The Reluctant Coroner by Paul Austin Ardoin (distant reading txt) đ
- Author: Paul Austin Ardoin
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âWeâve got people at the front desk whoâll do that,â McVie said from behind her. She jumped a little at his voice and turned around. He and Dylan were standing next to each other.
She smiled at McVie. âOkay. Maybe one of them could bring Rachel and me a couple of mugs when itâs finished.â
âWhy donât you come on back to the interview room? Iâve got some questions for Dylan, and you might want to sit in.â
McVie left Fenway with Dylan for a moment while he went to find the officer on duty to bring the coffee when it was ready.
Dylan looked down at the floor, then looked at Fenway and pointed at her cap. âRed Sox fan?â
âMy father is.â She smiled back.
âMy brother and I drove across the country one summer during college,â he said. âWe tried to hit as many major league parks as we could. We drove south first, then over to Phoenix, through Texas, then up through Missouri to Chicago and Milwaukee. But it was taking too long, so we turned around.â He sighed. âI still havenât seen Fenway Park.â He pointed at her. âYour dad named you after the ballpark? Itâs not some crazy family name?â
âFamily name?â
âSure, why not? A combination of your great-uncle Fenwick and your third cousin Hemingway?â
Fenway surprised herself by laughing. âIâm going to have to make that my story from now on,â she said. âThatâs a lot more interesting than the Red Sox jokes Iâve heard all my life.â
McVie came back. âReady?â
She nodded. As Dylan walked into the interview room, she pulled McVie aside. âAre you sure you want to talk with them together? Rachel knows police procedure and rules a lot better than most people. Sheâll stop him from saying anything incriminating.â
âI know,â whispered McVie. âBut itâs not about their answers. I want to keep them here for another couple of hours at least, and I thought if I kept them apart, theyâd insist on leaving. We woke up a judge for a warrant to search Dylanâs place. Theyâre on their way to execute it right now.â
âYou know youâre going to find that USB drive with that video of Walker attacking Rachel.â
âI know.â
âBut she says he didnât see it.â
âLook, if it turns out he did do it, this goes to motive, and we have to have that USB drive in our custody. Besides, I was hoping you would be talking with Rachel separately when I was gone, and we can see if there are holes in their story.â
âYeah, I got that,â Fenway said. âIâve got her alibi for both Sunday night and early this morning. She was with Dylan at home asleep this morning, and she was with a friend at a movie and Krazy Burgers on Sunday.â
âShe wasnât with Dylan Sunday?â
âShe was asleep when he got home.â
âAll right, letâs see what he says.â
They went in.
âOkay, Dylan,â McVie said. âNow that weâve gotten your stolen vehicle report filed, letâs talk about where you were a couple nights this week.â
Dylan leaned back in his chair. âI already told you, I was asleep at home. Rachel and I went to bed around eleven. And you saw the report for my stolen truckâwe got back from the grocery store at about six thirty, we left the truck in my spot, and I havenât seen my truck since.â
âHow about Sunday night?â Fenway asked.
Dylanâs face darkened, and he looked from Fenway to McVie. âSunday night? Where did you see my truck Sunday night?â
Rachel leaned over to Dylan and spoke softly. âThey arenât asking about your truck. They want to know where you were when Mr. Walker got shot and killed.â
Dylan balked. âWhy would I kill Walker? Because he was a shitty boss to Rachel?â
Fenway looked at Rachel, who frowned and quickly shook her head, as if to quiet Dylan. McVie saw it, too. Fenway wasnât sure McVie was going to let it go; he might dig into this line of questioning to see if it would push Dylanâs buttons. But he didnât, to Fenwayâs surprise.
âBecause your truck was caught on camera, leaving the scene of a break-in at Walkerâs office barely two hours ago.â McVie raised his voice slightly. âAnd weâre working under the assumption the break-in and the murder are related.â
Dylan had a confused look on his face. âBut my truck was stolen.â
âRight, youâve told me.â McVie stood up and leaned on the table, looking Dylan in the eyes. âBut there are lots of situations where a husband has done something stupid because of his wife. Maybe Walker was a shitty boss to Rachel. Maybe he was hitting on her and you didnât like it. Maybe she was going to get fired. Maybe she was stealing paper clips, and her boss found out, and so you took him out to the woods, or followed him out there, and killed him. And maybe her stealing paper clips was in Walkerâs files, so you had to take that, too.â
Rachel narrowed her eyes. âYou donât have any proof.â
McVie straightened up and sighed. âRight. All we have to go on is video evidence of Dylanâs pickup truck, smashing through the wall of Walkerâs office, and leaving with a file drawer.â
Dylan shook his head. âYouâre crazy. Smashing through the wall? In my truck?â
âDylan loves that truck.â Rachel put her hand on Dylanâs shoulder. âHeâd never even park it under a tree if he thought a bird would crap on it, never mind purposely smashing it through a wall.â
Dylan looked from Rachel, to Fenway, then to McVie. âI swear it wasnât me driving.â
Rachel shrugged. âHe wouldnât hurt that truck. Plus, we were together, in bed, asleep, two hours ago.â
McVie sat back down. âOkay, so youâve said thatâs where you were tonight. How about Sunday night? You still havenât answered. Where were you on Sunday night between eight oâclock and eleven?â
Dylan hesitated, but then leaned back in his chair again and grinned. âI was playing video games with Parker. I got out of there about eleven thirty. I had to work Monday morning.â
âWhatâs Parkerâs last name?â McVie asked.
âRichards,â Rachel said. âParker is Dylanâs brother.â
âDid Parker have to work on Monday morning, too?â
Dylan laughed. âNo, Parkerâs a cook at Villa Roma over in Paso Q. Theyâre closed Mondays.â
McVie leaned forward. âWhat video games did you play?â
âUm, I donât remember.â
âYou donât remember? You were playing against your brother and donât remember what you were playing?â
âWe usually play Rogue Nation 3.â Dylan swallowed. âI had a deadline at work this week. I was kind of distracted with that. I wasnât really paying attention too much.â
âOh, yeah.â McVie nodded. âI get that, being distracted by work stuff. That happens to me all the time.â He leaned forward and lowered his voice. âMy wife gets all over my ass when that happens. She hates it when I get distracted by work stuff.â
Dylan laughed a little. âYeah, Parker was kinda ticked off that I was distracted. I wasnât playing my best.â
âHow do you know you werenât playing your best if you donât remember what you were playing?â
Dylan paused, his cool smile frozen on his face. âBecause I remember Parker said I wasnât even trying. He called me names.â
âLike what?â
âYou know,â he trailed off, shrugging, ânames.â
McVie sat back. âHow about dinner?â
âDinner?â
âYeah, did you and Parker have dinner? I mean, sometimes people are so into their video games they just order a pizza.â
âOh, right, yeah, we ordered a pizza.â A bead of sweat was on Dylanâs brow, even though it was cold in the room.
âWhat time did the delivery guy show up?â
âUm, I donât know. Maybe seven?â
âWhere did you order from?â
âOh, uh, Iâm not sure. One of the chain places, I think.â
Fenway looked at Rachel, whose mouth was pursed; she didnât look like she was buying it. Fenway didnât need to remember her notes from her witness interview class to tell Dylan was lying.
She stood up. âHey, Rachel, letâs go see whatâs taking the coffee so long.â
McVie looked at her and Fenway looked plaintively at him. She was sure if she could tell Dylan was lying, so could McVie. Even if McVieâs original plan was to keep the two of them together, Fenway
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