More Deaths Than One

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by Pat Bertram




  More Deaths Than One

  Title Page

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Epilogue

  More Deaths Than One

  By

  Pat Bertram

  Published by Second Wind Publishing at Smashwords

  Second Wind Publishing, LLC

  931-B South Main Street, Box 145

  Kernersville, NC 27284

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, locations and events are either a product of the author’s imagination, fictitious or use fictitiously. Any resemblance to any event, locale or person, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  Copyright 2008 by Pat Bertram

  All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or part in any format.

  First Dagger Books edition published December, 2008.

  Dagger Books, Running Angel, and all production design are trademarks of Second Wind Publishing, used under license.

  For information regarding bulk purchases of this book, digital purchase and special discounts, please contact the publisher at www.secondwindpublishing.com

  Cover design by Pat Bertram

  Manufactured in the United States of America

  ISBN 978-1-935171-25-6

  Chapter 1

  “What do you think of a guy who embezzles from his own business?”

  Bob Stark recognized the voice of the graveyard shift waitress, the attractive one with the black hair. He glanced up from his contemplation of the scars on the laminated plastic table and saw her standing by his booth, gazing at him, her eyebrows quirked. She seemed to expect a response, but he had no idea what to say. And why would she ask him such a question? Though he’d been coming to Rimrock Coffee Shop for four weeks now, she’d never deviated from her standard lines of “What’ll you have?” and “Here you go.”

  He took a surreptitious look around. Except for the two drunks arguing in a corner booth and a cook cleaning the grill in the kitchen, he and the waitress were the only two people in the twenty-four-hour coffee shop.

  Beneath the overly long bangs, her dark eyes gleamed, giving him the impression of laughter. “Yes, I am talking to you.”

  “I’ll have hot chocolate,” he said, adhering to the unwritten script.

  With a flip of her wrist, she brushed the hair off her face. Her skirt flounced as she whirled away from the table, and Bob noticed that she had nicely muscled thighs. Good calves, too. Not wanting her to catch him staring, he picked up a newspaper someone had left behind and leafed through it.

  The waitress returned with his beverage. “What would you do if you were a girl who just found out her boyfriend is embezzling from himself?”

  Bob stirred his hot chocolate, trying to think of the right response, but nothing came to mind.

  “Men!” she said, hurrying off to answer the ringing telephone.

  Later, after the drunks had stumbled out into the night, she came back to Bob’s table carrying a cup of coffee for her and another cup of hot chocolate for him.

  He raised his palms. “I didn’t order this.”

  She sat across from him. “Let’s not quibble over details.” She sipped her coffee, eyes laughing at him over the rim of the cup, then set the empty cup aside.

  Folding her arms on the table, she leaned forward and stared into his face. “What do you have to say for yourself? And who are you? You’ve been coming in here every night, real late, and you never talk except to order hot chocolate.”

  She leaned back. “I bet you can’t sleep. That’s why you come, isn’t it? What’s the problem? Bad dreams?”

  Bob felt a shudder go through him. He came here to get away from the nightmares, not remember them. He took a gulp of chocolate, grateful for the warmth sliding down his throat.

  “You’re a shy one,” she said. “And you never did answer my question.”

  He lifted one shoulder in a disinterested shrug. “You asked a lot of questions.”

  “The one about the girl finding out that her boyfriend is embezzling from himself.”

  “Depends on their relationship. Is she involved in the business?”

  “She helped him start it, works in the office during the day, and waits tables at night to pay the rent.”

  “Then he’s embezzling from her, too.”

  She flicked the hair out of her eyes. “You’re right. God, what a fool I’ve been. Ever since I found out he’s been cheating on his business, I’ve been wondering if he’s been cheating on me. That son of a rabid dog. He promised we’d get a house together as soon as the business did well enough, and it turns out we could have been living in our own place for several months now.”

  “Even if he’s not cheating on you physically,” Bob said, “he’s cheating on you morally.”

  “I want someone who’s honest and true to himself, someone who likes and respects himself so he can like and respect me. Is that too much to ask?”

  The door opened. A young couple entered. Mouths locked together, they slid into a booth and groped beneath each other’s clothes.

  The waitress stood. “I better go remind them this isn’t a motel.”

  Grateful to be alone, Bob sipped his hot chocolate and read the newspaper.

  The Broncos still reeled from their humiliation at the previous Super Bowl, having lost to the Redskins forty-two to ten.

  Two youths found a man’s decomposing body in a culvert off the South Platte River. The man had been tortured; the work of a gang, the police surmised.

  Silverado faced insolvency, having squandered one hundred million dollars on bad loans.

  And Lydia Loretta Stark was dead. Again.

  ***

  “I brought you another hot chocolate. It’s on the house.” The young woman sat and peered at Bob. “Is something wrong? You don’t look so good all of a sudden.”

