Eddie Bourque: Speak Ill Of The Living - Part 17
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Part 17

I'm the worst teacher who ever lived.

He wandered back to the living room and checked the clock. Ten-fifty in the morning.

This was going to be a long day.

a.s.suming that the farm Jimmy Whistle's mother had owned was in the greater Lowell region, the Registry of Deeds would have land records on it. The registry was closed on Sunday. It would open in the morning. Whistle's old lady was dead; her farm probably had been diced into housing lots by now, but Eddie wanted to know where the farm had been. It was his only lead.

His cell phone rang.

"h.e.l.lo?"

"Knock, knock, little brother."

"Hey, Bobbi."

"You sound exhausted, boy."

"Didn't sleep," Eddie said. He glanced into his empty mug. "Made weak coffee this morning, too. Listen, did Henry ever mention a farm job he had as a teenager, before he went to prison?"

She was quiet a moment, and then said: "Your brother doesn't talk much about the past. I can barely get him to talk about our future. He's stuck in right now. I think that's part of the reason he has trouble getting excited to fight for his freedom." She was quiet a little more, and then asked brightly, "Why are you asking? Have you found something?"

Eddie considered telling her about Jimmy Whistle, about Jimmy's old lady and the gun in the toilet tank, but he couldn't. He didn't want to raise her hopes before he had something solid that Henry could use to persuade a jury-and which Eddie could use to persuade Henry. And he didn't want Bobbi interfering with his research, demanding to be taken along. He brushed her off with, "I don't know what I've got, probably nothing. I'll know better tomorrow."

She sputtered, prying for more.

Eddie steered the conversation away, asking: "How did you meet my brother?"

She cooed, "Oooo, I've always loved men in barbed wire." She laughed. "Actually, I got sick of cheaters. Married two of them, dated about a hundred. I call them 'excuses guys.' Always got a good excuse for why they're late, why they didn't call, why they can't drop by the restaurant and meet my friends. I told this one guy: if you're really working all that overtime, why do you drive such a piece of s.h.i.t?"

"You should have been a detective."

"Naw, not that I have any great brain for it. I've just heard every excuse ever written, so none of them work on me anymore."

"Anybody ever use the grandparent's funeral excuse on you?"

She snorted. "I was dumb and love-struck, but I'm no idiot," she said. "n.o.body ever had the stones to pull that one on me, at least not without an obituary in the paper as proof."

Eddie thumped the empty coffee mug against his forehead. No more grandma exemptions in cla.s.s.

Bobbi said, "When I was sick of scrubbing other women's body odors out of my man's undershirts, I swore that I wouldn't settle down until I had somebody I could trust."

"You can bet Henry won't be cruising the bars tonight."

"No, he'll be trying to keep from getting knifed," she said, suddenly shading toward serious. "I was looking for a man with golden character. I didn't expect to find him in the federal pen. A friend of mine came across this Web site that matches prisoners with pen pals around the country. It's run by an ex-con who learned computer programming in the joint. This guy posts letters from inmates on the Internet, so people like me can read them and decide if they want to write to one particular inmate or another. I noticed a bunch of letters from men in the prison in my town."

"Tough way to date," Eddie cracked. "The closest you can get to s.e.x is to both screw the same postman."

"It's not all about romance," she corrected. "It's about men desperate for some human contact outside those walls."

Something in her tone suggested that Eddie was being shallow with his wisecracks. Or maybe the suggestion had come from inside Eddie. Either way, he was embarra.s.sed. He tossed the empty mug onto the couch, sat on the piano bench and rubbed his eyes. "You're right, of course," he said, chastened. "So why did you decide to write to Henry?"

"His letter was different than the others."

"I'll bet."

"I could see that he was smart, though he didn't stick it in your face," she said. "He didn't use a lot of two-dollar words. Just made his point in clear language that I thought was pretty. He wanted somebody who traveled a lot, who could describe things for him, so he could travel, too. I'm surprised he even wrote me back. I mean-where do I ever go?"

