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Authors: Gregg Olsen

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Chapter Eighteen

The homicide and arson investigators didn't have it easy--even when they knew Claire Logan had probably advertised for her victims in a military newspaper. They needed to know more than just how, who, and when. The "why" would be helpful, too. But the crime scene was vast and the number of victims was unlike anything anyone had ever seen. Only a cop who had worked an apartment fire in Detroit that killed thirty-one had even the remotest point of personal reference. The Logan house and outbuildings had, for the most part, been reduced to ash. The fire that ignited as children across the world dreamed of Santa and presents had burned so hot that no pour patterns survived the inferno. Investigators picked through the rubble in search of clues. Shards of metal and the coils of several mattresses survived, as did the burned-out remnants of the kitchen-- a stove, a refrigerator, the ghostly web of a hanging rack for pots and pans. Jeff Bauer observed the police criminalists as they carefully bagged the charred remains of Claire Logan's house. It was tedious, mundane work and, with the snow against the blackened debris, oddly reminiscent of the old black-and-whites shot at some early twentieth-century disaster like the 1906 earthquake in San Francisco.

From the burned deadfall of Claire Logan's house, one investigator recovered the blackened and burned figure of what appeared to be an infant. Horror seized him and he called for the others to help while he gingerly cleared away the debris and rubble that nestled the baby's blackened body. Then he saw the baby's black face peer from a hole in the debris, its small mouth appearing to cry out in a scream that no one could hear. The crime scene investigator started to laugh--a soft, then loud rolling laugh, the kind meant to get attention.

"It's a doll," he said. "It's just a goddamn kid's baby doll!"

And it was. A swarm of men in yellow slickers gathered to laugh, too. The kind of laughter that firemen know, and police officers, and EMTs, and even reporters with strong stomachs and the crime beat: the laughter of relief.

The investigator later told a newsman, "After all that we found out there in the fire and out in the earth, I started to expect the worst. What's another dead baby to this nightmare? Makes my heart sick, those little boys died there."

Scraps of wood, including a doorframe, the piano, and the floorboards that were pinned under the piano, were sent back East for examination. While the murder of the boys, the woman, and the men found in the ground at the Logan farm were the focus of the growing investigation, the arson was also of critical importance. Speculation ran through town that Claire Logan and Marcus Wheaton had been in on the blaze together. It seemed from statements he made that he protected her, might have even loved her. Della Holm, the postmistress, beat that drum to her customers as they came to the post office to send back gifts that hadn't suited them. Others gossiped, too. As Bauer and others continued digging--literally and figuratively--they learned more details about the woman and her connection to the one-eyed, son-of-a-bitch slob who was locked up at the jail.

One woman called Bauer at the Whispering Pines Motel and told him the story of the time Claire gave her a ride home from work. She did not want to give her name.

"I needed a job and Claire gave me one. I twisted cedar garland for most of October through December and I was good at it. She said my garland was flawless. She was nice to me. One night when my car wouldn't start, Claire offered to give me a ride home. Her husband was dead by then. Just after we got onto the highway we hit a deer. I remember the jolt and how the doe lurched to the side of the road. The deer was still alive and making this awful noise, kind of a gurgling sound. Anyway, Claire turned off the car and reached over me to the glove box and grabbed a hunting knife. I saw a gun in the glove box. You know that little light? Well I could see the gun very plainly. Anyway, she got outside and grabbed the deer's head like she was going to hug the poor thing, then took that knife and slit its throat. She started screaming and I was freaking out. I didn't blame her. But you know why she was screaming? The deer sprayed blood on her jacket. She was mad at the deer. And I said, 'Claire, why didn't you just shoot it? You got a gun.' And she turns to me and kind of smiles a weird smile. 'I was pretending it was my husband and I wanted to feel him die.' Then she laughs and I started laughing. I don't even know why I'm laughing, except for the fact that she is. I thought it was pretty cold killing that deer the way she did. A bullet through the head would have been quicker."

