Like that told me a lot. Unfortunately, people just don't annotate e-mails for the cops.
In the rest of the e-mails, content identified Clutch as Huck since she talked about her job on the gaming boat. DealerofDarkness had to be Kevin. Kind of left MagikBoi for Toby, which I thought was a bit of a hoot. WailingSoul and EtherialWaifGurrl were up for grabs, but I was willing to bet the former to be Hanna and the latter Melissa.
Hester got off the phone, and said the group was expecting us after lunch. She sat down on the other side of my desk, and started going through e-mails with me. I told her that I had pretty well identified Choreographer as Jessica, and OnceLost as Edie. We started in from there.
After the first complete sorting, there were five e-mails in the OnceLost pile. One was a receipt from Amazon.com for a vegetarian cookbook; two were eBay-related messages indicating an initial bid and an outbid notice on a Raggedy Ann doll. She'd lost the bid at $12.50. The other two were both from [email protected]. The first was dated July 12, 2000, and timed at 23:15. It included a received e-mail, and like so many, contained the original message that DarcyB2 was replying to.
“Dear E,
I'll sure try to get there for the event! It's been a long time since we have been able to get together for a good talk. Looking forward to seeing you.
Yes I remember the D&E. We sure had big plans then! I remember Lindzy, too.
Hugs,
D”
—Original Message—
From:“OnceLost” >[email protected]>
To: >[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, July 12, 2000 4:19 PM
Subject: Birthday and stuff
“D,
Justa thot. The 19th of August is my Shanna's
>birthday. I think I can get a Raggedy Ann for her
>like Lindzy, our first customer at the D&E
>Salon. Remember? She would love to see her
>Godmother I know. I would love to see you too
>and have some things I really need to talk about.
>Really hope you can make it. Mom won't be
>with us if that helps.
>Sorry its been so long since I wrote.
>We miss ya.
> E & S”
The second was dated July 24, 2000, and timed at 16:44.
“Dear E,
I am so very sorry to have to tell you this, but I won't be able to make it after all. I have to be a bridesmaid for my roommate's sister Ellen, who is getting married on that date in Santa Fe, New Mexico. It's a really big wedding.
We really have to get together, really. I'll call when I get back for sure.
Love and hugs to Shanna and to you.
D”
Interesting. I showed it to Hester. She read through them, and then said, “I had a Raggedy Ann when I was a kid, too.”
“I hope she wasn't counting on the one she bid for on eBay,” I said. “There's an e-mail here telling her that she got outbid.”
“Oh.” She sounded a little distracted. “She had a child…. I didn't know she had a child.”
“Yep. Kid lives with Edie's mother. Not sure just why, but Edie and her mother didn't seem to get along.” I thought for a second. “I seem to remember some sort of custody thing. You know, not a battle, just voluntary. Edie didn't fight it, anyway.”
“Any idea how old?”
“Not sure, but I'd guess about three or four, maybe?”
“Ah. That's quite an age,” said Hester. “Quite an age.”
“Just so you know,” I confided, “with Edie being Lamar's niece and all, she attempted suicide about, oh, a year or so after her mom got the kid. I got stuck with that one, and if I remember correctly, it was the second or third time. None of 'em really serious. Pills, either the wrong kind or not enough. You know.”
“Might work for us,” she said, “but it could play hell with a jury at some point.”
“Well,” I said, “in Edie's case, I'm afraid that knowing she'd tried to do herself in before just gave her killer an idea. He just screwed up faking it, that's all. That'd make the jury think.”
The mere existence of the body bag spoke volumes about the malice aforethought in the mind of the killer or killers.
“Hey, Hester,” I said, “how many people you suppose have a body bag at home? Just lying around out in the garage, for example?”
“Not a lot. How many you know would know where to even get one?”
Not average citizens, anyway. “Well,” I said, “let's start with funeral homes. Then hospitals. Then ambulance services. Police departments. Maybe even a few fire departments.” I shrugged. “It's not a military bag. That leaves civilian agencies who would have them, plus manufacturers and sales outlets. That's about the only ones who would even have access.”
“Wonder if a sales or manufacturing place would question a request for one?”
“Well, I'd hope. But you never know.”
“I think,” she said, thoughtfully, “that it had to come from somebody who wouldn't ask, and who wouldn't have to mess with accounting for it.”
“Okay.”
“So, like, if you had a relative or a good friend who owned a small funeral home, for instance. They would order often, I suspect. The owner wouldn't have to account to anybody else for the items.” She smiled.
I didn't even answer her as I reached for the phone, and dialed Dispatch.
Sally answered. “Jiffy Dispatch, at your service.”
“I hope you never get inside and outside lines mixed up,” I said. She giggled. “You'll never know. Whatcha need?” “Well … ” I gave her the gist of what we'd been talking about, and asked her to check for any funeral homes with the same name as any of the five surviving residents of the Mansion, or Hunley or Ostransky, or Peel.
“Sorry I asked,” she said. “Give me a while on this one, okay? And how far away do you want me to look?”
