Dead Investigation

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Dead Investigation Page 1

by Charlie Price




  Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Notice

  Dedication

  Capped

  Talks to the Dead

  Sheriff’s Department

  Deadweight

  Lethal Solution

  Look It Up

  Anniversary

  Square Root of Nothing

  Classmating

  New Tract

  Strike Two

  Lingering Stain

  Working on the Railroad

  Spiffed Up

  Fleece and Powder

  Consultation

  NASCAR

  Courting

  Making the Short List

  Over-the-Hill Gang

  Corned Beef, Harsh Talk

  Unclear Envelopes

  Right Again

  Mission Accomplished

  Hot Sweet Pickle

  Intern Intake

  Rex

  Unconscious Inconvenience

  Going to the Other Side

  Jumping Jack Flash

  Won’t Go Away

  Floored

  Someone’s Killing

  Hypothetically Syndromatic

  The Goofball Scale

  Ex Marks the Spouse

  Cards on the Table or Shovel’s in the Shed?

  Investigation Terminated

  Rope Burn

  Daymares

  Long-Distance Photo

  Hill and Fail

  Dog Gone

  Short of the Porch

  Samurai Cemetery

  Aftermath

  Dead Ventriloquism

  Duck Love

  Whole Lot of Parking Going On

  And Three to Go

  The Psheriff and the Psyche

  A Fixture at the Country Club

  Lake Talk

  Mind’s Eye

  Story Time

  One Walk and You’re Out

  CarterGuard

  The Big Sleep

  Front Loading

  Paranoid Patrol

  Wanderer

  If a Phone Rings in the Forest

  Green Blinking Light

  Semi-Coma

  Think Inside the Box

  Invisible Blue

  Nurse Warrior

  The Final Word

  War Plans

  A Woman’s Touch

  Intrusion

  Noteworthy

  The Power of a Sandwich Bag

  Needle in a Forest

  Tech Support

  Cabin in the Woods

  Mighty Casey

  No Picnic in the Park

  I’m a Lumberjack and Not Okay

  Put This Together

  Hold the Relish

  Mad Alive

  Unturned Stone

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  By Charlie Price

  Newsletter Sign-up

  Copyright

  Guide

  Cover

  Table of Contents

  Begin Reading

  Table of Contents

  About the Author

  Copyright Page

  Thank you for buying this

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  To the Fairhope Center for the Writing Arts and the city of Fairhope, Alabama, for their commitment to the arts, continuous inspiration, and extraordinary people

  CAPPED

  Living in the cemetery lawnmower shed turned out pretty well. Murray had gotten used to the uninsulated prefab and its peculiarities. Sure, the concrete floor leached warmth from anything that touched it and the place reeked of motor oil and industrial cleaners. The window rattled when a city bus passed on the street. The little hut was an iceberg during cold spells, and yes, its seams made an eerie whistle when the wind gusted. Nonetheless, it had only one serious drawback.

  The shed sat atop a foundation that had been mistakenly poured eighty or ninety years ago over an old woman’s grave, and she complained nonstop to anyone who’d listen. It was enough to drive a person crazy.

  If you parked the riding mower under the front utility shelf, there was room in back for a cot and a milk crate that held a battery lantern so you could read yourself to sleep. Murray preferred it to home and was very grateful to Pearl for suggesting it, and to her dad, the cemetery caretaker, for making it available.

  Saturday morning was chilly but not shivery. Murray washed his face in a metal basin, put on jeans and pulled a hoodie over his sweatshirt, grabbed an apple from the grocery bag he kept on the tool bench. Breakfast. He’d get something at 7-Eleven for lunch. Candy bar, orange, something easy. What was cheap and built muscles? A banana? Murray noticed his T-shirts were tighter. But he wasn’t fat. He might be getting some muscles. Made him wonder why. All the walking he did? Genes from whoever his father had been?

  And he’d grown taller in the last few months. He could tell because his pants were too short. Time to visit Salvation Army. And his face? Pimples were rare now. His messy hair almost fit current styles. His nose was still too big, but his face wasn’t actually frightening. No horns. No fangs. Girls looked at him sometimes.

  * * *

  In February nothing needed mowing, but there was always trash to be bagged, stuff that visitors left behind, plus cups and wrappers the wind blew in off the street. Murray was picking a fast food sack out of the hedge at the cemetery’s north border when he heard somebody jogging through the leaves and downed branches behind him. Unusual. Most people were somber and dignified in cemeteries. He looked up and was surprised to see Pearl. Ordinarily she was quiet. She’d been known to sneak up and startle him just to watch him jump. So … in a rush today. Why?

  Pearl didn’t seem like a cemetery caretaker’s daughter. Her skin wasn’t pale green, her head didn’t do three-sixties. She looked … well, gingery blond hair, tight curls, a decent face that didn’t need makeup; medium tall, a girl jock with muscles and the start of a figure. Actually, Murray thought she looked kind of pretty. But dangerous. Smart and stubborn. Went after what she wanted like a torpedo. Could get you to do things you’d rather not. Murray braced himself.

