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Authors: Archer Mayor

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BOOK: Fruits of the Poisonous Tree
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Chances were good Windham County would be allowed to keep one of those, but for the first time in his career, all bets were off concerning Dunn’s future—and therefore Todd’s—at the polls. Dunn’s opponent, Jack Derby, was as low-key and appealing as the State’s Attorney was not, and he seemed to have all of Dunn’s ability, judging from a very respectable twenty-year career as a trial lawyer. Dunn’s acknowledgment of his own vulnerability was highlighted by a sudden newfound interest in popular opinion, complete with awkward appearances at Rotary lunches and Red Cross fundraisers.

Todd didn’t seem concerned by any of it, however, remaining as affable and easygoing as always, and he greeted us with none of the election-time heartburn I knew a major case like this ignited in his boss. Perhaps the prospect of Todd’s own potential unemployment was offset by a secret enjoyment in finally seeing “the gargoyle” sweat. In any case, I knew he was too discreet to tip his hand either way.

“Tyler working his magic?” he asked as we joined him.

Brandt nodded, crossing to the railing. “Yeah, with Ron. How’s Dennis doing?”

Lefevre chuckled. “He’s got ’em organized like a bunch of Boy Scouts on parade.”

Almost cut off from view by the far corner of the building, we could see a long line of patrolmen, traffic officers, auxiliary members, and even a few borrowed state troopers marching slowly across the field under the supervision of Dennis DeFlorio, the detective squad’s weakest link. A good-ol’-boy with a limited imagination, and ambition only for his pension, Dennis was never good enough to give me hope, or poor enough to give me cause to replace him. He did, however, have an unflagging sense of humor, never pretended he was better than we knew him to be, and always did what was asked of him. I was confident that if something could be found out in that field, he would probably come up with it.

“Where’re Sammie and Willy?” Lefevre asked conversationally.

I turned away from the distant search line and looked at him. We had worked together before, and with pleasure. For years he’d been both the liaison to Dunn’s office and the man who inherited our cases after arraignment, when the SA officially took over control. But things would be different this time. Without having discussed it with Brandt, I knew Todd would be nearby from the start—the price Dunn was exacting from Tony for allowing me on this case.

I smiled and accounted for the two missing members of my squad. “On the street, squeezing their snitches.”

He nodded. Brandt had hitched one leg up onto the railing and was stuffing his beloved pipe with tobacco, glancing at the two of us without a word.

“So what’s next?” Todd asked.

I appreciated his courtesy, granting me the illusion of leadership, but I waved a hand toward Tony. “I would guess a door-to-door inquiry’s being made right now.”

Brandt nodded, his cheeks puffing eagerly behind a balloon of smoke. “Then I guess it’s time to talk to Gail,” I quietly conceded.

· · ·

Brattleboro is an unusually mixed bag of a town. An icon of the previous century’s industrial might, it has an imposing downtown of stolid red-brick buildings, a few obligatory tree-lined neighborhoods of impressive Victorian showpieces, and a vast number of standard, modest, updated nineteenth-century homes—in good or poor shape depending on the locale. The whole thing rests on a broken-backed, topsy-turvy, creek- and river-creased patch of land, and looks like some oversized historical plaster diorama that’s been dropped by mistake and abandoned. Its few modern touches—a Dunkin’ Donuts right at its heart, and a dreary commercial strip heading north out of town—barely make an impression. It remains a town that the architectural ravages of the optimistic, taste-free fifties and sixties essentially bypassed.

Sprinkled throughout, however, just off the well-traveled thoroughfares, Brattleboro has a contrasting scattering of neighborhoods unique unto themselves. They are poor or middle-class or shyly redolent of old money, but they all share a separateness from the whole, as if, during the town’s early evolution, hidden genetic strains of other far-distant communities were subversively introduced.

One of these enclaves clusters around the Chestnut Hill Reservoir—a football-field-sized, cement-lined pond with a potentially commanding view of the town in three directions. Curiously, the potential is all that’s there, since the surrounding trees have been allowed to slowly shut out the urban scenery, leaving only glimpses of what might be available. In the same vein, the standard trappings of an exclusive, remote, dead-end block have all been dressed down. The houses are muted to dullness, the street and lawns nondescript, and the reservoir itself, historically the town’s first private water supply, is almost ugly—concrete-wrapped and encircled by a rusty chain-link fence.

