When the Dead Speak (1st Sam Casey Mystery)
Page 16
“They’ve been trying to get all the records on those new-fangled computers but they’ve only gotten as far back as, I think, about 1982.” He scribbled the name on a piece of paper. “Casey, Samuel. Okay, let me lookie-see what I’ve got.”
Jake watched Charlie shuffle off to the filing cabinets. A half-empty cup of coffee sat next to a chocolate donut with two bites out of it.
“Have to try the back room,” Charlie called out, having checked the dates on the cabinets in the front room. Several minutes later, Charlie returned. “Here you go. Need to sign out the file or do you just want a copy of something?”
“I’ll let you know.” Jake skimmed through the incident report on Samuel Casey’s death. Reading Abby’s comments made him conjure up a picture of a cute five-year-old girl, clutching a doll, waving to her father through the window.
The case was only investigated for three days. It seemed to have been thorough. Even the arson and explosive experts found nothing to point to a homicide. Jake wondered if the technology they had today would have come to the same conclusion. If he had been the detective on the case, he would have spent more than three days investigating it.
“Do you remember this case, Charlie?” Jake asked.
“That specific case, no. But I remember the date. June 6. That was the day before that letter bomb went off at City Hall. Injured three people. Killed the mailman.”
“Nice diversion,” Jake whispered.
“What?”
“Nothing.” Jake pointed to a signature at the bottom of the report. “Do you recognize these initials?”
Charlie squinted again, studying the curly letters that looked like an ampersand with a line through it.
“Naw. Can’t say that I do. He would have been the supervisor on the case.”
“Why does it say revise on the top page?” He flipped through the back pages. “Where’s the original?”
“Should be in there.”
Jake checked the file again. Only the revised report was there. “What about the two men who investigated the incident?”
“Simms and Beransky?” Charlie rubbed his dimpled chin. “Simms I believe was killed in a high speed chase several years after that. Beransky quit the force not too soon after. Beransky had been driving the squad car.”
“Could you make two copies of this sheet for me?” Jake handed the file back to Charlie with the page to be copied on top. He wanted one of the copies for Carl.
Chapter 56
“You’re lucky you came today, Sam,” Benny said as he opened the door to the smaller examining room. “We’re shipping the body to his sister in D.C. this afternoon.”
“So soon?”
“I’ve delayed it for too long as it is.” Benny looked through the glass window to his office where an assistant stood with a stack of papers for him to sign. “You have fun. Let me know when you’re through.”
Once Benny left, Sam took her necklace off and looked down at the mummified remains that now lay on a metal gurney. Hap probably had been filled with a lot of hope when he had spoken with her father. If that truck driver hadn’t hit the overpass, Hap’s body might never have been found.
She pushed the necklace into Hap’s hand, the one that had held Hap’s pin. Immediately a sea of lightning bolt shapes floated in her mind. All shapes and sizes. She sensed fear. Hap’s fear. Then bodies, falling in succession. She heard footsteps running, ragged panting. She saw the smiling face in the picture, Hap’s face. She saw a man’s hands, lifting her onto his lap. She saw the shapes again, and this time, a hand drawing them. A small hand. A child’s hand. Her hand.
Chapter 57
“I wish you had called first, Detective.” Mrs. Leland led Frank down the tiled hallway to Parker Smith’s room. Her uniform fit snugly over her robust figure. Frank could hear the sound of her nylons rubbing together as her inner thigh’s collided.
“I did call. The front desk told me Parker Smith was a resident here at Shady Pine Nursing Home.”
She made a face that said likely story. “If you had asked his condition, we would have told you Mr. Smith had a stroke three years ago. He hasn’t spoken a word. I don’t know how you plan to question him.”
They stepped into the sterile room. A poor attempt had been made to give the room some semblance of home ... floral paintings, potted plants, a quilt thrown over a rocker. Nurse Leland walked over to the picture window and turned the wand on the mini-blinds to let in more sunlight.
