More Perfect Union (9780061760228)

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More Perfect Union (9780061760228) Page 9

by Jance, Judith A.


  My question heaped salt on an open wound, but that’s one way to get honest answers, to ask while people are still down for the count, before they have a chance to get up off their knees and reactivate their defenses.

  “Yes,” Katherine said softly.

  “Why? What from?”

  “I don’t know. We were just too different, I guess. We sort of drifted apart. We got married way too young. Everybody said so—his family, my family. He wanted to have kids, I didn’t. I wanted to travel, he didn’t. When I met Fred, I could see how wrong it had been the whole time. We were only staying together because we didn’t know what else to do.”

  “There are lots of marriages like that in this world,” I observed. “Most of them end in divorce, not murder.”

  Fred leaped to his feet and slammed a fist onto the table in front of me so hard the three coffee cups went skittering in all directions. “Goddamnit! I already told you, we had nothing to do with it!”

  I ignored him and once more directed my question to Katherine Tyree. “Does the name Linda Decker mean anything to you?”

  There was a flicker of recognition in her eyes, but nothing else. No hurt, no animosity. “Yes,” she answered quietly. “Linda was Logan’s girlfriend.”

  “Did you ever meet her?”

  Katherine shook her head. Satisfied that I was no longer on the attack, Fred sat back down.

  “When they met, he was already living on the boat. I was glad for him when we heard about it,” Katherine continued, “glad he had found somebody.”

  “But you don’t know anything about her?”

  Katherine shook her head. “I do,” Fred offered. “I saw Linda down at the union hall a few times. When she and Logan started dating, word spread like wildfire. She’s a little mite of a thing, but tougher ’an nails. Understand she’s a bodybuilder. According to everybody I talked to, she was doing fine. Then, a week or so ago, she walked off the job, turned in her union book, and quit.”

  “She quit the apprentice program?”

  Fred nodded.

  “Any idea why?”

  Fred shook his head. “I thought maybe she and Logan had gotten into some kind of fight.”

  I took a minute to go back over my notes, checking to see if there was anything I had forgotten to ask. I returned to the boat. “Tell me more about Boomer. You said this was Logan’s first boat, is that true?”

  Fred and Katherine nodded in unison.

  “Would he have started the boat without checking to make sure the blower was running?”

  “No way!” Fred’s response was quick, involuntary. He answered without thinking of the possible consequences. “Logan was careful about everything he did. That’s why they had him teaching that welding class. Safety first, that was his motto.”

  I turned to Katherine. “Would you agree with that?”

  She nodded, tentatively this time. “That’s what I thought when they first came here to tell me about the fire, that it didn’t sound like Logan, but…” The sentence faded away.

  “But what?” I persisted.

  “I was afraid to mention it.”

  “Why, because you were afraid we’d come looking for you?”

  “Yes.”

  I closed my notebook.

  “Is that all?” Fred asked.

  “For the time being,” I answered, getting up. Everything they had told me had the ring of truth to it. Unless there was a lot more to it than I knew right now, there was no overwhelming reason for Fred and Katherine to knock off Logan Tyree, no motive to make risking a murder rap worthwhile.

  Katherine Tyree stood up too. “I’ll go get dressed,” she said to Fred. “I don’t know what I’m going to wear.”

  She disappeared upstairs and Fred showed me out. “I’ve gotta get dressed too,” he said. “I’m going with her today, even if people talk. Moral support. She needs to have somebody there with her. Logan’s relatives have written her off completely. As far as they’re concerned, it’s like she doesn’t even exist.”

  “What time is the funeral?” I asked.

  “Three o’clock. Out in Enumclaw. That’s where Logan’s folks are from. Are you going?”

  I shook my head. “No,” I said. “I’ll let this one pass,” not adding that since this wasn’t officially my case, it would hardly be appropriate for me to show up.

  When he got a glimpse of the 928, Fred followed me out to the gate. “Nice car you’ve got there. What are you, working undercover?”

  I nodded.

  “You don’t think Logan was into something illegal, do you?”