It was overlooking this dark, brooding, cold slab of water that Susan Raffner had her home, and it was there that Lefevre, Brandt, and I, in two separate cars, negotiated the narrow, potholed street—twisting up like an urban goat path—in order to speak with Gail.

The uncharacteristically chilly weather set the mood of the place—the low, gray sky leaching down into the tentacles of the trees all around. The foliage was still green and full, but in this light it all looked somber and cold; and our breath collected in vaporous clouds about our heads as we emerged from the warm cocoons of our cars.

Raffner’s house fit the tone set by its neighbors—large, dark, shingle-sided and unimposing—and like them, it murmured comfortably of a hundred and fifty years of generations spinning away through endless successive life cycles. It was through the echoes of those embracing ghosts that we made our way across the frost-dappled lawn, up the porch steps, and to the front door. It was still early, not even eight o’clock.

Raffner answered the doorbell, her face poised between suspicion and hope. “You catch him?”

“Not yet,” I answered. “Could we come in?”

The hopefulness died, but she opened the door wider and invited us to enter. “So what are you doing?”

“Everything possible. You know Todd Lefevre, from the State’s Attorney’s office?”

She shook her head, and I finished the introductions, which she just barely acknowledged. Except for a cursory glance at Todd, she kept her eyes locked on mine, her intention to get a fuller answer clear. We were still standing around the foyer, and Raffner made no move to extend her hospitality.

“Gail told the first officer she spoke to that she had no idea who this guy was. We have teams in the streets conducting interviews; we have a forensics unit going over Gail’s place with tweezers; and we’ve got people covering her grounds and neighborhood. Something like this doesn’t happen in a vacuum—for one thing, we’re already pretty sure he knew her—”

Raffner snorted. “I could have told you that—he raped her in her own bed, for Christ’s sake.”

I held up my hand. “I meant there’s a good chance she knows him, too, even though she didn’t recognize him. That’s probably the reason for all the cloak and dagger. If we can combine her memories of the attack with what we get from our investigation, it might be enough to come up with a name.”

She looked at all three of us doubtfully. This was hardly the first time she’d dealt with this kind of situation—part of Women for Women’s role was to escort rape victims through the legal system—and my request was certainly mundane enough. But Susan Raffner was used to dealing with “clients”—not members of her own board of directors. For her, as for us, this attack had become personal, and the trauma of it had cut through all our professional defenses.

“So you want to talk to her now? All three of you?” Tony Brandt answered for me. “No—just Todd and Joe. I have a selectmen’s meeting to make.”

Raffner was slightly mollified. “That might be a little less intimidating. Let me go upstairs and check if she’s up for it; then maybe you can see her.”

Todd and I stood in the entrance hall for some fifteen minutes, checking out the wall hangings, staring out the windows, and generally paying homage to whatever psychological mood Susan Raffner was establishing.

When she finally gestured to us from the top of the stairs, we discovered how thorough she had been.

Gail was located in a bedroom overlooking the reservoir, but she wasn’t in bed, which stood, fully made, to one side. Instead, she was sitting in an imposing wingback chair by one of the broad windows with the light to her back, dressed in a heavy, full-length caftan. Her feet were resting on a small ottoman, and she wore a shawl around her shoulders. Despite her pale and hollow face, the overall effect—while blatantly orchestrated—was one of security and peacefulness, almost of regality.

It may have bolstered Gail’s own psyche—I certainly hoped so—but it did nothing for me. My eyes locked onto hers from the moment I entered the room, and in them I saw only the pain, the exhaustion, and the despair of a woman in mourning. Once again, I felt a trembling at the center of my chest. I found myself yearning to embrace her and unwilling to speak—knowing I couldn’t do the first, and would have to do the second.

Todd Lefevre covered my initial paralysis by introducing himself, explaining what he was doing here, and asking permission to run a small tape recorder he’d pulled from his pocket, all while Susan Raffner and I found our seats—she comfortably by Gail’s side, and I next to Todd on one of two unstable-looking straight-backed chairs Raffner had placed in the middle of the room like penitents’ stools.

