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But it hadn't led to anything concrete-besides the unsettling suggestion that the hiding place had been known to several past employees, all of whom subsequently swore they'd kept mum. By the time Peter Shea was identified, Joe's devotion to the cause had flagged. After all, Oberfeldt was still alive, the case was still a robbery, and Ellen was still dying.
Near the end, Joe had to admit that he really didn't give a damn about the Oberfeldts or their presumed assailant. It was his chief who recognized this first and forced his young detective to take some leave. Joe put up a halfhearted protest. The chief back then was a laid-back, unruffled sort, more mindful of his "boys" than of the public they served, and Joe knew that no one would be asked to put much effort into the case, Shea or no Shea, until Joe himself returned to duty. But honestly, he was grateful to be taken off the hook. Toward the end, every conversation he had, every place he went, all he could see in his mind's eye was Ellen, pale and emaciated, slowly blending into the white sheets encasing her.
Inflammatory breast cancer is a fast-acting killer. Chances of recovery have improved over the years as both treatment methods and drugs have modernized, but it's a toxic disease and, when Ellen had it, a guaranteed death sentence. Chemotherapy, now such a mainstay, was generally considered a last-ditch tactic and most often wasn't even employed.
She'd laughed at the cancer's discovery, when Joe had noticed it during an intimate nuzzle. He'd felt its heat against his lips and pulled back to question her, noticing at the same moment its flushed color. There'd been jokes about how poison ivy could get in a place like that, before they resumed making love.
The image of their naked bodies entwined, moving as one, lost in pleasure and ignorant passion for the last time-the presence of the cancer already hot but unknown between them-plagued him like a nightmare for years afterward.
The following day, she went to the doctor to begin the countdown on their lives together.
It wasn't bad to begin with. Ellen drove daily up the new interstate to Mary Hitchcock Hospital for five-minute radiation treatments. She played it as a lark, ribbing Joe that she'd take advantage of being in what she called "precious Hanover" to do some upscale shopping and destroy their budget. But it became a thin con quickly made tinny by her growing exhaustion.
There wasn't any pain, thankfully-not at first-and her appetite remained normal. For what now seemed an impossibly brief twilight, both of them began thinking there'd been a misdiagnosis, or that she'd be the one that made this disease only 99 percent fatal.
But that didn't last. Joe became so tired of grim-faced people dressed in white lab coats, their eyes at once clinical and sympathetic, telling them nothing but bad news. Ellen and he became experts in the language of disease, speaking in Latin-based polysyllables with an ease they'd once reserved for happier conversations. Ellen and he turned to each other for small moments of pleasure and intimacy in the midst of it all, while feeling like two pieces of flotsam refusing to sink into the sea.
When they made love now, their previous joyful abandon was stained by too much knowledge, as if neither of them wanted to risk rupturing the virulent capsule cradled between them.
Surgery was next-radical, dehumanizing, utterly transforming. Not only was Ellen's breast removed, but, in an effort at what they blandly called hormonal therapy, her ovaries as well. The doctors recommended this in hopes of "an objective response."
She did not respond objectively, perhaps because, Joe once suggested, no one had bothered to tell her what the hell that meant.
Not that it mattered, finally. As momentous as had been their concerns about the surgery, they withered to nothing after the pain kicked in.
It first appeared in the right upper quadrant of her abdomen, and in what both she and Joe had come to expect as the norm, its cause was optimistically misdiagnosed as being related to the surgery.
It wasn't. The disease had spread to the liver. The pain came from the tumor growing faster than the liver could stretch to accommodate it. With Ellen's now rapidly shrinking frame, Joe began to fantasize at night about the cancer becoming larger than the two of them put together.
Of all the horrors he'd seen in combat, the self-doubt and confusion he'd suffered growing up, nothing he'd experienced had prepared him for this metamorphosis of the woman he'd planned to grow old with, into a pain-racked, sutured, wan-eyed vessel of an army of pestilent cells. Every visit to Ellen's bedside reinforced the sensation that a yawning distance was growing between them, as if she were slipping below the surface, and all he could reach-plunging as deeply as he could-were the tips of her fingers.
When she died, just two days after Klaus Oberfeldt, she weighed barely seventy-five pounds-a parody of Joe's nightmares about the creature growing within her. In the end, all that was left-all that escaped-was the smile she gave him just before she fell asleep for the last time.
Joe put aside the crime scene photographs and swiveled his desk chair around to face the darkness of the night outside. It was starting to turn cool, creeping toward September, and people had already begun commenting on how summer's grip on the region was beginning to slip.
"Working late, boss?"
He looked over his shoulder at the office entrance. He saw the small, slim profile of his one female squad member, Sammie Martens, barely visible in the gloom, "Hey, Sam. You, too? Feel free to hit the lights."
She approached his desk and settled into his guest chair instead. Of his three younger colleagues, Sam held a special place in his heart. She'd worked so hard to get here, essentially from childhood, that the concept of struggle had become not only second nature but a self-fulfilling prophecy. This wasn't just ambition, although she had that, too. It was more reminiscent of the punch-drunk boxer who can't see the other guy has thrown in the towel. Sam's fate, it appeared, was to keep on swinging without clearly knowing why.
"Not me," she said now. "I was working out at home and saw your light on. Made me curious. We have something going?"
Joe smiled in the semi-darkness. Sam's huge single-room loft apartment, once a post-Civil War dance hall in one of Brattleboro's ancient building blocks, was directly across the street, the better-so claimed her friends-for her to respond to any call. They were only half kidding, and she only half took it in jest.
