Read Hangman's Root Online

Authors: Susan Wittig Albert

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Mystery, #Women detectives, #China (Fictitious character), #Bayles, #Herbalists

Hangman's Root (9 page)

BOOK: Hangman's Root
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I looked again. The ashtray was filled with ash and charred bits of paper. One of the "F" papers, burned because it was too awful to read? Or something connected to his suicide? A draft of a note, perhaps, or the note itself, written and then rejected. I looked up at the body, hanging like the straw man the demonstrators had strung up in the tree an hour ago, and the flesh prickled on my shoulder blades. Their demands had been met. Harwick's animal experiments were finished. Harwick was finished.

I was facing the door when it was pushed open. An irate male said, "What's this I hear about—" The sentence ended in a gurgle.

"Hello, Dr. Castle," I said.

Frank Castle's "Oh my God!" was a bare whisper. He stared open-mouthed at the apparition hanging from the ceiling. He was tall and striking in a charcoal pin-striped suit, pale pink shirt, and tasteful gray-and-pink tie. There was no softness in his face, and his gold-framed glasses and carefully trimmed salt-and-pepper

hair gave him the look of a man who demanded respect. Lines of control appeared like deep parentheses on either side of his mouth, and he had the wiry, disciplined look of a serious jogger.

He closed his mouth with an audible gulp and looked at me. "Who are you?"

"China Bayles," I said. "We met at Dr. Patterson's house a couple of months ago."

"Oh, yes. The defense attorney" His eyes were once again engaged with the thing on the rope. "What are you doing here?"

"Ex-defense attorney. Miss Leeds asked me to stand guard until Campus Security gets here." I spoke gently. "I'm afraid I must ask you to leave."

He turned to me, jaw tightening, eyes suddenly fierce. He had remembered who was in charge in this building. " YouVe got a helluva nerve! Miles Harwick was my best friend! And this is my department! I ought to order you out." Involuntarily, with something close to fascination, his eyes skittered back to Har-wick's body. "How could Miles do such a thing?" he muttered to himself, as if he had forgotten about me. ''Here, of all places. The publicity—" He shook his head sharply, as if to clear it. "How could he involve the department in this?"

I couldn't help feeling that Castle's question was an ungenerous response to a friend's last desperate act—if that's what it was. "You're afraid his suicide will reflect badly on the department?"

"Naturally," he snapped, as if he were admonishing a freshman who had confused a tibia and a fibula. "Worse, it will nearly hamstring our research program. Dr. Harwick was the most promising member of the new animal research unit. His bone density project was just the beginning. He was developing an outstanding reputation and strong connections with the funding agencies. We had every expectation that over the next few years he would bring in grants on the order of a half-million dollars or more." Castle had slipped easily into an buzzword-studded style

that sounded almost like a script. Perhaps it was the one he'd prepared for the regents' meeting. "In fact," he added, strengthening my suspicion, "it was the high probability of the department's success in creating a strong animal research unit that decided the regents to include the animal lab in the science complex that's about to be built."

I blinked. An outstanding reputation? Most promising researcher? But Dottie claimed that Harwick's project was redundant, frivolous, and downright stupid. Who was right? Should I believe Dottie, who was clearly hungry to see Harwick discredited? Or should I buy the department chairman's version, even though he had both a personal and a professional stake in enhancing Harwick's success? I looked at Castle, carefully coiffed, nattily dressed, and thought once again about the mess downstairs. Why hadn't he taken the time to look in on the holding facility after Kevin told him about it? How could he tolerate—perhaps even cover up—the ill treatment of animals by one of his own faculty members?

But I was distracted from these questions by another one. "The science complex is no longer on hold?"

The lines around Castle's mouth relaxed. "Right. The chairman of the Board of Regents informed the dean last week that they'd decided to go ahead. It will be announced this afternoon." His voice failed him and he shook his head again. "So sad," he said thickly. "So very sad. I wish the decision hadn't been confidential. I wish the dean had let me tell Miles about it. Maybe it j| would have kept him from—" He didn't finish the sentence.

I looked up at the figure. "Why do you think he did it?" It was ironic that a man would take his life just as his dream—presumably, the new animal lab was Harwick's dream—was about to be realized.