Bauer wrote his thoughts in a report he knew he'd probably never officially file. He wasn't a forensic psychiatrist; he was a federal cop and his job was to catch a killer, not profile one. Even so, he kept a notebook of observations that he hoped would help him find young Hannah's mother:

Claire Logan is a classic loner. Her pleasant facade masks a bitter and angry woman. No one is good enough; no one is worth anything. Her ambitions and desires take precedence over all others and their needs and wants. She has no close friends. Her only living family member appears to be an older sister. Her first husband died in an accident, and there was some suspicion of Claire's possible involvement. None was proven. She was--is--a very controlling woman. With the exception of Marcus Wheaton, she's never been able to retain an employee longer than a single Christmas season. Those who knew her insist that she was brilliant, abrasive, and full of grandiosity when it came to her business and her lifestyle.

A week after the remnants of the Logan house were flown in a commercial aircraft's cargo hold to the labs at Quantico, word came back to Bauer and the others working the case that an accelerant had, in fact, been used to burn down the house. Significant traces of acetone were found on the doorframe and floorboards. The piano, however, was clean. This puzzled Bauer at first, until he remembered the original location of the piano-- the
second
floor. Bauer felt a chill. The brave little girl had been the final intended victim.

The volunteer fire department's pump truck had arrived eleven minutes after the call--a remarkable, an
incredible
, response for a rural area, but the two-story farmhouse was already a blazing shell when the team arrived. They said it looked like the sun had crash-landed on Icicle Creek Farm. As the steam rose from the spray of their hoses, they knew little property and no people could have survived such an intense fire. Oddly, like a blackened monument, it was the piano that stood alone in the center of the debris. And as the days passed, that monolithic burned-out instrument commanded the most attention. The piano was of considerable interest because the bodies of the two boys and the headless woman had been sandwiched between it and the floor.

Further chemical microscopic analysis revealed an abundance of cellulose and mica particles found in the area under the piano. At first it was thought to be packing material, but a sharp-witted chemist put two and two together--the chemicals
and
the business of the tree farm. The acetone and the cellulose were two components of Christmas-tree flocking material. The cellulose provided the puffy white bulk of the spray and the mica added silvery sparkles that some revelers found especially festive. Hannah Logan had told investigators that she had seen Wheaton with the sno-gun that night...and as she felt around in the smoke, she touched a coating of spray flocking on the hallway and the stairs. Bauer theorized that Wheaton used the flocking to increase the speed of the fire. Traces of kerosene were also identified.

A photo lineup showing Marcus Wheaton's one-eyed mug among five others (his lawyer would argue that the lineup was unfair because each of the other men had two eyes) got a positive identification from a salesman for Cascade Floral, Inc., a Portland wholesaler. Beyond mums and roses for the floral trade, the company specialized in supplies for Northwest tree growers. Among their product lines were various brands of cellulose and rayon flocking. When the FBI agent showed up to ask about the various products they sold, the counter salesgirl tried to sell him on buying rayon over cellulose.

"Half the price, twice the markup," she said, assuming he was there to place an order for his own farm and tree lot. "It fluffs nicely. Looks very real."

The agent explained that he wasn't a grower in search of flocking, but an FBI agent looking for answers. He didn't say which crime. But the girl seemed to know. She pressed the "call" button of the intercom mounted next to her telephone and summoned her manager. A minute later, a short butterball of a man emerged from his corner office and confirmed that Icicle Creek Farm was a customer.

"Not a big customer, but steady," he said. "Paid on time and always took the two percent cash discount. Could use more like Icicle Creek."

It took the manager all of ten seconds to identify Wheaton.

"His is a face you'd never forget," he said, using the eraser end of a pencil to indicate the Icicle Creek Farm's handyman.

Several days into the LOMURS investigation, the first of what would eventually become scores of Claire Logan "sightings" made the broadcast airwaves. Sheriff Howe and Bauer were drinking coffee when a deputy came in and told them to turn on the old TV that sat on a shelf above departmental service awards and certificates for community involvement.

