See Also Deception

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by Larry D. Sweazy




  ALSO BY LARRY D. SWEAZY

  See Also Murder

  A Thousand Falling Crows

  Published 2016 by Seventh Street Books®, an imprint of Prometheus Books

  See Also Deception. Copyright © 2016 by Larry D. Sweazy. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, digital, electronic, mechanical, photocopy­ing, re­cord­ing, or otherwise, or conveyed via the Internet or a website without prior written permission of the publisher, ex­cept in the case of brief quotations em­bodied in critical articles and reviews.

  This is a work of fiction. Characters, organizations, products, locales, and events portrayed in this novel either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  Cover design by Jacqueline Nasso Cooke

  Cover images © Corbis

  Cover design © Prometheus Books

  Inquiries should be addressed to

  Seventh Street Books

  59 John Glenn Drive

  Amherst, New York 14228

  VOICE: 716–691–0133 • FAX: 716–691–0137

  WWW.SEVENTHSTREETBOOKS.COM

  20 19 18 17 16 • 5 4 3 2 1

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Sweazy, Larry D., author.

  Title: See also deception : a Marjorie Trumaine mystery / Larry D. Sweazy.

  Description: Amherst, NY : Seventh Street Books, 2016.

  Identifiers: LCCN 2016007618 (print) | LCCN 2016013607 (ebook) | ISBN 9781633881266 (softcover) | ISBN 9781633881273 (ebook)

  Subjects: LCSH: Librarians--Fiction. | Murder--Investigation--Fiction. | BISAC: FICTION / Mystery & Detective / Women Sleuths. | FICTION / Mystery & Detective / Historical. | GSAFD: Mystery fiction.

  Classification: LCC PS3619.W438 S435 2016 (print) | LCC PS3619.W438 (ebook) | DDC 813/.6--dc23

  LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/2016007618

  Printed in the United States of America

  Contents

  CHAPTER 1

  CHAPTER 2

  CHAPTER 3

  CHAPTER 4

  CHAPTER 5

  CHAPTER 6

  CHAPTER 7

  CHAPTER 8

  CHAPTER 9

  CHAPTER 10

  CHAPTER 11

  CHAPTER 12

  CHAPTER 13

  CHAPTER 14

  CHAPTER 15

  CHAPTER 16

  CHAPTER 17

  CHAPTER 18

  CHAPTER 19

  CHAPTER 20

  CHAPTER 21

  CHAPTER 22

  CHAPTER 23

  CHAPTER 24

  CHAPTER 25

  CHAPTER 26

  CHAPTER 27

  CHAPTER 28

  CHAPTER 29

  CHAPTER 30

  CHAPTER 31

  CHAPTER 32

  CHAPTER 33

  CHAPTER 34

  CHAPTER 35

  CHAPTER 36

  CHAPTER 37

  CHAPTER 38

  CHAPTER 39

  CHAPTER 40

  CHAPTER 41

  CHAPTER 42

  CHAPTER 43

  CHAPTER 44

  CHAPTER 45

  CHAPTER 46

  CHAPTER 47

  CHAPTER 48

  CHAPTER 49

  CHAPTER 50

  AUTHOR’S NOTE

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  To Rose

  “Absence and death are the same—only that in death there is no suffering.”

  —Theodore Roosevelt

  “Indexing work is not recommended to those who lack an orderly mind and a capacity for taking pains. A good index is a minor work of art but it is also the product of clear thought and meticulous care.”

  —Peter Farrell

  CHAPTER 1

  October 1964

  By the fourth ring, concern started to creep into my heart and mind. Calla Eltmore had always been one of the most consistently reliable people that I’d ever known. Her enduring presence at the other end of the telephone line was a matter of expectation on my part, and Calla’s, too, as far as that went. She’d been the librarian at the public library in Dickinson for as long as I could remember, and she’d always held a strict policy of answering the phone promptly. More than once, Calla had said that she could get to the phone in three rings or less from anywhere in the library, then proven that statement to be true time and time again. My growing concern was not unfounded.

