Murder of a Small-Town Honey (4 page)

BOOK: Murder of a Small-Town Honey
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A camouflage-green T-shirt with the message IF YOU ABSOLUTELY NEED IT DESTROYED WITHOUT QUESTION BY TOMORROW, YOU NEED THE UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS was stretched taut across Kenny’s muscular chest.
“Who’s messing with you? Why’s Charlie got blood on his sleeve? Why’s he getting Chief Boyd? You don’t need the police. I’ll take care of whoever’s bothering you.” Kenny stood and balled his hands into fists.
Skye reached out to Kenny with her left hand, pulling him back down onto the step, careful to keep her right hand concealed behind her back. “Thanks, Kenny. I know you’d help me, but I’m okay. Someone else is in trouble.”
“Who? What’s going on?”
“Mrs. Gumtree, the TV star who was going to be in the parade, seems to be dead.”
“That tiny little old lady on the kids’ program? What happened? Did she have a heart attack?”
Skye considered saying yes, but could think of no reason to answer dishonestly. “No. It looks like she was murdered.”
“What?” Kenny bellowed.
“Charlie asked me to get her. She wasn’t answering her door. When I tried, the door was unlocked, the place was ransacked, and she was on the floor. Charlie is afraid the murderer might still be in the trailer, so he didn’t want me to wait here alone. Please, let’s just wait for the chief. I’m going to start crying if I talk any more.”
Kenny leaped to his feet once again and faced the door. He asked over his shoulder, “Is there another way out? What makes you think the perp is still in there?”
She shuddered. “I don’t know that he is. When I was inside I didn’t see or hear anyone. Of course, I wasn’t paying much attention at the time. He could have been hiding in the bathroom, I suppose. There probably isn’t another door, but there are plenty of windows.”
“We’d better get some people over here to secure the perimeter.” Kenny trotted off, calling over his shoulder, “I’ll go find your brother and the cousins.”
Skye sat still for a moment, catching her breath. It was quiet. The trailer was fairly isolated, and the crowds had moved to the parking lot in anticipation of the parade’s start. Closing her eyes, she said a prayer for Mrs. Gumtree’s soul. Suddenly a loud bang reverberated through the air. Skye jumped off the step and turned to look at the door. It was open and swinging back and forth on its hinges.
I’m sure I closed that door. Didn’t I feel it catch?
Skye tried to make sense of what she was seeing.
Oh, my God, the murderer must have still been in there.
Before she could react, a heavy hand descended on her shoulder, and she screamed.
CHAPTER 3
Send in the Clowns
Skye sat alone in the squad car watching police officers go in and out of the trailer. She was still a little embarrassed about having screamed at the chief when he first arrived at the scene and put his hand on her shoulder. Especially since he convinced her that the door had been blown open by the wind.
Charlie and Kenny, along with everyone else in the area, were banished behind the yellow crime scene tape draped around the parking lot’s border. Two harried officers tried to get people’s names and addresses before the crowd dispersed. Three more were busy keeping folks behind the tape.
The townspeople had been drinking steadily from their coolers since they began to gather for the parade at eleven o’clock. They were angry when its cancellation was announced, and seeing the police made them curious. Fights were already breaking out among the more well lubricated of the group.
When Chief Boyd first arrived and saw the body, he questioned Skye about her movements inside the trailer. Upon learning that she hadn’t touched anything except the outer doorknob, the vanity stool, and the corpse, he ordered her to sit in his squad car and talk to no one.
Since that time it seemed to Skye as if every Scumble River police officer and Stanley County deputy there was had arrived. She was up to thirty when she lost count. People, mostly men, in blue or khaki uniforms swarmed over the crime scene like ants over a piece of candy. One was taking photographs, another was videotaping, and yet another appeared to be drawing a picture of the site.
Around one o’clock a hearse arrived. The man driving it walked straight into the trailer without looking at either the throngs of onlookers or the police. Skye couldn’t see who it was from where she was seated, but he carried a doctor’s bag.
