Authors: Leslie Caine
Burke was so livid he was scaring me, but Asia merely
clicked her tongue. "Oh, honestly! You're the big-deal
conservationist. I'd think you'd appreciate all this free water." She shook her head. "There's just no pleasing some
people."
"Appreciate it?! You seriously think I'll buy that you've
done me some kind of a favor?! My house smells like a
skunky swamp, thanks to you! Right when Audrey
Munroe is here!"
"Oh, was that today?" Asia said, the picture of innocence. She turned her gaze to the windmill and murmured, "I'm so terribly sorry. I'd forgotten. Just as you
seem to have forgotten all about stealing my power."
"You manipulative little--" He broke off just as he
heard the door open. We both turned and saw Audrey approaching. Burke continued: "--annoying person, you."
"Burke," Audrey called, "we heard a funny noise and
went downstairs. Your basement is flooding."
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"Oh, my god!" Burke exclaimed, and ran inside.
"Is that her?" Asia asked. She looked at Audrey and
said in an ironic monotone, "Our own local minor
celebrity, right here in our little corner of the world.
Why, I'm practically starstruck at the very notion."
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Burke turned off the main breaker to prevent any
possibility of an electric current being carried in
his floodwater, then returned to the fence and watched as
Asia dragged the hose away from his property. Afterwards,
Audrey and I followed him as far as the bottom step of the
basement stair. There was enough ambient light from
the window wells and the open door behind us to see
how shallow the water was--less than an inch deep. I
started to roll up my sleeves, intending to help the two
men bail out the basement, but Sullivan, who'd already
removed his shoes and socks and stepped into the water,
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said, "It's okay, Erin. This really isn't bad. Why don't you
go ahead and accompany Audrey to Darren's house?"
Burke had been wearing soft-soled shoes and strode
right through the water without hesitation. He was redfaced and his jaw and fists were clenched. He set his
anger aside long enough to say, "That's a good idea, Erin.
It was nice meeting you, Audrey. Thank you for stepping
in as judge. But stepping into floodwater would be above
and beyond the call of duty." He'd come as close to making a joke as I'd ever heard, but he couldn't muster any
semblance of a smile to help pull it off.
"My pleasure, Dr. Stratton. We'll meet again soon.
Hopefully under better, and drier, circumstances."
He nodded. "You can go, too, Steve. This won't take
very long for me to clean up, and my . . . annoying neighbor has already shut off the source of the water."
"Thanks," Sullivan said, "but I've got some time. Let
me give you a hand."
I started to turn, then did a double take at a crack in
the foundation at the west wall. It unnerved me. Two
whole sections of the wall had shifted such that one portion was indented by a full inch. Water was seeping
through that seam.
Audrey was studying my features and surely must have
registered my alarm. In any case, she couldn't have
missed the crack in the wall, and with the home's structural problems accentuated by sewer water, Burke's
chances of winning were now zilch. "Let's drive next
door, shall we?" I suggested to her.
I got behind the wheel and made a show of preparing
to drive away, but then announced, "Oh, gosh. There's
something I need to mention to Sullivan before I go. I'll
be right back."
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Sullivan was waiting for me by the door and let me in
before I could knock. "We need to tell Burke to get a
structural engineer or soil engineer out here," I said quietly.
"Yeah. I'll tell him that. But we should also discuss this
mess with Jeremy Greene. In person. I'd like to see his reaction. Burke's foundation must have the same design
flaws that Richard was suing over. Jeremy should be
forced to pay restitution to Richard's estate."
"Fine, but remember that--"
He held up his hand. "I know. Burke's our client. And
it's his house. I'll recommend an engineer right now." He
turned and headed back to the basement without waiting
for my reply.
As I returned to Audrey's car, I pondered whether or
not Burke's bad relationship with Asia or his defective
foundation could be connected to the murders. If both
Richard Thayers and, later, Walter Emory had threatened to expose Jeremy's seriously flawed designs, could
Jeremy have been deluded into believing that killing
both men would save his career? Certainly Burke now
had cause to be driven into a murderous rage, but at Asia
and Jeremy, not Richard or Walter.
I got back behind the wheel. Audrey was jotting some
notes on her pad, which she returned to her handbag
when I started the engine.
"Once again, Erin, you did a truly remarkable job on
that house."
"Thank you, Audrey." I turned onto the road.
"I'm simply stating the obvious, but you're welcome. I
only hope your work isn't going to go for naught."
"What do you mean?"
"Just that Dr. Stratton's house appears to have been
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built on a sinkhole or something, judging by the cracks
in the basement."
I winced, but if she noticed she didn't let on. She
mused, "None of the questions on my score sheets ask me
to rank the home's durability or its prospects in the event
of a geological disaster. But clearly that's an oversight on
Earth Love's part. It hardly matters how energy-efficient
your refrigerator is, for example, if you've built your
house on top of quicksand. I can't rave to Earth Love
about Dr. Stratton's house's wonderful green design and
ignore the tiny issue of the entire place collapsing."
"It's just one little crack." So far.
"So is the San Andreas fault line, but I wouldn't build
my house directly on top of it."
I pulled into Darren's driveway. Her eyes widened as
we swung around in his circular driveway. "Now this
place, on the other hand, looks like it could survive a nuclear explosion."
"I've seen lots of photos, but I've never been inside,
and I'm dying to see it. Mind if I tag along?"
"Of course not, my dear. You're the one who's been so
worried about Burke's competitors crying foul."
