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Authors: Bill Crider

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BOOK: Bond With Death
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“Or maybe he didn't,” Sally said. She was getting a very bad feeling in the pit of her stomach. Had it been only a few hours ago that she'd thought things were going to be all right? “It's hard to believe that the e-mail and those quotations were just coincidence.”
“Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar,” Jack said.
Sally sighed. Jack was right. She was getting carried away. Weems's visit had upset her, and even the session on the firing range and the margaritas afterward hadn't completely settled her nerves.
“We aren't getting anywhere with this,” she said.
Vera agreed. “Information overload. But it's obvious that something's
going on. That e-mail, Curtin's death, that meeting you have with Jennifer Jackson tomorrow, a visit from Weems. It seems to me that they're all connected.”
“We don't know that. We should slow down and think things over. Maybe then we can come to some conclusions.”
“Come by my office after your meeting tomorrow,” Jack told her.
Sally said that she would, and Jack and Vera left. Sally wondered if they'd go somewhere and dance naked under the moon.
“What do you think, Lola?” she said as she walked into the bedroom.
Lola, who was still under the bed, had no comment, so Sally took a shower and went to bed.
 
 
The Deposition of Joseph Herrick, Sr., who testifieth and saith that on the first day of March 1692: “I being then Constable for Salem, there was delivered to me by warrant from the worshipful Jno. Hathorne and Jonathan Corwin, Esqrs. Sarah Good for me to carry to their majesties' gaol at Ipswich, and that night I set a guard to watch her at my own house, namely Samuel Braybrook, Michael Dunell, and Jonathan Baker. And the aforenamed persons informed me in the morning that that night Sarah Good was gone for some time from them both bare foot and bare legged. And I was also Informed that that night Elizabeth Hubbard, one of the afflicted persons, complained that Sarah Good came and afflicted her, being bare foot and bare legged.”
 
 
S
ally's eight o'clock class on Tuesdays and Thursdays was developmental English, a course designed for students who had somehow managed to graduate from the public schools with few, if any, writing skills.
Some of them had a rudimentary grasp of sentence structure, and could even write a compound sentence on demand. But it was likely to be something like one of her favorites, “Bill have him a coat, but I be cold.” It was a compound sentence. There was no way to get around it.
Others had a better command of the proper use of verbs, but they couldn't spell. Sally liked a sentence she'd gotten on one paper in which the student had talked about “bushing his tooths.”
Even with all the problems that some students had, however, Sally liked teaching the class. She liked the students, and she liked helping them overcome their more obvious problems.
But today she had trouble keeping her mind on the students' problems because her sleep had been disturbed by dreams of some ragged woman, Sarah Good most likely, being dragged before a huge wooden structure upon which several men in dark robes sat, looking down on her accusingly and questioning her about things Sally couldn't understand.
In addition, her mind kept drifting to the upcoming meeting with Fieldstone and Jennifer Jackson. She wondered if they would
treat her the way the villagers and the judges in Salem had treated Sarah Good.
Sally let the class out a little early, which wouldn't have pleased Dean Naylor had he known about it, and went by her office for a quick chocolate fix before the meeting. She told herself that she'd eat only half a bar, but she wound up eating the whole thing. She told herself that the walk to Fieldstone's office would use up the calories, and if that didn't do it, the meeting would.
When Sally walked into Fieldstone's outer office, Eva Dillon gave her an encouraging smile and picked up the telephone.
“Dr. Good is here to see you,” she said. Then, after listening for a couple of seconds, she told Sally that Fieldstone was ready for her. “And the Jacksons are in there, too.”
“Both of them?”
Eva nodded. “Both of them.”
Sally had understood that only Jennifer would be there, but she didn't suppose that Sherm's presence would make any difference. He was a mousy little man who generally had little to say. Jennifer was the one who did all the talking. The two of them worked together in Sherm's little independent insurance agency, and Sally had heard that they sold quite a few policies. Jennifer was the salesperson. Sherm was the business manager. He sat in the back and spent most of his time in front of a computer.
“You can handle them,” Eva said when Sally hesitated outside the door.
“I know,” Sally said. “I'm just a little surprised that they're both here.”