“I don’t know why the nurse’s aide closes these blinds. Sunlight rejuvenates a person.” She motioned with her arms as though pumping iron. “Now, Mr. Smith. How are you doing today?” Her voice had increased in volume when she spoke. Walking over to the frail figure lying on the bed, she said, “You have color in your cheeks. Yes, you do.” She plumped up his pillow, cranked his bed to where he was more upright. “You have a visitor.” She motioned toward Frank.
Parker Smith showed no response. His glassy eyes stared straight ahead. The thin blanket covering him rose and fell with each breath.
“He’s not on a respirator?” Frank asked. He saw the wires leading to a machine that registered his heart rate and blood pressure.
“He eats, breathes. We’ve had a therapist work with him on speech, but, no luck. He does have some movement in his right hand. Recognizes his daughter ... some days.” Looking down at Parker, Nurse Leland said, “I’m going to leave you with Detective Travis for a little bit.” She patted Parker’s arm and left the room.
Frank studied the man in front of him. The skin lay in folds where his muscles used to fill out his form. His gray hair was cut short. Pale blue eyes seemed bright against his pallid face.
Frank pulled up a chair and introduced himself. He watched for telltale reaction as he mentioned Hap Wilson’s name and Mushima Valley. There wasn’t a twitch, no flicker behind his vacant stare, no hint that Parker was understanding, much less hearing, what Frank was saying.
A cart rolled along the corridor stopping in front of the room. Visitors talked quietly as they passed, some pushing relatives in wheelchairs.
Frank stood up and pulled Hap’s pin out of his pocket. He held it up in front of Parker’s eyes, let the sunlight glisten off the shiny metal.
“Have you ever seen this pin, Mr. Smith?”
He thought he saw Parker’s right finger twitch. The monitor on the cart next to the bed showed an increase in Parker’s heart rate.
Second’s later, Nurse Leland came running in. “Is everything okay in here?”
Frank slipped the pin back into his pocket. “Sure. I did notice a change in his heart rate.”
“You betcha. The damn machine lit up like a Christmas tree.” She watched the monitor. “I don’t like the way his blood pressure is rising, though. I think you better leave now. This is a little too much excitement for one day.”
Moments after Frank left, Nurse Leland watched in awe as Parker started to cry uncontrollably. He emitted no sounds. His good arm shook, his hand clenched the side of the bed. His heart rate reached one hundred and ten. She made a frantic call to Doctor Chan, who prescribed a mild sedative.
An hour later when Nurse Leland checked on Parker Smith, she noticed he had pulled a pen off the nightstand and scrawled a simple note on his bed sheet. It said,
CALL NOLAND
Chapter 58
“Shhh, don’t say a word. Promise?”
The long cedar-colored tail whipped across the front seat. The Irish Setter cocked its head at Jake and padded restlessly across the front seat of Jake’s Buick Riviera. Strands of copper hair clung to the burgundy and gray cloth seats.
“Thanks,” Jake said picking up some of the hairs and flinging them out the window. “Now you’ll force me to clean my car.”
Jake snapped the leash on the dog and led it from the car. From the trunk, Jake hefted a bag of dog food. The Irish Setter sniffed along the driveway and the walkway toward the patio.
The sun was setting behind the tall willow tre
es. In the distance, Jake saw Alex kneeling in the grass fixing the brick edging around the birdbath. The dog spotted Alex at the same time and started pulling on the leash.
“You promised to remain quiet.” Jake unsnapped the leash. The dog took off.
“Hey, Poco.” Alex fell back on his rear as the dog jumped on him. “Where did you come from?”
Jake dropped the twenty-five pound bag of dog food on the ground. “She’s my thank you for doctoring my head.”
Alex looked toward the house. “Does Sam know?”
“It will probably be a week before she even discovers the dog.”
Alex rubbed the back of Poco’s neck as her tail whipped the air furiously. He looked up at Jake’s head, the gash that was starting to scab over.
“It is healing nicely.” Alex looked at Poco, then Jake. Jake detected a grunt as Alex turned to leave. Alex mumbled something about “now I get to clean up all the crap in the yard. Lucky me.” But it didn’t stop Alex from reaching down to pat Poco on the head as they walked away.