"Why do you think he wrote you back?"

She laughed. "I smelled good."

"You told him so?"

"He liked the way my letter smelled. I didn't drench it in perfume or nothing-like I said, this wasn't about romance in the beginning-but whatever scent I was wearing on my wrist must have gotten on the note. Henry wrote me back to say it was...hmmm...how did he put it? The first time in nearly thirty years he had enjoyed a direct sensation of unchained humanity." She giggled. "For you and me it's such a little thing. A dab of perfume. Who cares? Henry Bourque cared. I knew that he wouldn't take one minute for granted if I gave him a little of my time. So we exchanged a couple notes, and then I invited myself for a visit. The question, 'My place or yours?' never came up." She giggled again.

Bobbi sounded happily drunk with the memory. Eddie pictured her beaming and twirling a finger in a lock of hair.

She whispered, "I try to remember if I loved him before I knew he was innocent, or did I start loving him after I figured it out."

"Might have happened at the same time."

"As good a theory as any."

"When did Henry tell you that he didn't do it?"

"He never told me."

Eddie sprang to his feet. "Never?" he asked.

She was calm. "He didn't do it."

"Right, sure, I know-but he never told you that he didn't?"

Bobbi, still calm, spoke slowly. "Your brother did not kill those people."

Eddie sat down. He heard Bobbi's breath. The enormity of her faith in Henry struck Eddie as he listened to her. She was the living proof that Henry was not a monster, for a monster cannot be loved. He smiled, marveling at this logic. Then Eddie's thoughts turned inward. If there was no monster, then Eddie Bourque could not share any monster's blood.

They finished with small talk about downtown restaurants and the forecast for sticky weather the rest of the week. Eddie promised to call as soon as he knew whether he had discovered a worthwhile lead. They hung up.

The General paced restlessly, sniffing table legs and chairs-things a million times sniffed.

Eddie scooped up the cat. "You bored, too? How about a movie?" He set the General on the coffee table, and then flipped through his video collection. "I got Casablanca and I got one of your tapes, MouseHouse, Part Two. Which one do you want?"

The General waited quietly on the table.

"You're right," Eddie said. "We've seen Casablanca a hundred times." Eddie pushed a tape into the machine, then refilled his coffee and reclined on the sofa.

On the screen, white mice zipped around, burrowing under cedar chips, squeaking, sniffing, rolling around on top of each other. They hid part-way in paper towel tubes so that just their fat little b.u.t.ts and wavering tails stuck out, then they disappeared into the tubes entirely, and tender pink twitchy noses appeared at the other end.

General VonKatz was enthralled. He shrank into a compact ma.s.s of muscle on a hair trigger. Occasionally he quivered and chattered at the on-screen villains. "What's the plot?" Eddie asked. "This is the problem with sequels-I missed the original MouseHouse, so now part two doesn't make any sense."

He checked the clock and sighed. Around twenty-two hours before the deed registry opened for business.

Chapter 18.

Colonial-era fieldstone walls, speckled with dry moss, marked the property line of the old Whistle farm in both directions, broken only for the driveway. Eddie checked the plot map he had copied from the deed registry. Yeah, this was the place. He had spent most of the day chasing paper on the farm. It had once belonged to Jimmy's parents, Ivan and Beatrice-that much had been easy to figure out, and Eddie had been shocked to learn that the forty-acre property still existed intact.

Its history over the past thirty years was muddled in divorce, three lawsuits, a probate fight over a disputed will, and two bankruptcies. The owner-of-record was a real estate holding company in Indiana, which bought the place at tax sale ten years ago, and had since undergone two reorganizations.

As far as Eddie could tell from the public record, the place had been vacant and untouched for a decade.

To find it, Eddie had driven deep into tiny Dunstable, Ma.s.s., north of Lowell near the New Hampshire line. The area was still rural, and the potholed street that led to the farm cut through woods thick with hundreds of sugar maples that bore the black scars from where they had been tapped for their sap. The floor of the forest was clogged with underbrush, dry leaves and downed trees, the softened wood rotting into soil to begin again the journey back into a living tree.

