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Death in a Summer Colony
  • Текст добавлен: 5 октября 2016, 04:13

Текст книги "Death in a Summer Colony"


Автор книги: Aaron Stander



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Текущая страница: 15 (всего у книги 17 страниц)

43

“Everything go okay with the judge?” asked Ray, as he climbed into the passenger seat and buckled the seatbelt.

“He was running late and had just recessed for lunch. He wasn’t happy to see me,” Sue reversed out of the parking place and then headed for the highway. “I had carefully laid out the information from the autopsy report, focusing on the part dealing with the arsenic poisoning. I’m not sure he was completely convinced, but he signed it. I did lay out all the brand names for the household and garden products containing arsenic that we would be looking for, so it didn’t look like we were just on a fishing trip. I think we got this one by based on our positive history.”

“How much time did you spend on the document?”

“Most of the evening.”

“I imagine Harry was thrilled by that. A nice romantic evening in the north woods.”

“It worked out, Ray. It worked out. We were on dueling laptops researching arsenic. When I had absorbed enough information, I drafted the affidavit. He helped with the rewrites, anticipating the questions and concerns the judge might have. We had a really good evening, sharing our expertise, strategizing back and forth. We’re both too mature and type A to spend a lot of time pitching woo. I did a final draft this morning when I came in. Then it was just a waiting game. There’s a copy in the folder tucked next to your seat. Tell me what you think.”

Ray carefully read through the search warrant affidavit, looking up occasionally to take in the passing scene. “I’m convinced,” he said, returning the affidavit to the folder. “So our search is basically limited to the food and coffee preparation area at Gull House and Brenda Wudbine’s greenhouse.” He looked over at Sue, “The place will probably be clean. They would be less than bright to leave that kind of evidence around. But nothing ventured…”

Ray started to check his e-mail on his phone. His attention was pulled back to the present moment when Sue turned onto the long drive that ran up to Gull House.

“I wonder what’s happened?” she said, motioning toward the ambulance parked near the greenhouse. She pulled in across the drive and they got out of the Jeep just as three EMTs rolled a gurney to the back of their unit and quickly loaded it. Ray could see Brenda Wudbine’s motionless body secured to the stretcher. “How is she?” he asked just before the doors were closed. The last paramedic to climb aboard, a young woman, didn’t respond verbally, her dispirited expression said it all. As soon as the rear doors swung shut, the heavy unit, its diesel engine laboring under the sudden acceleration, rolled down the drive, lights flashing, siren silent.

Richard Grubbs was standing outside the greenhouse.

“What happened?” asked Ray

“Brenda, it must have been her heart. I know her health has been declining. I put her on my calendar today. I wanted to spend some time with her. That poor woman has been marginalized by everyone.”

“Was she alone?”

“Yes. She came down here every morning to cut and arrange the fresh flowers. This was her mission in life. I’d try to stop in and see her occasionally. Brenda, I don’t think anyone in the household even bothered to talk to her. She always seemed starved for conversation.” Grubbs stopped for a minute and took several long breaths before continuing. “Doing the flowers, that’s all that was left for her. She’d prepare the flowers and do the arrangements. Then Pat Eibler, he’s the handyman, would carry them up to the house.

“I knew I’d find her here. Like always, the door was open. I walked in and didn’t see her right away. I usually stand over there out of her way on the other side of her work area,” Grubbs pointed. “So I walked around, and there she was on the floor. I got down next to her. She wasn’t breathing. I called 911. They were here in just a few minutes.”

“And you’ve been alone the whole time?”

“Yes. As I was walking down here I saw Pat in his pickup with Grace, the cook. I think he was taking her grocery shopping. And just before you arrived, I got Elliott on the phone. He’s on his way over.”

Grubbs was silent. Ray watched as a wave of sadness swept across his countenance. “Brenda died alone.”

Ray and Sue stood by silently, leaving Grubbs to his thoughts. Finally, Ray said, “Please show us where you found her.”

They followed Grubbs into the greenhouse, stopping short of the large worktable still covered with roses. “Brenda was right there on the floor. I imagine she was working and just collapsed.”

“Should I get my camera?” asked Sue.

“Yes.”

“What was her position?” asked Ray.

“She was on her back. Her eyes were open, like she was looking at the ceiling.”

