Authors: Leslie Caine
"Oh, right," Walter said amiably. "Forgot I was traveling with a security officer. It's like having my own bodyguard."
"You got it," Jones said, puffing out his chest.
Walter rolled his eyes and gave me a wink. I'm sure we
all noticed that Bob hadn't exactly leapt in front of
Walter, prepared to take a shot of pepper spray for him
from Margot.
Margot lifted a sculpted eyebrow. "In my case, you
should have knocked on the door. I don't appreciate surprises."
"Have you already told them about Jeremy?" I asked
her, pretending it was an innocent question.
"Erin!" Margot snarled.
"Yeah, she did," Walter quickly replied. "We talked to
Mr. Greene last night. He admitted he was the one who
hooked up the power line. Said it was all his own idea. It
made sense," Walter added with a shrug.
"And it fit the evidence," Bob said. "It explained why
the only place on the power cable where Ms. Troy's fingerprints were found was right where it hooked into the
box . . . not where the power lines were coupled together."
"You were trying to unhook the line," Walter asked her
gently, "weren't you, Ms. Troy?"
"Without risking electrocution, yes," she said. "And
unless Burke or Darren has been tampering with my
lines, you're not going to find anything wrong here."
"Good thing," Walter said.
"As long as we're all here," Margot said, lifting her
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chin, "just tell me my status now. Have I been disqualified?"
"No, Ms. Troy. We discussed this with management at
Earth Love first thing this morning, and we're convinced
that Jeremy acted alone. You've been absolved. As has
Burke Stratton, and, of course, Darren Campesio."
"That's great, but . . ." I hesitated as Margot's piercing
gaze shifted toward me. "Sorry, Margot, but isn't there
also a rule about getting disqualified if you willfully ignore knowledge of rule-breaking by another party?"
"She didn't," Walter quickly interjected. "Mr. Sullivan
wasn't the first I'd heard from yesterday regarding this
matter. Ms. Troy beat him to it. She called me right after
the memorial service."
"I'd only just found out myself two days ago, when
Jeremy came to me privately and confessed. I said I'd give
him some time to work things out for himself, but yesterday, when he'd still done nothing, I finally took matters
into my own hands."
"Coincidentally, right when Sullivan had found the
pirated power line?" I asked her as gently as I could.
"Coincidences do happen, Erin," she replied in a
haughty voice.
"One piece of important information that should
make you both happy," Walter said, "is that I'm nearly
done. Just have to check to make sure all my i's are dotted
and my t's are crossed, and I'll be ready to make my final
decision. Monday or Tuesday at the latest."
"That's wonderful," Margot said, finally boasting a
sincere-looking smile. "I can't tell you how much I'll enjoy having this whole contest ordeal come to an end."
"Yeah," Walter said, chuckling again "I think we're
safe in saying that goes for all of us."
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On Monday morning, Sullivan and I pulled into
Burke's driveway for a scheduled meeting. "I just wish I
could figure out how Margot knew I'd discovered the bogus power line," Sullivan grumbled. After my phone call
on Saturday morning, we hadn't spoken again all weekend, but during our drive I'd filled him in on every last
detail of my conversation with Margot.
"Maybe she paid someone to keep an eye on Burke's
house. In any case, that wasn't the part that bothers me.
It's that Jeremy hooked the splice up in the first place."
He said nothing. I knew I'd given him that reply at
least twice. We made our way to Burke's door, and
Sullivan rang the doorbell.
After waiting a reasonable period, he knocked and
again pushed the doorbell button. Sullivan said, "He's
not here."
"We'd better check the garage," I muttered, already
heading around the house to peer through the window in
the door by the backyard. "He's never late for an appointment."
Sullivan followed in my footsteps. Just as I rounded
the corner, I froze. Some twenty feet ahead of me, I saw
what looked for all the world like a man lying prostrate
on the ground. He wore an Elmer Fudd hunter's cap.
Sullivan pulled up short, followed my gaze, and muttered a curse under his breath. An instant later, he was
running toward the body. I followed, cringing.
Sullivan knelt beside Walter Emory's lifeless body. His
clothing was drenched in bright crimson. There were
two bullet holes in his jacket.
c h a p t e r
1 4
steve checked Walter's body frantically for vital
signs as a wave of sorrow and despair washed over
me. Though I knew it was too late, I dropped to
my knees, grabbed Walter's lifeless hand, and cried,
"Walter?!"
"He's dead," Steve said quietly.
I released my grip and got to my feet. "What is going
on?! Why is Walter even here? On Saturday he said that
he'd nearly completed his judging."
"I'm calling nine-one-one," Steve said, already punching the numbers into his cell phone.
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Snow was beginning to fall. The crystalline white
flakes were starting to land on Walter's face. I couldn't
stand the sight; it seemed inhuman and degrading to
leave him in the elements like this. Sullivan must have
shared my reaction, because even as he solemnly spoke
to the dispatcher--reporting a murder and giving the
address--he was removing his coat.
"Wait," I said. "There's a blanket in the van. I'll get it."
He nodded, and I dashed to the van, eager to get away
for even a few seconds to clear my head. The instant the
macabre scene was out of sight behind Burke's house, a
sense of bitter rage overtook me. In the space of two
weeks, Sullivan had lost his mentor, and now Walter
Emory, an eminently decent human being, was dead,
too. I wanted to throw a tantrum and rail about the unfairness of it all.
I threw open the back door to the van, grabbed the
navy blue fleece blanket, and slammed the door shut. I
turned and tried to take a few slow, deep breaths, willing
myself not to fall apart.