  With each ring I gripped the receiver and tapped my red ink pen against the wall more emphatically. If I’d had another hand I would have chewed at the tip of my reading glasses, a bad habit I’d picked up recently. My nerves had yet to calm down from the unfortunate events that had occurred over the past summer.

  I wasn’t really pressed for time, though I was under a strict deadline—two in fact—with another indexing project waiting in the wings, a commitment made to my editor, Richard Rothstein, in New York, without much choice. But I had a question concerning the index that I was working on. A simple question that Calla could answer for me quickly, so I could move on to something else. So, like a thousand times before, I’d made my way from my desk to the phone in search of a resource that I did not possess, a book that needed to be added to my collection but never would be. At last count, the library in Dickinson held over twenty-one thousand volumes of text. The library had always been my salvation. The building, and Calla, had always been there for me in one way or another.

  Was musk thistle a perennial plant or a biennial plant?

  It was a basic question and one that I really should have known, since the noxious plant grew on our land. I could walk out my door and touch it, smell it, and feel it if I wanted to. But I’d never paid attention to its lifecycle, nor was the year of its growth mentioned anywhere in the text of the book that I was writing the index for, Common Plants of the Western Plains: North Dakota. It was a short book, more of a field guide than an in-depth study, and I was perplexed by the omission of such foundational information. Perennial or a biennial plant? How could the author, Leonard Adler, a native of Fargo, have missed such an important point about such a hated, invasive weed?

  According to Mr. Adler, musk thistle had been introduced in the nineteenth century, most likely on a ship with livestock, and had spread from the eastern United States to North Dakota aggressively, replacing other native and more beneficial thistles in pastures and grasslands as it went. Farmers fought it when they had time to notice, but they mostly won the battle and lost the war.

  I pulled the receiver from my ear and looked at the phone to make sure that it wasn’t broken. The buzz of the unanswered rings sounded like a bee was trapped inside the black plastic earpiece. I knew better than that. Then I began to question whether I’d dialed the right number. Of course I had. I could have dialed the library in my sleep. But I still had to wonder. I’d been burning the candle at both ends for weeks, bouncing between the demands of the farm, my daily life tending to Hank, and writing indexes for an array of books, one right after the other. The variety of subject matter required my undue attention—common plants, travel by train in Europe, and a biography about George Armstrong Custer’s wife, Elizabeth. Each new index I wrote became a journey into the unknown, an opportunity to learn, to better myself, to get paid for reading and writing, but I still had a life outside of books—whether I wanted to admit it or not.

  It was obvious by the eleventh ring that Calla wasn’t going to answer the phone, so I reluctantly hung up.

  The tips of my fingers were cold to the bone. I had a deep urge to try and stop time, to walk out of my small house and grab at the wide blue sky that hung overhead a
nd try to wrap it around my shoulders in a protective shawl against any bad thing that might be coming my way. I knew it was magical thinking, a childish wish, but I’d had enough tragedy to digest recently, and I could barely stand the prospect of dealing with anything else that came in the form of a dark cloud. Enough was enough.

  Something is wrong. I know it.

  I decided that I would just have to call back later, that the question about musk thistle would have to go unanswered for the moment. It wasn’t the end of the world. I was on track to finish up the Common Plants index a few days early, leaving me a little extra time to dive full force into the second book that I had committed to indexing, Zhanzheng: Five Hundred Years of Chinese War Strategy.

  Unlike the Common Plants book, the Zhanzheng title was a thick tome, four hundred pages, and I’d been given a month to complete the index. I was intimidated by the subject matter, since I didn’t know a thing about China, much less its ways of war, but I was heartened by the structure of the book. At first glance at the first few page proofs I received in the mail, the book looked to have been edited well, which made all the difference in the world when it came to divining the most important terms and concepts out of such dense text and creating an index out of them.