Jake smiled. Alex wasn’t exactly showering him with accolades or glowing in brotherly love. But it was a start.
Chapter 59
Sam paced the length of the dining room table. Time on her hands, too much time. Tim was still working on the password. Frank hadn’t called from Elkhart and it was close to seven o’clock in the evening. She had no idea where Jake was, and Hap Wilson’s body was on its way back to D.C.
Hap — she had met Hap when she was younger. She had been the one tracing the pin at her father’s desk. Hap had been at her father’s office. Sam stopped pacing. No, Hap had been here, in her father’s house.
She rushed down the stairs by the kitchen. The basement ran the entire length of the house with a ten-foot high ceiling. It was as tidy as the upstairs, decorated with the furnishings discarded from the redecorating Abby had done several years before. The patterned linoleum floor was dotted with a variety of area rugs.
Sam dodged the pool table and bookcase, stopping at the far end of the basement where a large mahogany desk sat. She heard a door upstairs close, then Jake’s voice.
“DOWN HERE!” Sam yelled. When she heard his footsteps on the stairs, she said, “Help me move this.”
He stared at the four-foot by six-foot red mahogany desk. “It’s built like a Sherman tank.”
“It was my father’s. I remember now. Hap came over to the house, not the office. Maybe he left some notes.”
She pulled out the heavy wooden chair and sat down. Almost immediately the drawings of lightning bolts flashed before her eyes. She smiled and said, “I knew it. I knew there was something right under my nose.”
“Don’t you think Abby would have found whatever your father might have left?”
“Maybe, maybe not.” Sam pushed the chair away from the desk and started opening drawers.
“What are we looking for?”
“I don’t know. Something, anything.”
“Let’s see if we can move it away from the wall.” Jake grabbed one end while Sam grabbed the other. It wouldn’t budge. “Like I said, it’s built like a tank.” He looked around the room. “Do you have a flashlight down here?”
She disappeared into a closet under the stairs and came back with a flashlight. He flashed it behind and under the desk.
“Nothing,” Jake said. They proceeded to take out the drawers and turn each of them over. Taped to the underside of the bottom right-hand drawer was a small, brown envelope.
Once upstairs, seated at the dining room table, Sam still couldn’t bring herself to open it. “Here.” She handed the envelope to Jake. “You do it.” Jake ripped the envelope open and spilled the contents on the table. A long, silver key clinked against the tabletop. “What is it?” Sam picked up the key and clenched it in her hand. Nothing. No visions, no sounds or scents.
Jake took it from her and looked at the number. “I think it’s a safety deposit key, Sam.” He checked his watch. “Banks are closed. I’ll check into getting a court order.”
Frank called to fill them in on his visit with Parker Smith in Elkhart. The nurse had informed him of the name Parker had written — Noland. Noland was Parker’s attorney.
After Jake hung up with Frank, he said, “I’m going to stop by the Chasen Heights Post Tribune office.”
“I’ll call the family attorney,” Sam offered.
Instead, Jake headed over to the Suisse Hotel to brainstorm with Carl.
Chapter 60
Ling Toy busied himself tying together makeshift cots to carry the wounded. But he never took his eyes off of the white soldiers. Hap and his friends were covered in dirt and dried blood. But the white soldiers had clean, sleeveless tee shirts, and looked as if they were catching a few rays while waiting to be picked up.
The shade from the scrub pines didn’t hide the arrogance in P.K.’s face. George lowered his tall frame onto a felled tree trunk, pulled out his knife, and slowly ran it across the back of his hand. Smitty’s bony fingers played with the dog tags around his neck. Len’s brooding, dark eyes peered out from under hooded brows. They eyed Hap and his unit like hyenas waiting for the weaker one to drop.
Hap tossed his cigarette butt aside, grabbed his stomach, and told Booker, “I gotta go find me some bushes.”
