Read The Singing of the Dead Online

Authors: Dana Stabenow

Tags: #General, #Mystery fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Detective, #Mystery, #Private investigators, #Mystery & Detective, #Fiction - Mystery, #Crime & mystery, #Crime & Thriller, #Murder, #Mystery & Detective - Series, #Women, #Mystery & Detective - Women Sleuths, #Women Sleuths, #Alaska, #Women private investigators - California, #Shugak; Kate (Fictitious character), #Women in politics, #Political campaigns

The Singing of the Dead (28 page)

BOOK: The Singing of the Dead
3.59Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Q. Did you know a woman by the name of Mrs. Angel Beecham, who resided at Number 3 Front Street?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. Also known, I believe, as the Dawson Darling?

A. Yes, sir. I delivered a quart of milk there every evening at about half past five, sir. Well, it used to be six quarts, but when the other girls moved out, Mrs. Beecham told me to deliver only one. Sir.

Q. When did you last see her alive?

A. About half past four on Thursday evening, sir.

Q. That would be Thursday evening, April 1, 1915?

A. I guess so, sir. I saw her every Thursday evening at that time, sir, when I delivered the milk, sir. I saw her every Monday evening, too, at half past four, too, sir. Every Monday evening and every Thursday evening, twice a week, every week at the same time, sir—

Q. Did you see her at any other time?

A. Well, I, well, sir, I guess I saw her on the street in town sometimes.

Q. Did you see her in town last week?

A. I don't know. I guess so.

Q. Be more specific, Mr. Olds, if you please.

A. Maybe on Friday around the shoe store?

Q. So you saw Mrs. Beecham in town on Friday, the day after you delivered her milk, downtown in front of the shoe store.

A. Or maybe it was Lavery's store, sir.

Q. That would be Friday, April 2?

A. Yes, sir, I guess so, sir.

Q. What time of the day would that have been? Mr. Olds?

A. I'm sorry, sir, I don't remember.

Q. Was it light or dark outside?

A. Oh. It was almost dark.

Q. So between seven or eight in the evening, would you say?

A. I'd say so, sir.

Q. Was she alone?

A. I guess so, sir.

Q. Did you see anyone with her?

A. No, sir.

Q. She was entirely unaccompanied?

A. She had a lot of packages, sir.

Q. Did you offer to carry them for her?

A. How did you know that, sir?

Q. Did you carry Mrs. Beecham's packages home for her, Mr. Olds?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. When did you leave her house on Friday evening, Mr. Olds?

A. Uh, I don't know. However long it took to walk her home, sir, and carry her packages into the house, sir.

Q. You didn't stay to chat? She didn't offer you any refreshment by way of gratitude for carrying her packages home for her?

A. Oh, no sir. I'm a married man, sir. I only saw her when I delivered the milk.

Q. Yes, I see. So you saw Mrs. Beecham on Friday in town, alone, escorted her home, and then didn't see her again until Thursday evening when you delivered the milk.

A. Yes, sir. I didn't see her at all on Monday.

Q. What time was this?

A. About half past four, sir. I leave home at four, sir, and it usually takes me about half an hour to get to her house.

Q. What did the house look like as you approached it? Was anything out of the ordinary?

A. Well, sir, the first thing was that the blinds were down.

Q. They weren't, usually?

A. Well, no, sir. Could I have a drink of water?

Q. Certainly. Bailiff . . . thank you. Now, then, Mr. Olds. You have testified that the blinds were drawn on Mrs. Beecham's house as you approached it. This was out of the ordinary, was it?

A. Well, yes, sir. On that street, sir, the windows and the blinds are always open, especially at that time of day.

Q. Why is that, Mr. Olds?

A. Well, sir, I, uh, I don't, I . . .

Q. Perhaps so that the ladies who reside on that street can take some air?

A. Yes, sir, that's it, that's exactly right, sir.

Q. So the blinds on Mrs. Beecham's house were down. What else did you notice about the house that was out of the ordinary, Mr. Olds?

A. Well, sir, when I went to set down the full bottles on the porch and take away the empty ones, I noticed that the door was open.

Q. This was the back door?

A. Yes, sir, I always delivered the milk to the back door, and so I went around to the back of the house and put my milk down with the ticket on top.

