Authors: Leslie Caine
wouldn't be the ticket for you. Just let your heart heal. See
how this feels in another day, then a week, then a month.
Give yourself a chance to gain some perspective."
I took a deep breath and let it out. "I can do that."
"Good. So are you okay to drive? You can come here.
I can make you some comfort food. Chicken soup. Hot
chocolate, maybe?"
I hesitated. The phrase "the last straw" kept ringing in
my ears, and now a strange image came to my mind's eye.
I kept seeing the reveal in Burke's wall, showing the straw
bales. All those broken and bent pieces--were they really
just the result of the shifting foundation? Maybe it was
just a coincidence, or a product of my utter confusion,
but something nagged at me.
"Thanks, but I don't think so."
"What are you going to do instead?"
"Go to the shooting range. Aim at any targets that remind me of Sullivan."
She laughed. "Now, there's a plan."
I couldn't muster a smile, but at least I was breathing.
And talking. Maybe even thinking. Things could be
worse. "On another subject entirely, when the police investigated the scene of the shooting at Burke's house, you
didn't find any loose pieces of straw, did you?"
"Not that I'm aware of. Why?"
"It's just . . . he's got construction problems, with the
concrete in his foundation. The shifting could be causing problems with his straw-bale walls."
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"So the house could be . . . leaking straw?"
"I'm just thinking out loud. Anyway, thanks so much
for your advice. I feel a little better now."
"Any time. And, Erin, Jimmy and I were talking about
having you over for dinner. Tonight's a little hectic, but
what about tomorrow? I don't get off till late, but . . ." She
was obviously making this up as she went along.
"I'd love to. Thanks. But why don't we try for next
week, okay?"
"That'd probably work even better. So. Are you going
to be all right?"
"Eventually. I'll give you a call tomorrow or the day after."
"Take care, Erin. And don't do anything rash."
"Now, when do I ever do anything rash?"
She chuckled and we said good-bye and hung up.
I repaired my makeup as best I could, then backed out
of my parking space. Linda would be furious with me,
but a growing suspicion was starting to get a stranglehold
on me. I couldn't get the image of all those damaged
straws in Burke's wall reveal out of my mind.
There was a simple way of finding out if anything strange
was going on at Burke's house. Many months ago he'd
shown us where he hid the key to his front door, for times
when we needed to let our crews into his home while he was
at work. As long as Burke was at work right now, it would be
simple enough for me to let myself in, remove the screws
holding the glass in place, and investigate to see if the straws
were getting mangled by Burke--or maybe Jeremy--using
that access into his thick walls as a hiding space.
I arrived at Burke's house and peered through his
garage window. His car was gone. Good. It would only
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take me five or ten minutes to prove or disprove my latest
shot-in-the-dark theory, and then I could scoot out of
here with no one the wiser. If, God forbid, Burke caught
me red-handed, I could tell him I was afraid that the
shifting straws could indicate that his house was becoming even more unsafe and that I wanted to take a second
look before calling the structural engineer again. It was a
weak story, but then again, I had red, puffy eyes; every
man I'd ever met hated to belabor any point made by a
woman who'd recently been crying. Men were always
afraid emotions would get stuck to them like white cat
hairs on black velvet.
I stuck a screwdriver in my pocket, raced up Burke's
porch steps, and removed the cap from his lamp. I could
hear his spare key clink inside as I did so. I slid the false
bottom out of the cap, retrieved the key, and set the lamp
cap in the middle of the porch where I couldn't possibly
overlook it. This was undoubtedly a wild-goose chase--a
by-product of my inability to think straight--and the last
thing I wanted to do was accidentally run off with Burke's
key.
I let myself inside, locked the deadbolt behind me,
and entered the living room. The warm air smelled of
cinnamon toast. Burke must have only recently left home
for work after eating breakfast. "Burke?" I called, just to
be cautious, though the jig would have pretty much been
up already if he'd answered.
The desk had been removed from the front porch, I
suddenly realized. Was it in his bedroom, or had the police taken it for fingerprint evidence?
"Focus!" I commanded myself.
I strode boldly into the kitchen and to the reveal on
the east wall next to Burke's table and chairs. I got a sink-P o i s o n e d b y G i l t
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ing feeling of futility as I looked at it. What had I been
thinking? This was straw. Of course the pieces would get
broken along the wall! It was pressed right up against the
glass, after all.
Then again, I thought, unscrewing the fasteners, it
was only the lower third of the visible straws that appeared to be pressed downward, as though something
had been jammed between them and the drywall. Plus,
this spot was in full view of anyone who happened to be
standing near the glass back door. Which was very likely
where Walter Emory had been when he made his unannounced inspection of the property, in the final moments
of his life.
A chill ran up my spine as I continued working to remove the eight screws that held the frame for the window
in place, my mind racing. This would make such an inconvenient--and small--hiding spot. Yet Burke had
been excessively concerned about privacy these past few
months. He'd complained to me before the open house
about how nosy strangers could be--always poking into
his closets and cabinets. That thought alone had almost
driven him to withdraw from the contest. If he'd wanted
to keep some papers well hidden in his house, this would
do the trick.
I finally removed the last screw and removed the
glass--frame and all--from the wall. Sure enough, the
lower portion of the frame had hidden the top half inch
of what looked like a bright yellow plastic folder, which
had been jammed between the straw bale and the
Sheetrock. I cursed at the sight.
