Three Can Keep a Secret (11 page)

Read Three Can Keep a Secret Online

Authors: Archer Mayor

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Police Procedural

BOOK: Three Can Keep a Secret
13.41Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Chapter Eleven

Sammie stopped what she was doing in the kitchen, hearing Emma squealing happily in the front room. She moved quietly down the hallway to watch Willy from the doorway. He was lying on his back, holding the tiny child overhead, cupped in his right hand

her chubby arms and legs thrashing like a turtle's seeking traction. He was lowering her as he might an exercise weight, until they were touching nose to nose, and then catapulting her back up into the air, to her repeated delight.

Willy, his self-preservative instincts never at rest, addressed Sammie without looking at her, despite the fact that she'd not made a noise. "You laying bets she's gonna throw up on me?"

Sammie laughed. "God, I hope not." She entered the room and settled into a rocking chair as Willy continued his play. For her part, she hadn't even heard him enter the house. Only Emma's giggles had informed her. But that was nothing unusual. She was living with a ghost in some ways

a man so bolted down and private, half the time he seemed to wish he'd been born invisible.

He wasn't entirely alone there. She'd known that feeling when she was younger, coming from a home with no love, functioning in a male-dominated profession, and having an attraction for losers when it came to past companionship. She'd had times when even her own company seemed too much to bear.

No longer, though. Of that, she was increasingly sure. Willy may have been everyone's favorite choice for relational disaster of the year, but he'd proved her faith in him to be sound and justified. And Emma was Exhibit A.

Emma's responses began to wane, so her father settled her onto his chest, where she happily lay drooling onto his shirt and playing with his chin.

"Just got back from the land of the one-string banjo players," Willy announced.

"Interviewing more Rozanskis?" she asked.

"A couple," he agreed. "I met two others, too, but I can't say I interviewed 'em. They are a tight-lipped bunch."

"You find out anything new?"

"Hardly. Confirmed that Bud and Dreama had three kids, Nate, Herb, and Eileen, and that Nate hasn't been heard from in forever . . . and, of course, they all thought Herb was six feet under."

"Where's Eileen?"

From his position on the floor, his face appeared upside down to her, making his smile appear all the more clownish. "Ah!" he said. "Great minds think alike. Yeah, I'm guessing she's my next stop. Not much to be gained messing around with the people she dumped

probably because of their crummy conversational skills. Stamford," he added. "To answer your question." He frowned. "Almost in Massachusetts and as isolated as what she left."

Sam rose from the rocker and stretched out on the floor beside them, so that their three heads were less than a foot apart. Emma gurgled happily with her mother's arrival.

"How 'bout you?" Willy asked, touching her hair with his fingertips. "What've you been up to?"

Her eyes widened slightly in alarm at that. "What time is it?"

He told her without checking his watch

another trick he'd perfected over the years.

"We have a staff meeting with Joe in thirty minutes," she said, immediately interpreting his reaction. "And I asked if Emma could come along. No sweat."

Willy smiled and addressed his daughter. "Hey, Junior G-girl. Wanna take a meeting with the big cheese?"

 

Joe smiled broadly as Sam, Willy, and Emma entered the office. Every time he saw them, this unlikeliest of families gave him pleasure, both because of how much he liked and admired the individuals within it, and because of how it contrasted with the domestic car crashes he and other cops witnessed every day.

"Hi, there," he greeted them. "Sorry for the short notice, but happy it forced you to bring in the young inheritor." He walked up to them and stuck his face into Emma's, as most adults do, as if babies were the shortsighted geriatrics some of them resembled.

"How are you, sweetheart?" he asked in a near whisper.

Emma reached out and swiped at his nose, her expression serious with intent.

Despite his propensity for delivering acerbic one-liners, especially at sentimental moments, Willy merely looked on benignly.

Joe broke away so they could settle in, and resumed his greeting. "Anyhow, Lester's wife was asking for photos of him, to remember what he looked like, so we came back for a quick visit. I thought it might be good to throw in a meeting, as well, to see where we all stood."

"That's why we have phones and e-mail, boss," Willy told him.

Joe ignored him. "You getting anywhere on Rozanski?" he asked instead.