Eddie looked down the farm's long driveway-two parallel tracks of packed gray stonedust, a swathe of knee-high weeds between them. The entrance had been blocked long ago with three great sloping boulders, each now wearing a skirt of tall gra.s.s. The boulders would stop a tank, but not a motorcycle. Eddie eased The Late Chuckie's rat bike between the stones. He saw a shallow gully to his left, and steered the bike into it. From the road, the bike would be hidden and would not invite an investigation by any police patrol with nothing to do on a summer evening in the country.

Eddie hesitated a moment before he killed the bike's engine. If he had to leave in a hurry, would the bike cooperate? It never cooperated. Well, he couldn't just leave it idling. He shut down the machine.

The forest instantly tried to swallow him in silence.

He walked slowly down the driveway. The sound of his shoes crunching on the gravel seemed big enough to fill the whole farm. He caught a sweet whiff of Concord grapes, and paused. The grape vines were hugging a dying red oak. Eddie ran his hand along the vine, a stiff, ruddy-colored rope that shed papery little slivers. He tugged on it and startled a crow that cursed and fluttered off.

The driveway bent steadily to the left, then broadened into a teardrop-shaped hayfield cut from the woods. Golden wheat lay flat against the land. Three ramshackle buildings slouched in a line at the far end of the field. They had long ago been painted white, though the paint was now flaking off, exposing the weathered gray clapboard. The small building to the far left was a one-car garage, with a single swinging double-door, and a rusted weathervane on the roof. It sagged more dangerously than the other buildings, and looked like one hard shove would knock it over.

The building in the center was the farmhouse-a two-story cube with a fieldstone foundation, a wraparound porch and a dozen broken windows. A tattered yellow curtain on the second floor waved lazily in the breeze.

To the right was a monstrous barn of wide wooden planks, in better shape than the house and the garage. Newer maybe? The barn was two and a half stories tall, with a ma.s.sive sliding door on the ground level and an opening on the second floor for loading by winch. Two swallows sailed into the opening, and immediately three sailed out.

There were no signs that anyone had been here in years. No tire tracks, no footprints. How long would footprints last in the packed stonedust? Not long; his own were barely visible. Eddie pictured Henry striding across the wheat field, shining with sweat after an afternoon of pitching hay bales onto a flatbed truck.

"Henry? Now that the hay's in, these logs gotta be split to quarter rails, but I can't tell you where I put my husband's ax."

"Maybe he took it when he ran off, Mrs. Whistle."

"If that's the case, I don't want you finding that son-of-a-b.i.t.c.h and bringing him back here."

"No ma'am, I won't look too hard."

Eddie shook off the daydream. He had three buildings to search in only two hours of daylight. For a moment, he considered turning around. He could come back in the morning-with Detective Orr and a dozen of her well-armed friends. No, he decided, what happened here thirty years ago couldn't hurt him now.

Eddie started with the garage. Striding toward it, he came upon a ring of fieldstones, ten feet across, like the fire barrier around a big campfire. The stones marked the opening of a deep-water well. The shaft was smooth cobblestones. It sunk ten feet before it hit the waterline, and then kept going for at least another ten. The water was still and clear.

Stepping carefully away from the well, Eddie kicked something in the tall gra.s.s with a bang and startled himself. He searched the gra.s.s and found an old bucket of galvanized steel, on a long rusted chain. Had somebody been fetching water? Am I not alone?

Eddie whirled and looked into every window of the old farmhouse. He saw n.o.body. He spun in a circle and scanned the woods. His instincts insisted someone would be there, watching him, and Eddie was surprised to see no one. The wind cooled his brow like the touch of an old ghost. Eddie rubbed his arms.

This is stupid. There's n.o.body here.