That was back when I thought he had a good chance of
winning, I thought. Before I saw Burke's basement. "I've
changed my mind. Everyone was there when Margot
nominated you for this job. Darren will just have to deal
with it."
I let Audrey lead the way and stood slightly behind her
as she used his brass doorknocker. Darren wore a big
smile as he swung open the door. The smile faded a little
when he saw me, but Audrey hastened to explain that
we'd been carpooling and she'd asked me to join her.
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He mumbled a welcome at me, but only regained his
enthusiasm when he returned his gaze to Audrey. "I'm so
glad you're doing this," he said to her. "Thank you for volunteering your time. I'm Darren Campesio."
"Audrey Munroe."
"I've heard about your show. I don't own a television,
I'm afraid, but I'm sure I would enjoy watching you, if I
could." He pulled the door shut behind me so quickly
that it nearly closed on my heel. "Let me take you on the
dime tour." He grabbed Audrey's arm and turned his
back on me. Apparently he'd decided to handle my joining his cozy twosome by pretending not to see me. "But
first, can I get you some refreshments? Tea? Juice?
Coffee? Cinnamon toast?"
"No, thank you," Audrey said graciously. "Erin? Would
you like anything?"
I was tempted to ask for a slice of watermelon just to be
obnoxious--it would have been no more incongruous
than the cinnamon toast--but I took the high road and
said, "No, but thanks for offering, Darren."
He gave me a perfunctory nod, then launched into a
well-rehearsed spiel about the wondrous benefits of underground living. If anything, though, the front rooms of
the house were surprisingly unexceptional and had the
feel of any other modest home. The furnishings were
what I'd term rustic-western-cabin: plaid upholstery, lots
of antlers and metal doodads shaped like caveman drawings of bears, and low clunky butcher-block tables,
which, not surprisingly, Darren had made himself. The
back rooms, which were actually underground, featured
light tunnels, which worked with mirrors and lenses, not
unlike periscopes, and looked like portholes. No room
was completely shut off from sunlight, and he'd posi-P o i s o n e d b y G i l t
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tioned mirrors wisely--although their frames were
adorned with deer antlers. In my opinion, antlers as decor is a stylistic choice in which a little goes a long, long
way. The loftlike upstairs, with its three bedrooms all in a
row separated by two three-quarter baths, reminded me
of a Motel 6 layout. In fact, I suspected he'd gotten all his
artwork from one of those hotel art "no paintings over
sixty dollars" sales that were periodically advertised on
late-night TV.
However, tacky decor aside, his home was remarkably
fuel-efficient. He heated the entire house using his woodstove, and cooked with it as well. So little wood was required that he only needed to burn branches that he
gathered from his own trees. He had an outstanding water collection system, which used charcoal filters of his
own design. The energy from his windmill and his solar
panels heated a hot-water tank and was stored in fuel
cells to provide him with electricity year-round. He had a
garden in the courtyard in front of his house where he
grew and canned enough fruits and vegetables for him
"to live off of forever, if I had to!" (He was a vegetarian
because it was "better for the ecology.") His home was
one hundred percent self-sustaining. Ugly, yes, but very
green. Not unlike an avocado kitchen from the seventies.
"I'm impressed," Audrey acknowledged as Darren returned us to the front door at the end of the tour.
"Thought you would be," he said with a wink. "Do
you have any questions?"
"I do," I said immediately. "Where is this shooting
gallery of yours? Is that through the one door you didn't
open, off your den?"
"Er, yes."
"I'd like to see that room, if I may," Audrey stated.
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"Ah, well, that room isn't really . . . in good viewing
shape."
"Oh, I can overlook a little dust and clutter, or what
have you," Audrey replied. When he gave no response,
merely shifting his weight from foot to foot, she added,
"I'm under a directive to inspect all rooms, Darren."
"Well, then. We can't have you ignore a directive,
now, can we?"
He ushered us back into the den, which was a more
cavelike version of the same mountain-man motif. He
removed a small keychain from a pocket in his olive
drab khakis, unlocked the door, and flipped a switch,
which gradually illuminated a long, narrow, windowless
room. We stepped inside. I generally avoid horror
movies, but this room reminded me of the trailers for
any number of gruesome films, and it was all I could do
not to bolt out of there in order to restore my normal
breathing pattern.
Directly in front of us was a half wall with a swinging
door that divided the room into two sections. We stood in
the small, square shooting portion, with a long, narrow
target hall on the other side of the half wall. Darren patted the dividing wall's two-foot-wide ledge. "Got this from
a restaurant downtown that the owner was remodeling.
Used to be part of his bar. I fortified it with two-by-fours. I
stock it with ammunition and some odds and ends from
my military days. It's perfect, don't you think?"
He grinned at Audrey, who merely shifted her gaze to
me without reply. The salvaged bar was certainly the
nicest feature of the room. Then again, it was also essentially the only feature.
Beside the door next to me hung a sturdy-looking gun
case, which held three rifles and two handguns, with un-P o i s o n e d b y G i l t
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used brackets for several more weapons. At the far wall
opposite the entrance, three targets--black torsos on
white cardboard--had been lined up on easels. Black
drapes behind the targets completely hid the back wall.
The floor consisted of strips of carpet over hard-packed
dirt, and the two long walls were cinderblocks. The low
ceiling--less than eight feet--was made of particle board
left unpainted, which supported four or five unadorned
low-wattage light fixtures.
"I love what you've done with this space, Darren,"
Audrey deadpanned.
He chuckled. "Some folks get claustrophobic the instant they walk through the door. But don't worry." He