Authors: Chris Bohjalian
And he was, like a lot of the real wife beaters, a great self-deluder.
And, perhaps, a great actor.
That morning I met him, he told me how he’d baptized Alice Hayward the day before and how he should have seen this coming from something she’d said when she came out of the water. I couldn’t decide whether he was overintellectualizing the fact that there was a dead woman in her nightgown on the floor and a dead guy with half a face on the couch, or whether he was so completely in shock that he was finding reasons to feel guilty himself. It wasn’t like
he
had strangled the woman. It wasn’t like
he
had shot the creep on the sofa.
Shows you what I know.
It was one of my associates, David Dennison, who first questioned what really had occurred at the Haywards’ the night they both died.
David is the medical examiner. He’s tall and scholarly-looking, and his hair is almost translucently white. His eyes are sunken, a little sad even, but he’s a very funny guy. I’ve worked with three pathologists in two states, and I’ve learned that most MEs are pretty witty. I think if you’re going to do that for a living, you have to appreciate black humor. He’s also an excellent witness, and as a prosecutor I need that in an ME. Cop shows on TV have ruined me: I don’t dare put a dull guy on the stand if I want to keep a jury awake.
In addition, David is a total control freak, and I want that, too. I have seen him go up to a person at a crime scene who is clearly there for the first time and politely take their hands and put their fingers together as if they’re praying. The last thing he wants—the last thing any of us want—is for someone to accidentally screw up a key piece of evidence by touching it.
David didn’t say much to any of us that Monday morning we all converged on Haverill. His office is up in Burlington, a good two and a half hours away, but he got to the crime scene by lunchtime. Everyone from the village was either somber or stunned, but the few words I overheard him exchange with Drew were collegial and about as pleasant as one could hope for. Drew, like many of the people who eventually wind up as suspects, was very, very helpful. He told us lots about the Haywards—about both George and Alice. After all, he’d been providing some counsel for Alice. (That was actually what he said to me: “I offered her some counsel.” It was only later that we’d figure out that a hell of a lot of that “counsel” had been between the sheets.) And he was a real scrubber. He donned those rubber gloves and just went to town on the gore in one corner of the room. (In the days that followed, this also would strike me as a tad suspicious.) He was a cool customer, not the sort of person I would have expected to panic suddenly and flee.
In any case, it was David’s preliminary autopsy report that caused
me to sit up in my office chair and reassess in my mind what had occurred. According to David, the cause of death for Alice was precisely what we all had assumed: strangulation. The manner was homicide. Aspects of George’s death, however, were a little murky: Though the cause was still that gunshot wound to the head, David had not cited the manner as suicide. Instead he had typed in that single word that would help trigger the whole investigation:
pending
. In his opinion there were factors in George’s death that left him wondering, and his report suggested that homicide was a possibility. In other words, it was conceivable that someone other than George had pulled the trigger of the gun that Sunday night—and, likewise, that someone other than George could have strangled Alice. It wasn’t likely, in that bits of George’s skin were under Alice’s fingernails and it was clear that she had scratched the hell out of his face. But people are bizarre. For a time I kept open the possibility that George and Alice had fought violently but it was a third (or fourth) person who had murdered Alice.
The first red flag for the ME was George Hayward’s head wound. When a person decides to put a bullet into his brain, he tends to press the barrel against the temple. At the hairline, usually. Or, if the gun is not actually touching the skin, it’s still pretty close: A suicide is either a contact or a near-contact wound. Besides, a person’s forearm is only so long; you really can’t aim a gun at your temple from a distance of greater than six or seven inches, and most suicides bring the gun a lot closer than that. The result is that most of the powder is driven into the skin and there is a dense deposit of soot. When a pathologist washes away that soot, he is likely to find abrasions and stippling, all those burning bits of powder embedding themselves into the flesh. The farther the gun is held from the bullet’s point of entry, the less pronounced those marks will be. In David’s opinion the bullet that killed George Hayward was certainly not a contact wound and—based
on the negligible amounts of powder and stippling and soot—not even particularly close. The gun might have been fired from as much as a few feet away.