Dumbly, Castle shook his head. "I suppose it was those ridiculous charges against his research. He refused to read the

newspapers, but it was harder to avoid the calls and the hate mail—"

"Hate mail?" I thought of the letter Dottie claimed to have received.

"One of the activists' campaign tactics," Castle said distastefully. "Threatening letters, abusive phone calls at all hours of the day and night, even bomb threats."

I stared at him. "I realized that the demonstrators were angry, but I didn't know they were violent."

"We managed to keep it quiet," Castle said. "We had to evacuate the building twice, but told people that there was a problem with the ventilating system in one of the chemistry labs. We alerted Campus Security after every call, of course, and they searched the building. There isn't much more we can do." He looked back at Harwick's body. "I had to tell Miles about the threats, of course. He was terribly disturbed. He was also very upset about some sort of run-in he had this weekend with one of his colleagues."

"Dr. Riddle?"

"You know about that?" His mouth tightened imperceptibly. "There's been bad blood between them for quite a while. He thought she went out of her way to . . . antagonize him. Poor Miles. Lately he seems to have thought that everyone was against him." He fumbled for a handkerchief, turned away, and blew his nose.

I felt a certain sympathy for Castle. He had lost both his friend and his star researcher, whose golden grants promised to pave the department's path to glory. But I could also feel sympathy for those who had won the battle and lost the war Harwick's experiment was ended and a hundred guinea pigs had been spared, but the state-of-the-art animal lab would be built after all. Scientists would use thousands of animals in their search for more knowledge, and demonstrators would continue to protest

the sacrifices. Ruby, who studies Buddhism, has a term for it. Samsara. The endless cycle of birth and death, action and reaction. Karma.

But there wasn't time to be think about Harwick's karma and his place in the endless circle that always comes round to dying. A uniformed campus cop appeared at the door and with courteous deference told Dr. Castle that the dean was waiting for him. I gave one last look at Harwick, hanging in silence, and followed Castle into the hall, closing the door behind me. Down at the end, in front of the departmental office, I saw a knot of people— faculty and staff, I guessed—talking to another cop. Then an administrator-type in a gray suit stepped forward and he and Castle disappeared into the biology office. I wondered if there was a special protocol for faculty suicides.

I stood by Harwick's door for another three or four minutes until I saw McQuaid coming from the direction of the parking lot, matching his stride to that of a stunning young blonde in a tailored black suit and silky white blouse, a pager clipped to her black shoulder bag. They were talking as they walked, their shoulders close together.

McQuaid did a double take when he saw me. "What 2iYtyou doing here?" he asked, surprised.

"Waiting for Campus Security," I replied. The blonde's shoulder-length hair was sleek and shiny and her artfully natural makeup made me remember that I hadn't combed my hair since breakfast. "What are you doing here.^" I asked McQuaid. "It's spring break." What was she doing here? Who was she?

McQuaid was wearing his cop look. "This is Sheila Dawson, CTSU's new chief of Campus Security. She just came on board this week. The dean asked me to give her a tour of the campus. We got as far as the library when Sheila's pager went off. Sheila, this is China Bayles."

The blonde extended her hand—skin soft and smooth, nails

nicely shaped, pink, and pearly. She was not as young as I had thought at first. But young enough. Mid-thirties, maybe. A year or two younger than McQuaid. We shook hands in a businesslike way.

"Hello, China," she said. Her words were clipped, her tone authoritative. "Mike has told me about you." She glanced at the closed door. "In there?"

I wanted to ask just what "Mike" had told her about me, but she didn't look as if she had time for chitchat just now. "Yes," I said. I stuck my hands in the pockets of my denim skirt. I dig every day in an alkaline soil that eats hands alive, and my nail polish looks like Black Pearl. "Harwick's office."

"Did you find the body?" McQuaid asked.

I shook my head. "Rose Tomkins, the departmental secretary, found him. I went in to secure the scene. Frank Castle came in, too. Neither of us touched anything." Except the hand. The dead, cold hand.

"Please wait here." Sheila spoke with the quiet command that makes "no" utterly impossible. She nudged the door open with her elbow and turned to McQuaid. "Call the local authorities, Mike. We need to get them in on this right away." She went into the office.

McQuaid went down the hall in the direction of the telephone. I was left standing beside the door, reflecting that the tone of Sheila's instruction to me had been entirely different than the one she used for McQuaid. Mike.