"Quick! She's on the tube. Flip on channel six!"

"Who?" the sheriff asked.

"Claire Logan!" the deputy replied, pushing past the round table with the morning's paper and an overloaded ashtray. He turned the knob and rolled the dial to Channel Six. An attractive female reporter in a tan raincoat and a robin's-egg-blue scarf stood in slushy snowfall gripping a microphone and pointing to a strip mall twenty yards behind her. Despite the frigid air, her hands were bare. Her showy lacquered talons couldn't be contained in gloves.

"...police responded after a Salem woman reportedly spotted Logan at this washateria just west of the university..."

Bauer and Howe were flabbergasted. Both wondered what the Salem police thought they were doing talking to the media. Why hadn't they bothered to notify the Spruce County authorities, not to mention the FBI?

"What the hell?" Howe said. Anger showed on his face. Even his ears were dipped in red. He slammed his fist on the table with such force that a weaker man would have yelped. "Get that cocksucker Reid on the line," he barked at the deputy. "RIGHT NOW!"

The deputy spun around and went for the phone.

Chuck Reid was the police chief for Salem, Oregon's capital, a jurisdiction that was big on pulling over boozedup legislators, busting hookers on the stroll, and cleaning up the vices that appear to go hand in hand with government work. Violent crime wasn't a part of the mix. Not usually. And criminals the likes of Claire Logan were never caught in places like Salem. Just didn't happen.

The TV reporter asked a woman of about thirty what she had seen. The woman held a baby with curly brown hair to her shoulder and rocked back and forth as she spoke.

"It was her, all right," she said. "I saw her picture on the news and the next thing I knew she was standing in line with me waiting for the change girl at the Laundromat. It was Claire Logan... I'm sure of it."

As the reporter interjected little pieces of the story, the number of the dead, the missing money, and the fact that what was purported to be Claire's body had been destroyed, the deputy hurried back into the room.

"Got Chief Reid on the line." The deputy's eyes bulged. "Says he's sorry. And sounds like he means it."

Bauer watched as Sheriff Bob Howe let the police chief of Salem have it with both barrels. His Andy Griffith demeanor vanished in an instant, and for a split second it looked as if he were going to tear the roof off the jail. But Bauer thought it was justified--every word Sheriff Howe uttered Bauer could have easily echoed.

"We've got a major investigation here, Reid. I know sure as hell you've been reading the papers and watching television news. We've got bodies stacked up in our gymnasium, for crying out loud. And you guys do this without so much as a phone call? What the hell are you doing... grabbing a bit of glory for yourselves?!"

After half a minute's tirade, complete with spittle foaming the corners of his mouth, the sheriff grew quiet and appeared to listen to Reid. Another minute passed and he ended the dialogue. "Talk to you later," he said. His tone was congenial, without being apologetic. His ears were no longer red.

"It wasn't Claire Logan the woman saw doing her laundry. It was a local gal with the friends to prove it. The alias wasn't an alias, after all. She left her goddamn wallet at home. That idiot from Channel Six pushed a story out there when she already knew better."

"Not the first time that's happened," Bauer muttered. Despite allowing the woman's body from under the piano to be cremated, he liked Sheriff Howe.

Later, a ticket taker reported seeing Claire Logan at a bus station in Portland; a jealous woman reported her husband's mistress was Claire; and a woman from Rock Point was sure she saw Claire at the Fred Meyer on Colfax Avenue. If the woman from Rock Point got away with murder, she didn't go unnoticed. At least it seemed that way.

Was she dead or not? Had she engineered the most astonishing disappearance in criminal history? The FBI broke tradition, and for the first time since Clyde Barrow's love and partner in crime, Bonnie Parker, and a San Francisco antiwar protester/fire bomber named Colleen Deming, a woman's name was added to the FBI's Most Wanted List.

Della Holm, the Rock Point postmistress, hung the poster all over the tiny post office.

"Local girl makes good," she said to customers.

