Love You to Death by D.J. Reid (most motivational books .TXT) đ
- Author: D.J. Reid
Book online «Love You to Death by D.J. Reid (most motivational books .TXT) đ». Author D.J. Reid
1
They had removed the womanâs body. The ambulance was pulling away as I crunched through the old snow up to the front door of the Forties bungalow. A patrolman in the doorway stood aside and said, âGo on in, Professor Samuels.â Iâd seen him before but I couldnât place his name. Good looking, blond if the hair that showed under his uniform cap was any indication. Buck-something maybe. Buckman? Buckley?
Inside, standing in a dimly lit bedroom, I was glad that I arrived when I did. The bloody smear down the wall where the victim had slumped was still fresh. Maybe not damp. But fresh enough to give my stomach a twitch. I didnât need a body present to make matters worse.
I stood looking at the ruined wallpaper and let the silence settle around me. I should say around us. Detective Foster Newkirk was standing next to me. The bloody smear started about five feet above the baseboard and ran down about two feet to a larger spatter of red. I imagined the womanâs bloody head tracing the course as she slid down the wall. Dead before she hit the floor, I suspected. But there was something odd about the smear, something I couldnât put my finger on yet. Like a name thatâs on the tip of the tongue but just that far out of memoryâs reach.
âItâs wrong, isnât it?â I said.
The detective sucked his lower lip. âYeah, but damned if I can put my finger on why.â
âSo you phone up a history professor to guide your hand?â
âDonât be cute, Brian. You know youâre good at figuring out stuff.â
Foster and I had known each other since grade school.
âI have a colleague whoâs good at the Times
crossword, too. A real whiz. I donât see you calling him up.â
âMaybe later. If you bomb.â
âThanks.â I looked at the blood smear some more, then took a minute to scan the room. A typical bedroom in a typical house.
âYou have to admit this is a far cry from murder in ancient Rome,â I said.
I should explain that I teach history at Guilford University. But everyone knows that my sideline is writing mystery novels set in the Roman Empire â three to date. I prefer to use my detective skills, such as they are, in fiction.
There wasnât much else of interest in the bedroom, so Foster and I just stared at the blood-stained bedroom wall and shoved our hands deeper into our overcoat pockets even though the room was overheated. Death put a chill in the air.
âCould the victim might have been dying, or even dead, before the gunshot?â I asked.
âYou think?â
âItâs an idea.â
âI wonder if forensics can tell.â
The professor and the detective. We were both in our 30âs and I like to think still boyish in our own way. I ran my fingers through a shock of sandy hair as unruly as it had been when I was a kid. Of course it didnât help that Foster had phoned at six, which coincided with the ringing of my alarm clock, and Iâd just thrown on some clothes and raced over. Most people would say we were hometown boys made good. Foster, well, he was thicker than he had been as a teen, but he still had a smooth face, dense dark hair, and heavy eyebrows over nearly black eyes.
He was expounding. âTrish Vanderark is the suicide. If it is suicide,â he qualified. âYoung blond woman, part-time student,â he said. âDarla Hoffman is the distraught housemate. Quite a bit older. Says she probably drove Trish to it. âLoved her to deathâ was the phrase she used.â
âWere they a couple?â I asked.
âYeah, been together a year or so. In this house at least.
According to a neighbor. Maybe they were together before that. You know them?â
âNo. Why?â
âYou know,â he shrugged.
âLesbians,â I pointed out, âactually have more in common with straight men than with gay men, Foster.â
He pondered that. âMakes sense, I suppose.â
âDarla Hoffman still here?â
âAt a friendâs place. Iâve got a woman officer keeping an eye on her.â
âOkay, well you got me out her at the crack of dawn, so give me the run down,â I said.
âLetâs go sit in the living room, Brian.â
2
I folded my lanky frame into an overstuffed chair with a tired cushion that seemed to rest on the floor, while Foster straddled a sofa arm. There wasnât much to his account. A middle-aged neighbor, Stanley Wodz, heard the women arguing in the night.
âWhich way does he live?â
Foster pointed. âHis bedroom faces the one where we found her.â
I nodded for him to continue.
âApparently, the argument went on for about an hour,â said Foster. âIt was right around midnight, according to Wodz, when the shouting stopped. He went to bed. Half an hour later, just as he was dozing off, he heard what sounded like a gunshot. He got up and raised a window.â
âWhyâd he do that?â
âCurious, I suppose.â
âSomeone starts shooting in my neighborhood, Iâm going to get on the floor and stay there, not stick my head out the window.â
âMaybe Wodz isnât as bright as you are,â commented Foster.
âAnyway, he says he waited several minutes, peering over here. Then, while he was still looking out the window, trying to see if anything was going on, he says, he heard a crash.â
âHe actually see anything?â
âNah, says the shade was down. He was just looking, maybe thinking heâd see a shadow or something. You know how people do that.â
âYeah.â
âThe crash was probably Darla Hoffman breaking down the bedroom door. Wodz didnât say that, but thatâs likely what it was. He just heard a crash of some sort.â
âShe strong enough to do that?â
âBuilt like a linebacker.â
Curious how often stereotypes turn out to be true.
