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Murder at The Washington Tribune: A Capital Crimes Mystery

Page 16

by Margaret Truman


  But when he was about to leave his office at 3:45, that positive spirit had dissolved like sugar in hot water, and he left the building with a tight jaw and knotted stomach.

  SEVENTEEN

  Wilcox had trouble finding parking on the street and circled the block a few times until a space opened up across from the address Michael had given him. It was a few minutes after four when he completed his parallel parking and shut off the engine. He sat quietly and stared at the building for a few minutes before slowly leaving the car and crossing the street. He paused at the door, drew a breath, entered the foyer, and read the names on the tenant panel on the wall. Listed next to the apartment number was the name MICHAEL LARUE. Strange, he thought as he pushed the button opposite the apartment number.

  “Joseph?” the voice came through a tiny speaker.

  The tinny sound startled Wilcox. “Hello?” he said, leaning closer to the panel.

  A buzzer and the metallic sound of the door lock disengaging filled the confined space. “Joseph, come in.”

  Wilcox pushed open the door and stepped into the hallway that ran from the front to the back of the building. A door opened at the far end and Michael stepped into the hall. “Down here, Joseph,” he said.

  Wilcox approached this man, his brother, who was silhouetted in light from inside the apartment. Joe’s initial reaction was to Michael’s height. He hadn’t remembered him being so tall.

  “Well, well,” Michael said, smiling. “You are here. How wonderful.”

  Joe tentatively extended his hand, which Michael shook enthusiastically.

  “Hello, Michael. I—”

  “Come in, come in,” Michael said, turning and entering the apartment. Joe followed.

  He stopped a few feet inside and took in his surroundings; soothing recorded classical music came from unseen speakers.

  “Like it, Joseph?” Michael asked, indicating the apartment with outstretched arms. “It isn’t especially large, but it’s perfectly adequate for one person. Come in, come in and sit, make yourself at home. Take that chair over there. It’s the most comfortable one.”

  Joe ignored the invitation and instead went to the window and looked out on to the side street. A passage in the music caught his attention, and he cocked his head.

  Michael noticed. “Like classical music, Joseph?”

  “Debussy,” Joe replied. “La Mer.”

  “Ah ha,” said Michael. “You obviously do like classical music. And some of the most familiar. Jazz, too?”

  Joe turned and for the first time since entering the apartment took a close look at his brother. While he’d been struck at Michael’s height, he now was aware that this man he hadn’t seen for decades was also physically fit. His black T-shirt was molded to his slender yet muscular torso. He hadn’t begun to bald as Joe had, nor had gray appeared. His hair was very black—dyed? Joe wondered—and neatly trimmed on the sides, but featuring a ponytail. What was especially evident was his tan. His face and arms were bronzed; piercing green eyes seemed to reflect inner bemusement.

  “Jazz?” Joe said. “No. I’ve never gotten into that. Some Dixieland maybe.” He noticed the guitar and amplifier. “You play, Michael?”

  Michael stood by the instrument. “I play at it,” he said. “All those years in the hospital gave me nothing but time to learn. I tried art but realized that wasn’t for me, so I turned to music, for which I seem to have a greater affinity. People say I’ve become quite proficient. I certainly love it. Do you play an instrument?”

  “Afraid not. Michael, I—”

  A cat appeared through the open bedroom door.

  “This is Maggie,” Michael said as the animal came to Joe and rubbed against his leg. “A Maine coon cat, a lovely breed. They sell for more than a thousand dollars from breeders. I rescued this poor thing from the SPCA. Cost me a hundred-dollar donation. Well worth it. Drink? I have wine, Scotch, or vodka. I believe you’re a Scotch drinker, but maybe you enjoy variety.”

  “Nothing, thank you. Oh, some Scotch on the rocks, a small one. I’m doing a television show this evening.”

  “How exciting. Back in a jiffy.”