Ray surveyed the table. Two piles of roses were separated by an open space. A pair of gardening gloves, several thick rags, and pruning shears lay on the near side of the table along with a large coffee mug, a crystal ashtray, a pack of cigarettes, and a lighter. A brandy bottle stood near the coffee mug. A toppled-over stool laid at an oblique angle.

“The flowers,” said Ray, “tell me exactly what she did.”

Grubbs went to the far side of the table, looking across at Ray. “It depended on the type of flowers. More often than not, she was working with roses. That was Malcolm’s preference. And what you see here, it looks like she was in the middle of her normal, what should I call it, pattern. If she was working on roses, she’d pile them to her left. One stem at a time, she would take off the thorns using those rags, trim up the stem with the shears, and move it to the right. It was almost automatic. She could talk to me and just continue working away. After, she would arrange them in vases and, like I said, they’d get carried up to the house. You can see that she was about halfway through.”

“Was she wearing gloves when you found her?” asked Ray.

Grubbs looked at the gloves on the table, then back at Ray. “I don’t think so, let me think.”

“You didn’t pull them off.”

“No. I’m…a bit squeamish. I was almost afraid to touch her.”

Sue arrived with her camera and started to shoot the scene. Grubbs joined Ray on the far side of the table. Ray pointed to the brandy bottle. “Tell me about her drinking? Did she always start early.”

“I wouldn’t know, Sheriff. That said, I think there was usually a bottle around. I imagine you’ve heard about her drinking. I guess the doctors told her it was killing her. But she didn’t seem to care.”

“Perfume,” said Sue. “Do you know if Mrs. Wudbine was partial to a specific fragrance?”

“Perfume, I wouldn’t know about that, either. She did have a certain smell about her. It was sort of musky. I always attributed it to the roses, but now that I think of it, the scent wasn’t rose-like. ”

44

Elliott Wudbine rushed into the greenhouse. “Where is she, where is Brenda?” He directed his question to Richard Grubbs, taking no note of Ray and Sue.

“In an ambulance. They left five minutes ago.”

“How is she?” Again, his question was directed to Grubbs.

“She wasn’t breathing when I found her. I don’t think they could do anything.”

Wudbine’s focus shifted to Ray. “What are you doing here?” he demanded, his tone hostile.

“There have been some developments in your father’s case. I have a warrant to search this building and part of Gull House.”

Sue slipped out of the building to retrieve the warrant.

“Well, you will have to talk to my wife about that. She takes care of the legal affairs. And at the moment she is indisposed. I know she won’t be happy having you poking around.”

“You won’t have to bother her, sir,” responded Ray, stalling briefly. Moments later Sue returned to the greenhouse with the folder. Ray passed Wudbine the search warrant. “As soon as you’ve read this, we can get started.”

Wudbine held the document, one hand on each side, pushing it away from his body, squinting as he struggled to bring the print into focus. He remained silent, slowly scanning the words. Then he looked at Ray. “What’s this about arsenic? My father was stabbed for Christ’s sake, and you’re looking for arsenic. How will the poor man ever find justice with your ship-of-fools approach to the investigation?”

“Did you read the warrant, sir?” probed Ray.

“I need my reading glasses, but I’ve got the gist of it. I don’t understand about the arsenic.”

“Some of the tissue from your father’s body showed high levels of arsenic. It appears that he had ingested a significant quantity of that element. We are wondering if there was an earlier attempt on his life. As you can see in the document, our search is limited.”

“That’s the silliest goddamn thing I’ve ever heard. I’m going to find Jill. We’re going to get this shithead, so-called judge on the phone and have your sorry ass ordered off our property.” Elliott spun on his heels and bolted for the door.

“Mr. Conviviality,” declared Sue.

Ray turned to Richard Grubbs. “Is there anything else you can tell us?”

“I don’t think so. You know where to find me.”

“Let’s get this done,” said Ray as soon as Grubbs was out of earshot, “just in case…well…the ship starts taking water.”

“You do want to treat this like a possible crime scene, don’t you? Until we know otherwise, this is a case of unexplained death.”

“Absolutely. It’s your scene, and we will secure it until you’re finished. I’ll disappear for a few minutes. I want to call Dr. Dyskin, tell him where he’ll find the body, and ask him to order a forensic autopsy.”