  But China would have to wait, too, just like my unanswered musk thistle question. I was almost sure that the thistle was a biennial plant once I thought about it, but almost sure wouldn’t cut it. I had to know the correct answer. There was no guessing when it came to including an entry in an index. It had to be a solid fact. I needed verification of my assumption, otherwise I would risk the integrity of the index, of my livelihood, and that wasn’t going to happen. I had to be just as reliable as Calla Eltmore had always been.

  I pulled myself away from the phone and stopped at the bedroom door, just like I did every time I passed it. I had to make sure that Hank was all right, still breathing.

  I would have preferred to be able to walk straight back to my desk and put a question mark by the biennial entry and move on to the next decision, the next question that needed to be answered for the reader, but that was not to be. The comfortably worn path of my life had been permanently altered a year ago and would never be the same again.

  As I looked at Hank, I was silently relieved. Today’s not the day. And silently sad for the same reason. Once again, death had not taken Hank gently in the night. The coming day would only bring more struggling—if only to breathe—than a good man like Hank Trumaine should ever have to endure.

  I’d rested my hand on the same place on the door trim so many times that it was starting to show the wear of my presence. Smooth with hours of worry and dread, the white paint had started to fade, discolored by the labor of waiting and the acidic oils of my skin. The terrified grip of my fingers holding tight to the molding had left an unsavory mark.

  I was not on a ship, but most days I needed steadying, fearful that the sway of everyday life, as it was now, would knock me off my feet and toss me overboard. I’d be lost in an endless sea of madness and fear from which there was no return. And no one to save me . . . but me.

  I knew that I would never repair the door, dab fresh paint over the mar, for as long as I lived, for as long as I remained in the house. It was like the notches that marked the growth of a child as it sprang as eagerly as a weed toward adulthood. Only this was no march toward independence or a keepsake log of happy milestones. There was no hint of a child in our house; Hank and I had failed long ago at that effort. Instead, it was a march toward death, the result of a simple accident, one that had left my husband nearly unrecognizable; a withering, fragile man, blind, paralyzed from the neck down, instead of the hale and hearty one that I had married and fallen in love with so many years before.

  The wear on the trim would forever remind me of Hank’s struggle to live and the sad fact that there was nothing I could do to save him or relieve him of his suffering. The truth was, he wanted to die more than he wanted to live. But leaving me and leaving this earth was out of his hands, or harder than he would have ever acknowledged out loud. I was convinced that it was only his permanent stasis, his inability to move, that had saved him from the choice of suicide.

  More than once Hank had begged me to put a pillow over his face and walk away. “No one would know,” he’d whisper. He was mostly right. We were isolated, miles from town, our tiny house in the middle of seven hundred flat acres of durum wheat and silage. Our nearest neighbor’s farm, Erik and Lida Knudsen’s place, was three miles down the road; ten minutes as the crow flew but longer for my human legs. We were connected by a path carved out over the years by their sons, Peter and Jaeger, coming to help out when they could or were needed, and by the horrible tragedy that had befallen Erik and Lida three months ago.

  But I’d know. I’d know and couldn’t live with myself, couldn’t live with the memory of the darkest sin a human being could commit. I wasn’t capable of murder. I just wasn’t. I could find no mercy in honoring Hank’s request.

  Hank would yell and curse at me—something he’d never done before the accident—when I’d disappear from the bedroom without saying a word. He would accuse me of being selfish, only to apologize later when it was time to eat or take a bath. Both of us were afraid. It was as simple as that. Lost and afraid, incapable of living the life we’d found ourselves in, but left with no other choice but to face every day the best we could.

  CHAPTER 2

  Shep, our ever-present border collie, appeared at my feet and watched my every move. He waited for me to flinch, to signal what was to come next. Sometimes, the dog’s persistent attention drove me mad, but most of the time I found comfort in his intelligence and diligence. I’d said it more than once, but Shep would have made a great indexer if he’d been human.