  How did he know I drink Scotch? Joe wondered as Michael came from the kitchen carrying the platter of hors d’ oeuvres. He set it on a small table and said, “Drinks on the way,” and disappeared again.

  Joe found himself relaxing. The music was nice, and the initial shock of finally confronting Michael had worn off. He went to the platter of food and tasted some. Michael returned carrying a glass of Scotch on the rocks and a half-filled glass of white wine. He handed Joe his drink and raised his glass. “To brothers, Joseph, and to being close again. Cheers!”

  After clinking, they sat on the small couch.

  “I suppose there are many questions I should be asking,” Joe said, sipping his drink.

  “And I have questions, too,” Michael said in a low baritone. “Where shall we begin? I know. You’re the reporter. Asking questions is your business. Go ahead, Joseph, interview me as though . . . as though . . . as though I’m a movie star who’s been out of the public eye for a while and am making a comeback.” He laughed. “No,” he said, “I’ll ask the first question. How did you become a journalist? As I remember, the only thing you thought about was football and baseball.”

  Joe couldn’t help but smile. “Yeah, I suppose I was a jock back in high school.”

  “And chased all the pretty girls,” Michael added. “Maybe I should have pursued sports and pretty girls back then. Maybe I wouldn’t have—” His words trailed off.

  “Hey, Michael, you don’t have to talk about it if you don’t want to. I’d understand.”

  “Oh, no, Joseph. There was a time when I was too embarrassed to speak of what I’d done. It was too painful to ever mention it. But I learned how important it is to be open and candid, to face one’s life squarely, the good and the bad, the high and the low points. Oh, no, Joseph, I don’t have any problem being honest about myself and who I was. Notice I put that in the past tense? Who I was and who I am now, are two very different people.”

  Thank God, Joe thought. “How did you know I drank Scotch?” he asked. “I was thirteen when you last saw me.”

  “Aha,” Michael said, standing and going to the center of the room. “Caught in the act. Well, Joseph, it took a significant amount of time for me to get up the courage to call you. During that time I decided to get to know you from afar, gain a sense of who my brother was before seeing him face to face. I’ve been spying on you.” He said it with dramatic flair, an actor supplying the curtain line in a British murder mystery.

  “Spying on me? You’ve been following me?”

  “Sometimes. I’ve taken the public tour at your newspaper a few times and saw you working at your desk, in your cubicle. As a matter of fact, I’ve seen you at work other times.”

  “How so?” Joe asked, feeling uneasy again.

  “I work for an office supply company, Joseph. I deliver supplies to businesses, including The Washington Tribune. I saw you once when I brought something to your newsroom.”

  “That’s interesting, Michael,” Joe said, finishing what was in his glass.

  “A refill?” Michael asked.

  “Thanks, no. Tell me more about spying.”

  “Oh, I waited outside your building one day and followed you to lunch. You met a very handsome woman. Hispanic, I surmised. That’s when I noticed you drank Scotch. I was at the next table. It took every ounce of restraint on my part to not reach over, pat your hand, and announce who I was. But I didn’t want to interrupt your conversation.”

  He didn’t mention that he’d seen Edith Vargas-Swayze again, when she and her cop partner interviewed him at work.

  The idea that he’d been spied upon as he went about his daily routines caused Joe to squirm. “When else did you spy on me, Michael?”

  “Oh, my goodness, Joseph, I sense you’re offended at what I did. If so, I apologize. It’s just that after so many years, and
the circumstances that kept us apart, I was reluctant to simply pop up like a jack-in-the-box and announce, ‘Here I am, brother.’ Do you understand?”

  “Yes, I understand,” Joe said. “I see that you’ve changed your name. LaRue, is it?”

  “Yes. I decided that if I was going to get a fresh start in my life, I needed to wipe away everything from the past.”

  It would have been better if you had, including me, Joe thought, not pleased with that uncharitable view.

  “LaRue has a nice ring to it, don’t you think?” Michael asked.