She was staring out the window without seeing anything when the opposite door was abruptly yanked open. Startled, she let out a yelp. She didn’t recognize the man sliding in next to her, and he wasn’t wearing a uniform. Acting on instinct, Skye flung open her door and stumbled out of the car.
As she ran toward the trailer, Skye hoped to find Chief Boyd, but instead a Stanley County deputy she didn’t know grabbed her by the upper arms and spun her around. “Whoa there, Missy, where you goin’ in such a hurry?”
Looking over her shoulder, Skye struggled to free herself from his grip. The stranger had emerged from the squad car and was now leaning against the trunk. When he saw her looking at him, he waved.
The officer holding her had a name tag on his tan shirt that read “Deputy McCabe.” He was not the type of person Skye would have picked for protection. Not only did Deputy McCabe strike her as missing a few buttons on his remote control, but physically he reminded her of Barney Fife on
The Andy Griffith Show.
She would have preferred Marshal Dillon from
Gunsmoke.
All those years of watching reruns as a child had left an indelible impression on her.
Skye pointed to the man by the squad car. “See that guy over there?”
Barney Fife didn’t answer.
“Is he a suspect? He got into the police car with me.”
Still no response from the deputy.
“Did you guys forget you told me to wait there in the squad car?”
Deputy McCabe took his time before speaking, examining the man by the car who was now engrossed in writing something in a pocket-size notebook. “Why, that there is the coroner, Mr. Simon Reid.”
She frowned. “Doesn’t the coroner have to be a doctor?”
“Well, Miss, I don’t know about places like Chicago or New York, but around here the coroner has always been the owner of the funeral parlor.”
Shaking her head in disbelief, Skye thought,
Being back in Scumble River is worse than I imagined. Things here truly are fifty years behind the times.
Before she could pursue that line of thought, Chief Boyd emerged from the trailer and joined them.
“Why, Skye, honey, what are you doing standing here in the hot sun? We don’t want you passing out on us. You were white as your mama’s sheets when I first got here. I told you to wait in the squad. That’s why I left the air-condition running.”
Skye blushed. When Chief Boyd had first come to town as a twenty-three-year-old patrolman, she’d been convinced she was in love with him. Back then Walter Boyd was a handsome young man who filled out his crisply starched police uniform superbly. He had warm brown eyes, curly black hair, and a gorgeous year-round tan. But his most attractive feature was his kind and generous nature.
The summer she was fifteen, Skye discovered his work schedule and managed to turn up wherever he took a break or stopped for a meal. He was always a perfect gentleman, never mocking her or taking advantage of the situation. Nevertheless, she was embarrassed to remember how lovesick she had acted, and she now found it difficult to look him in the eye. She also had a hard time calling him anything but Chief Boyd.
Time had been kind to him. His uniform still fit exceptionally well, revealing only a hint of thickening at his waist. The silver in his hair made him look, if anything, more distinguished.
“Sorry, I didn’t know Mr. Reid was the coroner, and he frightened me when he got into the car without any warning.”
Deputy McCabe gestured toward her with his thumb. “Yeah, she thought he was the murderer. She shot outta that squad like a bat outta hell.”
“What do you find so amusing, Deputy?” Chief Boyd asked. “That seems a sensible precaution, considering we don’t have any idea who the killer is and he might think Miss Denison saw more than she did.”
Skye shivered. She hadn’t considered that the murderer might think she was a witness.
Chief Boyd turned to her. “Why don’t you go back and introduce yourself to Simon? He has some questions he wants to ask you. I think he moved to town after you left. His uncle, Quentin Reid, up and died about eight years ago. Quent never married, and he didn’t have any kids, so Simon inherited the funeral home. Simon is Quent’s brother’s boy.”
She nodded to the chief, understanding his reasons for the genealogy lesson. In Scumble River you were an outsider, and not to be trusted, unless you could prove your connection to someone from town.
Gritting her teeth, she walked over to Simon and held out her hand. “I’m Skye Denison. Chief Boyd said you wanted to speak to me?” It was hard having to face a person you had just run away from.
Simon straightened and took her hand in a firm but not crushing grip. “It’s nice to meet you. I’m Simon Reid, the coroner.”