Second, there was the pattern of the blood and bone and brain that had sprayed the living room: the remains that people like the Reverend Drew and Alice’s best friend had cleaned up on the screen and the china cabinet, and had tried and failed to remove from the couch. David thought it was possible that the spatter was the result of a bullet pulverizing the skull in a suicide. But from the moment he had entered that room, he told me later, a part of him had wondered at the angle.
Finally there was George Hayward’s right hand. There was residue on it from the gunshot, but not a lot. And while no one puts a great deal of stock in gunshot residue these days, he still thought there might have been more if Hayward had indeed pulled the trigger. (The fact that there were traces meant nothing: In a small room, residue can be anywhere once a gun is discharged.)
Toxicology—the blood and urine tests—would take two or three weeks, but David suggested that a lot more could be inferred right now with another look at the gun. Just how severe was the blowback? Or, to be blunt, how much of the bastard’s brains were up the gun barrel? (Make no mistake: Though it seemed possible now that George Hayward was a murder victim, he was still a complete and total bastard.) David also suggested that after the weapon had been examined, someone in the crime lab should conduct a series of test fires with the same load to offer a baseline on the stippling it was likely to elicit. Once we did that, we could get a fairly precise sense of the distance the gun had been from Hayward’s temple.
Now, none of this would have led me to start wondering what sort of involvement Stephen Drew might have had with the deaths of either George or Alice Hayward if the guy hadn’t gotten out of Dodge
the second the bodies had been shipped to New York and New Hampshire for burial. Had he stuck around, it might have taken considerably longer before any of us in the state’s attorney’s office would have turned our eyes upon the local pastor. One of my associates, for instance, conjectured that the murders might have been an attempt to cover up a robbery and the burglar had known of George’s history of domestic abuse. In other words, someone had murdered the pair of them and then made it look like it was George’s handiwork. And there was also the possibility this was all some sort of horrible thrill killing, not unlike the 2001 murders of two Dartmouth College professors in their own home: Perhaps someone had strangled Alice while George had watched and then offed him. But why make that look like something it wasn’t? And when the house once more was viewed as a crime scene and thoroughly investigated, there was no indication that anything had been stolen and no reason to believe that either of the Haywards or their teenage daughter had had some sort of secret life as a drug dealer.
What we did find, however, were a variety of clues that Alice Hayward had been receiving more than mere pastoral counsel from that minister who’d fled Haverill hours after conducting her funeral service.
AFTER I READ
the autopsy report for the first time, I rang David Dennison. He was expecting the call.
“I had a feeling the word
pending
would pique your interest,” he said.
“Are you just trying to make my caseload completely suck? The Hayward mess wasn’t supposed to have any effing complications.”
“Has anyone told you that you have the mouth of a teenager?”
“Teenagers don’t say
effing
. No censorship there. And Paul says
I sound more like a sailor, thank you very much. And he spends his life around teenagers: I think if I sounded like one, he would have told me by now.”
“So what do you think?”
“I think it all seemed so simple when we were at the house that day.”
“It did look nice and neat.”
I glimpsed once more the photos of Alice Hayward that had been taken at the scene. Her eyes, starved for air, were bulging, the whites dotted with burst blood vessels, and her mouth was forever fixed in a rictus of agony and fear. “No it didn’t, David. It looked horrible.”
“You know what I mean,” he said, his voice not really defensive. Then he shared with me his suspicions about what might in fact have occurred, given the way portions of George Hayward’s brain were sprinkled liberally across the wall and the couch. When he was done, he added, “And I expect more serious questions when we get back the blood and urine work in another week or two.”
“What do you think the lab will find?”
“That George Hayward was too drunk to kill himself. This is all preliminary, of course, but I wouldn’t be surprised if as many as four hours separated the two deaths.”
“You’re kidding.”
“Good God, did you count the beer bottles?”
“I did.”
“The guy smelled like a frat basement on a Saturday morning.”
“I tried to avoid fraternity basements, thank you very much.”