“If that's a surprise, how about this: Christopher Matthys is in there, too.”
“Thanks for the warning,” Sally said.
Matthys was the college's attorney, and Sally wasn't really surprised that Fieldstone had asked him to be there. Fieldstone was a careful man, and it was typical of him to have the school's legal representative at a meeting that was likely to be as contentious as the one between Sally and the Jacksons might become. Fieldstone
would be hoping that Matthys could prevent Sally from saying something the college would regret.
Sally didn't think he had a chance.
On the other hand, Sally thought, maybe she was doing Fieldstone an injustice. It could be that Matthys was there to defend Sally. She'd have to wait and see.
“If you're not back in a week, can I have your Hershey bars?” Eva asked.
“Bottom drawer, left,” Sally said, and opened the door to Fieldstone's office.
 
Jack Neville had a composition class at eight o'clock on Tuesday mornings. He spent the time discussing an essay that the students had turned in the previous Thursday. He had used his word processor to copy several paragraphs of examples from the papers, then photocopied the examples for distribution to the class. He had also made a transparency of the photocopy so he could use the overhead projector to enlarge the examples on a screen in front of the classroom and point directly to the things he wanted to emphasize.
It was always a challenge to use the overhead in an early class. To do so, Jack had to darken the room, and darkening the room might well lead some students to seize the chance to catch up on some of the sleep they felt they needed. The challenge was in how to make talking about writing errors so exciting that nobody nodded off while he was talking.
It was especially challenging since Jack felt like nodding off himself. Vera hadn't wanted to go home after they left Sally's house, so they had gone to Jack's place. She hadn't left until well after midnight, and because of certain strenuous physical activities they had engaged in, Jack hadn't been able to get right to sleep. Too, his head had been crowded with all kinds of conflicting emotions. As a result, he'd slept only three or four hours, and he was never at his best without sleeping twice that long.
Somehow he managed to get through the class without losing a single student to the sandman. A couple of them had yawned, but
then so had Jack, so he couldn't be too critical. As the class ended, he gave them the assignment for Thursday and gathered up his books and papers, which he took back to his office before going off to look for Seepy Benton.
Benton's office wasn't in the administration building, for reasons that weren't exactly clear to Jack. He'd heard that the problem was office space, or lack thereof, in the admin building, but he wasn't sure that was the real reason. He suspected that Fieldstone wouldn't have been comfortable with someone like Benton in an office that was next to his own, or even in the same building.
So Benton was relegated to a space on the second floor of the business building. It was actually a pretty good deal, Jack thought, certainly better than being located right where the president and his minions could keep their eyes on you all the time. Jack would have preferred it that way, and he suspected that Benton did as well.
Jack went into Benton's outer office and asked Molly Evans, the I.R. director's secretary, if Dr. Benton was there. Molly was a smiling woman with a good sense of humor, which was an asset if you were working with Dr. Benton, in whose office there was none of the formality that existed elsewhere on campus. Nobody announced that you were there. Molly just smiled and said, “He's here. Go right in.”
Jack went past her and into Seepy's office, which made Sally's look as if it had been cleaned and organized by Mae Wilkins. There were papers everywhere, even stacked in one corner of the room. A guitar case sat on one chair, and hanging on a coatrack were a coonskin cap and a braided leather whip. Some kind of astrological chart covered most of one wall, and on another were framed photographs of fractals. Jack knew that Benton had taken the photographs himself and was rather proud of them, but Jack didn't ask about them because to do so was to risk a lecture on Mandelbrot sets or whatever they were. Jack wasn't sure of the proper term, but he wasn't going to say that either. Benton loved to lecture and would do so at the least opportunity, and Jack wasn't in the mood to talk math.
Benton was sitting at his computer desk, looking at the monitor. While the rest of the office was chaotic, the computer desk was uncluttered.
Jack stood and watched as Benton made a few movements with the mouse, clicked to save, and swiveled his chair around.
“What can I do for you, Jack?” Benton asked.
He spoke slowly and reassuringly, perhaps because he had once taught college algebra, a course that Jack knew from his own undergraduate experience could destroy a student's self-esteem faster than a bad complexion or having to drive an inferior car.