"Slowly," Willy said. "It's basically a double missing persons case, involving Herb and his brother, Nate. Next stop is to interview the sister in Stamford. How you doin' with Barber?"

"About the same," Joe admitted. "Only, when we went to interview Carolyn's sister, she had Alzheimer's and couldn't talk to us. Her son didn't have much, either, but at least he gave us an album with a newspaper clipping showing Carolyn with the same politician named Gorden Marshall that Sam discovered had died overnight."

There was silence in the room for the couple of seconds that it took Willy to grasp that this was beyond a simple catch-up meeting. "Killed?" he asked, realizing he'd never gotten an answer from Sammie about what she'd been doing.

"They're claiming natural causes," Joe explained. "But we've sent him up for an autopsy with the local SA's help."

"I found out a little about Carolyn," Sam volunteered. "According to what I could locate, she worked for the legislative counsel in the statehouse, I guess typing up bills. Wasn't married, no kids, didn't own a house, made probably five grand a year. There's a ton that's not on computers from back then, so that's a disadvantage."

Her expression showed how badly she felt that she couldn't rattle off a detailed and revealing biography on command. Sammie openly regarded Joe as a quasi-father figure, since their history stretched back to when she was on patrol and he headed the detective squad downstairs. To have so little to report made her feel like a failure.

But Joe simply shrugged. "Just a twenty-something office girl," he said. "Socially invisible. God only knows what kind of shark pool that was back then."

Lester feigned surprise. "Really? In little old Vermont?"

Joe smiled at him. "Ancient history now, but the legislators and their hangers-on used to drink like fish and act like sailors on leave. If you were a girl and valued your job, you either joined them or got out of town after hours."

"That what you think was behind the 'Governor-for-a-Day'?" asked Sammie.

"I have nothing to go on
,"
Joe conceded. "I'm just saying that the culture was different and that young women like Carolyn Barber were advised to watch their backs."

" 'Governor-for-a-Day' seems to have been a flash in the pan," Lester added. "You think that was because it was just a cover-up for a little hanky-panky?"

"Maybe," Joe agreed. "The Republicans were on the verge of losing power. The plan was probably a way to make them look friendlier to the electorate. I think that was the rumor. But there's no saying that something darker wasn't also at work."

"Does that make Marshall the guy who was doin' her?" Willy asked. "Pretty convenient that he died now

if
it was of natural causes."

"Yeah," Sammie chimed in. "And not so convenient if someone headed us off at the pass."

"That scenario would mean," Lester suggested, "that Marshall was not the guy doin' her, but maybe the guy who knew that guy."

"Eloquent," Willy sneered.

"Duh . . . ," Lester responded.

Joe cut them off.
"Which means we better put Marshall under the proverbial magnifying lens, starting with the contents of his apartment, which we left under guard and seal, thanks to the converted Sergeant Carrier.
Carolyn may have been invisible, but Marshall sure as hell made a wake in those days. Pro tern in the senate, head of several key committees. We ought to be able to find someone willing and able to rat
him
out."

"I don't know, boss," Willy said doubtfully. "Sounding a little harsh with the attitude there."

Sammie used her sweetest voice. "Don't worry, honey-bunny. He could never challenge the King."

 

The medical examiner's office in Vermont had enjoyed a reasonably progressive ride into modernity over the years, thanks to a combination of well-intentioned people and a lack of attention from the rest of the world.

It was currently housed in the bowels of the mazelike Fletcher Allen Health Care Center in Burlington, which itself had been remodeled into something between the world's largest Rubik's Cube and a nonfunctioning Transformer action toy. Still, the so-called OCME

for Office of the Chief Medical Examiner

while tricky to locate, had blossomed into a lean, efficient, quiet organization overseeing why and how the residents of Vermont died.

It was run

and had been for decades

by Beverly Hillstrom, a tall, slender, strikingly attractive blonde whom Joe had known, trusted, and collaborated with since his early days as an investigator. That shared high regard had extended to the physical

just once, years ago

when they'd spent the night together. That encounter, to their mutual relief, had only strengthened the fondness between them and reinforced the sense that they were friends first and foremost.

Amusingly to Joe, however

whose job relied on picking up on life's small, telling details

there had been one noticeable change that marked this very private evolution in his relationship with Hillstrom. In the past, she had referred to him

as she did all police officers

by his rank and last name. That had undergone an improvement.