  He tried to ignore the ache inching up the back of his head. “What would you do if you were reading today’s paper and came across the obituary of your mother who’s been buried for twenty-two years?”

  She laughed. “Go to the funeral, of course.” She must have realized Bob hadn’t meant to be funny, because the mirth faded from her eyes. “You’re serious?”

  “Dead serious.” He showed her the notice.

  She read it aloud. “‘Lydia Loretta Stark, sixty-six, of Denver, passed away August twenty-ninth, nineteen eighty-eight, at four p.m. Preceded in death by husband Edward Jackson. Survived by sons Edward Jackson, Jr. and Robert; six grandchildren. Services and interment Friday, ten a.m., at Mountain View Cemetery.’” She looked at him. “Are you Edward or Robert?”

  “Robert. My brother is Edward, but he goes by the name of Jackson.”

  “What name do you go by?”

  “Bob.”

  “I’m Kerry. Kerry Casillas.” She eyed the obituary. “How many of those children are yours?

  Bob massaged the back of his neck. “None.”

  “Jackson’s been a busy boy.”

  “Seems like it.”

  “You don’t know?”

  “I h
aven’t seen him since my mother’s funeral—the first one, I mean. We never got along.”

  She pushed back her hair. “So this is really your mother’s obituary?”

  “Could be. She died in nineteen sixty-six at the age of forty-four and had no grandchildren at the time, but everything else matches.”

  “If it’s not a coincidence, it must be a hoax.”

  Bob shook his head, stopping abruptly when pain shot to the top of his skull. “Why would anyone go through all the trouble of putting a fake obituary in the paper? And who’s being hoaxed? It can’t be me. No one knows I’m in Denver.”

  ***

  On Friday, Bob made the trip to Mountain View Cemetery. He wandered around the lush expanse, skirting formal flower gardens and stepping over white gravestones lying flush with the ground. The place seemed deserted, but as he topped a small rise, he saw a funeral party spread out before him like a stage play.

  He paused beside a large clump of lilac bushes and scanned the small crowd encircling the brass-trimmed casket.

  Everyone wore black except one young woman, scarcely out of her teens, who had pasted on a skimpy red dress that left no part of her voluptuous figure to the imagination. A much older man had an arm draped around her, his hand cupping her buttocks.

  Bob recognized the man: his brother. Jackson had been a good-looking boy, having inherited his father’s athletic build and his mother’s blond beauty. He still looked good, though Bob could see that too many years of hard living or hard drinking had left their mark.

  Bob’s headache returned in full force. He closed his eyes and massaged his temples while breathing deeply. When the pain abated, he glanced at the crowd again and noticed two men with the tensed posture of police officers on duty standing off to one side. They seemed familiar, but he couldn’t place them. As if becoming aware of his scrutiny, they turned in his direction.

  He stepped closer to the lilac bush, out of their line of vision.

  Clustered with their backs to him stood a man, a woman, and six children ranging in age from about two years old to about sixteen. The obituary had mentioned six grandchildren, Bob recalled. Were these six his brother’s offspring, by an ex-wife, perhaps?

  One of the children, a pudgy little boy, reached out and yanked the pigtails of the taller, skinnier girl slouching next to him. She slapped him. The next moment they were rolling around on the ground and pummeling each other.

  The woman turned around. “Stop it, you two.”

  Bob sucked in his breath. Lorena Jones, his college girlfriend? What was she doing here? How did she know these people? He certainly hadn’t introduced her to them.

  Feeling dizzy, he studied her while she scolded the children. Deep lines and red splotches marred her once satiny smooth face, and her body appeared bloated, as if she had not bothered to lose the extra weight from her last pregnancy or two. Despite those changes, she looked remarkably like her college picture he still carried in his wallet along with the Dear John letter that had ended their relationship.

  Lorena nudged the man next to her. “Robert Stark, don’t just stand there. Do something.”

  The man she called Robert Stark turned around to admonish the children.

  Bob stared. The other Robert Stark seemed to have aged a bit faster than he, seemed more used, but the resemblance could not be denied. He was looking at himself.

  Head aching so much he could scarcely breathe, he stood like stone. Not even his eyes moved as he watched the rest of the ceremony.

  When everyone left, he approached the casket. He gazed at it, then turned to walk away. A flash of white caught his attention—the headstone, lying discreetly off to the side, ready to be inset: Lydia Loretta Stark, cherished wife, beloved mother; adored grandmother; born March 10, 1922; died August 29, 1988.

  “What the hell is going on?” he asked aloud.

  The mild expletive hung in the air until a sudden breeze blew it away.

  Chapter 2

  Bob set his easel in the backyard and let his fingers decide what to paint. His brain seemed to have disconnected itself from the rest of him while it sorted out the preposterous information it had received that morning at the funeral. Synapses fired as the data hurtled around the neural network of his cerebrum, and he could almost see the sparks of electricity they generated, but he found no answer to the conundrum.