In addition to being glacially calm, Benton was a soft-looking teddy bear of a man. Today he wore a Hawaiian shirt with a blue background covered with large white flowers that Jack suspected belonged to no known species growing either on the mainland or the islands. His black beard was shot through with gray, as was the thinning hair that curled wildly on his head.
“Can we talk?” Jack said.
“Sure. Move the guitar and have a seat.”
“I meant privately,” Jack said, indicating the door that was open to the outer office.
“Molly never listens in. She's afraid I might play something on the guitar and sing along. Which reminds me. I wrote a new song last night. It's called ‘Fabric Free.' Would you like to hear it?”
“I wouldn't,” Molly called from the other room. “I've already heard it three times.”
“Some people have no appreciation for the arts,” Benton said, shaking his head as Molly shut the door between the two rooms.
Jack leaned the guitar case against the wall well out of Benton's reach and then sat in the chair.
Benton looked hurt. “I thought an English teacher might appreciate my song. It even rhymes.”
“Knowing you,” Jack said, “I have a feeling I know what the lyrics of a song called ‘Fabric Free' might be about.”
“I'm not in my nudist phase anymore.” Benton's hurt look became slightly unfocused and faraway. “Those were good times, but Hippie Hollow just isn't the same these days.”
Jack was afraid to ask why not, but Benton told him anyway.
“All the people who go there now are as old as I am. Time and gravity can be cruel to the human body, Jack.”
Jack said he knew the truth of that all too well.
“So what did you want to talk about, then?” Benton asked. “Did you want me to cast your horoscope? I've been doing a little of that lately to pick up a little extra money. I charge a hundred dollars, but I could give you the faculty discount.”
“What's the faculty discount?” Jack asked, suppressing a yawn. He didn't want his horoscope cast, but he was curious.
“You know the faculty discount you get at all the stores in town?”
Jack was puzzled. “I don't get a discount at the stores in town.”
“That's right, and I'm giving you the same one.”
Jack was never quite sure when Benton was joking, but he assumed that this time he was.
“Thanks,” Jack said, “but I'll pass. What I wanted to talk to you about might be a bit related to astrology, though.”
“Good. I'm always interested in things like that. What was it, exactly?”
“Harold Curtin,” Jack said.
 
 

C
ome in, Dr. Good,” Fieldstone said as she entered his office. Matthys stood up and greeted her, smiling as if to reassure her that he was indeed on her side. Fieldstone stood as well, but only to offer Sally a seat. He and Matthys were dressed in navy-blue suits that were all but identical.
The Jacksons stayed right where they were, hardly bothering to spare Sally a glance. They sat in their chairs, backs straight, eyes forward, knees together.
When Sally had taken a seat beside Matthys on the leather couch, Fieldstone went back behind his desk. The Jacksons were facing the desk, in profile to the couch.
Fieldstone didn't lighten the atmosphere a bit when he said that the meeting was being recorded. He'd gotten permission from the Jacksons before Sally arrived. After that little announcement, he performed all the unnecessary introductions and then said, “I think Mrs. Jackson would like to speak first.”
“Yes, I would,” she said.
She was painfully thin, Sally thought, almost anorexic. Her fingers were long, just skin and bone. Her hair looked great, though. It was cut quite short and almost made her angular face look pretty. If she and Sally had been friends, Sally would have asked where she got her hair done.
Sherm Jackson just looked average. He was the kind of man who
could disappear in a crowd of three. He wore a gray jacket, gray pants, and a nondescript tie. Sally wondered if he would speak at all during the meeting.
Jennifer Jackson turned slightly in her chair. Not much. Not enough so that she would have to meet Sally's eye, but enough so that she would seem to be talking to both Sally and Fieldstone.
“Yesterday I got a very troubling e-mail,” she said. “It was about Dr. Good. Here's a copy of it.”
She handed a piece of paper to Fieldstone, who hardly looked at it.
“For the record,” Fieldstone said, “I got the same e-mail. It says that Dr. Sally Good, a member of the HCC faculty, is a witch, descended from Sarah Good, notorious witch of the seventeenth century, executed for the crime of witchcraft in 1692. A ridiculous charge, as Dr. Good will explain. The campus police are working with one of our computer specialists to see if they can find out where the e-mail originated.”