Chapter Nineteen

A woman who appeared to be at least fifty, certainly old enough to know that her bird legs and paunchy tummy didn't qualify her to wear the short skirt she had on, approached the front desk of the Whispering Pines Motel. Never mind that the ensemble was ludicrous for Oregon in the winter (and probably, given the conservative nature of that part of the state, wrong in any season). She lugged a purse the size of an overnight bag. She knew who she was looking for; she'd seen the fellow on the news the night before. The young FBI agent from Portland was standing there checking his messages. She'd come in person to deliver hers.

"Mr. Bauer?" she asked.

Bauer felt a chill down his spine as he turned around to face Marcus Wheaton's mother, Liz. Her voice had a husky, steeped in bourbon, quality. He, too, had heard her on the news the night before.

"Liz Wheaton," she said, extending her hand. "I got the message that you wanted to see me about my son. So here I am. And you know what I want to tell you?" She steamrolled ahead. "I want to tell you what you need to know to get this whole damn thing over with."

Bauer shook her hand. It was as cold as a crab claw. "Hello, Mrs. Wheaton," he said, "I'm glad to see you. Is this a good time to talk?"

The motel manager looked on. His eyes bulged. "I wouldn't be here if it wasn't. Actually," she added, "it is not a good time. But here I am. I am a mother and that's why I'm here. Mr. Bauer, my son might be a lot of things--fat, stupid, lazy, ugly.
Whatever
. But he is not-- and hear me loudly and clearly--a murderer."

"I see," Bauer said. "Let's sit down." He motioned to a corner by the pop machine and the day-old Danishes left over from the free continental breakfast.

"Let's not and just say we did." Her voice was harder-edged in person than on TV when she was whining about her son being railroaded. "I want you to know that Marcus is a good boy, a decent young man. If he were killing those men and had killed those two little boys, I'd have known about it. I am his mother, for Christ's sake. I know my son! He could never hide anything like that from me."

The manager pretended to read the day's paper while he listened to every word. Bauer longed for a private room with a stenographer and a yellow pad.

"Mrs. Wheaton," Bauer said, "supposing you tell me what your son had to do with the fire and the murders. He was there, you know."

"Of course he was there." Her voice was rising and her pumps were digging into the Berber carpet like cat claws. "He worked for that bitch-on-wheels, Claire Logan. And like I told you, he was stupid. He was in love with her. Get it? She was the woman of his dreams. Don't ask me why. Don't even try to explain it. I told him over and over that she was just using him. 'Go to town and get this! Harvest twenty-five more trees before lunch. Clean the goat barn!' She had him on a string ten feet long!"

"I see. He was in love with her?"

Mrs. Wheaton set her suitcase-size handbag on a chair and stooped to fish through it for a lipstick. Sample-size containers of all kinds spilled out. She scooped them up, grabbed the shade she wanted, and started applying it to her thin lips, going over the edge to make them fuller. All the while talking.

"Mesmerized is more like it. Claire Logan mesmerized him. And for what? She's knocking off all these old guys for their money, life insurance, I bet, and what is he getting? Nothing. He's getting screwed. She screwed him big time. She left my boy and flew the coop."

"How do you know that? I mean how do you know she's not dead?"

"Listen, I know. I know because I've met Claire a time or two. Been out to the place. Met the kids. Poor Erik and Danny. I feel bad about the kids, I really do. I have a soft spot in my heart for kids," she said.

I bet you do,
Bauer thought.
Real good with kids, aren't you
. "What do you mean? What about Claire Logan makes you think she's not dead?"

Liz Wheaton hoisted her purse from the chair seat. "Because she's as cold as a witch's tit in a brass bra. She's like some reptile. All Claire cares about is money. She'd do anything for money.
Trust me
. I know the type."

With that she turned around and walked out the door.

Three doors down from the mortuary was the main local branch of the Oregon State Bank. A phone call made by Bauer that afternoon had secured an appoint- ment with Darwin Graves, the bank manager. Graves was a pleasant fellow with a moon face speckled with acne scars. He smelled of Clearasil and Head & Shoulders shampoo. He wore a brown knit tie and a plaid shirt, rolled up to the elbows.

