The Novels of Nora Roberts, Volume 3

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The Novels of Nora Roberts, Volume 3 Page 196

by Nora Roberts


  “Thank God. Max. Back there.”

  “Stay here. Keep her here.”

  He started toward the back office. He could smell it. You could always smell it. No, he corrected, not true. There would be no smell of death in the ice cave where Galloway waited. Nature would have covered it.

  But he could smell Max Hawbaker’s death even before he saw it. As he could smell, beneath it, the fried eggs and bacon from the two sandwiches on the floor just over the threshold.

  His gaze scanned the room from the doorway, the placement of the body, the gun, the nature of the wound. It said suicide. But he knew the first murmur from a crime scene was often a lie.

  He moved in, keeping to the edges of the room, noting the pattern of the blood spatter on the chair, the computer screen, the keyboard. And the pool of it from the head wound that had soaked the desk and dripped onto the floor before death had turned off the pump.

  Powder burns, he noted. The barrel of the .22 had probably been directly against the temple. No exit wound. And unlike Jim’s babbling statement, the insult to the face was minor. The bullet had left a relatively neat hole before it entered the brain and bounced around gleefully, like a pinball hitting top score.

  Dead, most likely, before his head had hit the desk.

  Noting the swirling pattern of color from the screen saver, Nate drew a pen out of his pocket and moved in close enough to tap the mouse.

  The document sprang on-screen.

  His eyes narrowed as he read it, stayed narrowed as he looked down at the body of the man who claimed to have killed Patrick Galloway.

  He moved back to the doorway, then signaled for Otto to wait when the deputy rushed in the front. Nate walked to Carrie, and like John, crouched down.

  “Carrie.”

  “Max. Max.” She raised red, horrified eyes to his. “Max is dead. Somebody—”

  “I know. I’m so sorry.” He clasped his hands over hers. “I’m going to help him now. I need you to go over to the station and wait for me.”

  “But Max. I can’t leave Max.”

  “You can leave him with me. I’m going to take care of him. John’s going to help you get into your coat. And in a minute, he and Otto will take you over. I’m going to be there as soon as I can. So you go over there, and you wait for me.”

  She stared dully, shock still glazing her eyes. “Wait for you.”

  “That’s right.” She’d do what he said. The shock and the horror would make her obedient. For a while. “Otto?”

  He rose, moved toward the back again.

  “Merciful God,” Otto said under his breath.

  “I need you to take both of them over. Jim’s still there?”

  “Yeah.” He swallowed audibly. “Jesus, chief.”

  “Keep them there, and keep them separated. Let Peach take care of Carrie for now. I want you to call Peter in, tell him to come straight here.”

  “I’m here now. Peter can ride herd over at the station while—”

  “I need you to start taking statements. You’ll handle that better than Peter. Start with Jim. I want the doctor here, too. You get in touch with Ken and tell him to come straight here. I want him standing in. I don’t want any mistakes on this, and I want it kept quiet until we have this scene secured and the statements on file. Use a tape recorder. Get the time and the date on it and take notes as a backup. Keep everyone there, everyone in separate places until I get back. You got that?”

  “Yeah.” He swiped a hand over his mouth. “Why the hell would Max kill himself? That’s what it is, isn’t it? Suicide?”

  “Let’s work the scene and the witnesses, Otto. Let’s take it a step at a time.”

  When he was alone, he picked up the camera Otto had brought in to record the scene. He went through one pack of film, reloaded, and shot a second.

  Then taking out a notebook, he wrote down details. The fact that the rear door was unlocked, the make and caliber of the gun, the exact wording of the note on-screen. He did a rough sketch of the room, adding in the position of the body, the gun, the lamp, the bottle of whiskey and the single mug.

  He had on his gloves and was sniffing at both bottle and mug when Peter came in.

  “Take the crime scene tape, Peter. I want you to use it on the front and back doors.”

  “I got here as soon as I could—” Otto broke off when he reached the doorway.

  When his skin tinged with green, Nate snapped at him. “You don’t get sick in here. You have to puke, you do it outside and take that tape with you.”

