Read A Treasure to Die For Online
Authors: Richard Houston
Cory and Jennifer’s house was less than a block from Colfax. The old saying about birds of a feather came to mind. I saw beggars, drunks and prostitutes on almost every corner, despite the newer stores trying to reclaim the area.
I parked across the street from their house, and pretended to read a map. The yellow police tape and crime scene signs I expected to see didn’t exist. Nor were there any police cars parked in the driveway. I even checked up and down the street thinking the house might be under surveillance by an undercover team. Nothing. There were no unmarked cars, no vans, nothing that television cops use during a stakeout. Maybe real cops used cameras or satellites instead.
What was I thinking? I could feel my heart racing and blood pressure rising. Who would take care of Fred if I got caught or had a heart attack? “Calm down, Jake,” I said aloud.
Fred turned his head at an odd angle when I spoke. He had taken Bonnie’s seat after we dropped her off, and had been sleeping up until I had turned off on Colfax. I’m sure he would tell me I was a fool if he knew what I had in mind, for my plan to check the kids’ driveway for power-steering fluid started to look really dumb. Was it even necessary?
I had reasoned that since the Datsun was sitting in an impound lot and I couldn’t check it for a power-steering leak, the next best thing was to look for indirect evidence. My chances of getting away with snooping were much better here than in some impound lot, but I couldn’t simply walk over there and look for oil spots. Someone would surely see me, and my Jeep wouldn’t be hard to trace. I doubt if there were fifty of the old Wagoneers still registered in Colorado. And what if the police did have the house under surveillance?
When Fred started whining to be let out, I had my answer. I drove back to Colfax and parked in Casa Bonita’s lot. Fred and I could walk the three blocks back to the kids’ house, pretending to be locals out for a walk.
We hadn’t gone a block when an older couple stopped us. “What a good looking doggie. What’s your name, big fella?” The old man was bent over like a cartoon caricature and wasn’t much taller than Fred. He surprised me when he stuck his hand out to pet him, but then, Goldens seem to have that affect on people.
“Say hello to the nice man, Freddie.”
“That’s an odd name for a dog.” It was the old guy’s partner, who I assumed was his wife. The grip on her purse told me she still didn’t trust me.
“My ex named him. My daughter had her heart set on a Ginger, so when I brought home a male instead of a female puppy, my ex called him Fred, after Fred Astaire.”
She relaxed the grip on her purse and a smile began to form on her lips. “Now
that
was when they knew how to make movies, wasn’t it, Bill?”
Her husband looked up from shaking Fred’s paw. “Huh? Who’s moving?”
She ignored him and directed her answer to me. “Are you new to the neighborhood? I don’t think I’ve seen you before?” So much for being inconspicuous. Unless these two had a severe case of senility, they wouldn’t have any problem whatsoever picking us out of a police lineup.
“No. The wife wanted to browse one of those second-hand stores on Colfax, and Fred needed some exercise.”
“Well, be careful, young man. I’d hate to see that beautiful dog get hurt. The neighborhood isn’t what it used to be. There was a time we didn’t even lock our doors and knew all our neighbors. Now they come and go so quickly, we don’t even know half their names.”
“Like those kids who got killed down the street,” Bill cut in. Obviously, his hearing was selective, like my father’s used to be when he would tune out my mother’s nagging.
I tried to act shocked. “Two kids on this block were killed?”
“On the next block, but it wasn’t here they were murdered. Up in the mountains somewhere,” said his wife, who evidently realized I wasn’t a purse snatcher by now, as she no longer held onto hers with both hands.
“Cops all over the place,” Bill said before his wife could finish. “They went door to door asking all kinds of strange questions.”
Oh, how I wanted to ask what kind of questions. Luckily, I didn’t have to. “Yeah, like had we noticed any suspicious activity,” Bill’s wife said.
“Any activity on this block is suspicious,” Bill added before his wife had time to speak again. Like my own parents, these two must have been married forever. Either that or they were Siamese twins at one time, because they answered each other’s questions like they were joined at the hip.
“Well, they were wasting their time, and that’s exactly what I told the detective,” the wife continued. “I told him it had to be somebody like that lady Mr. Renfield says did it because Shelia killed her daughter.”
“Now, June, we don’t know that. How could someone our age dump those kids in a mine?”
The wife, I now knew as June, gave her husband a look before continuing, the kind of look my sister used to give when she knew something I didn’t. “She had an accomplice, that’s how. Mary at the beauty parlor says she’s been hanging out with a younger man who must have helped her. And Mary should know. Her son is a Jeffco deputy.”
My eyes must have come close to popping out of their sockets. I prayed my blood pressure didn’t complete my exposé by making my face red, too.