Q. When you noticed the kitchen door was open.

A. Yes, sir.

Q. Did you go into the kitchen?

A. No, sir.

Q. Take your time, Mr. Olds.

A. Yes, sir, thank you, sir. It's just that it was . . . that she was . . .

Q. Now then. You noticed that the kitchen door was open. You didn't go inside. What happened then?

A. I looked through the door and saw the body. It was real dark with the blinds drawn, and I said, “Angel, what's the matter?” and she didn't say anything, and it was dark but I could see she didn't hardly have any clothes on and that she was dead.

Q. How did you know she was dead?

A. When I went in, I walked in her blood. And she didn't say anything. And she was cold when I touched her.

Q. What did you do after you discovered the body?

A. I went to the nearest place anybody could call home and told them Angel was dead.

Q. Did you notify the officials?

A. Yes, sir, Mrs. Croxton called the police.

Q. How long after you had discovered the body?

A. Well, sir, as long as it took me to walk to Mrs. Croxton's house, and as long after that to when they came.

Q. To whom did Mrs. Croxton telephone, Mr. Olds?

A. I guess the chief of police, sir, because that's who came.

Q. Now, Mr. Olds, how wide open was Mrs. Beecham's door when you discovered the body?

A. Well, sir, you might say it was practically wide open. Something I had never seen before.

Q. Was anybody else in Mrs. Beecham's house between the time you discovered the body and the time the chief of police got there?

A. Oh no, sir. Well, I don't think so. I was up at Mrs. Croxton's house, you see.

Q. Did she go into the house?

A. No, sir. We went back down to wait for the chief of police, and we waited outside, sir.

Q. Who was next to arrive?

A. I believe Mr. Brittain, the coroner, sir. That would be you, sir.

Q. And after that?

A. Well, I guess that would be the United States Marshall and the district attorney, oh, and Dr. Davidson, sir.

Q. How long have you known Mrs. Beecham, Mr. Olds?

A. Oh, sir, since she became a customer, sir, I think.

Q. When was that, Mr. Olds?

A. Uh, last July, I think, sir.

Q. She moved into the house in July?

A. I don't know, sir, that was when I first met her. She has been a milk customer of mine for about four months.

Q. I see. Mr. Olds, this is now April.

A. Yes, sir.

Q. And you first met Mrs. Beecham in July.

A. Yes, sir.

Q. And she has been a milk customer of yours for four months.

A. Yes, sir. Oh.

Q. You see my difficulty, Mr. Olds. You claim to have known Mrs. Beecham only as a milk customer, and that for only the last four months, and yet you say you first met Mrs. Beecham in July. Mr. Olds?

A. Yes, sir?

Q. Can you explain this discrepancy?

A. No, sir. I guess I must have been introduced to her before then.

Q. Before when?

A. Before she became a milk customer, sir.

Q. When would that have been, exactly?

A. I don't know, sir. I'm a married man, sir.

Q. Yes, I see. Well, Mr. Olds, you may be excused for now, but please hold yourself in readiness to return should I need to speak to you again.

A. Yes, sir. Thank you, sir.

JOE FORTSON, being first duly sworn, testified as follows:

Q. What official position do you hold, Mr. Fortson?

A. Chief of police.

Q. Did you hold that position on the sixth day of April 1915?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. Were you acquainted with Mrs. Angel Beecham during her lifetime?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. When did you last see her alive?

A. I couldn't say. About Monday, I believe I saw her on the street.

Q. Monday, that would be the fifth?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. Did you see her body on the evening of the eighth of April 1915?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. Where?

A. In the residence she occupied on Main Street, down on the river.

Q. How did you come to go there?

A. I received a phone call from Mrs. Elizabeth Croxton that she was dead.

Q. State what you found when you arrived at her residence.

A. There was a crowd of girls and a few men outside of her house, being held back from going in by Mr. Olds and Mrs. Croxton. I went into the house and turned on the light and found Mrs. Beecham's body on the floor.

Q. What did you do then?

A. When I saw that she was dead, I went out of the house and closed the back door and waited until the coroner got there.

Q. Did you make any examination of the body or the scene at that time?

A. No, sir, I could see the gash in her neck, and I could see that she was dead, but I did not examine the body.

Q. Who came after that?

A. Yourself [Judge Brittain], and then the U.S. Marshal.

Q. Any doctors?

A. Yes. Dr. Davidson came.

Q. Who else came, in an official capacity?

A. The district attorney.

Q. Was there an examination of the body made at that time?

A. Yes, sir. And we searched the house.

Q. Who engaged in the search?

A. Yourself [Judge Brittain], Marshall Kelsey, and myself were the principal ones, I think.

Q. What did you find?

A. The house had been ransacked. The trunk was overturned, the drawers were pulled out and dumped on the floor, two valises had the sides cut out and were on the floor, too.