P.K. yelled at Ling Toy, “What are you looking at?” Ling Toy turned away quickly. He tried not to hear what they were talking about. All he knew was that Base had instructed Booker, Hap, Bubba, and Shadow to bring the injured in. But the white sergeant, P.K., wanted them to take a look at what was over the hill.
Rays from the setting sun bounced off the weapons drawn by the white soldiers. Gunfire rang out.
Lincoln Thomas woke with a start.
“Whoa, didn’t mean to startle you,” Sergeant Scofield said. “Here’s your tea.” Too nervous to eat, Lincoln had skipped breakfast this morning. He pulled out his handkerchief and wiped his forehead.
“You okay?” Scofield asked.
“I am fine. Do you know when Detective Mitchell will return?”
“Sorry. He hasn’t answered his beeper yet.”
“And Sergeant Casey? Are you sure I can’t have her phone number or home address?”
Ed shook his head no. “If you can’t wait, I can have them call you.”
“I will wait.”
Lincoln unbuttoned his suit coat and, from his seat in the visitor’s area, watched as detectives filled out reports at their desks, and others went from phone call to phone call. The desk sergeant himself was either logging in information or on the phone.
Lincoln moved an ashtray over to the table on the other side of the waiting room. The coffee table was littered with half-empty coffee cups and outdated newspapers. He picked up the coffee cups and emptied them in a nearby trash can. Gathering up the papers, he stacked them in one pile so he would have room to lay his paper down to read.
Voices pierced through the commotion in the outer office. Two figures emerged from the elevator. Hoping that they might be the detectives, Lincoln stood up.
He didn’t know the well-dressed man the desk sergeant referred to as Captain. But the man with the captain, Lincoln would know in the dark. Even if he hadn’t seen the cold eyes and arrogant smile, he would know the voice. It was loud, demanding, laced in cynicism. It was him. The man he hated. The man known as P.K.
Lincoln hid his face behind his newspaper and waited for the two men to disappear behind a door at the far end of the room.
Without a word to Ed Scofield, Lincoln left his cup of tea and newspaper and fled down the stairs.
Chapter 61
Sam stood in front of one of the tall windows in the sitting room watching for Jake to return from the bank. He had discovered that the Chasen Heights Post Tribune had been paying on Samuel Casey’s safety deposit box. It had been a little-known hideaway for their traveling reporters years ago that, somehow, slipped through the cracks in the Bookkeeping Department.
Abby stood in the living
room watching her daughter. “Samantha, please come into the kitchen and eat your breakfast.”
“Where is Jake? Why hasn’t he called?” Sam reluctantly walked to the kitchen. She snatched a piece of crisp bacon as Abby pushed her onto a stool at the counter.
“The banks aren’t open.” Abby set a plate of toast on the counter.
“He had to get a subpoena but it shouldn’t have taken that long.”
Sam glanced out into the backyard. Alex was kneeling in the lawn repairing a sprinkler hose. Just as she was ready to turn away from the window, her eyes caught sight of something. “Is that a dog in our yard?”
Abby peered out of the windowbox over the sink, spatula in hand. “Yes, Dear, that’s a dog.”
Sam looked sharply at her mother. “That’s not funny.”
“That’s Poco,” Abby explained, smiling. “Jacob bought her for Alex.”
“He did WHAT?”
“Alex has been admiring that dog for three weeks. He said she was going to be put to sleep. So Jacob bought her as a thank you gift for Alex fixing the cut on his head. That was very thoughtful of him, don’t you think?” Abby didn’t wait for Sam to reply. “She’s very well-behaved, Dear. And she’s going to be with Alex, not here.”
“You’re fawning, Mom.”
“I’m what?”
“Fawning. You are fawning over Jake. All this time I keep waiting for the shoe to drop, expecting him to plop that videotape of me on Uncle Don’s desk.” Her hands moved in animation. Abby leaned against the sink, her arms folded in front of her as she watched her daughter rant. “But why does he have to? He has you cooking his meals, washing his clothes. He uses my house like a hotel with complete room service.”