“This young man doesn’t want to hear your beauty shop gossip.”
Oh, but I did. I almost said so when her cell phone went off. She pulled out an ancient phone from her purse and flipped it open. I bit my tongue, waved goodbye, and left before I said something to incriminate myself.
***
My blood pressure was back to normal once Fred and I were within sight of the kids’ house. I stopped to let Fred sniff a telephone pole between the street and sidewalk. I casually looked back up the street in time to see the couple turn the corner onto Colfax.
Fred spotted a stick on the grass and nearly pulled me off my feet when he jerked the leash to get the stick. That’s when my plan came together. All I had to do was let Fred off his leash and pretend to play fetch. I’d throw the stick up the kids’ driveway and follow Fred so I could check for oil leaks. It should look innocent enough to any nosy neighbors who might be watching as they’d think it was a badly aimed throw.
Unfortunately, my toss was way off. Instead of the stick landing in the driveway, it sailed over a short, chain-link fence, separating the drive from the backyard. Like the rest of the house, repairs were long overdue. The gate to the yard had been torn off and lying on the ground, so Fred ran past the spot I wanted to examine and into the yard when he went after the stick. He didn’t seem to care that he was trespassing.
Pretending to tie my shoe, I stopped short of the fence, and kneeled down. Sure enough, there was a puddle of fresh, red oil less than a foot ahead of the darker spots left by the engine.
“Come on Fred. Get out of there,” I called out, now that I found what we had come for. He ignored me and began rolling around on the ground.
“Get your butt over here right now!” This time I said it loud enough that the next door neighbor peeked out between her broken Venetian blinds.
Fred picked a great time to let his instincts take control. I knew there was either a dead animal or something that came out the rear of one. He could be totally disgusting when he wanted. I made a display of showing his leash, for the benefit of the neighbor, and went in the backyard to get him. That’s when I saw he wasn’t the creature I’d accused him of being. It wasn’t a dead animal or some by-product of one. Fred had the evidence Bonnie and I needed to avoid lethal injection.
He found a plastic garbage bag that had been torn open by a scavenger. The rotting garbage must have been irresistible to Fred. Rolling in foul-smelling feces might have been great to cover his ancestor’s scent when hunting, but the only animal Fred hunted was a squirrel he couldn’t catch, no matter how bad he smelled.
Instead of scolding him, I ended up giving him praise when I saw the green tee-shirt with a Marine Corp label and the name, Appleton, printed on it. It looked like it had been used to wipe up blood. I no sooner picked it up when Bonnie’s manicure kit fell out. It had been wrapped up in the bloody shirt. At least I assumed it was hers. I noticed the initials, BMJ, printed in gold cursive on the case when I opened it. Inside the case were a small pair of scissors, a couple nail clippers, a tweezer, and some other tools I didn’t recognize. It looked like everything a woman would need to trim her fingernails, except for a file.
***
Fred and I hadn’t gone a block on our way back to my Jeep when I saw the neighbor who had been watching us, leave her house and knock on Renfield’s door. It was time to start jogging. My mind screamed, run, but that would really make me look guilty, so I pretended I was giving my dog some exercise with a leisurely jog.
No one seemed to be following us, so when we got to Colfax I stopped jogging to catch my breath. Only then did I realize my charade had backfired when I saw several people waiting at a bus stop watching us. I realized no serious jogger in his right mind would be caught running in long Levis and hiking boots. The onlookers were probably wondering what I was running from. I prayed their bus would show up before the police did.
Fortunately, we only had another two blocks to go before we could get in our Jeep, and be out of there before Renfield or the police came looking for us. Unfortunately, that wasn’t going to happen. I spotted a Lakewood police car blocking my Jeep once we passed the bus stop. The officer was standing by my car saying something into his portable radio.
I turned up Pierce Street and kept walking past the parking lot. I couldn’t believe Renfield had called the cops already. How had he known what I was driving?
We stopped once we were out of sight behind the Dollar Store, hoping no one at the bus stop had seen me park the car half an hour ago. I wasn’t too worried about the street people. Most of them probably had warrants of their own and wouldn’t want anything to do with the police. Other than the bus people, my fear was that a customer, or staff member in one of the stores, would recognize me or Fred. They might deem it their civic duty to tell the cop they had just seen me walk by.
I waited a few minutes then peeked around the building. The cop was placing a ticket on the car next to my Jeep.
“I’ll bet you were ready to wet your pants, Jake.” Bonnie said when I told her about the Lakewood police officer the next morning. We were sitting on her deck drinking coffee, or I should say,
I
was drinking coffee. I had slept in and Bonnie already had her quota for the day, but insisted on making coffee, even though she didn’t want any more, and Fred preferred water.
