The troopers went to the state prison to take a handwriting exemplar from Jay Smith. He didn’t know why they wanted it, but he didn’t like the idea. He tried to fake his handwriting. Dr. Jay gave them an exemplar that was so shaky it looked like it was written by Howard Hughes after he was gooned out from watching Ice Station Zebra ninety-two times.
Matt Mullin was on a roll. The next lead he developed had to do with the fiber samples found on the body and in the trunk of Susan Reinert’s car. Jack Holtz went to the former home of Jay Smith and got permission from Grace Gilmore to cut samples from her upstairs red carpet.
The fiber samples matched the fibers found in Susan Reinert’s hair. The FBI lab reported that they were polyester fibers and that less than 7 percent of America’s carpets are polyester. However, hair and fiber analysis is the most subjective of forensic sciences and the task force knew that any defense lawyer could come up with a couple of experts who would say that they couldn’t tell for certain if the fibers were from the same dye lot or even if they were polyester. But they looked like the same dye lot and they looked like polyester.
Matt Mullin and Jack Holtz later went back to the house on Valley Forge Road, this time with lights and brushes and vacuums.
When Grace Gilmore had gotten rid of the beige carpet in the basement she’d decided to leave the carpet pad. The lawmen divided the basement into quadrants, took out their soft little sweeping brushes and started cleaning that pad. They swept and crawled and vacuumed that basement for hours. They had knees like medieval nuns’ when they were through with that job.
Poor Grace Gilmore. Instead of a Welcome Wagon hostess she got cops snipping at her carpet. And what did they have to show for a brutal day’s work? Four big dust balls. That was it: huge balls of dust and grime and fuzz that she could’ve handed them right out of her Hoover any day of the week. But they looked happy with their dust balls.
The task force sent the sweepings off to the FBI lab in Washington, and went about their trips to communes where the children were allegedly being held. There were more landfills to excavate and more lakes to drag.
One year after the murder of Susan Reinert, and one day before the fifty-second birthday of Jay C. Smith, American justice finally got around to his peccadilloes of 1977.
Jay Smith and his brothers and sisters gave testimony before Judge Warren G. Morgan as to his accomplishments in life. They told how they’d lost their father when they were children and worked very hard to better themselves. They described how Jay Smith had risen through the ranks in the army reserve and very nearly became a general, and detailed how he’d continued his lifelong formal education until he was awarded his doctorate.
The judge had this to say: “The devotion of this family is of course impressive. Touching. And we are saddened that this defendant has brought such discredit upon his family. As I listened attentively to members of his family testify, I had to think that they seem to be talking about a man who is now really two different persons: the brother they grew up with who worked hard to educate himself and this man who has been tried in this courtroom and other courtrooms of the commonwealth.
“It was the duty of this school principal to provide an example of probity to the young minds who were committed to his charge. He has dishonored his profession in a monstrous way. It is rather interesting that we do not sense today in this defendant any real remorse.
“The court sentences the defendant to pay the costs of prosecution and to make restitution to Sears, Roebuck stores in the sum of fifty-three thousand dollars and to undergo imprisonment in a state institution for an indefinite term, the minimum of which shall be three and a half years and the maximum of which shall be seven years. To commence and be computed consecutively to the sentence being served.”
It was a stiffer jolt than Jay Smith expected. That came to a term of five and a half to twelve years. He couldn’t expect parole until 1986. As a pretty fair jailhouse lawyer, he began doing legal research into the appeal process, but he kept being distracted by another matter. The Reinert task force was coming after him hard. He’d long since stopped sending whimsical bulletins to former colleagues. He was maintaining total silence. Prison officials and other inmates described him as a quiet loner.
Matt Mullin called Jack Holtz one day and said, “I’ve got bad news and good news.”
“Gimme the bad news,” Jack Holtz said.
“There wasn’t a blue fiber anywhere in the sweepings. We may never know how she picked up the two blue fibers.”
“Gimme the good news.”
“In quadrant number one they found a hair. It’s the same length as the hair taken out of her head at the autopsy. It’s a positive match in twenty-one out of a possible twenty-five microscopic characteristics. That’s as good as it gets.”
“It’s not a fingerprint,” Jack Holtz said. “But I’ll settle for that!”
They also found red fibers in the basement which indicated that a piece of the upstairs carpet might’ve been down there, but then again the fibers could’ve been tracked down from upstairs on someone’s shoes.
Still, it was another link, and it tied in beautifully with the letter from Jay Smith to his wife asking her on her deathbed to throw away that downstairs rug.
Jay Smith was no longer a lonesome silhouette dancing on some distant crag with little hooves. He was being forced down from the hills. He was giving off pungent goat smells, and it smelled better to Jack Holtz than a gunload of snuff.
Sue Myers was almost through doing needlepoint. She’d done needlepoint when they slashed through Europe like General Patton. She’d done needlepoint through Bill Bradfield’s sixteen and a half love affairs. She’d done needlepoint when his money and hers went down the drain at the art store. She’d done needlepoint through the months of blather about devils and guns and acid and bodies and hit men and murder. She’d sat there quietly as Madame Defarge at the guillotine and … just … done … needlepoint.
And then he went too far. It happened in the office of his Philadelphia lawyer, John Paul Curran.
Bill Bradfield would talk to a radish if he had to, and Curran was an expansive Irish type who liked to shoot the breeze too, and the meetings with Bill Bradfield got pretty windy. Sue Myers was sitting there, apparently placid, when Bill Bradfield made the devastating mistake of talking personally about Susan Reinert.
He said to Curran, “That woman was the nearest thing to a nymphomaniac that I ever met.”
Sue Myers later said, “Stars went off in my head!”
Sue Myers saw more stars than a steer in a slaughterhouse. She saw stars for weeks and weeks after that. The sniggering way he said it. It could’ve been said like that at an Elks club smoker.
Curran looked at her, and Sue Myers, with her fortieth birthday approaching, had never felt so cheap, so used, so foolish.
She’d hated Susan Reinert in life and hated her in death, and never felt much pity for her. In her own words it was an “un-Christian” way to feel, but she was getting close to understanding the core of those feelings.
If there was one thing she had been positive about, it was that Bill Bradfield had despised Susan Reinert, though Susan Reinert was certain that he loved her.
Now, for the first time, Sue Myers was beginning to think: “What if he despises Shelly? And Rachel? What if he despises them all? What if he despises me?”
It was starting to seem possible. And though she was not willing to admit consciously that he might have conspired to murder two children, she was getting ready to concede that he might have badly wanted Susan Reinert dead. So what about herself?