“Is Hanna at the hospital today?”

“Yes.”

“You should give her a call, too. Brenda’s departure is….”

Ray cut her off, “Just too convenient.”

“Right. See if you can get the curmudgeonly Dr. Dyskin to consult with Hanna.”

Ray looked over at her. “I thought you had softened a bit on him since he’s given up cigars.”

“I have. But given Brenda’s history of heart trouble, if Dyskin will listen, Hanna can probably give him some useful counsel.”

“Are you done with the camera work?” asked Ray returning to the greenhouse a few minutes later.

“Yes. Let’s get the search done before we have any more interruptions. Here are some rubber gloves. First, I want to call your attention to this smock.” She carefully lifted the light gray, cotton garment from a hook and held it in Ray’s direction.

“What am I suppose to do with it?”

“Your nose, Ray. Smell it.”

Sue watched his tentative moves. “Ray, not little sniffs. Put your nose into the material and inhale.”

“Okay.”

She pulled a small glass bottle from her pocket and removed its top. “Okay, take a whiff of this.” She passed the bottle under his nose. “What do you think?”

“Very close. What’s the difference?”

“The bottle has patchouli oil. It’s quite unique. If one were in the know about aromas and scents, I don’t think they would confuse it with anything else.”

“Agreed,” said Ray. “So Tom Lea has helped us make a connection between the shadowy woman at the picnic shelter and Brenda Wudbine.”

“Yes.”

“What does arsenic look like?” he asked, impatient to get the search completed.

“Arsenic, the mineral, is described as a silver-gray crystal. It will be a powder or in granules. Until it was banned in most consumer applications about a dozen years ago, arsenic was commonly found in insecticides, herbicides, and on flypaper. Our most likely suspect will be pesticides that contain arsenic, probably as a main ingredient.”

Ray pointed to a tall, metal shelving unit along a wall at the far end of the building.

“Yup,” Sue responded. “That’s a good starting point.”

Twenty minutes of careful label reading had yielded four cartons of insecticide—cardboard cylinders with pry-off metal lids. Three had a tape seal across the top; the fourth had been opened. Ray found a screwdriver in a near-by drawer and removed the lid. They peered in at the grayish powder of the half empty container.

“So what have we proved?” asked Sue.

“That the means for poisoning Malcolm was present and easily accessible. The autopsy suggested that the poisoning was of short duration, probably talking place over a few days. Did you listen to Pepper Markley’s interview from yesterday?”

“Yes, before I started to work on the affidavit. There were things I didn’t understand. Why didn’t they just teach the cook to do the cappuccino?”

“Remember Pepper said Jill was…and these are her words…trying to rehabilitate Brenda. So the question is why?”

“I see where you are going. Was this something Jill did occasionally, or was it part of a larger scheme. Did Brenda start poisoning her husband, or was Jill pulling the strings. And if this is the scenario, why did Brenda, or Brenda with Jill’s assistance, stop?” asked Sue.

“I don’t know how well Brenda was functioning. But Jill is a very bright woman. If she was behind the poisoning, she wanted to make sure Brenda would take the rap. In fact, it would have ended like this, with Brenda dead. But someone got spooked. Pulled back before the poisoning was correctly diagnosed.”

“The problem is,” started Sue, “all we have so far is the arsenic in Malcolm’s hair, the report of his illness, and a partially depleted container with a compound containing arsenic found in the greenhouse.” She gave Ray a mocking smile. “A substance you can probably find in most of the garages, sheds, and barns in this county. Do you want to take our evidence to the prosecutor or should I?”

“Maybe you will find some prints on the container. While we’re here, let’s give the rest of the place a quick look,” said Ray.

He reopened the drawer where he found the screwdriver and looked over the contents. Then he moved over to the next drawer. He surveyed the neatly arranged contents: spools of wire with bright coverings, green tape, florist scissors, pruners, craft knives, and three box cutters next to two containers of extra blades. His eyes swept over the contents a second time. In a back corner of the drawer, partially hidden under rolls of tape, was a rosewood handle with two brass rivets. He pushed the tape aside. The handle was attached to a triangular black leather sheath. With a gloved hand, Ray carefully removed the object and set it on the bench. Sue came to his side. He released the snap on the leather strap that secured the blade and carefully pulled a weapon from its scabbard.