"Joe," she said, greeting him with a hug in the hallway beyond the reception room. "It's good to see you. When I saw Mr. Marshall arrive, I was hoping that you'd be close on his heels."

Joe laughed, as much at her greeting as in his own continued enjoyment of her perfect syntax. She was one of the best-spoken people he'd ever met.

He gave her an appraising look. "You found something?" he asked.

She squeezed his arm. "I haven't even looked." She led him down the hallway as she spoke further. "He is laid out and waiting for us, however, and he has been washed and had his blood drawn. So, if you care to change into a pair of scrubs, you know where to find me for the next phase."

He stepped into the tight-fitting locker room, at the rear of the equally small office area, changed out of his street clothes, and proceeded down a separate corridor to a wide door at the end. Beyond that he found Hillstrom in the spacious, modern autopsy room

complete with skylight

spreading out what she needed to examine a stark and naked Gorden Marshall.

She looked up as he entered. "I take it the two of you have met?" she asked.

"We have," he answered, approaching the steel table and looking down at the corpulent ex-senator.

"And Todd?" She gestured to a gowned and masked man who walked in from the refrigerated sample storage room, off to the side.

Joe and the all-but-completely disguised diener nodded greetings to each other. The diener in an autopsy suite was like the bouncer at a well-run bar

he did the heavy lifting, to be sure, but was also attuned to everything that occurred around him, in particular the pathologist's expectations and needs. The average autopsy could take several hours and involved quite a bit of effort, especially with a man the size of Mr. Marshall.

"A well-wined-and-dined individual," Hillstrom commented, back to sorting out her tools. "Who, on paper at least, paid the predictable price for most of his earthly vices."

"Meaning high cholesterol?" Joe asked.

"Oh, much more than that," she said. "We just received his medical record from The Woods. He was being treated for hypertension, cholesterol, diabetes, liver disease, cardiac problems, and deep vein thrombosis, among other things. He was also addicted to tobacco and alcohol. I'm not at all surprised that his personal physician was ready to sign him off as a natural. The miracle here is that he lasted so long."

"You think I'm on a wild-goose chase," Joe allowed.

She looked up again, her eyes wide this time. "Good Lord, no. I would never presume such a thing." She reached out with a gloved hand and gently stroked Marshall's considerable belly. "We'll let Mr. Marshall tell us what he knows before we get into that conversation."

Joe had attended many an autopsy. More, in fact, than were called for by his job. For years now, a police liaison had been assigned to the OCME, specifically to communicate with law enforcement, obviating the need for any officer to actually attend an autopsy as part of his or her investigation. That had been common practice in the old days, back when Joe had made it part of his routine, but he was one of the few who

albeit occasionally

still liked to witness the process. Watching the contents of a body being meticulously analyzed was not unlike carefully searching a house, after all. Each and every component had the potential of telling a tale of interest. The trick was in knowing what you were looking for.

That had marked the foundation of Joe's and Beverly's friendship: this passion for clinical scrutiny, not to mention the emotionally charged satisfaction of being on the hunt for clues.

In this case, however, the hunt did not need to extend to Gorden Marshall's organs, or the inside of his skull. It turned out to be surprisingly easier and more readily available than that.

The beginning of any proper autopsy amounted to simply studying the body in detail, including photographing it up close like a mapmaker documenting the lay of the land. As was her routine, therefore, following this, Hillstrom moved to the man's mouth, gently eased his lips apart, and exposed his teeth and gums.

"Ah," she then said.

Joe had learned enough of her ways to immediately sidle up alongside her, so that they looked as if they were praying over Marshall's head. "What?" he asked, peering down.

She had peeled Marshall's upper lip completely back. "The
frenulum labii
superi
oris
has been stressed," she said, virtually to herself.

"Of course it has," he agreed in a similar tone.

She turned her head slightly to catch his eye, their noses almost touching. "Okay. I get it," she said, and pointed to what she meant. "The frenulum is that fragile stretch of skin connecting the lip to the gum. You can feel your own with your tongue right now. You have an upper frenulum and a lower one."