  The sound of a gasp brought him out of his trance. He turned around, palette in one hand, brush in the other, and bumped into Ella Barnes, his landlady.

  Twisting the skirt of her prim shirtwaist dress in knobby fingers, she stared at the painting, then at him. She disentangled her hands from her skirt, clutched her chest, and hobbled across the yard.

  Watching her disappear into the house, he wondered why he frightened her. He shrugged and stepped back to inspect his painting. It looked exactly as he had dreamed it: impenetrable jungle, serene yet menacing, so real he could almost smell the decay and feel the suffocating heat. He shivered. Perhaps the painting radiated too much vileness, but at least he’d transferred the image from his head to the canvas where it could no longer torment him.

  When the light faded, he packed his materials, took them inside, and set out for Rimrock Coffee Shop on Colfax Avenue. As he drifted along the street with the rest of the strays, feeling as if he were one more nonentity with only fading memories to show he had ever been real, he saw a man wearing a homemade aluminum foil helmet.

  The man accosted one pedestrian after another, but they all dodged him and his shrill proclamation of doom. “Why won’t anyone listen to me? Sissy’s going to get you. No one is safe. They can get you like they got me.”

  The man sidled up to Bob. “They’re going to get you, too.”

  Bob nodded. “I think they already have.”

  Slanting a wide-eyed glance at Bob, the man scuttled away.

  At the coffee shop, Bob discovered that Kerry’s shift didn’t begin until eleven. He ducked out the door and crossed the street to the Golden Pagoda where he’d been taking most of his meals. Picking at his firecracker chicken, he tried to figure out what to tell her. He’d promised to let her know what happened at the funeral, but how could he explain what he didn’t understand?

  ***

  “So?” she said, bringing him his hot chocolate. “Did you go? What did you find out?” She plopped down in the booth and gazed expectantly at him.

  After all his careful deliberation, he heard himself blurting it out, like ripping off a bandage.

  “I went. According to the headstone, they did bury my mother. My brother attended, and so did I.”

  She brushed the hair out of her eyes with a quick, impatient gesture. “I know. You told me you went.”

  He shook his head. “You don’t understand. I saw another me there. Another Robert Stark. He looked like me and he seemed to be married to my college girlfriend.”

  Her eyes sparkled. “Another you? Wow, how did it feel talking to yourself?”

  “We didn’t talk.”

  “You didn’t talk? Why not? I would have charged up to him and demanded to know why he wore my face.”

  Bob almost smiled. She probably would have, too. “I didn’t have time,” he said. He knew the excuse sounded lame, but he didn’t want to talk about the headache that had paralyzed him. Unable to think, unable to act, he had watched Robert herd his family away from the gravesite. Then the headache loosened its grip, allowing him to return home and find serenity the way he always did: by painting.

  Kerry flicked the hair away from her face again.

  “Why do you do that?” Bob asked. “If you don’t like your bangs in your eyes, why don’t you trim them?”

  She lifted a hand as though to touch her hair, then let it drop. “I’d like to, but I can’t.”

  “Do what I do. Get a pair of scissors and whack them off.”

  “You don’t get it. My boss wants me to cut my bangs or wear them pulled back with a barrette. He nags at me all the time about it, so I can’
t. Don’t you see? And anyway, we’re supposed to be talking about you and your other self.” Her eyes gleamed. “Maybe it’s like a story I once read where this guy kept winding up in alternate universes and seeing different versions of himself. Or maybe you’re twins separated at birth and adopted out to people with the same last name.”

  Bob gave her a sour look. “These are not answers.”

  She folded her arms across her chest. “If you don’t like my explanations, what are yours? What do you think is going on?”

  “I have absolutely no idea.”

  “Then we better find out.”

  He drew back. “We?”

  “Sure. I get off at seven, but sometimes I don’t finish my side-work until seven-thirty. How about if I come get you a little before eight?”

  “I thought you worked for your boyfriend during the day.”

  “Not on Saturdays. Where do you live?”

  He shook his head, not wanting her help, then decided the idea had merit. Although she wore him out, she had a car and he didn’t. If worse came to worst, he could pretend she was another annoying cab driver.

  After giving her the address, he said, “Come in through the gate off the alley, and knock on the French doors. The old woman who owns the boardinghouse is nosy, and it’s best to try to avoid her.”

  Her eyes laughed at him. “No one lives in a boardinghouse anymore.”

  “Well, I do. I’m not going to be in Denver long enough to get an apartment, and I hate hotels.”

  Yawning, he stood and tossed a couple of dollars on the table. “I’ve had a rough day. Maybe tonight I can actually sleep for a change.”

  ***

  Bob stepped inside the door and froze. Someone waited for him in the darkness. He couldn’t hear a sound, but he had the skin-crawling sensation of being watched.

  Thinking Ella was poking among his things again, he sniffed but caught no lingering odor of the cheap perfume she doused herself with.

 

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