“Nice piece of cutlery you’ve got there. Looks like the type of implement Dyskin was talking about. He called it a push dagger. Time for a little dusting,” said Sue.

Ray stood back and watched, knowing that Sue didn’t like chatter as she worked. Finally she looked up at him. “Some very nice prints. The blade looks clean. I wonder if the scabbard absorbed any blood or other residue?”

“We should get this to the State Police lab. Today. Have someone drive it to Grayling.”

“I should do that,” said Sue. “Maybe I can use the old girl network to get them to give this a quick look. If they find blood, maybe I can get the type and start the process to see if there is a DNA match with Malcolm.”

“Take the brandy bottle and the coffee container. Check the contents and get prints. And get her phone added to the search warrant.” Ray inhaled deeply. “So where are we? We have Tom Lea’s eyewitness account, backed by the scent of patchouli oil. Could Brenda have offed Wudbine alone?”

“What you are asking is could Brenda have switched off the power, gone backstage and killed Wudbine in what, less than a minute, and then passed Tom Lea?”

“Yes.”

“I don’t think so. Highly improbable.”

“Agreed,” said Ray. “Someone has cleverly been stacking the evidence against Brenda. Who? And how did they get her to conveniently die? Get over to Grayling and see what you can find out. I’ll see if Hanna has anything that will help. I also want to make contact with Pepper.”

“Grubbs is always at the scene of the crime,” said Sue.

“Yes, I’m noodling around with that.”

45

Ray heard a vehicle braking to a stop in his drive, then one door slamming, followed 15 or 20 seconds later by the second door being slammed. Hanna came through his front door, releasing the latch, then shouldering her way into the room, her arms full of packages.

“No paddling clothes?” asked Ray.

“Tonight I am the consummate hunter and gatherer, the chef, too. We will have a leisurely dinner. It’s all fresh. It’s all local. No growth hormones, no MSG. And you’re going to love it.”

“But I thought we were heading for the big lake.”

“Ray, something rather amazing is going on. I’m not frantic. I don’t need to go out and paddle my butt off to feel okay. I’m feeling very relaxed. I want to have a good meal and a slow evening. It’s payback time. For better or worse, I’m the cook this evening, and you will love it.”

“So what’s the menu?”

“Fresh lake trout from Leland, salad and green beans from Meadowlark, local raspberries to put on a salad, a baguette that even you will find acceptable, and at the end a small glass of sherry with Stilton and biscuits. And, along the way, I’ll serve tall glasses of ice water, still my safest beverage.”

“How about Brenda Wudbine?” asked Ray.

Hanna embraced him warmly, pulling him close, waiting as he enfolded her in his arms, then kissed him passionately. Eventually she pushed away. “Careful,” she said playfully, “or you won’t get dinner.”

“That’s not all bad,” said Ray.

“True. But at 3 A.M. when you wake up blissfully satiated but starving, you will remember that you didn’t have dinner.”

“How about Brenda Wudbine?”

“You keep repeating yourself. Here are the rules of engagement for this evening. There will be no shoptalk until after we have had dessert. Agreed?”

“Agreed,” said Ray. “What can I help with?”

“Go read your New Yorker. In 20 minutes I’ll have dinner on the table.”

“Can I ask about Brenda Wudbine now?” said Ray as he sipped from the small glass of sherry Hanna had served him.

She handed him a folder. “There’s blood work and the prints you requested in there. Your medical examiner is a real character. I guess he’s had serious heart problems recently. He wanted to pick my brain.”

“And Brenda Wudbine?”

“Not wanting to violate any protocols before the body was sent to Grand Rapids for a forensic autopsy, I only did a few things, and those were with Dyskin’s permission. First, I interrogated the defibrillator pacemaker.”

“Voices from the dead.”

“You could say that. There was nothing remarkable. The device appeared to be operating normally. You can see where the heart stopped beating and the defibrillator fired. It cycled through a number of times. Then you can see the use of the second defibrillator. This would’ve been the EMTs. They obviously noted her Medalert bracelet. When the patient has this kind of pacemaker, the EMTs have to take care to position the paddles so the energy they deliver won’t destroy the pacemaker. It appears the EMTs did everything right. This was a woman with cardiomyopathy, with alcohol probably being a contributing factor.”