  “Yes. A nice ring.” Joe fell silent, his attention on the cat, who had climbed up on a windowsill and was playing with the blind’s cord.

  “Joseph,” Michael said, aware his brother’s attention was elsewhere.

  Joe turned and faced him. “What?”

  “I realize how shocking it must be for you to be sitting next to me after so many years. Frankly, I never thought I’d have this opportunity again, that I would die in the hospital. Forty years is a very long time to be put away. At first, I kept track of the days on a calendar, crossing each one off, filled with anger that my life had been taken away from me.”

  “It was your anger that put you there, Michael,” Joe said, not sure he should have.

  “Yes, it was. I couldn’t accept that at first. Everyone else was wrong except me. The world conspired against me—and I admit, Joseph, that that included you and mother and father.”

  Joe winced.

  “Did you ever read I’m Okay, You’re Okay?”

  “Yes, I did.”

  “I thought it was a brilliant book. I saw myself in it. I was okay, the world was not.”

  Joe recalled the groundbreaking book in which the Freudian concepts of ego, superego and id were redefined as adult, parent, and child, and one’s way of viewing others helped define how successful they would be in establishing relationships. His interest stemmed from his job as a cops reporter writing about society’s criminal element. Criminals, the book pointed out, tended to function with the attitude that they were okay but others weren’t. Emotionally healthy people were the I’m okay, you’re okay individuals, whose positive outlook applied not only to them but to the rest of society.

  “With the help of the good men and women at the hospital, I eventually shed my anger and was able to see that not only was I okay, but that my fellow men were, too. And women, of course.” Michael laughed. “Women! I envy you, Joseph, having a beautiful, loving wife and splendid daughter.”

  “You don’t know Georgia,” Joe said.

  “True. Oh, well, I might as well admit it. I’ve taken the liberty of enjoying an advance peek at your Georgia, too, and Roberta. Of course, I see Roberta all the time on TV. But—”

  “How dare you?” Joe said forcefully.

  “How dare I what?”

  “Sneak around spying on my wife and daughter. What did you do, stalk them?”

  “That would be criminal,” Michael said with a modicum of indignation. “I wanted to feel that I at least knew what they looked like before actually meeting them. Is that so terrible?” He didn’t give Joe a chance to respond. “You’re forgetting, Joseph, that I’ve not been as fortunate as you in life. You went on to become a respectable journalist. You married the girl of your dreams and fathered a loving daughter. I’ve had none of that, but I intend to make up for lost time. Won’t you help me achieve that, Joseph? I’ve paid my debt to society, paid it in full. I came to Washington because my only living relative was here—my brother!”

  Joe stood and went to where the cat was now sleeping on the sill. He ran his hand over its head and back, waking it and eliciting a rumble of a purr. He liked four-legged animals. He and Michael had had dogs and cats growing up, and he and Georgia had brought strays into the house and raised them with love. Their last pet, a mixed breed rescued from the local pound, had been put to sleep at the advanced age of sixteen. That was two years ago, and they’d never pursued having another animal in the house.

  He leaned closer to Maggie to better hear her contented sounds, and wasn’t aware that Michael had come up behind him. When he realized it, he straightened with a start.

  “I didn’t mean to frighten you,” Michael said.

  “You didn’t,” Joe said, moving toward the door. “I’d better be going.”

  “Your TV appearance,” Michael said. “You’ll be talking about the serial killer?”

  “Yes.”

  “I’ll be watching, Joseph.”

  “Good.”

  “Joseph.”

  “Yeah?”

  “This won’t be the last time we spend time together. Don’t tell me that it is. Don’t destroy me again.”

  “What the hell are you saying, that I played a part in what you did and what happened to you?”

  “No, no, no, no, no. I learned, among many things, that it’s important that I take full responsibility for that. What I am saying, Joseph, what I’m begging—and I hate to beg—is that you bring me into your life. I desperately need that, Joseph. I was told it’s vitally important for me to reestablish contact with family. Please.”