"I can't give you any records," Graves said, ushering Bauer into his office.

Bauer was nonplussed. It was part of the game. "I understand," he said. "I'll get a subpoena here tomorrow."

"All I can do is confirm whether she had an account here or not."

"She," of course, was Claire Logan.

"That will be fine."

Graves flipped through a manila folder. If it was meant to telegraph that he had more to say about Claire Logan and her accounts at Oregon State, then it worked like a charm.

"She doesn't," the bank manager said.

"Did she ever have an account here?"

"Not now, but ever? At any time?"

"Yes, that's what I mean."

"She did." Graves looked down at the folder. "Not now, not
anymore
, but she did."

"When? When did she close it?"

Again a slight stall. "Recently," he said.

"How recently?"

"I don't want to say. I could probably get in trouble for this. You know, without the subpoena, the banking ethics guys will get on me. We have rules, you know."

"I know," Bauer said, though he sometimes hated the rules. He understood the reason for them. "This is a major investigation. Your help could turn out to be vital to solving this crime."

Graves' face went white. "I'll tell you that she no longer has an account here. Hasn't had one since she closed it on December twenty-third. All of her money is gone. Cleaned out."

"Was the amount substantial?" Bauer asked.

"I'm really not going to say anything more. I can think of two hundred thousand reasons not to." He nodded in the direction of the door, satisfied with his own cleverness. "You have a nice day and good luck on the case. Claire's kids were very well behaved. So sorry to hear about her boys. Very, very nice little boys. Hope the girl will come out of this all right."

As the pair walked toward the door, Graves leaned over to whisper in Bauer's ear.

"She's got an account at First Oregon, too. On Cherry Street next to the Marcie's Silver Spoon. Ben Rafferty is the manager. Don't tell him I sent you."

An hour later, Rafferty, a dolt with half the intellect of his banking colleague Graves, outlined the same story to Bauer. Claire Logan had cleaned out her account on the same day. Her account totaled more than $220,000.

"She was in a hurry when she came in. We didn't have much time to chat, but she said she was going to invest in her farm," he said. "Too bad it burned down. Kind of ironic, if you ask me."

"That's one way of looking at it," Bauer said. "Thanks for your help."

"No problem," Rafferty said. "You want the stuff she left in her box? I know the rules, but you're making me feel like she's never coming back."

"I don't know that," Bauer said. "But what stuff?"

"Some paperwork," he said, walking over to the vault to retrieve the contents of another of Claire Logan's safe deposit boxes. "If you're looking for an escape plan, you're out of luck. I'll get it for you."

A moment later, Rafferty appeared with an oversized envelope. It was curled in a U-shape from being held in the narrow box.

Bauer opened the envelope and pulled out some papers. It took only a moment to realize what they were.

Jesus
, he thought.
What am I supposed to do with this
?

Later that day, Bauer dropped the packet off with Veronica Paine. She was at her office; a ceramic tree fitted with twinkling lights sat on a small table between two visitors' chairs. The room was cool. The heat had been kept off for the holidays.

"This belongs with you, I'd say," Bauer said. "Doesn't apply to anything I'm doing. And I doubt the sheriff should have it."

"I'm intrigued," she said. She smiled and took the packet. She put on her stylish readers and scanned the documents, pulling one after another and placing them face down on her office desk. She looked up at Bauer. Her face went from quizzical to concerned.

"I'm glad that you brought this to me. I'm taking this to Judge Wells. This is going to be sealed."