“I wouldn’t go that far, but I did say a prayer.”
“A prayer?”
“Yes, I promised God if he got me out of this one that I’d go to church every Sunday.”
“And you’ve already broken your promise. Do you want to go to hell? You can’t do that, Jake. You don’t want to fool with the Lord.”
“I’ll start next week, Bon, I promise. Just as soon as I find a church that allows pets.”
“Jake!”
“Okay. How about I join the church of C and E?”
“I never heard of that. Is it Christian?”
“Christmas and Easter, of course it’s Christian.”
Bonnie laughed. “You’re incorrigible, Jake.”
“You win, Bon. Wake me next Sunday and I’ll go with you. I wouldn’t want to spend eternity in hell when Julie’s in heaven. I just hope Saint Peter lets Fred in, too.”
Bonnie poured me more coffee from the carafe on the table then lit a cigarette. “Well, I’m glad Fred got my manicure kit back before the police found it.”
I had told her how Fred found her kit, and about my paranoia about seeing the cop by my Jeep, but I never mentioned the conversation with Bill and June. I didn’t want to upset her with beauty parlor gossip. It could have been from before Appleton confessed, for all I knew, and telling Bonnie that we were both suspects could wait until I checked it out.
“We need to tell them, Bon, or we will be guilty of withholding evidence. The fact that it was wrapped in Appleton’s shirt should prove you had nothing to do with the murder.”
Bonnie looked like she’d just felt a spider crawl up her leg. “Have you forgotten it was missing a file? What if it’s my file that was used to kill Shelia? Please don’t tell them about it, Jake. Please?”
“What if there are prints they can trace to the killer?”
“Oh my God! I never thought of that. Can they get prints off of glass?”
“Glass?” I asked, wondering what she was talking about.
“The file, Jake. It’s glass.” She stopped long enough to roll her eyes. “And my name, now that I think of it.”
Suddenly her eyes lit up like one of those new LED light bulbs. “That means it wasn’t my nail file that killed Shelia. My name is on the plastic handle. Margot had it ordered special for my sixty-ninth birthday. If it were my file, they would have arrested me by now.”
Talk about being stuck between a rock and a hard place. I needed to tell the cops about the shirt before someone cleaned the garbage from the kids’ yard and destroyed crucial evidence. It was against my better judgment, but I didn’t have the heart to say no.
“Okay, I’ll call in an anonymous tip telling them where to find the shirt, but I think we’re making a big mistake by not telling them about the manicure kit.”
“You left the shirt?”
“Of course I left the shirt. They would never believe I found it there otherwise.”
She seemed to consider my statement before she spoke again. “I would have never thought of that. Are you sure you weren’t a crook in a different life?”
When I only smiled and didn’t say anything, she continued. “But why tell them anything? I don’t see how that shirt proves anything.”
“Remember when I thought Craig had an accomplice who must have picked him up from Three Sisters after he left Appleton there?”
“So?”
“There’s a very good chance Cory was that accomplice. He practically lives next door to Craig, so they must have known each other. I’m sure forensics will match the blood on the tee-shirt to that on Appleton’s deck.”
I took a breath and drank my coffee before continuing. “That is, if Fred didn’t contaminate the evidence when he rolled in all the garbage. There was some really stinky stuff in there.”
Fred looked up, then laid his head back between his outstretched paws when I didn’t acknowledge him.
Bonnie raised her cigarette to her lips, but paused before taking another drag. “I know you would like to see Renfield hang, but did you ever consider it was Cory and Jennifer who killed Shelia and Appleton? Why else would they have the bloody shirt and my manicure kit?”
I wanted to tell her about Jennifer’s poetry, but then I’d have to mention the unborn child and Bonnie was already too upset. “Maybe Cory was keeping those for insurance, or blackmail. I don’t know why, Bon. All I know is Jennifer had nothing to do with any of it.”
Bonnie blew a perfect smoke circle and watched it float away. “Then how do you explain my manicure kit? I’ll bet that little thief lifted it out of my purse at the signing. No, Jake, she’s in it with that boyfriend of hers, or was. I keep forgetting they’re both dead now.”
I couldn’t argue with her logic, and realized Jennifer’s poetry may have affected my judgment. “Assuming you’re right, and I’m not agreeing with you, I’m simply thinking out loud, let’s say she
did
steal the kit from your purse. That would explain how it ended up in her trash. And if it was her and Cory who killed Appleton then there should be the telltale oil spot from the Datsun at his cabin.”
Bonnie beamed like a child with a new toy. “We should check the cabin to see if the Datsun’s been there.”
“I suppose it won’t hurt to drive by. We could stop on the way back from giving our statements.”
“Do we have to, Jake?”