  “Michael, I—” Joe managed a smile. “Welcome to the family, Michael. But let’s take it slow. Okay?”

  “Absolutely.”

  “Give me some time to adjust to this and to bring Georgia into it.”

  “Take all the time you need, Joseph. But in the meantime, we can meet now and then, can’t we?”

  “Sure. Now and then.”

  There was an awkward moment when Joe was afraid Michael would hug him, embrace him physically. He stepped away to avoid it and said, “Take care, Michael.”

  EIGHTEEN

  Wilcox had an hour and a half to kill before appearing on D.C. Digest. Had he not planned to have dinner with Edith Vargas-Swayze after the TV show, he would have grabbed a bite before it. He considered going back to his office at the Trib but decided against it. Because there was no breaking news upon which to base another article in the series, he was off the hook for a day—but only a day. Morehouse had said that he expected the story to pick up again, and had urged Wilcox to pull out all the stops to make that happen. Newsstand sales since the articles had begun to appear were up by 8 percent, and subscriptions had increased, too.

  He found a coffee shop near the TV studio and wiled away the time sipping an iced coffee and nibbling on a piece of lemon pound cake to take the edge off his appetite. But nothing could take the edge off his thoughts about having gone to Michael’s apartment.

  Cognitively, he was happy that his brother was no longer confined to the Illinois hospital where he’d been a patient for so many years. That Michael had come out of that experience looking as good as he did and with a relatively positive view of his future, was admirable. His desire to reintegrate with Joe and his family wasn’t unreasonable. As he’d said, his doctors urged him to reestablish contact with his family as part of his post-hospital recovery.

  But as those good thoughts came to him, they were accompanied by a visceral dread. The way Michael had begun the process of reintroducing himself to Joe and the family was upsetting at best. To think that he, Georgia, and Roberta had been spied upon, followed, their movements deliberately observed by someone with an agenda, sent a shiver up Joe’s spine. And there was Michael’s threatening tone during his phone calls, and at the apartment. When Joe had demonstrated initial shock and reservation at hearing from a brother he hadn’t seen in four decades, Michael had hinted he would go through Georgia: “You know how women are, more social than men.”

  As he sat in the coffee shop, these thoughts caused new anger to bubble up and to sour the taste of cake in his mouth. The truth was—and he had to admit it to himself—he did not want Michael Wilcox, or LaRue if he preferred—back in his life.

  He’d been twelve years old when the murder had taken place. Michael, his taller, handsome, all-knowing big brother, was sixteen at the time. The victim had been a neighbor, Marjorie Jones; blond, flir
tatious, and physically developed beyond her fourteen years. She had a habit of not always drawing the shade when undressing in her small second-floor bedroom, which Michael had discovered one evening. After keeping his find to himself for a week, he eventually shared it with his younger brother.

  One night after dinner, when it had become dark, Michael allowed Joe to huddle with him behind an elm in the side yard and wait for Marjorie to put on her show.

  “She wants us to see her naked,” Michael said in his worldly wisdom. Joe didn’t understand why any girl would want boys to see her without clothes, but he never challenged Michael’s analysis of what became an almost nightly event.

  “Look, look,” Michael said when the light came on and Marjorie appeared. Joe giggled. “Shut up!” Michael said.

  If she wanted them to see her, Joe reasoned, why would it matter if she knew they were there? But he didn’t say that to Michael. He kept silent as Marjorie began to take off her clothes, slowly, looking as though she might be posing, disappearing from view, then coming back into the frame created by the window.

  “Look,” Michael said, “she’s gonna take off her bra. Oh, man!”

  “Did you ever see hair?” Joe asked.

  “Shut up. Yeah, of course I did. Look.”

  Marjorie faced the window as she unhooked her brassiere and allowed it to drop to her feet.

  Joe squealed.

 

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