He walked to the garage. The windows were coated with dust on the inside. Through the dust, Eddie could make out a tractor-sized vehicle under a canvas tarp. A padlock seized with rust fastened the door. There was no way into the garage short of cutting off the lock.

Eddie moved to the house. The mortar between the bas.e.m.e.nt stones was disintegrating into coa.r.s.e gray crumbs. Dry rot infested the clapboard. Squirrels had packed dried leaves in a hole in the eves. Eddie stepped onto the porch, heard the crack of rotted wood, and decided to check the barn.

The sliding barn door had rusted shut, but Eddie slipped easily into an opening in a wall where a plank was missing. The barn was strewn with antique hand tools: shovels, rakes, a pick, a wedged maul for splitting logs, a two-man saw with two-inch teeth. On a workbench Eddie found a kerosene lantern. It was an old-fashioned design, but seemed in good shape, the little mesh mantle intact within the gla.s.s. He shook it gently, heard fuel sloshing inside. He unlocked the lantern's fuel pump with a twist, and withdrew the short bra.s.s rod to be pushed in and out to pressurize the fuel. The pump was well oiled and slid easily. The rusted hand tools in the barn could have been untouched for thirty years. But not the lantern; it had been used recently. How recently? Eddie couldn't tell.

He put the lantern back, left the barn and explored the house.

The rotted porch was like a poorly camouflaged pit trap, but the floors inside the house seemed sound. The wind blew through the building like living breath, and the whole place creaked and moaned like an old man getting up in the morning.

The house held an abandoned collection of junk left to slowly disintegrate in the elements. Eddie searched the place, trying to picture the house as Henry would have seen it thirty years ago. Eddie imagined rooms full of Shaker style furniture, shelves lined with knick-knacks, milk cans stuffed with cut sunflowers, the smell of hot cardamom bread.

"Henry?"

"Yes, Mrs. Whistle?"

"I put chipped ice in the pitcher for you, little sugar in there with it. Take it outside and draw some water from the well for yourself."

"I'll get to it, ma'am."

"Don't you ma'am me. You need to drink if you expect to finish splittin' those rails in this heat."

"Amen to that, ma'am."

Eddie tugged open a door and discovered stairs leading down to a black hole. He didn't want to go down there, but the bas.e.m.e.nt was the last place he hadn't looked. He couldn't go down there without light.

Hmmmm...

Eddie hustled from the house, back to The Late Chuckie's rat bike. Rummaging through the saddlebags he found a book of matches-from the "Rump and Grind" gentlemen's club.

Chuckie, you h.o.r.n.y dog.

He trotted to the barn and grabbed the lantern. With a glance to the setting sun melting over the treetops, he ducked back into the house, to the bas.e.m.e.nt stairs. Kneeling with the lantern, Eddie pressurized the fuel with a dozen pumps. He struck a match and put the flame to the mantel. It lit with a gasp and then hissed steadily. The bright white light hurt to look at, and just a moment's glance at the flame left floating green spots before Eddie's eyes.

The wooden stairs groaned in surprise under Eddie's weight. Downstairs, the bas.e.m.e.nt floor was made of poured concrete. The walls were fieldstone, like those in the pictures of Roger Lime that the kidnappers had taken.

Eddie lifted the lantern to one of the walls.

This could be the one from the picture.

Any of them could have been.

The old house creaked above him. Eddie held the lantern at arm's length and followed it around the bas.e.m.e.nt. He felt its heat and listened to its hiss; it seemed like a living thing and it made Eddie feel less alone.

The bas.e.m.e.nt seemed to be a rectangle, with a plank-and-beam ceiling about six feet high. Eddie had to duck his head as he explored. There were scattered cobwebs between the ceiling posts. A fine white dust covered the floor. Eddie lowered the lantern. He saw footprints in the dust-the k.n.o.bby pattern of a workboot, and another pair with no tread at all, from a sock maybe? Eddie's face flushed. He compared the footprints with his own. His fresh footprints were sharper.