I was still standing there when Bubba Harris arrived, accompanied by two PSPD officers. For the last decade Bubba has been in charge of law and order in Pecan Springs, and he's used to having things his way. He's a hard-fisted, heavy man, with graying hair, drooping jowls, and a belly that sags out over his belt as if his internal stuffing has shifted. He sucked in his breath when he saw me, almost sucking his unlit cigar with it. The cigar is a

fixture. Fve rarely seen him without it, ahhough I've never seen it Ht. He narrowed his eyes under bristhng black brows.

"What are^/ow doing here?" It was McQuaid's question, put with animosity rather than surprise, in the tone of a man who suspects the worst and is disappointed if he doesn't get it. He likes his ladies sweet and southern style. He doesn't much like me.

"I've been keeping out the hoi polloi."

He scowled. "You find the body?"

I was about to explain the sequence of events when Sheila Dawson opened the door. "You must be Chief Harris," she said, with precisely the right blend of sweetness and deference, southern style. "I'm so relieved to see you! I'm Sheila Dawson. I've just taken over Campus Security. We have an unfortunate situation here, and we need to keep it as quiet as possible."

Bubba's scowl went away. "Yeah, sure," he said quickly. He turned to me. "Go down to the biology office and give your statement to Dominguez," he said, and stepped through the door, leaving me to reflect that Shiela Dawson was one smart cookie.

Dominguez finished with me twenty minutes later. Dottie and I walked out onto the quad together, where clumps of people—demonstrators, faculty and staff, curiosity seekers—were still standing around, stunned.

"I hated him," Dottie said wearily. "Probably everybody hated him, in one way or another. But what I hate more is the thought of him doing that to himself." Her face was gray and saggy. "I hate the thought of him hanging in that room since God knows when. Why did he do it? Was it because of all this?" She waved her arm in the direction of the A-frame. It was empty, but the sign was still there. "Hang Harwick Instead."

"What do you think?" I asked. "Why did he do it?"

"I don't know. I'm sure his reputation meant a lot to him, but I wouldn't have thought a little embarrassment would drive him to kill himself. Especially when he and Castle were so close to

getting what they were after. The new science complex, I mean. The lab."

So Dottie had heard the big news. "Maybe it was personal," I said. "Did Harwick live alone?"

"Yeah. I don't think he had many friends. Occasionally Fd see a car parked in front of his house, but not often." She looked at me. "You were in the office. Was there a note?"

"If there was, I didn't see it." I leaned forward, lowering my voice. "About that letter you showed me—"

Her jaw tightened and she flushed red. "Let's forget about that, okay? The man's dead. He's no threat anymore. There's no point in bringing it up."

"/ can forget it," I said. "I wonder about Cynthia Leeds."

"What do you mean?"

"You showed her the letter. If somebody comes up with the idea that this wasn't a suicide—"

"But it was a suicide. Wasn't it?"

I was saved from answering by Amy Roth, who appeared beside us still carrying her clipboard with the words STOP SENSELESS MURDERS! written on it in red. "Is it true?" she asked, breathless. "Did Harwick really hang himself?"

"I have to go," Dottie said, already two steps away. "I'll call you, China."

"Well, did he?" Amy demanded. She seemed almost exultant.

"That's what it looks like," I said. What kind of woman was Ruby's daughter, to rejoice at someone's death?

Her eyes widened. "Are you suggesting that maybe he didn't—"

"Of course not. I just meant that ..." I sighed. "Look, I used to be a lawyer. Lawyers can't agree to anything without qualifying it all to hell. It looks like suicide."

She shook her head. "What a cop-out. But that's like the guy. He could dish it out, but he couldn't take it."

I looked at her. "Couldn't take what?"

She seemed to recollect herself. "The criticism, I mean. Being in the newspaper, having people protest his research."

"Well, you did say some pretty nasty things." I nodded in the direction of the A-frame. A boy was taking the sign down as several others stood silently and watched.

Amy looked nettled. "That's what we're here for. To say nasty things. Things that make people think about the harm they're doing to defenseless animals." The nettled look became openly contemptuous. "But the guys we go after usually have more guts. This guy wasn't just a murderer, he was a coward."

BOOK: Hangman's Root
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