That was a good question. It's always tempting to say, like, the whole world. To make it reasonable, and to increase my chances of ever getting another favor like this, I said, “Two hundred miles … ” Before she could object, I added, “ … because Hunley lives about that far away, for one thing.”
“This,” she said, “will cost. Big time.” “Anything you want,” I said. “Just say what and when.”
“Well, Houseman,” said Hester, “how about you and me go get some lunch, and then lean on some witnesses?” That was more like Hester's normal good spirits. She'd seemed just a bit down since the bit about Edie's daughter came up.
I smiled. “Might as well. Can't dance.”
Before we could get out the door, Sally called the back room and reminded us that there was a wake for Edie from 4:30 to 6:00 P.M., at the funeral home at Freiberg. Swell. I just hate to go to wakes where we're involved in a case. They're usually pretty sad, and they can really skew a cop's perspective. You just don't want to get emotionally involved. Makes you rush things, because you want to do something for the grieving survivors. Rush, and the case can get away from you.
We decided we had to go, though. Lamar would want us to. And we'd be near Freiberg anyway, while we were at the Mansion.
There was a consensus that I'd better stop at home and get rid of the blue jeans and tennis shoes, and put on something a little more presentable. Considering that I'd also have to be working, and maybe doing grungy things, when I got there I settled for a pair of wash pants, olive, and dark hiking shoes. A shirt, and cardigan sweater-vest to hide the gun at my hip, rather than take a chance and leave it in the car when we went to the wake. I didn't think it was too startling a contrast to my normal attire. Apparently I was wrong. As I walked back out to the car, Hester looked up from her notes.
“Well, the new Houseman. Hardly recognize you.”
I got in the driver's seat, and started to buckle my seat belt.
“My,” she said, “I hope we don't get you dirty.” As I threw her a look of disdain, she continued with, “Maybe you should have eate
n first.”
“Now, come on. They're just wash pants.”
“You're too modest, Houseman,” she said. “You're creepin' up on presentable on me.”
“You know,” I said, as we headed out for lunch, “I'd think the group up at the Mansion would want to go to the wake, too.”
“It could be tough for 'em,” said Hester. “Hard to fit in, I'd think.”
I grinned. “Then I'll be in good company. Really, though, it's not going to give us much time to do interviews.”
“Give me a little while on this,” she said, “but we may just have enough to get selective.”
We were barely in the car when lunch was canceled.
“Three, Comm?” came crackling over the radio.
“Three … ”
“Ten-twenty-five with the search party up north. Eighty-one says they have something for you.”
Fantastic! “Ten-four, Comm. We'll be ten-seventy-six,” I said, turning left instead of right at the bridge, and heading north. “ETA about fifteen.”
“Ten-four. They advise at the bottom of the bluff, on the highway end. They'll be in plain sight.”
“Ten-four.” I was really, really tempted to ask if they had somebody in custody, but I was aware that the media were probably monitoring our radio traffic even then.
“You think they got him?” asked Hester.
“I'd think so,” I said. “But maybe not.”
“Hard to think why else they'd call us up,” she said.
“If I'm gonna miss lunch,” I replied, turning onto the main northbound highway, “they damned well better have a warm body for us.”
They did, as it turned out.
“Eighty-one, Three,” I said into my mike, as I got within a mile of the bluff.
“Three, go.”
“I'm a bit less than a mile from you.”
“Ten-four, got you in sight. Pull in here,” he said, and I saw a figure in blue jeans and a dark green jacket step onto the highway on the bluff side. There was a sheriff's car parked in a level area just off the roadway, where the county kept a gravel pile for use on the roads. The figure waved, and I recognized Old Knockle. As I got closer, I saw there was a blue Chevy parked ahead of the squad car, and as I pulled in, I saw that it had Wisconsin plates.
As we got out of the car, I said, “Don't you ever sleep?”
“Only got an hour to go. Hello, Hester.”
“Right,” I said. “What you got?”
“Well, we were up the road there, me and Tillman, and we were comin' in to relieve the other guys, and I noticed this car, here. Ran the plates, and they're expired. To a woman named Gunderson, over by Madison.”
“Okay?” I was awfully eager to see what else he had, but I didn't want to rush him.
“Well, while Tillman was checkin' under the seats,” he said, provoking a wince from me, “I looked up there.” He pointed to the bluff. “There was a fellah up there lookin' back at me.”
“Recognize him?”
He pointed to his glasses. “Surprised I even saw him, Carl.”
“What'd he look like?”
“He's just a man in a gray sweatshirt with a hood, I think. Not much more. Anyway, I yell at him, and he just stares at me. I holler 'Who're you?' and he just motions like he wants me to go away.”
I hate to admit it, but my heart rate was elevating.
“Where'd he go?”
“Well, he sort of disappeared, Carl. But I think he went back toward the top of the bluff.”
“And where's Tillman?” My heart sank. Tillman was about twenty-five or so, and had been a reserve for about three months. A great kid, but I was pretty sure he didn't fully appreciate some aspects of the job. Like risks, for example.
“He took up the hill after him,” said Knockle. “Told me to stay here, and call for help.”
I looked up the bluff. There was a ravine that was full of big rocks and old, fallen trees. But it looked passable, at least up into the tree line.
