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"Will you guys pipe down? I need my beauty sleep."
"Try coma," Pewter smarted off.
The other two snickered but did quiet down.
8.
The scale needle dipped. Tom Yancy, the coroner, lifted off the brain. His a.s.sistant wrote down 2 lb. 9 oz.
Both Rick and Coop had attended enough autopsies not to be but so squeamish but Rick hated the part when the coroner sawed off the skullcap. The sound of those tiny blades cutting into fresh bone and the odor of the bone made him queasy. The rest of it didn't bother him. Most people got woozy when the body was opened from stem to stern but he could handle that just fine.
Each organ was lifted out of Hank Brevard.
"Liver's close to shot," Tom noted. "Booze."
"Funny. I never saw him drunk," Rick remarked.
"Well, it is possible to have liver disease without alcohol but this is cirrhosis. He drank."
"Maybe that's why he was so b.i.t.c.hy. He was hungover most of the time," Coop said.
"He wasn't exactly beauty and light, was he?" Tom poked around the heart. "Look. The heart is disproportionate. The left side should be about one half the right. His is smaller. Chances are he would have dropped sooner rather than later since this pump was working too hard. Every body has its secrets."
After the autopsy, Tom washed up.
"The obvious?" Rick asked.
"Oh yeah. No doubt about it. Left to right as you noted. Back to the bone. The C-3 vertebra was even nicked with the blade where I showed you. d.a.m.n near took his head off. A razor-sharp blade, too. Nothing sloppy or jagged about it. Very neat work."
"A surgeon's precision." Coop crossed her arms over her chest. She was getting tired and hungry.
"I'd say so, although there are plenty of people who could make that cut if the instrument was sharp enough. People have been slitting one another's throats since B.C. It's something we're good at." Tom smiled wryly.
"But the a.s.sailant had to be powerful." Rick hated the chemical smells of the lab.
"Yes. There's no way the killer could be female unless she bench-presses two hundred and fifty pounds and some do, some do. But from the nature of the wound it was someone a bit taller than Hank. Otherwise the wound would have been a bit downward, unless he drove Hank to his knees, but you said there was no sign of struggle at the site."
"None."
"Then my guess, which I'm sure is yours, too, is the killer came up behind him, was Hank's height or taller, grabbed his mouth and cut so fast Hank barely knew what hit him. I suppose there's comfort in that."
"How long did it take him to die?"
"Two minutes, more or less."
"There'd be no shortage of suitable knives in the hospital," Coop said.
"Or people who know how to use them." Tom opened the door to the corridor.
Flames darted behind the gla.s.s front of the red enamel wood-burning stove. Tussie Logan hung up the phone in the kitchen.
When she returned to the living room, Randy Sands, her housemate and best friend, noticed her ashen face. "What's wrong?"
"Hank Brevard is dead."
"Heart attack?" Randy rose, walked over to Tussie, and put his arm around her shoulders.
"No. He was murdered."
"What?" Randy dropped his arm, turning to face her.
"Someone slit his throat."
"Good Lord." He sucked in his breath. "How primitive." He walked back to the sofa. "Come on, sit down beside me. Talking helps."
"I don't know what to say." She dropped next to him, which made his cus.h.i.+on rise up a little bit.
"Who just called to tell you?"
"Oh, Debbie, Jordan Ivanic's secretary. I guess we're all being called one by one. She said Sheriff Shaw or Deputy Cooper would be questioning us and-" She bit her lip.
"Not the most hospitable man but still." He put his arm around her again. "I'm sorry."
"You know, I was just in the post office with him and he was b.i.t.c.hing and moaning about working a late s.h.i.+ft because someone was sick or whatever. Half the time I tuned him out." She breathed in sharply. "Now I feel guilty as h.e.l.l about it."
Randy patted her shoulder. "Everybody did that. He was boring."
A log popped in the stove.
Tussie flinched. "You never know. How trite." She rocked herself. "How utterly trite but it's true. Here I work in a hospital with these desperately sick children. I mean, Randy, we know most of them haven't a prayer but this shakes me."
"Working with terminally ill children is your profession. Having an a.s.sociate or whatever you call Hank is quite another matter . . . having him murdered, I mean. Sometimes I open my mouth and I can't keep my tongue on track," he apologized.
"Start one sentence and bop into the second before you've finished the first." She smiled sadly. "Randy, I have to go back and work in that hospital and there's a killer loose." She shuddered.