  We were both ready to get on with the work that needed to be done, but my feet were planted heavily on the wood plank floor, glued in place by hesitation and reticence, neither of which were familiar traits to me in the days before Hank’s accident.

  There was something in the way that Hank breathed that had changed since I’d last checked on him. It was a subtle sound, nothing visible, more like an echo in a far off canyon. A place that I didn’t want to explore on my own, even though I knew I would have to.

  “What’s the matter?” Hank opened his pale, cloudy eyes at the same time as he spoke. He stared blankly up at the ceiling, his facial muscles still and unreadable.

  I had to wonder how long he’d been awake, aware of my station at the door, his eyes closed, his ears open.

  “Nothing. Nothing’s the matter,” I answered.

  It was futile to expound on the lie any further. Even blind and in his motionless, incapable state, Hank knew the peaks and valleys of my voice, knew the truth when he heard it. Even Shep wasn’t convinced. My tap-tap-tap of the pen against the wall had set the dog on edge, alarmed him. I was certain the dog could smell my frustration. Shep took his eyes off me and searched the floor for anything that moved. Nothing did.

  “You want to try again?” Hank said.

  I closed my eyes, strained to hear the strength and certainty in Hank’s voice, imagine him healthy, upright, getting ready to leave the house and tend to his daily chores. But that was more of a fantasy than I could easily conjure at the moment. That man, that Hank, had been taken from me long before I was ready for it. Some days I could barely remember when he could actually fend for himself. Caring for him was the exercise of child rearing that I’d never experienced before.

  “Calla’s not answering the phone,” I finally said.

  “Maybe she’s busy.”

  “She’s never too busy to answer the phone.”

  “Personal business?”

  “You don’t understand.”

  “You’re worried. Something’s out of place. How could I not understand that?”

  I didn’t answer him right away. He was right. Hank had always been good about reading my moods. He knew the difference between my personal clouds as
much as he did those that floated in the sky. “It was a year ago this week,” I said. All of the doctors said you wouldn’t last a month, but here you are, I wanted to say, but couldn’t bring myself to.

  “I know what time of the year it is,” Hank said. “That wasn’t it. The worry I heard.”

  I had to strain to hear Hank’s words. His voice was weak and scratchy.

  “I thought I heard a rattle in your chest is all,” I said. “Doc Huddleston said we should always be wary of a cold, of something settling in your chest. The weather’s changing.” I cocked my head to the door, put an ear to the wind that rustled around the house looking for a way in. I could feel its cold fingers grabbing at my toes. “The box-elder bugs are gathering at the seams of the siding, trying to find their way in.” I could already smell their frass mixed with the odor of human sickness and pity.

  “Hibernation would be a nice option to have, wouldn’t it?” Hank whispered. “Wake up in the spring when everything is normal, with no memory of the winter.” The longing in his voice was painful to hear.

  I turned my head and watched as one of the little black and red beetles scuttled across the window sill. I hated the bugs, globs of them pushing their way inside looking for a source of heat to keep them alive through the winter, but Hank was more forgiving. He admired their struggle and desire to survive, and I’d never seen him kill one. If only he’d felt the same way about killing ruffed grouse.

  Hank had told me more than once that hunting grouse wasn’t like hunting partridge or quail. The birds didn’t congregate in coveys and flush in an explosive flock of feathers and fear. Grouse were mostly loners, except for the young males. They tended to hang loosely together, pecking at the gravel along the side of the roads to fill their gizzards. Those were the easy shots, like shooting fish in a barrel or a lame coyote unable to flee a human’s presence. Hank liked to hunt the more elusive males, the mature ones that flittered in and out of the thin woods, filling up on the abundance of fall berries. It took skill to shoot grouse on the fly. “Evens up the game,” Hank would say with a nod, as he polished the barrel of his grandfather’s reliable shotgun in the same place, at the same time, in the same way year in and year out.

 

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