âAnyway,â Foster continued. âWodz figured something bad had happened, picked up the phone, and called 911. According to the 911 operator, a call from Hoffman came in a couple of minutes after the call from Wodz.â
âThe neighbor called first?â
âRight. But the calls werenât far apart.â
I looked around the living room. Cozy, if you went in for second-hand furniture and bare walls. The place itself wasnât bad for a rental though, considering. Wood floors. Fireplace looked unused, except for some old soot. Chimney probably needed cleaning. Not a lot of personal items. No knickknacks. Maybe the women hadnât been together long enough to collect any. Or maybe they werenât the type to go in for knickknacks.
A lamp had been knocked over.
âThat happen during the argument?â
Foster riffled the pages of his notepad. âAccording to Officer Buckleyâs reportâ â Buckley, that was his name â âHoffman and Vanderark scuffled and the lamp got broken.â
âWhat was Darla Hoffman doing when the police arrived?â
âBuckley says she was sitting on the floor next to the body crying her eyes out.â
âFront door unlocked?â
âHoffman apparently unlocked it after she called 911. The floor was wet.â
âHuh?â
âHoffman told Buckley that she was in the shower when she heard the gunshot. The door between the bedroom and the bathroom was locked on the bedroom side. The door into the bedroom from the hall also was locked. So she broke down the hall door and found Trish Vanderark slumped against the wall. The gun was still in Vanderarkâs hand.â
âHowâd she do it?â
âVanderark?â
âYeah.â
âAccording to the medical examiner, looks like she put the gun in her mouth and pulled the trigger. Pretty butch, huh?â
I shrugged. How would I know?
âGun kept in the bedroom?â I asked.
âDrawer of the nightstand. It was Darla Hoffmanâs revolver. Registered. Nothing wrong there.â
âConvenient.â I drew in a breath and blew out. âLocked room murder?â
âThatâs where Iâm going with this, Brian. Question is: Howâd Hoffman do it?â
âIf she did.â
âRight. If.â
3
Later that morning in my office, I folded myself into the university-issue swivel chair behind my desk, rotated toward the window, and gazed out on Brixton Woods, the center of the old campus at Guilford University. Snow had begun to fall again. Consciously setting aside the images and ideas of earlier, I thought Iâd spend a few idle moments mentally plotting what I hoped would be the next of my Roman mystery novels.
Gaius Chrysanthus Capito examined the rust-colored stain that marred the frescoed wall. âA pity, that,â he thought, musing on the bloody smear that now defaced the handsome domestic scene. The caw of a crow broke his concentration, causing him to look toward the window....
A real crowâs caw broke into my attempted reverie. Even my ancient Roman was seeing blood on a wall. I refocused, my eyes drawn to the flock of crows huddled on some branches near my window. Not âflock,â I remembered. Crows in literature often were used as symbols of evil or the macabre. Huddled together, they were, technically speaking, a âmurder.â
I had asked to see the crime scene photos, which Foster promised to send over. He had urged me to give the case my closest, and quickest, attention, as if I didnât have classes to teach or papers to correct or, okay, a novel to plot.
âJust think about it, please, Brian? Higher-ups in the Police Department are eager to write âsuicideâ on the file and stamp it âclosed.ââ
âYou donât believe it was suicide.â
âNo, and neither do you.â
âI know,â I said.
Time, I thought, to shrug into the shabby toga of G. Chrysanthus Capito, my fictional detective. Where would Gaius start? This wasnât the kind of case that called for politely kicking (Romans didnât use their knuckles to knock) at doors and asking pointed questions.
Officer Buckley, after securing the house, getting a nearly hysterical Darla Hoffman packed off to a friendâs home, and calling in the evidence team and the medical examiner, had already done all the necessary door-knocking, according to the report Foster shared with me. Only Stanley Wodz had been awake. All of the other neighbors were either away or slept through the whole business.
According to Wodz (so said Buckley by way of Foster), Darla Hoffman and Trish Vanderark had been decent enough neighbors except for the occasional loud argument. Over the backyard fence, Wodz had found out that Hoffman worked at a local furniture factory and Vanderark waited tables at the Dixie Diner when she wasnât in classes at Guilford. The Dixie Diner was a half-step above a greasy spoon, and Trish Vanderark was a late-bloomer as a college student. Sheâd been in her late twenties, Wodz thought, and Hoffman looked to be in her early forties, he said. Foster confirmed that both guesses were on the mark. Asked what they fought about, Wodz couldnât say. He could hear the loud voices but couldnât make out more than a word here and there.
There was a tap on my open office door.
âProfessor?â I swiveled toward the sound of Angie Lyterâs voice.
âA police officer brought this.â The departmental secretary handed me a large brown
Comments (0)