"Now you don't know that. It could have been a random thing."
"A homicidal maniac goes to the hospital and selects Hank."
"Well," his voice lightened. "You know what I mean. It's got nothing to do with you."
"G.o.d, I hope not." She shuddered again and he kept patting her shoulder, keeping his arm around her.
"You'll be fine."
"Randy, I'm scared."
9.
Once a human being reaches a certain age, death, while not a friend, is an acquaintance. Sudden death, though, always catches people off guard.
Lisa Brevard, in her early fifties, was stunned by her husband's murder. To lose him was bad enough, but to have him murdered was doubly upsetting. She knew his faults but loved him anyway. Perhaps the same could have been said of him for her.
After Harry left the Brevards' she, Susan, Miranda Hogendobber, and Coop had lunch at Miranda's, she being the best cook in Crozet.
"When does Tracy get back?" Coop asked Miranda about her high-school boyfriend, who had struck up a courts.h.i.+p with her at their reunion last year.
"As soon as he sells the house." She placed the last dish on the table-mashed potatoes-sat down, and held Harry's and Coop's hands. Coop held Susan's hand so the circle was complete. "Heavenly Father, we thank Thee for Thy bounty to us both in food and in friends.h.i.+p. We ask that Thou sustain and comfort Lisa and the family in their time of sorrow. In Jesus' name we pray. Amen."
"Amen," the others echoed, as did the animals, who quickly pounced upon their dishes on the floor.
"You look wonderful, Miranda." Susan was proud of Miranda, who had lost forty pounds.
"Men fall in love with their eyes, women with their ears." Miranda smiled.
Coop glanced up, fork poised in midair. "I never thought of that."
"The Good Lord made us differently. There's no point complaining about it. We have to accept it, besides"-Miranda handed the bowl to her left-"I wouldn't have it any other way."
"Wh-o-o-o." Harry raised her eyebrows.
"Don't start, Harry." Miranda shot her a glance, mock fierce.
"I hope Tracy sells that house in Hawaii fast." Harry heaped salad into her bowl.
"I do, too. I feel like a girl again." Miranda beamed.
They talked about Tracy and others in the town but the conversation kept slipping back to Hank Brevard.
"Cooper, are you holding back?" Harry asked.
"No. It takes us time to piece together someone's life and that's what we have to do with Hank. Whatever he was, whatever he did, someone wanted him dead. Big time."
"He couldn't have, say, surprised someone doing-" Susan didn't finish her sentence as Harry jumped in.
"In the boiler room of the hospital?"
"Harry, someone could have been throwing evidence into the boiler," Susan defended herself.
"Most likely the incinerator." Cooper then described the bowels of the hospital building to them. "So you see, given the corridors, whoever did this knew their way around."
"Someone who works there," Miranda said.
"Or someone who services equipment there. We have to run down every single contractor, repairman, delivery boy who goes in and out of that place."
"What a lot of work," Miranda exclaimed. "Like that old TV show, Dragnet. You do throw a net over everything, don't you?"
Cooper nodded. "And sooner or later, Miranda, something turns up."
And so it did, but not at all where they thought it would.
10.
"Oh boy." Harry closed the post office door behind her just as Rob Collier pulled up to the front door. She hurried through and opened the front door. "Monday, Monday."
"I've got stuff for you," he sang out as he hauled canvas bags stuffed with mail.
"Valentine's Day. I forgot." She grimaced as he tossed two extra bags onto the mailroom floor.
"Just think of all the love in those bags," he joked.
"You're in a good mood."
"I already got my Valentine's Day present this morning."
"No s.e.x talk, Rob, I'm too delicate."
He grinned at her, hopped back in the big mail truck, and took off in the direction of White Hall, where a small post office awaited him.
"Think Mom got any love letters?" Tucker tugged at one of the bags.
"I don't think she cares. She has to sort her mail the same as everybody else's," Murphy replied.
"Saint Valentine. There ought to be a Saint Catnip or how about a Saint Tuna?" Pewter, having eaten a large breakfast, was already thinking about lunch at seven-thirty in the morning. "I bet there wasn't even a real person called Valentine."
"Yes, there was. He was a third-century martyr killed in Rome on the Flaminian Way under the reign of Claudius. There are conflicting stories but I stick to this one," Mrs. Murphy informed her gray friend.
"How do you know all that?" Pewter irritatedly asked.
"Whatever Harry reads I read over her shoulder."