Read The Pied Piper of Death Online
Authors: Richard; Forrest
âWinston Churchill once said that often the most important accomplishments are done by men who don't feel well in the morning.'
âI don't suppose you have any coffee?' Lyon asked.
Sarge shuddered while he pulled two steaming mugs of inky coffee from the machine at the rear of the bar. He slid them across the scarred bar and plunked a sugar bowl and small cream container by each mug. He sulked on a stool hidden behind the sports page.
âHe is not a happy sergeant,' Rocco said.
âListen,' Lyon said. âAfter I drink half this coffee I go back to work. I have a deadline on this book and you aren't helping. Your case is wrapped up. Spook didn't kill anyone. Eddy killed the girl and Lister killed Eddy. You have an eye witness to Lister's shotgunning, and all you need is a little back and fill to tie Eddy to Boots' murder. A nice double solution.'
Rocco arched an eyebrow too high for it to be a natural movement. âDo you believe that?'
âIs that a rhetorical question?'
âI have a gut feeling about this case,' Rocco said.
âThat it's not over yet?'
âWe're a small town,' Rocco said. âA ripple in the water expands to the town line. Man gets girl preg, man kills girl. Man is killed by irate father. Everything over and all back to normal? Maybe. Or maybe we need to know what caused that first ripple.' Rocco drummed his fingers on the bar before calling out, âSarge!'
The owner gave a start as the newspaper fell from his fingers. âHuh?'
âWhat in the hell was Lister Anderson doing in here yesterday? In my holding cell last night he spouted bible talk to Spook for ten hours straight.'
âI think Spook is a Buddhist or something,' Renfroe responded.
âWhat's a bible thumper like Lister doing in a dump like this?'
âLister Anderson has been coming to this establishment every other day for the past two years. He comes in at noon with the other mechanics from the Chevy agency. The other guys have a beer and a burger. Lister has a Coke with his. He keeps his mouth shut about the religious stuff or he wouldn't be welcome here.' Sarge rocked back on his heels so pleased with himself that he poured a shot of bar whiskey and drained it in one fluid motion. âRight, Cap?'
âRight, Sarge,' Rocco answered, ignoring the latest liquor transgression. âYou know we have to go see Mrs. Anderson,' he said to Lyon.
âWe?' Lyon said. âWhy do you need me for a closed case? We've already decided, older man gets involved with younger woman. She gets a bun in the oven. They argue. She wants marriage or money for abortion. He wants out. More argument. He shoots her. Bible-thumping father decides on divine retribution. Daddy with shotgun blows away philandering used-car salesman. How much more typical can you get, Rocco?'
âEddy Rashish would sell his grandmother for twenty dollars a week payable every Friday for two years. But I don't think he would shoot his lover in the lower abdomen.'
âMaybe he was a bad shot,' Lyon countered.
âHe might hire a hit man,' Rocco said. âI can see Eddy hiring a guy and paying him off with a bad check. But to make love on a blanket in the woods and then shoot her in the gut ⦠No.'
âRocco, Eddy was not a very nice person.'
âHe wasn't evil either,' Rocco said contemplatively. âWell, he might lie a little about an odometer, a creaky transmission, finance charges, or about divorcing his wife in the near future in order to seduce a girl, but â¦'
âOK,' Lyon said. âAnother scenario. He takes her to the woods for their usual slap and tickle. When he finds out about the baby he decides to throw a real scare into her. He waves the gun around and it accidently goes off and hits her in the abdomen. There is no way he can explain things so he panics and takes off.'
âWhat were Eddy's dying words?' Rocco asked.
Lyon watched Sarge surreptitiously down another quick shot. âSomething about closing deals and odometers were his last words.'
âI rest my case on his priorities,' Rocco said as he slipped off the bar stool. âLet's get on with conversing with Mrs. Anderson.'
The front and back yards of the Anderson house looked like a rusted lawn sale. Engine blocks without pistons, old lawnmower motors in varying stages of disassembly and other strange pieces of machinery were scattered across the yard. Clustered around the small garage at the rear of the property were three automobiles of unknown vintage that were in dire need of reconstruction. It was a disaster area that was tolerated by the neighborhood because adjacent properties also contained herds of motor vehicles in various stages of perpetual repair.