Raising her eyes to his, Skye discovered that he was well over six feet tall and very attractive in a Gary Cooper sort of way. The silence lengthened, and she realized that she had been staring at him for several minutes. Blushing, she looked away.
He did not seem the least bit uncomfortable with her inspection. Instead, he leaned back against the fender and crossed one long leg over the other. His next statement surprised her. “Miss Denison, tell me about the blood you had on your hand.”
For some reason his self-confident attitude irritated her. “I prefer
Ms.
Denison. Why do you need to know about the blood, Mr. Reid?”
“Do you know what a coroner does, Ms. Denison?”
“No, Mr. Reid, I do not know what a coroner does. Something with dead bodies, I presume.”
His slight smile did not reach his eyes. “To save a lot of time explaining why I’m asking the questions I’m asking, I’m going to explain the duties of a coroner to you, Ms. Denison.”
Nodding, she waited for him to continue.
“The number one duty of the coroner is to conduct the inquest, but at the crime scene we take vital signs, draw blood—directly from the heart if possible—and take urine samples from the bladder.”
“You don’t perform the autopsy?” Skye shifted from one foot to the other. This was getting a little more graphic than she liked.
“No, we need a licensed medical examiner for that. We hire a guy from the county hospital to do the actual cutting. He uses the specimens I’ve collected at the scene to run toxicology screens and lab tests.”
“So, what do you want to know? I was in the trailer all of five minutes, so I didn’t see much. I can’t even tell you what the victim looked like.”
“I’m most interested in your description of the blood. Wally mentioned that you had quite a bit on your hand when he arrived.” Simon moved closer.
“Yes, I must have stuck my fingers right next to the wound while I was trying to find a pulse, but I couldn’t see what I was doing because the body was under the vanity. I know you’re not supposed to move injured people, so I didn’t want to drag her out from the knee-well.” Skye explained all this in one breath, still feeling as if she should have done more.
“All I want you to do is to picture the blood on your hand right after you first saw it.”
Skye closed her eyes and tried to think about the earliest instant she looked at the blood on her hand. After a long pause she said, “It was bright red. At first I thought I’d cut myself.”
“Good. It looked like new blood. What was its consistency?”
She tried to reconstruct the scene in her head. “It was runny, more like chocolate syrup than molasses but not as thin as oil.”
“Great. That’s exactly what I needed to know.”
“Why?”
“It will help pinpoint the time of death,” Simon said, then added, “I hope.”
“I don’t understand why it took you so long to get here. It was over an hour and a half since I found the body and reported it to Chief Boyd.”
“The police have to take all their pictures and gather their evidence before they call me to take the body. I’ve tried to convince them that they should notify me immediately and let me examine the scene, but we have so few homicides I haven’t been successful.”
“How many murders have you handled as coroner?”
For the first time Simon looked uncomfortable. He cleared his throat before answering. “This is the first murder, but I’ve done suicides and accidental deaths.”
Skye raised one eyebrow. “That’s not quite the same thing. You must be feeling somewhat anxious. There have been so many cases lost in court due to the evidence being spoiled at the scene. I read an article in
Time
magazine a few years back that said something like sixty-five hundred murderers each year go free, most because of coroners who were not well trained. I didn’t realize at the time that many were not physicians.”
“The only thing I’m nervous about is you. We didn’t get off to a very good start.” His golden-hazel eyes sparkled. “The reason the funeral director in small towns is usually also the coroner is simple. We own the hearse and we have a place to store the body.”
He was attractive, and as everyone kept pointing out, there were not many appropriate men Skye’s age in Scumble River. She surreptitiously glanced at his left hand. He wore no wedding band. Of course, that didn’t prove anything. One strike against Simon was that he reminded Skye of her ex-fiancé. It had been only a few months since they broke up, and the pain was as sharp as ever.
She smiled. “I’m sure you didn’t mean to scare me earlier, and I am sorry for screaming and running away when you got into the car.”
He waved away her apology with a gesture of his hand. “No problem. After what you’ve been through, I’m sure most girls would have been frightened.”
BOOK: Murder of a Small-Town Honey
7.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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