  “We’re playing all the angles,” I told him. My answer was vague enough that it would help keep me out of hot water as long as Manny Davis and Paul Kramer didn’t tumble to the car. The red Porsche would be a dead giveaway.

  Thoughtfully, I turned my key in the ignition. Old man Corbett had been right about some things and dead wrong about others. Katherine Tyree’s screaming fits hadn’t exactly been jealous rages—at least his interpretation of the boat being the root cause had been somewhat wide of the mark. And that little doubt made me begin to question his assessment of Linda Decker as well. I wanted to meet Linda Decker and decide for myself.

  Ron Peters had already told me that Linda Decker had moved out of her mother’s house, but that was the place to start if I wanted to learn anything about her. Of course, the sensible thing would have been to drop the whole program, to stay away, leave it alone.

  But when have I ever done what’s sensible? I pulled out of Katherine Tyree’s driveway and headed for Interstate 405 and Linda Decker’s former address in Bellevue.

  I figured I could just as well be hung for a sheep as a lamb.

  CHAPTER

  9

  Bellevue, a suburb which started out as a bedroom community due east of Seattle, has become a city in its own right. The transformation from sleepy suburb into a high-tech center has escaped the notice of confirmed cosmopolitan snobs who derisively refer to the entire east side of Lake Washington as the ’burbs.

  To hear city dwellers tell it, Bellevue is a lilywhite, bigoted, upper-middle-class sanctuary. From what I saw that day, the blush was off the rose. I wouldn’t call some of the areas slums, but they certainly qualified as pockets of poverty.

  To begin with, I had a tough time finding Leona Rising’s address on S.E. 138th. It’s always like that. Bellevue’s incomprehensible street system is a cop’s nightmare. While I drove around lost, wandering in ever-narrowing circles, I saw a duke’s mixture of kids out skateboarding and biking their way through the last full week of summer vacation. It didn’t look like a totally segregated bunch to me.

  Then, when I finally did find the place, on a small dead-end street just off Newport Way, the address turned out to be in one of a series of battle-weary duplexes much older and much more worn than their single-family-dwelling neighbors.

  On that particular block, a somewhat shoddy dead-end street, my red Porsche would have stuck out like a sore thumb. There was no point in advertising my presence. I drove back up Newport and parked a few blocks away in the lot of a nearby public library branch. I returned to the house on foot. The aspirin I had fed my hangover was also helping my foot. For a change, the initial stab of pain from the bone spur wasn’t quite as acute as I expected.

  Approaching the place, I noticed a young man sitting on the front porch. At least I thought he was young. He was dressed in a loud, orange plaid shirt. His Levis had been rolled up at the cuff to reveal a long length of white athletic sock. On the porch near his feet sat a large, old-fashioned black lunch pail as well as an expensive-looking stainless-steel thermos.

  At first glance I thought maybe he was in his late teens or early twenties, but closer examination showed a slightly receding hairline with flecks of gray dotting the short brown hair. I revised my original estimate up to thirty-five or forty. He didn’t look up as I neared the porch. Instead, he sat there unmoving, staring dejectedly at his feet. He was sucking his t
humb.

  “Hello,” I said, stopping a few feet away. “Anybody home?”

  Surprised by my unexpected intrusion, he started guiltily, pulling his hand from his mouth and shoving it under his other arm. He held it there, pressed tightly between his arm and his chest, as though by imprisoning it he could conceal it from himself as well as from me. He stared up at me for a long time before he shook his head in answer to my question.

  “I’m looking for Leona Rising.”

  “She’s…not here.” He spoke slowly, haltingly, in a deliberate monotone.

  “What about her daughter, Linda Decker?”

  His lower lip trembled. He began rocking back and forth, the repetitive motion slow and hypnotic. For some reason my question had brought him dangerously close to tears. “She’s…not here either,” he answered. “It’s her fault I missed…the bus. It’s all…her fault.”

  With that, he did burst into tears. He bent over double and sobbed while the comforting thumb crept out from under his restraining arm and back into his mouth. I stood there feeling like someone who has just unavoidably run over a headlight-blinded rabbit on the open highway. Whoever this guy was, he was no mental giant. My question had unleashed a storm of emotion I was helpless to stop. There was nothing to do but wait it out. Eventually, he quit crying.

