why would someone throw this perfectly good t-shirt in the dumpster?” Bill asked.

“I don’t know. A million reasons. Didn’t like it. Spilled something on it. But it’s definitely our mystery man’s size, extra extra large.” Amy said. “There are no holes in it, but it does look like it’s been worn and it’s kinda dusty.”

“What is that all over it?” Bill asked and ran his finger down the shirt.

Amy said, “You know I suppose we should be wearing gloves.”

“Oh, come on. You can’t leave fingerprints on fabric. What are we going to mess up? We’re not even sure that it’s connected to bloaty boy.”

“I just have a feeling.”

“Gosh, that is so girlie. You’re such a smart cop, I forget you have that woman’s intuition.”

Amy ignored that remark, but slipped her gloves on and then rubbed a finger down the t-shirt fabric. She sniffed the light-colored powder that collected on her fingertip and then stared at it closely. “I think it’s sawdust.”

“Throw it back in the garbage. It’s nothing.”

“Let me turn it right side out first.” Amy grabbed the bottom of the shirt and straightened it out. Nothing on the back. When she turned it around, her heart jumped in her chest. “Look.”

“What?” Bill asked, staring at the shirt. “I don’t see nothing.”

“Anything,” Amy couldn’t help saying. “You don’t see the tree?”

“So? What’s with a tree?”

“Oh, maybe I didn’t tell you—bloaty guy—he had this exact symbol of a tree tattooed on his shoulder. Which, I’m guessing, would make this his t-shirt.”

“Great. Now we have a guy who we can’t identify with a shirt that has no writing on it.”

“But maybe it means something,” Amy suggested. “Like it’s the symbol of a business or an organization or something.”

Bill turned the shirt around so he could see the tree symbol again. “Yeah. I think you’re right. I got an idea. Feel like a beer?”

“We’re not quite off duty, my dear.”

“Let’s go to Sven’s anyways.”

As they walked into Sven’s Bar and Grill, Amy was hit by the smell of old cigarettes and stale beer. Funny how it seemed stronger in the middle of the day when the bar was nearly empty. No people-smell to tone it down.

“Well, if it isn’t two fine officers of the law,” Sven himself said. Sven, broad as a beam, could barely see over the bar. Amy figured he was no more than five feet tall. He sported a patchy dark beard and slicked his wispy brown hair back with some kind of gel. His gruff voice sounded like it came out of a well. She didn’t know him well, but she knew he ran a tight ship. They didn’t get very many calls from his establishment.

“What can I do you for? Set you up with two frosty ones?” Sven asked as they settled onto bar stools.

Bill looked at her and Amy said, “Thanks, but not at the moment.”

“Show him the t-shirt,” Bill told her.

Amy held up the shirt for Sven’s perusal. They had stopped off at the squad car on the way to the bar and she had bagged it, folding it carefully so the tree symbol showed clearly through the plastic.

“The tree guy,” Sven said.

Amy refrained from saying, “Duh.”

Bill asked the obvious question. “What tree guy?”

Sven shook his head. “Not sure what his name is or anything. He’s come in a couple times. He’s a tree removal and trimmer guy. Don’t think he’s from around here, but I’m not sure. In fact, if I remember correctly, he’s a Vikings fan.”

“Only someone from Minnesota would have that kind of bad taste,” Bill said. He was a hard-core Packers fan. “Interesting. Anything else you can tell us? He a regular? When was the last time you saw him in here?”

Sven combed his hands through his scant beard. “Within the last couple weeks, I’d say. Couldn’t swear to it, though.”

“Can you describe him?” Amy asked.

“Oh, you know, about yea-high,” Sven held a hand out about a foot above his own head. “About yea-wide.” He held his two short arms out as far as they would stretch. “And to hear him talk, about yea-long.” He held his hand out as far as he could in front of the fly of his jeans.

“Into the ladies?” Bill asked.

“If you believed what he said.”

“What color hair?” Amy asked.

Sven scratched his own thinning scalp. “Geez, you know, it’s dark in here most of the time. I don’t pay much attention to that sort of stuff.”

“Could it be red?”

Sven shrugged. “Could be. Kinda dark red.”

“Ever noticed any kind of tattoo?” Amy asked.

“Where?” Sven fired back.