“It had a return address.”
“Which is a fake,” Fieldstone said. “We're working on it, however, and we'll find out the real sender.”
“It doesn't really matter,” Jennifer said, turning a bit more toward Sally. “I don't think the college needs an instructor whose past is so questionable. You might remember that she's defended witchcraft before.”
“That's not true,” Sally said.
“I haven't finished,” Jennifer said. “Dr. Fieldstone said I could have my say, without interruption.”
Fieldstone hadn't mentioned that little fact to Sally, who gave him a reproachful look. Fieldstone made no response except to say, “Please go on, Mrs. Jackson.”
Sally started to object, but Matthys nudged her elbow. He was still smiling, so Sally settled back on the couch.
“Well,” Jennifer said, “when an organization of which I'm a member tried to cleanse the local library of several books about witches, Dr. Good stepped right up to stop us. Everyone knows those books are just thinly disguised satanic tracts that glorify witchcraft.
Who knows how many children have been lured into witchcraft by reading them?”
“I do,” Sally said. “None. And while we're at it, please tell me how many times Satan is mentioned in those books. Have you ever read them?”
Jennifer was shocked. “Of course I haven't. Why would I do something like that?”
“To find out if what you're talking about is true or just a pile of … rubbish. I've read the books, every one of them. Satan is never mentioned at all.”
Jennifer's hands clenched. “Dr. Fieldstone said I could finish without being interrupted.”
“I forgot,” Sally lied.
Matthys muffled a derisive snort, but Sally heard it. She ignored him. Jennifer either didn't hear or didn't care.
“As I was saying, Dr. Good has defended witchcraft before. Now we find out that she's a descendant of a witch who was hanged for her satanic practices. I don't think we need her teaching students from our community.”
“That's enough,” Sally said, standing. “I don't care what Dr. Fieldstone told you. I'm not going to sit here and listen to that kind of slander without having something to say about it. It is slander, isn't it, Mr. Matthys.”
Matthys stood beside her. “It certainly sounds like it. She's implying that you're unfit for your profession, and if that's untrue, it just might be actionable.”
“And we have it on tape,” Sally said.
“But I'm just repeating what I received on my computer!”
“Repeating a libel would still be slander,” Matthys said. “We'll take action against the sender of the e-mail as soon as we find out who that is.”
Jennifer looked pained. “But it's true that Dr. Good defended witchcraft. If it hadn't been for her and a few of her friends, those books wouldn't be in the library now.”
“I was defending the freedom to read, not witchcraft,” Sally said, resisting the urge to add, “You idiot.” Name-calling would get her nowhere. “And as Dr. Fieldstone told you, my late husband was a distant relative of Sarah Good, not me.”
“I think there's a lot more to the story than that,” Jennifer said.
“And what's that?”
“I think you put a curse on Harold Curtin and killed him.”
 
“Harold Curtin?” Seepy Benton said. “What about him?”
“He's dead.”
“I know that, but I don't see what it has to do with me.”
“You're heading up the college's campaign to get the bond issue passed. Harold was one of the opposition leaders.”
“I know that, too. What's your point?”
Jack explained what Sally had told him about Weems's suspicions.
“So you think I killed Harold so we could win the election?”
“No,” Jack said. “But Weems is acting suspicious of Sally, and even of me.”
“You've been in trouble with him before.”
“That wasn't my fault,” Jack said. “Anyway, what I'd like to know is who might want to get rid of Harold.”
“Except for all his former students, most of the faculty he knew, and nine-tenths of the people he met, I have no idea.”
“You know something about this bond election. You know who's for it and against it. You might know if Harold had made any new enemies.”
“Have you heard about the Citizens for Fiscal Responsibility?”
Jack said he had.
“And did you know that Harold was involved with them?”
Jack admitted that he'd heard it from a pretty good source, Curtin himself.
“Other people are in the group, but Harold was helping them quite a bit. He was giving them information about college operations
and finances, but he was exaggerating. They've used some of the exaggerations in their advertisements.”
“Like the one that says taxes will go up by thirty percent if the bond passes?”
“No. And anyway, that's not an exaggeration.”