  When the thumb was once more concealed under his arm, he stole a sly glance up at my face. “What’s…your name?” he asked ingenuously.

  I stuck out my hand. “My name’s Beaumont,” I said. “What’s yours?”

  He stared at my extended hand for a long time as if trying to decide what he was supposed to do with it. As if remembering, he wiped his hand on a clean pant leg and shyly held it out to me. His grip was limp and sweaty, but he grinned at me suddenly, his tearful outburst of the moment before totally forgotten. “Beaumont…that’s a…funny name,” he said. “My name is…Jimmy.”

  There were no nuances or shadings in his voice, and the long pauses between words made it clear that he spoke only at tremendous effort.

  “Do you live here?” I asked, deliberately keeping my question as simple as possible.

  He nodded and pointed to a curtained window to the right of the front door. “That’s my…room over there. Lindy…used to live here. She…left.”

  “Lindy?” I asked. “Who’s that? Do you mean Linda Decker?”

  He nodded again, once more becoming serious. “She’s my sister. My…baby sister. She’s lots…smarter. She’s not like me. Not…retarded.”

  He spoke the words as casually as someone else might have said they were right-or left-handed or that they’d been sick with a cold. All the while he looked directly into my eyes with a disconcerting, unblinking gaze. I felt myself squirming under it.

  “Do you know where your sister is?” I asked.

  He went on, giving no evidence that he had heard my question. “Lindy’s good…to me. Always. I don’t want her…to go away. I want her here. With me. I…need her.”

  Once more his lower lip began to tremble and he fell silent, rocking slowly back and forth.

  “Did she say why she had to leave?” I asked gently.

  He shook his head slowly from side to side. “She said she had to…go. That’s all. And then…those men came. I didn’t like them.”

  “What men?”

  “Big men, like on…TV. Detectives. They were asking Mama about…Lindy. They even…had guns. Real ones. Not toys. I tried to tell them. They wouldn’t…listen. And Mama told me to…go sit down. To get out…of the way and be…quiet. I didn’t want to. I knew the answer. That’s why I…missed my bus.”

  His ragged, halting delivery made it difficult to extricate meaning from what he was saying. The story was lacking several key ingredients. I struggled in vain to sort out the connections, to see through to the pieces that were missing.

  “I’m afraid I don’t quite understand,” I said finally.

  Jimmy looked up at me determinedly. “I’m not a k-kid, you know. I’m a grown-up. Just like…you. When I cry, sometimes people make fun of me. Kids at the…bus stop. They…call me a baby. It makes me…mad!” The last was said so vehemently that two small streams of spittle slipped unnoticed out the corners of his mouth.

  The missing pieces fell into place. “So you were crying and that’s why you missed your bus?”

  He nodded, no longer looking me in the eye, but relieved that he didn’t have to go on explaining. His chin dropped until it disappeared into the collar of his shirt. Once more his thumb edged toward his mouth. “I lost my…paper,” he mumbled in little more than a whimper.

  “Paper? What paper?”

  “With the…numbers on it. Bus numbers. So I can…find the right…bus. I never missed…work before. I go there every day.”

  Uninvited, I sat down on the porch next to him. “What kind of work do you do, Jimmy?” I asked.

  He straightened his shoulders proudly. “Micrographics,” he said. Surprisingly enough, the syllables of the long word rolled unimpeded off his tongue. “I take pictures. Important stuff. I put it on…fiche.” He paused.

  “You know about fiche?”

  I nodded. “And where do you do this?”

  “At the center.”

  “Is it far from here?”

  “Too far to walk,” he said glumly. He moved his foot slightly and bumped it against the lunch pail. He studied it for a long time as though he hadn’t seen it before. “It isn’t break,” he said. “I’m hungry. Can I eat now?”

  A golf-ball-sized lump bottled up my throat. Jimmy Rising was someone who was lost without his crib sheet to decode the bus system and without someone to tell him whether or not it was okay to eat his lunch. He needed permission from someone else. I swallowed hard before I could answer. “I’m sure it would be fine,” I told him.