Amy couldn’t help laughing. “You know, your mind’s in the gutter, Sven. On his shoulder.”

“Not that I remember.”

“Was he with anyone when he came in?”

“Not that I recall.”

Amy felt like they had pushed Sven’s memory about as far as it would stretch. “Thanks for help. If you remember anything else, give us a call.”

“Yeah, thanks,” Bill said as he was looking longingly at the tap on the edge of the bar.

“Can we get a six-pack to go?” Amy asked.

After Sven handed them the six-pack, Amy grabbed Bill’s arm and pulled him toward the door. “So it sounds like he was down here for business, not pleasure, if he is our guy.”

Bill shrugged. “Who knows, maybe both.”

* * *

Claire decided she didn’t want to take Colette back to the department. The woman needed to recover, and sugar was always good for shock so she took her to a little coffee shop in the basement of the hospital.

“They make good pie here,” Claire advised her.

Colette reached out and took the first piece of pie that came to hand. Cherry, it looked like. Claire followed suit. There

wasn’t a fruit pie she didn’t like. Both of them grabbed coffee. Claire paid for it. The least she could do.

Once they were sitting at a table and Colette had a few bites of pie inside her, Claire asked her an easy, non-threatening question. “How far is Waseca from here?”

“Well, depends on which way you come. You know, as the crow flies, it’s only about sixty miles, but then there’s the lake, you see. You have to get around the lake. Usually takes me about two hours to get home.”

“Did you see Anne very often?”

“Oh, you know how it goes. Both of us were pretty busy. I’d say I’d maybe get over here two or three times a year, usually the holidays, and she’d come to Waseca about the same, but we talked on the phone just about every week. We’d check in. Since I’ve been living on my own, Anne’s been real good to me.”

“Just you two in the family?”

“Oh, no. We got two brothers in between us, but they moved away. One’s out in California. The other’s down in Florida. They don’t stay in touch. You know how guys are.”

Claire could see that Colette was calming down. She had eaten some of her pie and was sipping her coffee. So Claire decided to launch into the more tricky questions. “I’d like to ask you a few more questions about your sister’s state of mind. What did Anne tell you was going on with her and Chet?”

“She wasn’t specific, you know. Just kind of hinting around, like they were having some kind of sex problems.”

Claire suddenly remembered a snippet of a conversation with Anne about a month ago. They had walked out to Anne’s garden to look at her roses. Anne had said something about all

things ending, even passion. She had said it in a funny way, looking at the full-blown rose in her hand. “Too much? Too little?”

“I got the feeling too little.”

“According to whom?”

“Whom? What are you, some kind of professor? According to her, obviously. Otherwise, I probably wouldn’t know about it. She didn’t go into any gory details, but I could tell.”

“Did she sound very upset about it? Did she think her husband was stepping out on her?”

Colette pursed her lips. “No, nothing like that. Just sounded like they were having problems.”

“Did she seem depressed to you?” Claire asked.

“Hard to say. More like confused and a little angry. Like what about her, what was she supposed to do?” Colette pushed at her pie with her fork. “Our parents were totally stoics. Taught us not to complain when things were going wrong. Said nobody wants to hear your bad news. Hard to unlearn those sorts of lessons. So I was surprised when Anne even told me she was having a hard time. Especially about sex. To tell you the truth, I didn’t want to know much more about it. Never asked her specifically what was wrong. Now I wish I did.”

“You didn’t get the feeling she was upset enough for her to kill herself?”

“No way.” Colette slammed her fork down on her plate. “I’m sure she didn’t. I already told you. I suppose it could have been Chet. Maybe she was too demanding. Maybe he was ashamed of not being able to take care of her. How do you expect me to know? Are you going to arrest him?”

“Well, he’s in the hospital and a guard is there.”

“Here? Why is he in the hospital?”

A twinge of guilt pricked Claire as she explained, “He tried to kill himself this morning.” Claire thought of Chet sleeping in the hospital floors above them. The nurse had called earlier to say he had come around and was talking so Claire had sent over a deputy to sit watch. She wasn’t going to make that mistake again.

Claire watched as Colette’s face broke open, mouth hanging open, eyes pulling wide, nostrils flaring. Then she said, “I can’t believe it. When did that happen? Was it one of those joint affairs where they tried to go together?”

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