  Peter angled his body away, looked hard at the wall and breathed through his mouth. “Otto said Max killed himself, but I didn’t think—”

  “We haven’t determined that. What we have determined is Max is dead. Right now, this is a crime scene, and I want it secured. Nobody gets in here but the doctor. Clear?”

  “Yes, sir.” Peter fumbled the yellow tape out of the box Otto had thrown together and staggered back outside.

  “State boys are going to want you, Max,” he murmured. “It looks like you’re going to tie things up for them, with a fucking bow on top. Maybe that’s just what you did. But I’m not a big believer in bows.”

  He walked out and, with his hands still gloved, called Sergeant Coben in Anchorage.

  “I’m not leaving this body sitting here until you can fly in from Anchorage,” he said after he’d given Coben the essentials. “You’ve run me by now. You know I’m qualified. I’ve secured and recorded the scene, and I’ve got a doctor on the way in. I’m gathering the evidence and having the body moved to the clinic. Everything I’ve got’s at your disposal once you get here.”

  He waved Ken inside when the doctor came to the door. “And I expect the same cooperation regarding the Galloway investigation. This is my town, sergeant. We both want to nail this down, but we’re going to have to share the hammer. I’ll be expecting you.”

  He hung up. “I need you to look at the body. Can you give me an approximate time of death?”

  “So it’s true. Max is dead.” Ken slipped his fingers under his glasses, pressed them to his eyes. “I’ve never had to do this sort of thing before, but I should be able to give you a ballpark.”

  “Good enough. Put these on.” Nate handed him a pair of gloves. “It’s not pretty,” he added.

  Ken stepped in, then took a moment to visibly steady himself. “I’ve dealt with gunshot wounds. But nothing quite like this, not when I knew the victim. Why the hell’d he do this to himself? The winters can prey on people, but he’s been through them before. Worse than this. He wasn’t suffering from depression. Carrie would’ve told me, or I’d’ve seen it myself.” He flicked a quick glance at Nate.

  “I never thought about killing myself. Too much effort. If I change my mind, I’ll try to let you know first.”

  “Feeling better these days?”

  “Some days. Ready now?”

  Ken squared his shoulders. “Yeah, thanks.” He stepped over. “Can I touch him? Move him at all?”

  He had the photographs and had outlined the body in crime scene tape for lack of something better. So he nodded.

  Leaning down, Ken lifted one of Max’s hands. Pinched the skin. “I’d do better if I could get him to the clinic, strip the body, do a more thorough exam.”

  “You’ll get your chance. Give me an approximation.”

  “Well, digging back into my student days, and figuring the temperature of the room, the state of rigor, I’d guess between eight and twelve hours. That’s really rough, Nate.”

  “So, that would be somewhere between nine P.M and one A.M. Good enough. We might be able to close that in some with Carrie’s statement. I’m going to send Peter for a body bag. I need you to put the body somewhere secure—and cold.”

  “I’ve got the area we use as a makeshift morgue when we have a death.”

  “That’ll work. I don’t want you talking about this to anyone. Keep him under wraps until I get there.”

  He supervised t
he transfer of the body, made a printout of the note on the computer before shutting it down. Once he’d locked the doors, he started back to the station.

  Hopp ran him down.

  “I need to know what the holy hell is going on.”

  “I’m still working that out. What I can tell you is that Max Hawbaker was found dead at his desk at the paper, apparently from a gunshot wound to the head. Possibly self-inflicted.”

  “Oh, God. Oh, goddamn it. Possibly?” She trotted to keep up with him and plucked at his sleeve when he outdistanced her. “What do you mean possibly? You think he was murdered?”

  “I didn’t say that. I’m looking into it, Hopp. The State Police have been notified and will be here in a few hours. When I have answers, I’ll let you know. Let me do my job.” He hauled open the door of the station. And shut it in her face.

  He took the time in the Arctic entry to pull off his gear and try to clear his mind. The sun was up now, and the day as clear as the forecasters had promised.