“And his dinner was all but digested. Mush. Hers? I could have counted the string beans and peas. So here’s one scenario. He strangles her around eight or eight-thirty. Then, filled with remorse or panic, he drinks. Well, drinks some more. A lot more. And finally he passes out. Then, around midnight, someone shoots him.”
“Sounds a little far-fetched.”
“Wait till we have the blood-alcohol numbers. I wouldn’t be surprised if we’re talking the neighborhood of point-three or more. Alcohol poisoning. I wouldn’t be surprised if it turns out he was flirting with lethal.”
“But you can’t be that precise on the times of death. Plus or minus two hours, they both could have died around ten,” I said.
“Possible. But gastric emptying time is about four hours. People lie, but stomachs don’t. Assuming they ate dinner together—say, seven or seven-fifteen—she’s dead before eight-thirty. Him? Could be closer to midnight.”
“Of course, if Hayward was that drunk, it’s also possible that he didn’t kill Alice, either.”
“Well, yes,” he agreed, and I didn’t have to verbalize what both of us were thinking. Sometimes none of us has the slightest idea what really goes on in a house when the shades are drawn and the doors are closed. There are the postmortem realities—how a body decomposes or cools to room temperature, how it stiffens or putrefies or lets loose with one last bowel movement—but what that body was doing in the moments before it died is often unfathomable. And, in the case of a homicide, often freakish and weird. There might have been things going on in that Cape that were emphatically beyond our wildest conjectures and people passing through whose presence would have astonished the neighbors.
And passing through with the Haywards’ welcome complicity: There had been no indications of forced entry at the house on the hill. The doors were unlocked, and the windows—though filled with screens—were open.
Yet we did know this: George Hayward would beat the living crap out of his wife when the spirit moved him. That pastor had said so, that pal named Ginny had said so, and the couple’s one kid, the teenage
girl, had said so. And this meant that whoever had killed the one or the both of them had been aware of George Hayward’s nasty little hobby. When we found Alice’s body, her rear end and lower back were flecked with two- and three-day-old contusions and welts, which meant that George had beaten her the weekend she was baptized. David said her kidneys were so badly bruised that she’d probably been peeing blood on the day that she died.
“Had she had sex that day?” I asked. “Consenting or otherwise?”
“No indications. No semen in the vagina.”
“Well. At least it isn’t a rape.”
“Small consolation when you’ve been strangled.”
“True.”
“And I do think George murdered Alice.”
“You do?”
“Absolutely. His skin was under her fingernails. Those are her scratch marks on the left side of his face.”
“Well, then,” I said, “I think I should send an investigator to Haverill, don’t you? I think I should have someone go shake some trees.”
“I agree.”
A few days later, we would all be wondering where the pastor had gone and why he wasn’t answering his cell phone.
JIM HAAS HAD
been the state’s attorney for the county before I arrived, and my sense was that he would be the state’s attorney after I had moved on. He was no longer the prodigy he’d been ten years ago, when, in his mid-thirties, he had rooted out the drug dealers from Albany and the Bronx who were snaking their way into the county high schools, and convicted the Arlington novelist who had murdered his wife and tried to make it appear as if it had been a random home robbery and slaying. I had just arrived after working for two years in
the prosecutor’s office in Concord, New Hampshire, and I had been impressed as hell with Jim’s first accomplishment. But the second? Oh, please. I can count on one hand the number of women in northern New England who were killed in my lifetime in random home robberies. We all know women are often murdered by the men who profess to love them the most. But Jim really enjoyed leading our small office and mentoring younger lawyers like me, and he savored the strange currents that seemed to waft through Bennington and southwestern Vermont. We had our extremely funky, always-a-little-goth college just outside the city; there was that great New England world-weariness that comes from being a mill town that no longer has a whole lot of industry—which made us a bit like Pittsfield and Albany, our urban neighbors across the state lines; and there was the reality that we were surrounded by iconic little Green Mountain hamlets filled with longtime locals and second-home interlopers from Manhattan, Westchester, and Fairfield County.