“How'd Tillman get up there?”
“He went up the ravine, Carl. Didn't look too easy. You better watch your step.”
“No shit.” It was no time for pride. “Did he have a walkie-talkie?”
“No, we only got one, and he told me to keep it 'cause he'd need both hands.”
I looked as Hester went by me, toward the ravine. “Coming?”
My good slacks. My better shoes. Damn. “Yeah, I'm coming.” I reached into the car, and pulled out the walkie-talkie, and slipped it into my back pocket. “The team you were going to relieve still up in the woods?” I asked Knockle.
“I ain't heard from 'em, Carl, and I called three or four times.”
“Did you use your walkie or the car radio?”
“Oops. Sorry, I used the walkie.”
As I headed toward the ravine, I said, “Use your car radio, get some more people up here, and get your shotgun out and keep your eyes open. I don't want you getting hurt on me. You're too old to bury.”
He grinned. “You bet.”
The damned ravine was really wet, to start things off. The rain had soaked the rotting timber that was crammed into the rocky waterway, and there was still a thin trickle of runoff flowing down from the hill. On top of that, everything was covered with soggy, moldering leaves. And I could catch the occasional whine of a mosquito as I took my first steps onto the big rocks. Great. My good slacks.
Hester was ahead of me, and I wasn't able to gain on her at all. It took both hands just to stay upright, and the handholds I found among the decaying branches were treacherous because the sodden bark just peeled off in my hands. Underneath, the smooth wood was slippery as the rocks under my feet. But, up I went. I was pretty certain that, as we passed the limestone bluff and went up into the wooded area, the footing would get better, and the slope would be less steep. I was half right.
After about three or four difficult minutes, I saw that Hester was stepping spryly from a boulder and into the tree line. About a minute later, I went for the trees at the same place. The footing was a little better. The slope, unfortunately, was steeper.
I kept losing sight of Hester as she moved about among the big maple and walnut and pine trees. I stopped to catch my breath, and heard her call out.
“What?” It was difficult to get much volume, I was breathing so hard.
“Here …,” she said.
Well, swell. Two more gulps of air, and I headed upslope again. Then I heard another voice, and realized she was talking to Tillman. They seemed to be stationary. Good. I slowed a bit, as the tone of their voices didn't seem especially urgent. By the time I got to them, I was only breathing sort of hard.
They were on either side of a rock outcropping that jutted out from the hillside about twenty feet. It was a good ten feet high, and seemed to be split about down the middle by a fissure that was about four feet wide.
I've been around long enough to realize that, when there's an officer acting really alert on either side of an opening, with a gun in his or her hand, that there's a very good chance there's somebody inside that opening. Somebody who's being difficult, at best.
“What's up?” I said as I moved to the right, or Tillman side, of the split.
“I think he's in there,” he said. “I saw him go in. I don't think anybody could climb up the inside of that to the top up there, do you?”
I thought of the wall outside Alicia's apartment.
“Don't be too sure,” I said. “You heard anything since you saw him go in?”
“Nope.”
“Hey, you in the rocks!” I shouted. “Out, now!”
Nothing.
“Police! Come out now, and keep your hands where we can see 'em!”
Still no response. I remembered when I was a kid, and we would think there was something fierce or ferocious in a hole. We'd grab a stick, and poke it in the hole to see what might come out. Nothing ever had. Buoyed by memories, I nevertheless realized that poking a stick into the crack between the halves
of the outcropping wasn't quite the solution we needed. I looked around, and saw several small rocks that had flaked off the limestone over the years. I picked up three nicely shaped ones, hefted them, and decided they'd do admirably. I whistled softly through my teeth. When Hester and Tillman glanced toward me, I held up the rocks and made a tossing gesture. They both nodded, and returned their gaze to the target area. I holstered my gun, and lobbed the first one at the ffssure. It bounced off to the side. Close, though. I tossed the second one about seven or eight feet higher, and saw it enter the crack. It clattered off the sides twice, and then I heard a muffled thump.
“Hey! Stop throwing the damned rocks!” came from the split.
I was grinning from ear to ear at that point. “Come out slowly and with your hands where we can see them!”
“Okay, okay.” With that, there was a shuffling and a grunting, and a man emerged, hands up, head down, wearing a gray hooded sweatshirt and blue jeans. His head was down more to avoid thrown rocks, I thought, than for any other reason.
While Hester and Tillman covered me, I approached slowly, gun back in my hand, but pointed down. “Stop right there.”
He did. I still couldn't see his face.
“Who are you?”
He looked up at me. “Bill Chester. You know me.”
Honest to God. Our intrepid vampire hunter. “What the hell are you doing up here?”
“Can I put my hands down?”
“Yeah, go ahead. So, what the hell are you doing up here?”
“Can't a man just take a walk in the woods?”
Tillman spoke up. “I told you to stop. I got a uniform on. You saw us down at that car, with a marked cop car. Why'd you rabbit on me?”
I thought that was a pretty good question.
“I'm not sure I have to tell you that.”
I was getting a little tired of Mr. Chester. “That your car?”
“No, it belongs to a friend of mine.”
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