Hanging the Chimney Hook
All Rights Reserved © 2020, Rick Haydn Horst
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events, locales, and incidents are either the products of the author's imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.
Chapter Ten
While working a case, a good investigator will examine the evidence individually and as a group to get a clearer picture. Unlike a physical jigsaw puzzle, the pieces of this aren't lying at one's fingertips and often have no smooth outer edge to indicate just how far the picture goes. In this mental puzzle, you'll discover obvious pieces, false pieces, and those maddening disparate pieces that you know have value but have yet to connect to anything, just sitting there like an island. The pieces connect effects to their causes, by reasoning out means, motives, and opportunities, through the gathering of evidence and an analysis of possibilities versus probabilities, which might be little more than gut instinct.
Malor had the means and opportunity but no motive that I could see, and my gut told me he hadn't killed Tommy. I heard something in his voice when he spoke of him. I couldn't compare it to how I might speak about my Golden Bear, but in his own way, he valued Tommy.
The ring brought up several questions, and I think the involvement of Tommy provided a clue to the answer of one of them. How long did Chadwell have the ring? They started the removals on the Thornbrier mansion three years ago. The probability of him having it all that time seemed remote. And somehow, he intended to turn that valuable ring into cash. Had he deluded himself over how easy that would be? Or did he have a partner, perhaps one he tried to double-cross? And Tommy's death connected somehow; otherwise, it appeared motiveless.
Max, Edgerton, and I stood at the conference room table, and after considerable discussion, I asked them, "Do either of you think Malor is involved?"
"He has opportunity, and he knew them," said the detective, "but I don't think he did it."
"I agree," said Max, "but let me tell you of a thought that occurred to me. What if the death of Chadwell was the killer's goal? Malor made the finger traps; we know that now. What if Tommy's death were merely to help point the finger at Malor for the murder that the killer really wanted to commit? Think about it, if Tommy hadn't dated Malor and hadn't died with a finger trap on his hands, would we connect Malor at all?"
"That's a thought," said the detective, "and if so-"
"Then Tommy might not have known about the ring," I said. "But if that's the case, why Tommy? Had he picked him merely out of convenience?"
"Since he's no longer a suspect," said Edgerton, "will you question Malor about the ring, or should I?"
"You're asking me?"
"You're officially consulting," he said, "but I want a good result, and if I have to take advice on occasion to get it, I will. Catching the killer is all that matters. When you and I first met, you probably thought I had an impervious ego. Trust me, I don't."
"I appreciate that. Well, if we want the killer to lower their guard, we need to convince Malor to let you keep him in custody. If he agrees, we can ask him about the ring, but it's important that only the people we trust know we have it because if he walks, he might talk to someone. Even if he hadn't killed anybody, his innocence wouldn't mean he can keep a secret."
"Legally," he said, "if necessary, I could hold him for 72 hours without charge."
I tipped my head, thinking. "Hmm...I will ask you not to do that. Right now, he's answering every question put to him. If you hold him against his will, he might decide to zip his mouth. We know he has information, and he may have the answer to a question we don't yet know to ask. So, if he says he's willing to stay, do you have any place for him here that isn't a cell?"
"We have an entire bedroom here for just such occasions; it probably needs some boxes removed from it, but we have one. And if he gives us valuable information, I'll even throw in turndown service and a mint on his pillow."
"What, no sex?" Max laughed.
"From what you told me?"--Edgerton shook his head--"No way! He ain't fuckin' me with that thing, and what man wouldn't like a blowjob?"--he turned to me--"Let me get someone to straighten that room."
Once the detective was in the observation room, I carried the bagged ring inside a manila folder, so Malor couldn't see it. The room was quiet, and he had laid his head on the table, taking a snooze, but perked up when Max and I entered the room.
"Are we done? Will they let me go?"
"Not quite yet. It's not a coincidence that someone used the finger traps in the two deaths; the killer wants us to think you did it, so somebody wants you in prison for a long time. Have you any idea who might want that, perhaps someone from Seattle when you lived there, dealing with the court case. What can you tell me of that?"
"Oh, you know of that," he said. "Well, I met a guy named Daniel, who wanted me to fuck him. He wasn't sure he could take me but wanted to try. He never said stop or gave me any indication that anything was wrong, but I had perforated his colon, and I took him immediately to the hospital. He said he didn't blame me, but that he had a boyfriend and that it was best that I go and never see him again. So, while I may have left, I still checked on him; they helped him, and he survived the incident. Apparently, Daniel had problems with sex after that, and it exposed an underlying bowel issue that he didn't realize he had. He said in his suicide note that it destroyed his life. His sister sued me for wrongful death. My uncle represented me, and I won the case based on the evidence."
"Had the boyfriend attended the trial?"
"It was a closed court, and only his sister was there, so I never saw him."
"Okay. As for Chadwell and Tommy, were they friends?"
"Oh yes, they were great friends until Chadwell discovered that Tommy wanted me. After that, Tommy was Chadwell's enemy. As far as he was concerned, he had laid a claim on me, and he said that Tommy betrayed his friendship. As if...."
"Why had Tommy quit working for Alliance?"
"I'm not sure," he said. "Is that important? I figured people quit jobs all the time, so I didn't think anything of it. Glenn got him the job driving the cab, and he seemed happy with it."