  He quickly opened the lunch pail, pulled out a sandwich, unwrapped it, and ate it noisily with total self-absorption. When he finished the sandwich, he brought out an apple and poured some orange juice from the thermos. He bit off a huge hunk of apple. “Lindy gave me this,” he said proudly, patting the top of the thermos. “It keeps hot…things hot and cold things cold. Did you know that?” he asked.

  “Yes,” I answered.

  He reached over and touched the lunch pail, running a finger lovingly across the folded metal handle. “I bought this all by myself. With my own…money.” He was speaking less hesitantly now. The nervousness of being with a stranger was gradually wearing off.

  “Money you earned from work?” I asked.

  He nodded smugly. “It cost…ten dollars and forty-seven cents. I bought it at Kmart. It’s got some…scratches now. Lindy says that…happens to lunch pails. Everybody’s lunch pails. They get scratched.”

  “You must love Lindy very much,” I suggested quietly.

  He looked past me and stared off into the vacant blue sky. When he finally spoke, his voice was full of hurt. Again he was close to tears. “She was going…to take…me with her. She promised. But now she can’t.”

  “Why not?”

  “She lost her job. It was a…good job. Building great big buildings. She’s got another one…now. Not as good.”

  “You told me you know where she is?”

  He nodded, slyly, ducking his head.

  “Would you tell me? I need to find her.”

  There was only the slightest pause before he began rummaging in his shirt pocket. Eventually he dragged out a rumpled wad of paper and handed it to me.

  “Her…phone number’s there,” he said. “She told me I could call. Anytime I want to.”

  I unfolded the scrap of paper. It turned out to be two pieces, actually, one with a telephone number scrawled across it, and the other, neatly typed, saying “210 Downtown Seattle and 15 Ballard.” Upset as he was, Jimmy had evidently crumpled his bus-schedule crib sheet in with his sister’s telephone number.

  I jotted the telephone number into my notebook then straightened the typed piece of paper on my knee and h
anded it back to him. “Is this the paper you lost?”

  His eyes brightened when he saw it, then his shoulders slumped again. “This’s it. But it’s…too late to go now.”

  “I could give you a ride,” I offered tentatively.

  There was a sudden transformation on his face. Just as quickly, it was replaced with a kind of desperate wariness. “You’re…making fun of me,” he said accusingly. “I’m retarded. Not stupid. You don’t…have a car. You can’t give…me a ride. I’m too big to carry.”

  “My car’s just up the street,” I told him. “It’s a red Porsche. We can walk up and get it and have you to work in half an hour.”

  Still he hesitated.

  “What’s wrong?” I asked.

  “I’m not supposed to…ride with strangers. Lindy said.”

  Lindy had given him good advice, advice I wanted him to disregard. “Am I still a stranger, Jimmy?” I asked. “We’ve been talking a long time. And I really do have a red Porsche.”

  “Like on TV?” Jimmy asked.

  I nodded. He struggled through a moment’s hesitation before leaping off the porch like a gamboling puppy. “Really? You…mean it? You’d take…me all the way there?”

  “I’d be happy to.”

  As quickly as it appeared, the animation went out of his face. “But I don’t know…the way,” he said hopelessly. “Do you? Have you been there?”

  The bus directions had given me a clue. Dimly I remembered back in the sixties how the U.S. Navy had surplussed its Elliott Bay site, turning it over to a group of can-do mothers who had transformed it into a model center for the developmentally disabled.

  I had gone to the center once on a mission to deliver a batch of free tickets for the Bacon Bowl, a Seattle-area police officer fund-raiser. It’s an annual exhibition game between Seattle P.D. personnel and a team made up of police officers from Tacoma P.D. and the Pierce County Sheriff’s Department. It gives a bunch of frustrated ex-jocks a once-a-year chance to get down on a football field and strut their stuff. Looking at Jimmy Rising, I wondered if he had been the recipient of one of those tickets, and if he had, did he like football.

  Quickly, Jimmy Rising began gathering his belongings, his lunch pail and his thermos. “Can we go now?” he asked. His eagerness was almost painful to see. I don’t think I’ve ever headed for work with that degree of unbridled enthusiasm.

 

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