“It's not?” Jack didn't like paying taxes any more than anybody else, even though he knew his money was going to support the college. “No wonder there's opposition.”
Benton settled back in his chair, laced his fingers together, and rested his hands on his stomach. Jack knew that he was about to get a lecture. He hoped it would be a short one.
“There are ways to use facts to make them appear much worse than they are,” Benton said. “While it's true that there would be a thirty percent tax increase if the bond passes, what's left unsaid is that because college taxes are so low, the increase would amount to about seventy-five dollars a year for the average taxpayer. That would be six dollars and twenty-five cents a month. I think everyone could afford that.”
Jack thought the Citizens for Fiscal Responsibility were dirty fighters to twist things and make them appear much worse than they actually were, but dirty tactics were to be expected in any kind of campaign.
“If that's not one of the exaggerations you were talking about,” he said, “what is?”
“The business about administrative travel,” Benton said. “Did you see that ad in the newspaper about the college board's trip to Hawaii?”
Jack remembered that one. There was a photo of the board members that had been altered to show them all dressed in grass skirts. The caption had been something like
Board members party in the islands while you suffer in the Texas heat.
“That trip wasn't paid for by the college,” Benton said. “Even though it was legitimate college business. The Hawaii meeting was an important training session, and it was attended by college board members from all over the country.”
Jack didn't question the meeting's importance, though it did seem to him that while college boards and presidents held their meetings in places like Hawaii, San Francisco, and Key West, meetings for college faculty were more likely to be in Dallas, Houston, or Austin.
“Who paid for the trip?” Jack asked.
“The board members paid for it themselves, out of their own pockets. The ad sticks to the truth, but like the one about the thirty percent increase, it leaves something unsaid. You might have noticed that it didn't say the college paid for the trip. It just implied it.”
Jack couldn't remember the ad exactly, but he was sure Benton was right.
“Are you telling me that one of the board members might have killed Curtin because of that ad?”
“No. I'm telling you that none of them liked him very much. But as we know, that would put them on a very long list.”
Jack didn't blame the board members for not liking Curtin. And thinking about his past experiences, he believed that at least one board member, Roy Don Talon, was capable of murder.
“And don't forget Larry Lawrence,” Benton said.
Larry was easy to forget, Jack thought. He'd been Fieldstone's administrative assistant for years, longer than Jack had been at the college, until he'd taken early retirement a couple of years previously. He'd been the perfect man to play second fiddle. He was quiet, unobtrusive, glad to work behind the scenes and let the Big Guy get all the credit.
“Why would Larry be a suspect?” Jack asked.
“I didn't say he was a suspect. He might be, but he wasn't against Harold's stand on the bond issue. He was helping him.”
Jack said he didn't believe it. “Larry was always a strong supporter of the college.”
“That's right. He was. You English teachers always use the right verb. He's not anymore.”
“Why not?”
“We administrators have to keep some secrets. Otherwise we wouldn't be any better than the faculty members.”
“If the cops come and ask you, you'll tell them. Surely you like me better than you like the cops.”
Benton looked over to where his guitar case leaned against the wall.
“Maybe the cops would listen to my new song.”
“No, they wouldn't. They'd haul you in and give you the third degree. Believe me, I know.”
“Maybe you do, at that. All right. This has to do with cops. You know how Chief Desmond has a thing for younger women?”
Jack knew. There were few if any real secrets at the college. But sometimes things could be successfully covered up if the right people worked on doing it. Desmond was one of the right people.
“He hasn't been dating students, has he?” Jack said.
While Fieldstone felt that the personal lives of college employees were their own business, there was a college rule against fraternizing with students. Faculty members had been known to violate the rule in the past, and it had gotten them into trouble.
“Desmond's not crazy,” Benton said. “He's just having a late midlife crisis.”
“He's been having it for about fifteen years.”
“Possibly. Anyhow, one of the younger women he liked was Larry's daughter.”
“You said
liked
.”
“There's that verb tense thing again. And you're right. I did use the past tense. Desmond dumped her, and she went through a bad time. She was teaching in Houston, but she quit her job, moved back home with the Lawrences, and developed an unfortunate substance abuse problem.”
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