  They’d be heading up to retrieve Galloway today, he thought. And maybe, they’d be flying in to pick up the body of his killer. Two for one.

  He’d see about that.

  He opened the inner door and found John sitting in one of the wait chairs, reading a paperback copy of Watership Down. John got to his feet, stuffed the book in his back pocket without marking his place. “Peach has Carrie back in your office. Otto’s with Jim back in a cell. Not locked up,” he added quickly. Then sighed. “Hard to think.”

  “Otto get your statement?”

  “Yes. There wasn’t that much to tell. I left The Lodge, took a walk, heading to school. I saw Jim and Carrie, stopped for a minute to talk to them. Carrie had breakfast in a bag—and the light was on in Max’s office. You could see the backwash of it through the window. She went in, and Jim and I stood there another couple minutes talking. He was going to pick up some bait. Going fishing. He likes to rib me about it because I don’t hunt or fish.”

  He began to rub the left side of his jaw as if it ached. “Next thing we knew, Carrie’s screaming. We ran in, and we saw him. Saw Max.”

  He closed his eyes, drew a couple of breaths. “I’m sorry. I’ve never seen anyone dead before—not until they were . . . prepared for viewing.”

  “Take your time.”

  “I, ah, I pulled Carrie back. Didn’t know what else to do. Yanked her away, and I said, ‘Jim, the chief’s at The Lodge. Go get him.’ Carrie was hysterical. I sat her down, held her down at first because she wanted to go back to Max. Then I got her some water and just stayed there until you came in. That’s it.”

  “Any of you go in the room?”

  “No. Well, Carrie was just inside the room. She was standing maybe, I don’t know, a step or two inside. She was holding a paper plate in each hand. She’d dropped the sandwiches and was just standing there screaming, with a plate in each hand.”

  “How long between the time you heard her screaming and the time you reached her?”

  “Maybe thirty seconds. Nate, she sounded like someone was carving her up with a knife. We both reacted. We were through the door fast. Probably less than thirty.”

  “Okay. I may need to talk to you again, and the State cop who’s coming in will want to. Stay reachable. And I’d like to keep this quiet. Not much chance of it, but I’d like to.”

  “I’m going to go on into school.” He checked his watch in an absent gesture. “Already late, but maybe it’ll keep my mind off it. I’ll be there most of the day.”

  “Appreciate the help.”

  “He always seemed so harmless,” John said as he reached for his coat. “Benign, if you know what I mean. Always looking for a story in a place like this. Town gossip, local color, births. Deaths. I’d have said he was a contented man, running his little paper, raising his children.”

  “Hard to see under the surface sometimes.”

  “No doubt about it.”

  He went in to Jim next, corroborated John’s story. Once he’d sent the man on his way, Nate sat down on the bunk next to Otto.

  “I’ve got Peter down at the clinic. I’m going to leave him there for now. He’s a little shaken, and I was hard on him. I need you to start a canvass. Work your way out from the paper, talk to people who live nearby. Ask if anyone heard a gunshot last night. We’re working on between nine P.M. and one A.M. right now. I want to know if anyone saw Max or anyone else around the building. When, where, who. If they heard a car, if they heard voices, if they heard or saw any damn thing, I want to know.”

  “State coming in?”

  “Yeah.”

  Otto’s face settled into bulldog lines. “I don’t think that’s right.”

  “Right or not, that’s the way it is. Give Peter an hour, then pull him in to work the canvass with you. Ken can be trusted to keep the body locked away. Did you talk to Carrie?”

  “Tried to. Didn’t get much.”

  “It’s all right. I’ll talk to her now.” He rose. “Otto, did Max know Patrick Galloway?”

  “I don’t know.” He frowned. “Yeah, sure he did. It’s hard remembering back that far. But it seems to me Max came along the summer before Pat disappeared. Was murdered,” he corrected. “Max worked for a paper in Anchorage and decided he wanted his own rag, small-town deal. That’s the story, anyway.”

  “Okay. Start the canvass.”

  As Nate approached his office door, he thought he heard singing. Crooning, he corrected, the way you might croon to a baby. Opening his door, he saw Carrie stretched out on a blanket on the floor, her head pillowed in Peach’s ample lap. Peach stroked her hair and crooned.