“It’s already Tuesday; White isn’t going to wait much longer.”
“Let’s go after we check out the oil spot. If we find one then maybe you can tell him about the shirt.”
She had a point. There’s no such thing as an anonymous tip since public phone booths went the way of Superman. All other phones can be traced. “No, not the shirt. I’ll have to think of some other way they can discover it. Like I said they will think I planted it to cover our tracks at the cabin. I might as well walk in and sign a confession in triplicate.”
***
We were almost to Conifer when I began to have my doubts; sooner or later the cops would be searching Appleton’s cabin and asking his neighbors questions. We got lucky the first time we went there. The only person other than Margot who knew we were at the cabin was the author Paul Wilson, and he seemed to have bought my story.
I was driving Bonnie’s Cherokee with her in the passenger seat and Fred’s big head resting on the center divider. The rest of his body was in the back seat. “This is stupid, Bon,” I said without taking my eyes off the road. “Someone might see us.”
“I already took care of that, Jake. Why do you think my Cherokee is so dirty?”
“Because you went four wheeling yesterday?”
“No, silly. Because I made it look dirty. I’ll finish the job just before we get there with a bucket of mud I brought along to complete the subterfuge. It’s a trick Greg used to do, back when we were young and poor. He covered his plates with mud so the cops wouldn’t see they were expired.”
I had to smile. “My dad told me stories about doing the same thing, only it backfired on him. The cop who pulled him over said the mud was a red flag, and he would have never noticed the expired plate otherwise. It’s the oldest trick in the book.”
Bonnie thought about it for a while before answering. “Then I’ll only cover a few numbers and leave the sticker visible.”
“What do you think, Fred? Think the mud on the plate ploy will work?” Fred’s head had been turning like a spectator at a tennis match. He followed whoever was speaking at the moment. When he answered by barking once, I took it as a yes. Sometimes I think he actually understands what we are talking about.
We pulled over at the Pine Junction Country Store so Bonnie could run in for cigarettes while I smeared mud on the plates. She stopped before getting out and turned to me. “Are you going to tell White if we find the Datsun was there? I mean, it would prove the kids knew Appleton, and if the blood on the shirt is his, well then…”
“The kids probably killed him,” I finished her thought after she paused too long. “I should, but then I’d have to tell him about our little break-in. No, we’ll just have to hope their forensics can put the pieces together after they find the shirt.”
“Thanks, Jake. Margot would kill me if you told White without her lawyer present,” she said before going into the store.
The only other person in the parking lot held the door for her then followed her inside. It was my chance to cover the plates. I didn’t leave any numbers visible because it wasn’t going to fool the police, and I didn’t want any nosy neighbors getting a partial.
***
Bonnie laughed at me when I turned onto Appleton’s road and told her I had heard of cases where they traced a car with only one letter or number by matching it with the make and model. She started to say something about my imagination when we saw several sheriffs’ vehicles and a CBI truck in Appleton’s drive. I kept on going, hoping they didn’t notice the mud on our plates.
“Wow, that was close,” I said after parking around the bend where we couldn’t be seen. I left the engine running in case we had to make a quick getaway.
She had her pack of cigarettes out and was playing with the seal. “Did you see that huge truck? What on earth do you suppose that is?”
“CBI, according to the sign on the door.”
“It took them long enough,” she said.
I put the Jeep back in gear and slowly pulled back onto the road. “Lucky for us. If they hadn’t been sidetracked by the fake suicide, they might have sent the forensics’ team out before we had a chance to wipe our prints.”
***
Neither of us spoke again until I was back at the intersection of 285 and waiting for the light to turn. It had taken a little time to find a road that didn’t go past Appleton’s cabin. I tried using Lucy, my GPS, but would have had better luck asking Fred. I gave up after Lucy couldn’t get a signal, and stumbled on to Highway 74, which I knew would take us to 285.
“Let’s forget about giving any statement today, Bon. Maybe you need Margot’s lawyer after all,” I said, pulling out into traffic when the light finally changed.
She put the pack of cigarettes she had been holding back in her purse. “You won’t get any argument from me.”
I was about to answer but was side-tracked when I noticed a semi-truck in my rear-view mirror barreling down on us. The driver had run a red light, and was about to turn us into road kill. I couldn’t switch lanes because another car was already in the fast lane, so I quickly swerved toward the shoulder and came to a stop.
Bonnie waved a single finger and yelled out a few choice words to the reckless driver when he went speeding by.
I crossed myself before turning to her. “This is one time I don’t care if you smoke the whole pack, Bon. What was that guy thinking?” I asked before turning around to check on Fred.
“Oh, crap. That’s all we need now.” Fred was fine, but pulling in behind me was a State Patrol car with its lights flashing.