“Affirmative.” “But not the identity.” “Correct.” “It’s the man from Natick.” There was a moment’s silence. People love to listen in on police quencies in Vermont. Part of that is due to the large number of lunteer firefighters in the state, most of whom listen to scanners the y elevator operators listen to Muzak; the other part is because in as like the Kingdom, everybody knows, or once knew, everybody e; scanners have become the electronic version of the old party line, d a primary reason why cops try to be as oblique as possible in their mmunications.
“Ten-four. What do you advise?” “Keep the scene locked up until the crime lab arrives instead of ting your boys have first crack.” “Why should I do that?” “Lots of foot prints. Any more people and you’ll lose them. Also, ere’s nothing here that’s going to change over the next couple of urs.” There was a pause. My request was neither unreasonable nor precedented, but Hamilton still had to suppress a cop’s natural urge jump in and start digging. “All right. Give me Wirt.”
Wirt was already there, of course, seething down my neck. I nded him the mike and slipped out of the car.
I walked over to Buster. “Can I borrow your truck?” “Sure.” “For what it’s worth, I just cleared with the State Police lieutenant charge of all this that no one, not even cops, are supposed to go down at path or get near that scene before the lab guys show up. “So I can drop Wirt if he tries?” “You can have fun thinking about it.” I walked over to the truck d noticed the bike was missing from the back. “Where’s Jimmy?”
Buster shrugged. “Beats me.” ‘Damn. I think we can assume the cat’s out of the bag.” I’d known from the very start that we’d never keep this a secret, but I had hoped could at least interview the man’s widow within scant minutes of his iscovery without being beaten to the punch.
Now I doubted I’d be able do even that.
I drove directly to the Rocky River Inn. For once, the place was mpletely empty. It looked like an abandoned warehouse, the dirty, lastic-filtered light seeping through onto unswept floors and strewnout furniture, highlighting the grime on the walls and the cobwebs n the light fixtures.
I walked up the stairs to the second floor, two at a time, finding, as before, the Wingates’ door open. Ellie Wingate was sitting on the bed, half-dressed in her slip, with Greta beside her. Greta looked up at me scornfully. “Oh, the great Brattleboro detective-come to save the day.” I nodded at Ellie, who seemed to be listening to distant whispers.
“She knows?” “I wasn’t going to let the police tell her.” I crouched down in front of her, putting my face in her line of sight.
“I’m sorry, Mrs. Wingate. I’ll need your help to find out who did this.” “You’ve been no help so far,” Greta muttered. I looked over at her.
“Greta, either be quiet or leave.” The depth of her anger mixed with my own. I fought back the impulse to air my own frustration and tried instead to concentrate on the drawn-out process of picking up the pieces.
Greta gave me a withering look, but didn’t say anything more. I got the impression, though, that some bridge had been burned in her mind, that I would never be “Joey” to her again.
“Mrs. Wingate, when did you see your husband last?” Her eyes were startlingly blank. She blinked once in a great while, but otherwise didn’t move. Her mind was filled with so many other, more insistent voices, that mine must have had the impact of a mosquito hitting a window.
“Ellie.” I reached out and touched her cheek. Her eyes shifted onto mine, but without appreciable recognition.
Her brow furrowed just a hint. “Last night,” she said in a whisper.
“When last night?” The furrow deepened. “Bedtime.” “You both went to bed at the same time?” Two blinks in a row. The eyes seemed to focus a little. “Yes.” The voice was stronger, but somehow less real.
“He didn’t wake you when he got up?” “No. I’d taken a Valium.” “How many?” Her body English all seemed very odd to me, a cross between being entranced and rehearsed, as if two behavior patterns were tugging at her simultaneously. “What did you do after I left last night?” “We went to bed.” “You didn’t talk to anyone? Didn’t see anyone?” She shook her head.
“You saw me,” Greta said. She sounded hurt.
Ellie Wingate nodded but didn’t look at her. “Oh, yes.” “What did you talk about?” She shrugged. Greta answered. “I gave them a letter and they told how you’d treated them… I should have known.” I turned back to the stricken woman, trying to make my voice d as bland as before. “What was in the letter, Ellie?” She didn’t answer. I straightened and glanced around the room. bed was still unmade, there were a couple of suitcases in the corner, e odds and ends on the bureau top and the bedside table, some hes hanging over the chair-basically the same as I remembered night.
I glanced at the trash basket near the bed. On the top was a pled, baIled-up envelope. I squatted down and poked at it with my and the back of my fingernail, trying to spread it open wide enough ead. I made out “Bruce Wingate” handwritten across the front in pt. My high hopes fell a little when I saw the envelope was empty. I tapped it with the pen. “Is this what Greta gave you last night, e?” She glanced over distractedly and became very still. “Where’s the letter that was inside?” “I don’t know.” She went back to studying her hands. “What did it say?” “I don’t remember.” I thought a different approach might shake more out of her. hen did you tear your stockings?” She raised her head disconcertedly. “What?” I repeated the question. “Yesterday,”
she said, frowning. “The envelope was on top, Ellie. It was put in the trash after you w out the stockings last night, after you took them off.
Isn’t this same envelope Greta handed you?” She closed up again. “I don’t remember.” Greta had been fidgeting in silence, either in deference to me, zch I seriously doubted, or because even she was beginning to realize not everything was as it seemed. Prolonged silences, however, were her strong suit. “Enough, Joe. She’s in shock.” I struggled with a surge of anger. Ellie Wingate’s husband was now g dead with his face in the dirt and yet she still seemed as unwilling elp me now as they’d both been earlier. Her reaction was baffling.
“How did you get the letter, Greta?” “It was in their cubbyhole downstairs. I don’t know how it got re.
“Any idea when?” She shrugged. “Could have been anytime-from midafternoon on.
I rose and crossed to the bathroom. Over the sink were several prescription bottles. I tore off a piece of toilet paper to keep my fingerprints from contaminating the one labelled Diazepam and then opened it, pouring the contents into my palm. There were twenty tablets. I read the label again carefully. Ellie said she took a Valium before bed. Prescription medicine labels sometimes border on Sanskrit, but this one I could figure out. The date of issue was about a month ago; the contents listed twenty tablets. None were missing.
I had called Mel Hamilton from the pay phone downstairs and was sitting on the top step of the staircase when he found me fifteen minutes later.
The Wingates’ door was still open, but Greta had moved Ellie to her own apartment at the end of the hall, albeit with a predictable amount of grumbling. Even she, however, could see that events had progressed beyond her ability to control them.
Hamilton was slightly winded when he reached the top. “You’ve been busy.” I raised my eyebrows, surprised at his acerbic tone of voice.
“Oh?” “You’ve contaminated a crime scene, overrun the attending State trooper, and now you’ve presumably ransacked the dead man’s apartment and interviewed his widow. I’m surprised you bothered to call me.