“Anything else?” asked Ray.

“Yes, two things. First, we did a blood alcohol. Brenda’s was .26. That’s a lot for early in the day. Probably had a residue from the night before, too.”

“And the second thing?”

“It looked like she had had a fall. The back of her head showed signs of significant trauma. How did you find her?”

“We didn’t. She was being loaded into an ambulance. But the person who found her said she was lying on her back in her greenhouse. And yes, there was a brandy bottle and a coffee mug that smelled of alcohol.”

“How about the floor?”

“Concrete.”

“She might have blacked out from the alcohol or had some sort of cardiac incident, hitting her head on the floor as she collapsed. That injury might or might not have been a contributing factor to her death. We’ll know that after the autopsy.”

Hanna pointed, “Ray, your phone.”

“Rules of engagement? Phone calls?”

“Take it.”

Hanna cleared away the dishes as Ray talked. After a short conversation, he rejoined her.

“What’s going on?”

“That was Pepper Markley. She served as a concierge to Malcolm Wudbine. You saw her onstage. She played the young wife of the Vicar.”

“Yes, I remember her, one very pretty woman. Vivacious.”

“That’s the one. She told me earlier today she had something to tell me. The circumstances prevented that from happening. I gave her my card.”

“And she just called with some information that will turn your investigation on its head?”

“I wish. No. She said she has sent me lots of documents. If I connect the dots, I might have the motive. I asked her to tell me more, but she just hung up.”

“I love a good mystery. Where’s your laptop?”

Hanna settled next to him at the table.

“And here’s her e-mail. Her note reads, No one is clean.”

“I see that, what are the attachments?”

“PDFs, dozens and dozens.” Ray opened one, then another, then a third. “They seem to be confirmations of hotel reservations. I wonder what this is all about.”

“Why don’t you print them out, and I’ll make some tea,” said Hanna.

By the time Hanna brought the tea to the table, Ray was laying out the printed pages. “It looks like three years of reservations. Which would make sense,” said Ray. “Pepper had been with Wudbine for that period. There seems to be two kinds of room arrangements. About half of them are for suites, the other for adjoining rooms. The early ones all list Jill Wudbine as the other occupant. Pepper shows up in the later ones. Then Alyson Mickels makes an appearance. She was Wudbine’s pilot and security person. What do you notice?” he asked.

“The first reservations are always for two people, Wudbine and one of those three women, never a combination. Give me a minute, I want to rearrange things.”

Ray watched as she moved the sheets around. Hanna looked through the stacks a second time, making a few changes.

“I’m feeling a bit like a voyeur.”

“How’s that?” asked Ray.

“Don’t you see it? Look. Early on it’s just Jill and Wudbine. That’s true for the first year. The second year it’s mostly Jill, especially true for the multi-day trips. Occasionally Pepper appears, mostly one-night stays, or should I say, stands. That pattern holds true into the last year, then suddenly everything changes. Jill’s out, Pepper’s out. For the last six months he’s only traveled with Alyson Mickels.”

“It’s not a practically new plot line, is it?” said Ray

“Nope. Rich and powerful older man, beautiful young women. That one has been around since…the dawn of man and woman.”

“You know Jill Wudbine is Malcom Wudbine’s daughter-in-law?” asked Ray.

“That makes the story suddenly a lot darker, doesn’t it,” observed Hanna.

Ray gestured toward neatly arranged pages. “So you really think….”

“Look at this e-mail. All she says is No one is clean. Perhaps Pepper is projecting her behavior….”

“I wondered about that, too.” Ray picked up his phone and touched the top of the recents screen. A moment later he spoke into the phone, “How do you know the same is true of Jill?” He listened. “Thank you. That’s what I need to know.”

“Well?” asked Hanna.

“In flagrante delicto. And on more than one occasion.”

“Well, the message is clear.” She paused, her tone changed. “This thing with Jill, it’s not incest, but it’s pathological behavior of the worst sort. Perhaps the ultimate hostility a father can commit toward a son. I think you have lots of people with a motive. Now I need the beach, Ray. A long walk on the beach.”

“Ditto.”


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