By the time he’d turned his machine on, I had found my voice. Leaning forward in my seat, elbows on my knees, getting as close to Gail as the staging allowed, I asked her, “Do you feel you can talk a little?”

She nodded. “Yes.”

It was said with determination, belying the circles under her eyes and the gauntness of her cheeks, but its brevity spoke also of a need to conserve energy. This interview had to be done, but it would cost her, and she knew it. It was then that I noticed, under the caftan’s long, roomy sleeves, that her hands were gripping the arms of her chair like a child’s on a wildly swinging Ferris wheel.

“Would you feel more or less comfortable with me asking the questions? Or even being in the room? I can wait downstairs if you want.”

Her face hardened, tight with impatience. “Come on, Joe.”

I stopped hanging back. “You told Ron you didn’t see your attacker—didn’t recognize anything about him. Now that a little time has passed, has anything come to mind? Some phrase maybe, some allusion he made that might place him in context?”

Her forehead furrowed in concentration. “He didn’t say much, and he whispered.”

“What kinds of things did he say?”

“Orders at first—telling me not to kick after he got off my legs to tie them down.”

“He’d already tied down your hands before you woke up, right? How could he have done that?”

Her face flushed abruptly. “I don’t know; I was asleep. Why don’t you catch him and ask him?”

I straightened in my chair, stung by her fury. I’d anticipated an awkwardness between us—not that she’d react completely out of character. It emphasized that our intimacy could be a real liability here, leading me to expect the even-keeled rationality I’d grown used to. The first rule in interviewing rape victims was to absolve them of any notion that the attack was their fault. I’d inadvertently cut a corner there, assuming Gail would understand where I was heading. Her failure to do so told me that the same love that had driven her to want me here could just as easily turn to resentment if I presumed too much.

“I’m sorry.” I pressed on, “He ordered you to cooperate while he tied down your legs. Is that when he used the knife? To persuade you?”

She nodded silently, her eyes downcast, the color draining back out of her cheeks.

“How did he use the knife, Gail?”

“He pricked my breasts; he said he’d cut off my nipples if I fought him.”

I paused a moment, steadying my voice. “What words did he use—exactly?”

“His voice was very calm—the whisper, I mean. He didn’t seem excited at all. He said—” She stopped, apparently thinking back. “He said, ‘I’m going to get off your legs now; if you move a muscle, I’ll cut your tits off.’ Then he pricked me with the knife and said, ‘With this.’”

“What happened then?”

“He tied me down. I didn’t move.” There was a tremor in her voice, and she looked—I thought almost apologetically—at her friend Susan.

Raffner squeezed her shoulder and kissed her forehead maternally. “You did the right thing. Your life was what mattered; you did it to save your life.”

“Did he ever use the knife again?” Todd asked in the brief lull.

Gail shook her head.

“But he did beat you,” I added.

“At the end, just before he finished. He seemed suddenly frustrated—angry for the first time. It was the only time his voice changed. He said, ‘You snotty goddamn bitch.’ And then he hit me.”

“Where?” Todd asked.

“In the stomach once; on the breasts a few times; and once across the face—hard.”

I focused again on the livid bruise that rested on her left cheek like an enormous birthmark, and tried not to play out the violence in my head. “Why do you think he became frustrated? Couldn’t he get hard?”

Her face underwent a subtle change, as if some deep-seated pain had just reasserted itself. It wasn’t a grimace but more a drawing out—a sudden thinning of her features, as if her entire soul was recoiling. “He was hard—the whole time.”

I decided to step away from the subject a bit, to give her time to get used to the idea that we would have to ask her for all the details—if not now, then eventually, and probably many times over. “Your room was a mess—drawers pulled out, closets emptied. When did he do that?”

“Sometime in the middle. He stopped and I could hear him going around the room.”

“After he’d completed the sex act?” Todd asked. All three of us looked at him, caught off guard by his choice of words. He didn’t seem fazed.

Gail finally shook her head. “If you mean ejaculate, he didn’t. He just stopped.”

Todd looked confused. “He didn’t ejaculate at all?”

“No.”

BOOK: Fruits of the Poisonous Tree
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