The house was a small ranch with a large picture window in the living room. The window faced the street and overlooked a rusting school bus, which sat on concrete blocks. Rocco looked at Lyon with a shrug when the doorbell wouldn't respond to his touch. He thumped heavily with a door knocker made from a hood ornament.
A tall man whose body was dominated by an elongated face opened the door to look at them with somber dark eyes.
âIs Mrs. Anderson home?' Rocco asked.
âSister Anderson is in grief and not receiving.'
âTell her Chief Herbert is here to talk about her husband.'
âI said the sister is not receiving.'
âWho be you?' Rocco asked.
âPastor of her flock.'
âYou will be herding your flock from my lockup if you don't produce the lady in five seconds,' Rocco said in a quiet voice.
Eliza Anderson had a slight body and a face too deeply grief-worn to have been accumulated in one life. Some of the ravages were inherited from past generations, who had fought icy fish lines off the Grand Banks, or scrabbled a living from Maine's rock-strewn fields. Lister and Eliza had immigrated from the harsh Maine coast to Connecticut where new generations faced hardships of a different type.
Eliza had already lost her eldest child when his pickup went airborne after striking a bridge abutment on the interstate. Her daughter Boots occupied a slab in the medical examiner's office. Her husband was in jail. Her last offspring sat sullenly before the television in his ill-fitting meeting-time clothes and glared at them resentfully. Rocco nodded at the teenager. They were acquainted due to several juvenile charges that would probably escalate in the coming year. Rocco knew it was only a matter of months until the kid would be caught and charged as an adult for grand theft auto. It seemed like an irrevocable pattern.
âPastor was with me through the night,' Eliza Anderson said. âHe read from the Book of Job and we prayed. Nothing more can be done.'
âDid you know that Boots was pregnant?' Rocco asked with an abruptness that startled Lyon.
âShe done told me. We decided not to tell her daddy until after the wedding. You saw what happened when he found out on his own.'
Lyon was puzzled. It was not a secret in this small town that Eddy Rashish was very permanently married.
âMarriage?' Rocco questioned.
âTo Skee Rumford. They've been sweet on each other since the eighth grade.'
âLister killed Eddy Rashish,' Rocco pressed.
âLister always did get things mixed up,' Eliza Anderson replied. âSometimes I think he didn't listen none, or maybe he didn't hear none. Anyway, he always got things wrong unless it was a piece of machinery that he could put his hands on.'
âAre you telling us that Eddy wasn't the daddy?' Rocco asked.
âNot saying that.'
Rocco sighed. âWhat are you saying, Mrs. Anderson?'
âBoots was beddin' them both.'
âShe was involved with Eddy
and
Skee?'
âThat's what I'm saying. Boots always did like variety. She would kinda alternate them.'
âThen who was the daddy?'
Eliza Anderson shrugged. âGod knows,' she finally replied as she looked at Rocco and Lyon. âDon't matter none now, does it? And I wouldn't pick one over tuther cuz I wouldn't want Lister to think he shot the wrong man.'
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A
BOUT THE
A
UTHOR
Richard Forrest (1932â2005) was an American mystery author. Born in New Jersey, he served in the US Army, wrote plays, and sold insurance before he began writing mystery fiction. His debut,
Who Killed Mr. Garland's Mistress
(1974), was an Edgar Award finalist. He remains best known for his ten novels starring Lyon and Bea Wentworth, a husband-and-wife sleuthing team introduced in
A Child's Garden of Death
(1975).
All rights reserved, including without limitation the right to reproduce this ebook or any portion thereof in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of the publisher.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, events, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Copyright © 1997 by Richard Forrest
Cover design by Andy Ross
ISBN: 978-1-5040-3790-7
This 2016 edition published by
MysteriousPress.com
/Open Road Integrated Media, Inc.
180 Maiden Lane
New York, NY 10038
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