The greatest disappointment of the Logan case happened so slowly that no one recognized it until it enveloped them like a dense fog, quiet and omnipresent. Law enforcement had discovered three obvious murder victims in the house, and seventeen bodies in various states of decomposition planted in two areas of the property. An extensive search employing a backhoe and infrared analysis turned up no other lime-stewed corpses or rotting hotspots.
Twenty dead
. The problem with the case was that the autopsies of the two boys showed they had been poisoned with sodium cyanide and were dead
before
the fire consumed so much of their flesh. The fire, probably started by Marcus Wheaton, had not killed them. While he theoretically could be charged with their murder, it was a poor case. Nothing could connect him with poisoning the boys. For a time, Spruce County prosecutor Veronica Paine thought she'd try, but she knew only too well that a loss would mean that the victims of Oregon's worst mass murder or serial homicide (the debate raged for a decade,
which was it?
) would go without retribution.

After talking with Liz Wheaton, Bauer came to accept the possibility that her son had been duped by a very clever, if not diabolical, woman. Not that torching a house with the bodies of two little kids and some woman wasn't a horrendous deed, but Bauer doubted whether the hefty, one-eyed man was really a killer. An accomplice, maybe, but a killer? After all, Bauer reasoned, the bodies started disappearing before Wheaton came to work for Claire Logan. Several years before. Since autopsies revealed that the missing military men had been poisoned with cyanide in the same manner as Erik and Danny Logan, it was clear that it could not be proven that Wheaton had a hand in the murders. Coupled with the fact that the only living witness, Hannah Logan, never saw Wheaton do anything other than spread the flocking. It was only an arson case.

Almost one month into the investigation, Paine telephoned Bauer at the Portland field office. He'd been back for a couple of weeks. Pending the outcome of further lab analysis from Washington, he fully expected to head back to Rock Point at some point, though it was not a federal case. There was no joy in Ms. Paine's voice. She sounded tired and drained of emotion.

"We can't make the murder charges stick," she said. "We can't connect Wheaton to the murders--not to the extent it would take to nail him."

Bauer knew it was coming. Deep down, he'd known all along. The person behind the murders was exceedingly clever. "Brilliant" was the word he thought of first, but he didn't want to waste an accolade on Claire Logan.

"I figured as much," he said. His tone was calm and meant for the Rock Point lawyer to understand that it was resignation, not disappointment, he was registering. He added, "You had a lousy hand from the beginning."

"We did. We
all
did," she said. "The arson will stick and we'll put him away for a long time. And," she paused, "if we ever find out if Claire Logan is alive--and where she is--we can probably use Wheaton against her. He might be agreeable after a few years in Cutter's Landing."

"Yeah," Bauer said, "especially if we can show how his girlfriend, his soul mate, is living the high life with all that money."

An Associated Press story written by the barracuda reporter Marcella Hoffman broke the news two days later. The
Lumberman
ran the wire service piece because its own reporter couldn't get an interview with Veronica Paine. Editors headlined the story:
MURDER CHARGES DROPPED
,
WHEATON WILL BE TRIED FOR ARSON

A sidebar described the continuing mystery of the headless woman and the growing belief that Claire Logan had killed her two sons and seventeen men before faking her own death by decapitating some hapless woman. Though all but three of the men would eventually be identified, the headless woman, "Number 20," as she became known by just about everybody, remained a mystery.
She belonged to someone
, Bauer thought, hoping that her mother, husband, boyfriend, sister, or someone would come forward and claim her. Didn't she deserve to be more than a stand-in for the infamous Claire Logan? Oddly, it was her unshakable anonymity that gave Number 20 such notoriety. The woman's gruesome plight was turned into a wildly popular catchphrase. "Drop a Twenty" meant "Lose your head; go crazy."

But more than anything, people speculated about where Claire Logan had run off to.

One woman, a cashier at Wigwam, a discount store, mused that she was sure Claire Logan had taken all her money and gone to Mexico. "She's down there, I'll bet you. It makes me sick to think she's down there laughing at all of this. Hope she chokes on her money."

A man who worked as a guard at the Stoneway paper mill disagreed. He was certain that Marcus Wheaton had killed his employer, probably in fit of jealousy over one of his competitors for her affection. The disappearance story was "complete and utter bullpucky."

"She's dead. I'm convinced that headless body was
hers
. Wheaton gave her what she deserved. I'd have done the same thing."

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