Killer Summer Lynda Curnyn (most important books of all time txt) đ
- Author: Lynda Curnyn
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He shook his head. âDoesnât matter if it was the victimâs best friend pushing her under. If a person is being forced under water sheâor heâis going to fight it. Kicking, scratching. Something always turns upâa DNA sample under the nails, for example.â
He said this with such confidence, I was starting to believe that maybe I had been unduly suspicious. Then I thought of something. âHow do you know the victim wasnât dead when she went into the water?â
âWell, thatâs easy enough. When a person drowns, they inhale water into the lungs. The medical examiner would be able to tell that due to the condition of the lungs, the presence of microorganisms from the water in the personâs system.â
Micro-organisms? Yuck. Even if Maggie wasnât murdered, drowning didnât sound like the most pleasant of deaths.
âWhat if sheâthat is, the victimâwas unconscious? Would she inhale water then?â
He stiffened. âLook, Zoe, I donât know what your interest is in this case, but I donât feel comfortable talking in too much detailâŠâ
That was interesting. What had made him so uncomfortable? I switched tracks. âOh, well. I guess I can go to the department to get my information. But itâs too bad. Thatâll take time, and I was hoping to get my research down before I started filming.â
âFilming?â he replied, his interest piqued.
Gotcha, I thought, trying not to smile. Worked like a charm every time. I knew from long experience that it was easy to get somebody to talk about a subject if they knew their words might one day be immortalized on film.âIâm a documentary filmmaker. I directed Invisible People, a piece on New York Cityâs homeless. Maybe youâve heard of it?â
He frowned. âNo, I havenât.â
So much for my ego.
Still, he seemed interested. âWhat are you working on now?â
âOh, just something on water-related accidents. For PBS.â
âReally?â
I nodded.
âWell, I can answer a few questions, I suppose.â
Bingo.âSo let me ask you, how can you tell if a person was consciousâin any sort of drowning, that isâbefore he or she hit the water? What if she was hit over the head? Or he,â I added, quickly.
âWell, as I already mentioned, we would look for evidence of a struggle. If she had suffered a blow to the head rendering her unconscious, the autopsy would reveal that.â
âSo let me ask you, does the investigating officer go over the autopsy? You know, to compare his findings at the scene with the medical examinerâs?â
âWell, not necessarily me. That is, not necessarily the first officer on the scene.â
âWho would?â
âDrowning deaths are turned over to homicide, and they do the follow-up. Accidents like that always are followed up by them,â he replied, a bit defensively I thought.
âOh. So who has access to that information?â
âWhatever detective was on homicide that night.â I saw him physically slump as he said this, as if he realized he was no longer my hero.
But I realized there was someone who could be my hero. Myles. Last summer heâd interned at the D.A.âs office for Suffolk County, thanks to his dad, whoâd recommended him for the position. Hell, Myles might even know the homicide detective who was on that night. His father probably had.
I would have to talk to Myles. If he was still willing to talk to me.
Chapter Fifteen
Nick
Money doesnât grow on trees. But far be it from me not to plant a few seeds.
âDude, I got you covered. Thatâs what Iâm trying to tell you.â
This was a first for me. Iâm sitting on the beach, gazing out into the ocean, plastic cup of beer in hand, making a deal. Itâs the kind of thing that can give a guy a woody, you know?
And I would have a woody if Les Wolf, aka Paranoid Lead Singer of Nose Dive, knew enough not to look a gift horse in the mouth. Iâm offering this guy a chance to sign with Revelation, and heâs hemming and hawing over money. âNo worries,â I told him last week when we started hammering out the deal, and heâs still worrying.
âSo youâre going to put up ten thousand just for publicity. Thatâs over and above the advance and recording costs,â Les said.
I glanced over at Sage, who was still fast asleep on a blanket on the other side of the umbrella from me. Still, I lowered my voice. âI told you, dude. Money is not a problem here.â
âAnd all the monies we discussedâfor the advance, publicity, recordingâthose will be in the contract?â
I sighed. âMy lawyerâs working on it right now.â Good thing my dad was my lawyer. I had just popped a payment of two grand in the mail to Lance to get him working on the site, and after I paid the monies I promised in this contract, I was going to be back where I started again. Nearly broke. But all that would change. Just as soon as we got our first CD distributed, the royalties would start rolling in.
âListen, Les, Iâd love to talk all day with you, man, but I got another client to call.â Another client. Yeah right. Another beer maybe. Not that Iâm a bullshitter. But when it comes to negotiating, you gotta treat the prospective client like you would the prospective lay. Always make them think thereâs someone you want more.
Smiling, I listened as Les promised to call as soon as he talked to the rest of the band. âNo later than next week,â he said.
âLater,â I said, snapping the phone shut with a smile. Worked like a charm.
As if to prove my point, my cell rang again. I looked at the caller ID. Bernadine. Of course Bernadine was calling. Probably because I hadnât yet responded to her post breakup call. The one she always followed up the breakup letter with. I never understood why the call was necessary. I guess Bern wanted to make sure I understood all those heartfelt thoughts she put in her letters. Hell, if I didnât understand by
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