  “Hey, Ghostbuster. I need your help.”

  “I’m busy.”

  “You’d rather pick up trash than talk to me?”

  “Um…” At least half the time Pearl came around she had something she wanted Murray to do that was borderline risky. He’d learned to be careful about what he agreed to. “What kind of help?”

  “Your special thing. Like the others.” Pearl held out a dirty wool stocking cap.

  Murray didn’t get it. “What others?”

  “Others with the gift. Clairvoyants.”

  Murray stepped back onto the garbage bag and heard it rip. “Dang it, Pearl, don’t use that … I don’t … Leave me alone.”

  “You just probably haven’t tried it before.” She pushed the cap toward him. “They hold something that the person wears or handles a lot and they get information.”

  “What information?”

  “Tell me where to find that down-and-out guy who walks around outside the gate all the time.”

  “Try outsid
e the gate.”

  Pearl stuck out her tongue. Glared. “I have stuff for him.”

  “Uh, why?” Murray couldn’t imagine.

  “You know the ratty sleeping bag he carries? Dad and I got him a new one and a coat and some canned meat. I’m pretty sure he sleeps up in these hedges sometimes.”

  Murray nodded. Both Pearl and Janochek did kind things for people all the time. Murray was one of them. “Okay, I’ll tell him.”

  “Have you seen him lately?”

  Murray tried to remember. “Probably not for a week. Ask at the mission.”

  “I did. Nothing. They didn’t recognize him.”

  “How would they? You don’t even know his name, right?”

  “That big red bump on his forehead? Like an infected boil? Pretty hard to miss. They said they’d never met him.”

  “Yeah, so, what could I do? I’ll tell him you have stuff when I run into him.”

  “No, you could actually find him.” Pearl held out the stocking cap again.

  “You’re nuts. Even if that’s really his, you want me to read the label and tell you where he bought it or something?”

  She stuck the cap out closer to his hand. “Just hold it and tell me what comes to you.”

  Where do you even start with a request like that? Murray had never done anything like it. Would never do anything like it. Felt queasy just thinking about touching the smelly thing.

  “I’ve been reading,” Pearl said, rummaging in her backpack like she was searching for a book. “Clairvoyants can hold somebody’s favorite pen and know where they’re hiding.”

  Murray retreated another step, hearing paper and cans crunch under his feet.

  Pearl shook her head, pursed her lips. “Don’t be such a pussy. Give it a shot.”

  TALKS TO THE DEAD

  The last time Murray had helped Pearl he got shot, literally. Spent days in a hospital and got hauled into the police station to explain how the two of them found a missing cheerleader’s body. And then, somebody talked. Maybe a cop told his family at dinner or a reporter leaked it. Something. Somehow. The story got around school that Murray Kiefer thinks he can talk to dead people. He went from being a mostly invisible loser to a well-known certifiable wacko.

  Big problem: it was true. He was friends with a lot of dead people, and he learned things from them. The cheerleader, for example. “A lot happens in your last second. You’re so mad that you’re dying, and so scared, but there’s also this relief … and it hits you all at once like lightning. I couldn’t say anything quick enough before I was gone.”

  Maybe Murray could have guessed the fear and anger part, but relief? That was a surprise … and then it wasn’t. Living is probably hard for everybody.

  “When you realize it’s really the end, everything gets clear,” Blessed Daughter told him. “In that moment I knew who I really loved and who I didn’t, what I was proud of and what I wasn’t. It was surprising. I loved my dog as much as I loved my parents. I don’t know why. Riley was always bouncy and happy. Didn’t understand how quick I was dying away. I didn’t have to watch his face crumple.”

  As far as Murray could tell, Blessed was as sharp and sensible as a lot of adults even though she had died of a brain tumor when she was only eleven.

  “And the school grades I worked so hard for? I was prouder of my swimming medal, ’cause they said the tumor would wreck my swimming but I made the team anyway. And I won a fifty-yard backstroke before the cancer messed my timing.”

  His older friend, Dearly Beloved, told him she didn’t miss her family very much. “It was back in the fifties. Mom and Dad mostly paid attention to my brothers. ‘Stay a virgin till you’re married.’ That and ‘Wear clean underwear when you go to town’ was the only advice I ever got. I wish now I’d moved out before the darn car accident.”

  Dearly had gone through the windshield when her date hit a tree.

  “When I croaked, what I missed was the life I’d saved money for. I’d earned enough to bus to San Francisco. I thought if I winked and smiled I could maybe get a job at a bookstore in North Beach.”

  Dearly was lighthearted, and wise for her twenty-five years. Almost like a mother to Murray.

  “Don’t worry about me and the others,” she said. “The grave isn’t uncomfortable or cold or anything. Really, you don’t even feel it.”