Q. Did you make a careful search of the home for the purpose of finding money?

A. Yes.

Q. Did you find any money in the house?

A. Yes. There was a little boxwith some change in it, and that was all the actual money that we found.

Q. What clothing did you find on the body?

A. A pair of stockings and a pair of shoes.

Q. What jewelry did you find?

A. She had on diamond earrings and a bracelet watch on her left wrist, and a gold bracelet on her right wrist, and a gold chain around her neck. She had one ring on her left hand and three rings on her right hand.

Q. Did those rings contain jewels?

A. Yes, sir, diamonds.

Q. Was her hair done up or loose?

A. Done up.

Q. Did you find the rest of the clothes she had been wearing immediately before her death?

A. Yes, sir, they were hung up on the coatrack inside the front door.

Q. All of them?

A. I should imagine so.

Q. Was there anything about the body that would indicate a struggle on her part immediately before her throat was cut?

A. No, sir.

Q. What was the appearance of the wound on her neck?

A. It started on the left side of her neck and extended over under the right ear, a very large, deep cut. Her head was almost severed from her body.

Q. Did you discover any articles in the house that did not seem to belong there?

A. I discovered a glove with a rock in it.

Q. Have you that glove and rock?

A. yes, sir.

Witness exhibits rock, which is examined by judge and district attorney
.

Q. These are the identical articles you found?

A. Yes, sir.

The glove and rock are admitted as evidence, marked Exhibit 1
.

Q. The court notes that the glove is a man's glove, made of brown leather, lined, well-made, and almost new. Chief Fortson, where was the glove, containing the rock, when you found it?

A. It was by her right foot.

Q. Did you see a washbasin there?

A. Yes, sir, near the washstand, close to the body, about a foot from the body.

Q. What did it contain?

A. Bloody water, it seemed to me.

Q. Was there a towel?

A. Yes, sir, on the washstand. It was damp.

Q. Was it blood-stained?

A. Not that I could see.

Q. Other than the glove and the rock, did you find any other weapon of any kind in the house?

A. No, sir.

Q. Did you discover a knife that had the appearance of having been used by any one to inflict the wound upon the person of Mrs. Beecham?

A. No, sir.

Q. You made a thorough search of the house and didn't find any money?

A. No, sir. I mean, yes, sir. No money other than the boxof change, and the jewelry. Mostly just a lot of little trinkets.

Q. Of any value?

A. Not of any great value.

Q. Evidently the person who rifled the drawers and grips was not looking for jewelry?

A. Didn't seem to be. If he did, he overlooked a lot of it.

Q. Did you know Mrs. Angel Beecham in her lifetime?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. You knew her to be known as the Dawson Darling?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. Also that she resided at Number 3 Front Street in Niniltna?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. Did you know her personally or professionally?

A. I—I'm a married man, judge.

Q. Answer the question, please, chief.

A. I knew Mrs. Beecham to say hello to on the street.

Q. I see. Thank you, chief, you may step down.

J. R. STEWARD, being first duly sworn, testified as follows
:

Q. What is your name?

A. J. R. Steward.

Q. What official position do you hold?

A. Chief deputy marshal.

Q. Did you hold that position on the eighth day of April 1915?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. Did you know Mrs. Angel Beecham during her lifetime?

A. I did. I knew her when I saw her.

Q. To say hello to on the street?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. Did you see her body on the evening of the seventh of April?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. Where?

A. In her house on Main Street, in the town of Niniltna, Alaska.

Q. What officials were there when you arrived?

A. Uh, yourself, Judge Brittain, and Chief Fortson, and myself. Oh, and District Attorney Turner.

Q. Anyone else?

A. Oh, Doctor Davidson was also there. When I arrived, he was examining the wound in the neck.

BOOK: The Singing of the Dead
3.59Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

October Skies by Alex Scarrow
Zocopalypse by Lawson, Angel
Historical Trio 2012-01 by Carole Mortimer
Anatomy of a Killer by Peter Rabe
The Sun Chemist by Lionel Davidson