  She looked up when Nate entered. “Best I could do,” she murmured. “Poor thing’s broken to bits. Sleeping now. I, ah, happened to find some Xanax in your desk drawer. I cut one in half for her.”

  He had to ignore the twist of embarrassment. “I need to talk to her.”

  “Hate to wake her up. Still, she should be a little calmer than she was when Otto tried. You want me to stay?”

  “No, but don’t go far.”

  When he sat on the floor, Peach closed a hand over his wrist. “I guess I don’t have to tell you to be gentle. You’d know, and you’ve got that in you. But all the same . . .” She trailed off, stroked Carrie’s cheek. “Carrie? Sweetie, you need to wake up now.”

  Carrie opened her eyes, and they were unfocused and dull. “What is it?”

  “Nate’s got to talk to you, baby. Can you sit up?”

  “I don’t understand.” She rubbed her eyes like a child. “I had a dream . . .” She focused on Nate now, and those eyes filled. “Not a dream. Max. My Max.” When her voice broke, Nate took her hand.

  “I’m sorry, Carrie. I know this is hard, and I’m sorry. You want some water? Anything?”

  “No. No. There’s nothing.” She pushed herself up, buried her face in her hands. “There’s nothing.”

  Nate rose, helped Peach struggle her way to her feet. “I’ll be right outside if you need me,” she said and went out, closing the door quietly behind her.

  “Do you want a chair, or do you want to stay where you are?”

  “I feel like I’m still in a dream. Everything’s floating inside my head.”

  He decided the floor would do, and he sat again. “Carrie, I need to ask you some questions. Look at me. What time did Max leave the house last night?”

  “I don’t know. I didn’t know he was gone until I got up this morning. I was annoyed. He always leaves me a note on the pillow when he goes in to work at night or early in the morning.”

  “When did you see him last?”

  “I saw—this morning—I saw—”

  “No.” He took her hand again, tried to lead her away from that image. “Before. Was he home for dinner?”

  “Yes. We had chili. Max made it. He likes to brag about his chili. We all had dinner together.”

  “What did you do then?”

  “We watched TV. Or I did. The kids watched a littl
e, then Stella got on the phone with one of her friends, and Alex got on his computer. Max was restless. He said he was going to read a book, but he wasn’t. I asked him what was up, and he was irritable with me.”

  A tear spilled over, tracked a lonely line down her cheek. “He said he was working something out, and couldn’t I leave him the hell alone for five minutes. We got snappy with each other. Later, when the kids were in bed, he said he was sorry. He had something on his mind. But I was still mad and shrugged him off. We hardly spoke to each other when we went to bed.”

  “What time was that?”

  “About ten-thirty, I guess. But no, that’s not right. I went up to bed then, and he muttered something about staying up to watch CNN or something. I didn’t pay attention because I was annoyed. I went up to bed early because I was mad and didn’t want to be with him. Now he’s gone.”

  “He was still home at ten-thirty. You didn’t hear him leave?”

  “I just went straight to bed. I fell asleep. When I got up this morning, I knew he hadn’t come to bed. He always pulls the sheets out from the bottom of the mattress. Drives me crazy. I thought maybe he’d been sulky and slept on the couch, but he wasn’t there. I got the kids off to Ginny’s. It was her turn to drive them in. Oh, my God. My God, the kids.”

  “Don’t worry. They’re being looked after. I’m going to get all of you home once we’re done here. You went into town.”

  “I decided to forgive him. You can’t stay mad at Max. And I was going to make him an appointment for a checkup. He’s been off his feed for the last few days. I stopped to get us some breakfast, then I drove to the paper. I saw Jim and John, then I went in and found him. I found him. How could anybody hurt Max that way?”

  “Carrie, did he ever leave the back door of the paper unlocked?”

  “All the time. He never remembered to lock up. Why bother, he’d say. If somebody really wanted to get in, they’d just kick the door in anyway.”

  “Did he own a handgun?”

 

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