  That was good news, because Murray couldn’t imagine being an adult. What would he do? He didn’t drive, didn’t have money, couldn’t think of a job he could hold except caretaking this cemetery, and Janochek already had that. So Murray was pretty much ready to die. He had his tombstone picked out, charcoal granite with silvery flecks. He was paying for it by keeping the lawns and hedges and grave sites free of trash. And he had his words:

  MURRAY KIEFER

  MAY 12, 1997–

  FRIEND TO THE DECEASED

  He knew he’d miss Pearl and Janochek. That’s why he hadn’t died yet. Well … and there was one more reason. He was happy in the cemetery. Mostly. Except it had started again. Voices. People he didn’t know and wasn’t talking to. Moaning. Mumbling. Hurting. East, just past the back fence, probably on the hill between the rodeo grounds and the rear hedge. He’d heard them last week and again this morning when he was picking up trash. More than one person at the same time. That hadn’t happened before. He knew they were dead. But they were outside the cemetery. Not his people.

  SHERIFF’S DEPARTMENT

  His son’s birthday was drawing nearer, this day, a month from now. Deputy Roman Gates sat apart from his peers, quiet and reflective during the morning briefing. At the head of the room, the duty sergeant straddled a corner of the desk beside the county map and read from his clipboard without so much as a hello or good morning.

  Petty crimes were mostly confined to Cypress Street, five blocks on either side of the freeway. Convenience store / gas stations open all night and vulnerable. Next, a DUI chase ending when the fifty-seven-year-old local realtor fled the wrecked car and made a run for it but was easily apprehended when she staggered unclothed into a barbed wire fence. That got Gates’s attention because he knew the woman. Played blackjack with her at the local casino during the time he’d burned down his marriage and job with the gambling.

  Main news: a third home robbery in the Garden Tract. To date, total property losses were under two thousand dollars, but if this pattern continued there was a high probability that a homeowner or family friend or, god forbid, a child returning from school would interrupt the burglary, and injury or death could result. Riverton Police Department was currently busy with a heroin sting operation involving a local gang and La EME Mexican Mafia from the San Diego area, so the Sheriff’s Department drew Garden Tract responsibility and Gates was lead investigator.

  As the briefing drew to a close, the community liaison asked for a minute. A stocky gray-haired woman named Pittman made eye contact with each of the five officers present before speaking. “Both Good Hope Mission and Faith Be Saved House have repeatedly contacted me about missing homeless people. Lately they believe the numbers are increasing. I know this is easy to dismiss. I know many of the homeless are transient, and I also know this population has been a low priority in the community for years. Chamber of Commerce, city council, county supes all have economic and political pressure to downplay the number of Riverton’s homeless along with the social and medical problems they present.”

  The woman looked at a manila folder she held under her arm as if she was considering reading from it.

  A relatively new female deputy used the pause to respond. “No way we’re ignoring the homeless. The majority in shelters? Decent folks, horrible life. Bad upbringing, bad education, bad breaks. Just saying. We get it. We look out for them. But the troublemakers? Maybe 25 percent? We bust them day-in, day-out for petty crap and they’re free before dark. No jail room. I’m not sure what else we’re supposed to do.”

  Gates had not personally met this woman deputy, never heard her speak before. Bui
lt like a fullback. He thought her name was Faraday. She was a recent hire from Alameda County, where he guessed they knew a thing or two about street people and poverty. Anyway, he agreed with her. Was glad she spoke up.

  Pittman nodded, acknowledging the woman’s point. Moved on. “There’s a disturbing thread to the recent reports. At least three of the missing had jobs within support agencies, had a motel room or low-income apartment. They disappeared for no discernible reason. Agency staff is concerned someone could be targeting these people and that possibly several less visible homeless have similarly vanished with no one to report it.”

  She stopped for a deep breath, more like a sigh, and once again made eye contact with each deputy. “I know this is not a glamorous concept. Some may feel that Riverton would be better off if all the homeless vanished or moved to another town. I’m sure that viewpoint isn’t shared by the officers in this room, and I’m asking you to begin paying more attention to the library, parks, and shopping centers where transients and dispossessed tend to congregate. Particularly, whether an individual or group of predators might be monitoring them.”

  Now the woman opened the folder, ran a finger down a typed page, and stopped near the bottom. Looked up and continued. “Recently a local homeless man’s gone missing. David Payne. Before his life fell apart he was an auditor and financial planner for an engineering firm here in town. The mission reports the disappearances of its other clients have increased since that event. They believe it is possible a person or persons is…” She stopped and swallowed.

  Gates got the impression the woman didn’t want to say the words that had entered her mind.

  “They’re wondering if someone might be hunting these homeless for sport.”

  DEADWEIGHT

  When Murray turned the corner on Continental Street and walked through the main gate, the cemetery looked empty—no funerals, no families, Janochek off working somewhere. That was good. A chance to meet some of the new kids nearer the street without being interrupted. In the west section, three rows over, a plaque marked a fresh site. A boy he hadn’t met. He sat in front of the marker. Relaxed into a long breath. Read the information.

 

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