It took quite a bit of effort, but millimeter by millimeter I managed to pry the thin folder from behind the wall.
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I sent up a quick prayer that its contents would be innocent in nature--stock certificates or savings bonds.
My hands shook as I unfastened the clasp on the
folder and emptied it onto the kitchen counter. Two
items were inside the folder--a photograph and a dozen
or so typed pages stapled together. The photograph
showed Burke holding a beautiful towheaded boy as they
both beamed into the camera. At once the portrait
tugged at my tear ducts and filled me with fear. The implications of why he'd stashed the picture in a hiding
place with what appeared to be a scientific report were
dreadful.
I scanned the report about data findings for an airpurification system called the CleenAir 2000 System.
The document had been compiled by Dr. Burke Stratton
and listed the results of various airborne particles, which
I recognized as carcinogens. According to the time
stamps and the graphics, the particle counts had increased, rather than decreased, as the samples were
taken.
"Damn it, Erin," a quiet voice behind me said.
I gasped and whirled around. I tried to speak, but I was
too frightened. No words would come.
Burke had managed to unlock the front door and tiptoe inside without my hearing a sound.
He shook his head. "I knew I was in trouble when I
saw the Sullivan and Gilbert van in my driveway. I was
hoping it would be Steve."
He aimed a gun straight at me.
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Ididn't want to do it, Erin," Burke said. He looked to be
on the verge of tears, and the hand holding the gun
shook. "I save lives. I don't take them. But . . . Thayers
killed my son. That idiot invention of his not only didn't
work, it made the air quality worse! Caleb was breathing
in more carcinogens. And I'd put my son's life in his
hands."
Now he was openly crying. His face was the picture of
a man in agony. "My wife was against it all along. She
wanted to keep Caleb in the hospital in the final stages of
his chemo. It wipes out the patient's immune system. But
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Richard promised me his air purifier was as good as anything they could do at the hospital."
Burke's eyes were staring into mine desperately, as if
begging for my understanding. His plaintive demeanor,
when combined with the gun aimed at my chest, made a
physical oxymoron that was both surreal and terrifying.
I'd trusted him! I'd fought with Sullivan over him, insisted on his innocence! He was guilty all along!
"I believed Richard," he went on. "I had to. There was
no time for more testing. We would be able to keep
Caleb home, you see? In his own bedroom. Patients do
better there. Especially when they've got skilled caregivers. It's a proven fact. I told my wife I knew best, as a
doctor."
Burke was openly sobbing. He'd lowered the gun, but
kept it trained on me. The irony of the situation hit me
full force. I was going to die, all because I'd believed in
Burke and refused to listen to Sullivan. Just two days ago,
Steve warned me that Burke could have boody-trapped
his own desk to make himself look innocent.
"That decision took months off my son's life, Erin,"
Burke continued. "It turned me into an accomplice in
my own little boy's death. I tried so hard to live with that.
But I couldn't. Richard Thayers took everything from
me. My son. My self-image as a healer. My wife. My
home, because I couldn't stand to live in that house after
Caleb was gone. My job."
"Because you went into research?"
He shook his head. "I was fired months ago. I was putting too much time into my own research on that
damned CleenAir flimflam contraption that killed my
son."
"I'm so sorry, Burke."
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He nodded and said in a cracked voice. "I know you
are. And it's . . . there's no justice in this world. This is a
place where beautiful, innocent little children get sick
and die. And it doesn't matter how well they're loved.
But, Erin, it shouldn't also be a place where a father who
loves his son more than anything else gets conned into
having a hand in hastening his child's death. That's just
too much."
"It was still wrong, what you did, Burke," I said in a
near whisper, my throat too swollen with pent-up emotion to speak.
He made a derisive noise. "I should have sued, right?
Brought Thayers to court on charges of criminal negligence and so on?"
I managed a small nod.
"I didn't want a dollar figure attached to Caleb's life.
To have judges and lawyers and doctors calculating how
much money parents deserve for some bastard shortening their dying son's life. Besides, Richard made it clear
that the product was still in Beta testing. Though he also
claimed that it was this state-of-the-art product that would
eventually revolutionize air quality in the home. I was
the one who wanted to partner with him--turn it into a
legitimate business that could allow patients with weak
autoimmune systems to convalesce at home. If I had sued
Thayers, I would've been publicly humiliating myself.
The press would have played me as the arrogant doctor
who tried to play God. The fool who defied prevailing
wisdom about patient care and trusted the snake-oil salesman with his own son's life."
Not knowing if it would help or hurt my cause of getting out of here alive, I decided I had to at least go down
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fighting. I said sternly, "So you took revenge instead and
tricked Richard into poisoning himself."
"Yes."
"Did it make you feel any better? Did it restore your
sense of justice in any way?"
"No. No, Erin, it didn't." He swiped at his tears, then
pointed the gun at me again. "I rented lab space by myself at a private facility. When I began the research on
CleenAir, I expected only to find that his product was ineffective. Once I found out that the damned filtering material was emitting more harmful particles into the
environment, I had no choice. I could not let that man
continue to live."
"He didn't do it intentionally, though. I can't believe
he knew how bad his system was and still sold it to you."
"That's irrelevant, Erin! It was his responsibility to do
the kind of testing that I did myself! My own work was