Joe did as instructed and felt the tiny taut ness where she'd advised it would be. "Always wondered what that was there for."

"To help us here and now," she answered simply. "You see where it appears reddened and slightly torn?"

He did, although it didn't leap out at him.

"And here," she continued. "You can see what appear to be slight impressions across the surface of the lip's inner aspect."

"Okay," Joe said in a neutral tone.

"It could be argued," Beverly said, leaving her hands in place but stepping back so that Todd could move in and take photographs of the site, "that such damage can result only if pressure is applied to this area just before death

at least damage with this type of coloring and degree of inflammation."

Joe understood where she was headed. "He was smothered?"

She raised her eyebrows, as she often did when he stretched a finding of hers to satisfy his needs. "This is consistent with that mechanism. Pressure is applied over the mouth

say, of a sleeping man, given that he was dressed in pajamas and found in bed and his apartment not disrupted

resulting in the interior surface of the lip being crushed against the teeth.

"But

" She raised the index finger of her free hand. "— the victim awakens as his oxygen needs reach criticality, and he begins to struggle." She shook her head violently from side to side. "Making his head toss back and forth. That action, combined with the pressure on his mouth, stresses the frenulum, often damaging it, as it did here."

She backed away as Todd finished. "It's not a given that a suffocation always results in such a finding, any more than it is that the hyoid bone is crushed in a hanging or that petechiae have to result from strangulation. But if you find what we did here, the question has to be: How did those injuries get there otherwise?"

Joe was nodding, pleased with his instinct to have sent Marshall here in the first place. "But there must be other findings you can use to back that up, now that you know what to look for? Brain or blood tests?"

She gave him a sad expression. "Not necessarily. If this is a suffocation, that may be it, especially if his heart went into atrial fib quickly. But I do have an ancillary notion. Given that Mr. Marshall was an alcoholic, he may have been drinking before going to bed. That might

and I stress 'might'

have impaired him enough to explain why the frenular damage is as slight as it is. Because this

" And she tapped the man's lip with her gloved finger

"is relatively subtle."

"You're thinking he may not have put up much of a fight," Joe suggested.

"Something else supports that theory," she answered indirectly. "The responding personnel at The Woods routinely document their actions. It's part of their corporate protocol, and one that I greatly appreciate. They faxed me that report, and there is specific mention of the decedent's being supine, in bed, with his arms under the covers. To me, that either indicates that they were pinned in place while he was being suffocated

possibly by an accomplice

or that the attack was sudden and lethal enough that his own enfeebled constitution simply collapsed under the strain."

"How was his pillow situated?" Joe asked.

"There were two of them. His head was resting on one. The other was found on the floor beside the bed."

Joe's cell phone began to vibrate where he'd clipped it to the waistband of his scrubs. He checked the caller's ID. It was Sammie, who knew where he was, what he was doing, and that he'd be poorly disposed to being disturbed for anything shy of an emergency.

He looked up at Beverly. "I better take this," he said apologetically, as she was already encouraging him to do so with a hand gesture. "Joe," he answered.

"Sorry," Sam began, "but I knew you'd want to know this right off. There was a fire at the house where you and Les went to see Barb Barber and her son, in Shelburne. They're both dead."

"Arson?" he asked.

"Don't know yet. I just got it."

"Okay. I'll head there right now. Thanks."

He snapped the phone closed and looked up at Beverly. "It appears you're about to get two more customers. House fire in Shelburne."

She gave him a world-weary smile and said, "It was nice seeing you again, Joe. Try to fit in dinner next time." She nodded toward Marshall. "I'll send you my findings on him as quickly as I can."

"Thanks, Beverly," he replied, already retreating toward the door. He stopped there to cast her a more measured look, and added, "And I'd enjoy dinner very much."

Other books

The Color of Courage by Natalie J. Damschroder
The Aloha Quilt by Jennifer Chiaverini
Sennar's Mission by Licia Troisi
Uncovering the Silveri Secret by Melanie Milburne
Crave by Karen E. Taylor
Wittgenstein's Mistress by David Markson, Steven Moore
All That Matters by Lillibridge, Loralee
Pecking Order by Chris Simms
Delicious and Suspicious by Adams, Riley
Plus One by Brighton Walsh