A car was parked across the street. It looked just like
Burke's forest green hybrid. The vehicle was facing the
wrong direction and partially in the ditch.
I took a step toward the car, then remembered that
Sullivan was waiting for the blanket. I strode back to him.
The snow was already starting to accumulate. This was
the Colorado champagne powder that was a skier's delight. Right now, though, it just felt like so much salt,
pouring onto an open wound.
Sullivan shook his head at me and lowered his cell
phone. "The dispatcher told me we shouldn't drape anything over Walter. We'd be lousing up the evidence."
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"So we're just supposed to leave him like this? Getting
covered in snow like a . . . park bench?"
Sullivan gave me a defeated shrug, listened to his
phone for a moment, then explained to the dispatcher
that we hadn't entered the house and couldn't say for certain whether or not it was vacant.
When he paused, I told him, "I'll be out front." I
tossed the blanket back into the van and stared across the
street. The vehicle was still there. My heart was pounding
as I approached the car. Was Burke the second victim?
My feet seemed to be moving of their own accord, bringing me to the car window against my will.
It was indeed Burke's Toyota.
His car was far enough off the side of the road that
Sullivan and I must have driven past without even seeing
it. Burke sat behind the wheel, motionless.
"Burke?" My heart was in my throat. He didn't answer.
With the various patterns of shadow and light on the
windshield, I couldn't see if Burke's eyes were open or
shut. He certainly appeared to be unharmed, though. As
I started around the car to the driver-side door, I could
see that he was alive. He was pale, with dots of perspiration on his brow. He was gripping his steering wheel hard
with both hands, and his engine was turned off.
He looked at me for a moment, turned the key in the
ignition to activate the power, then rolled down the window. "Did you call the police?" he asked.
"Sullivan's on the phone now with nine-one-one.
What on earth are you doing, Burke?" I had to consciously keep my voice below the level of a shriek.
"I don't know. I . . . kind of panicked."
"When?"
"When I found Walter's body. In my backyard."
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Again, I willed my voice to stay reasonably calm, although I wanted to grab the man by his lapels. "So you
found him dead, and you didn't call the police?"
He shook his head. "I was going to run away. All I
could think was: I've got to get out of here! I mean, I
couldn't believe it! This is such a nightmare. A second
murder. This time at my own house!"
"But if you're innocent, nothing makes you look guilty
faster than running."
"Worked out okay for O.J. Simpson."
"You're not a celebrity."
He searched my eyes, his own nearly bulging out of
their sockets. "Erin. I'm screwed. The police are going to
assume I did this! I know I'm still tops on their list for
Thayers's murder."
"Was anybody else here? Do you have an alibi?"
"No."
"Did you see anyone? Hear any cars in your driveway?
Anything?"
He shook his head. "I thought I heard the doorbell
while I was in the shower. But when I shut off the water,
it was quiet. I figured I must have been hearing things.
Then I heard a bang a minute or two later. I assumed it
was someone's old pickup truck backfiring."
"When did you spot Walter Emory?"
"Um, I happened to look out my back door. In the
kitchen." He still seemed to be out of sorts and was struggling to concentrate. "When I came downstairs. I
thought someone was lying in my backyard. And then I
started to put things together . . . and I realized that had
been a gunshot earlier. I ran out and tried to do CPR on
him, but it was too late. That's when, I dunno, I just . . .
went a little nuts. I got into my car and started to head out
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of town. Then I got ahold of myself and came back. But
this is as far as I could force myself to come. Erin, they're
going to arrest me on the spot."
The distant sound of sirens was growing louder.
"That's the police. They'll be here any second. You've got
to come back with me to the house. Right now! Tell them
the whole story."
"They'll arrest me!"
"Burke. You have no choice but to take that chance."
His eyes were vacant, his face and his lips pale. He still
wasn't budging from his car. The sirens sounded like they
were just around the bend. He stared through the windshield with a glassy expression.
"Look at me, Burke. You've got to come with me now
and explain things to the police."
He nodded numbly and emerged from his car. "This
has been the worst nightmare. Why does this keep happening?"
I had no answers for him. Two black-and-white police
cars pulled into Burke's driveway just as we were making
our way up his walkway. A pair of officers emerged from
each car, and we were promptly ordered: "Hold it right
there!"
While Burke explained that this was his house and
that he'd discovered the body in his backyard, a third vehicle, a tan four-door sedan, pulled in and parked at the
base of the driveway. I gritted my teeth at the sight of the
driver--Detective O'Reilly. He was my least-favorite officer. He glowered at me as if to make certain I knew that I
was his least-favorite Crestview citizen. And to think that
Sullivan had the ridiculous notion that O'Reilly had a
crush on me!
He drew a steady bead on me. "Miss Gilbert."
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"Detective O'Reilly."
"Come with me," he ordered, and pulled me away
from Burke, marching me through the freshly fallen
snow in the front yard. "Sergeant Holcombe," he called
to the closest policeman. "Keep an eye on her. I'll question her myself in a few minutes."
O'Reilly and the three remaining uniformed officers
spoke to Burke. I could only hear snippets of the conversation. Understandably, they were taking tremendous exception to his decision to bolt without calling them. I
waited, shivering in the cold. At length, O'Reilly ordered
one of the others to come with him to the backyard to see
what Sullivan had to say, and for two other officers to take
Burke to the station house and get his statement.
That left just me and the officer who'd been assigned
to watch me in the front yard. He was obviously a body
builder--his uniform seemed ready to burst at the seams,