"Indirectly. It's an old case from the PD days," Joe explained. "Something I worked on when I was starting out. The gun just surfaced in the hostage negotiation Ron had a few nights ago."
Sam nodded. "That was a bummer. I called him right after at home. Wendy said he'd already gone to bed. I can never figure out how he stays in this business."
Joe considered that for a moment. "Maybe it's lucky for all of us he does."
She understood his meaning but couldn't resist putting her own self-deprecating spin on it, adding, "Yeah. We can't all be hard-asses, right? Did the gun supply a breakthrough?"
He made a face. "Not in so many words. Basically, it's just a new string to run down. There was one thing, though-the crime lab made a wild guess that, until it popped up last week, it's been safely tucked away."
He leaned forward and pushed the crime scene pictures toward Sam for her perusal. "I would love to find out where that little resting place is."
Chapter 6
According to Ron Klesczewski, Linda Purvis denied knowing where her estranged husband had gotten the Blackhawk. In fact, since she'd hired a lawyer, she'd buttoned up entirely. That left Gunther to interview the rest of Matt's friends, family, and acquaintances, starting with his son, an army private in town for the week on bereavement leave.
He caught up to Christopher Purvis at a local funeral home, where he found him being sale-pitched by a dark-suited attendant. A small, slight man, Purvis was saddled with bad skin, poor eyesight, and an oddly shaped skull that only looked worse for its high-and-tight haircut. For those societal misfits that a uniform improved, visually if nothing else, this one was the exception. He stood in the home's viewing room, surrounded by coffins, his ha
t in his hand and his expression downcast, looking to Joe like a child freshly caught wearing his father's stolen clothes.
Joe started by saving him from what he could. He stepped before the attendant, whom he knew, and requested a moment's privacy.
They both watched the man glide off with professional smoothness.
"Thought you might need a break," Gunther said quietly as the door closed without a sound.
"What I want is a pine box," the young man said tiredly, removing his thick glasses and rubbing the bridge of his nose.
"You'll get it. These are good folks. They'll listen eventually."
"He was saying he didn't want me to think back a year from now and regret that maybe I didn't pay proper respect by getting a fancier casket."
"Are you paying for it?"
"Some of his buddies have chipped in for most of it." Up to now, Chris Purvis had been staring either at the floor or at the samples along the wall. Now he looked at Gunther for the first time, his eyes magnified behind their lenses. "I know what everyone's saying, but he was a good guy. He just never got a break. Pretty typical that people are there for him after it's too late."
"Still, if it's mostly their money, maybe they should have a say," Joe suggested. "It would help get you off the hook, too."
Purvis mulled that over, finally nodding. "Yeah. Maybe." He scowled slightly, as if embarrassed, and then said, "I'm sorry. Am I supposed to know you?"
Joe stuck out his hand. "No. Sorry. My name's Gunther. I work with the Vermont Bureau of Investigation."
Purvis stared at him. "And you came to see me here? Jesus." He didn't sound angry. It was more like amazement.
But Joe waved that off. "No, no. Don't misunderstand. This has nothing to do with what happened to your father. I was just told where to find you. But I can leave. I'm not here to add to your troubles."
Purvis barely shook his head, clearly nonplussed. "No. I mean, you're not bothering me. I just… Well, thanks for dealing with that guy, anyhow. Did you even know my dad?"
"No, but what I've heard matches what you said: a good guy always at the short end of the stick. I never can figure how that happens to some people." Gunther gestured to the waiting room outside. "Would you like to sit down for a bit?"
The young soldier moved with him to a row of chairs set up near a picture window overlooking the parking lot.
"Had you seen your dad much recently?" Gunther asked as they sat down next to each other, the only occupants in a skeletal array of empty wooden chairs. They were speaking softly, influenced by the somber tones of their environment.
"No, sir," Purvis answered. "This pretty much came out of the blue."
Gunther didn't suggest he not call him "sir." The perception of authority might be handy as the conversation progressed. "You mean the confrontation between him and Linda?"
"That bitch," Chris Purvis murmured, back to staring at the rug.
"They'd been at each other for a while?"
"Forever, seems like. I never understood what he saw in her. She treated him like shit from the day they met."
"Did it ever turn violent?"
He looked up. "From her it did. You bet. She was always slapping him and yelling at him. He never laid a hand on her."
"But he didn't like it."
Purvis flared with anger. "Well, no shit, he didn't like it. What the fuck do you think?"
Gunther narrowed his eyes. "Watch it."
The other man's face paled, and his chin trembled briefly. "Sorry, sir," he whispered, glancing away.
Gunther let a moment pass before easing him off the hook. "You have a right to be upset. You know anything about your dad's gun? The Ruger? That's what I'm trying to trace."
Chris Purvis was at a loss. "The only gun I ever saw was an old.30-06 he used to hunt with. I didn't even know he owned a pistol."
"Would you have known?"
"Probably. We got along, and I went through his stuff all the time for one reason or another. He didn't care. He didn't hide things." He snorted and added, "Didn't have much to hide and no place to hide it anyhow. You seen where he lived?"
Gunther couldn't say he had.
"A one-room rat hole. That bitch took him for all he owned. He couldn't afford anything else."
"So, he got the gun recently," Joe mused out loud. "Any ideas there?"
Purvis shrugged. "I don't know."
"Any friends who were into guns?"
He was incredulous. "This is Vermont. Everybody's into guns." He scratched his cheek reflectively. "He had a friend named Dick who talked a lot about them. I think he belonged to a gun club. Kept inviting my dad to the range so they could shoot together. He might know."
"Dick who?"
Chris looked up at the ceiling in concentration, sighing. "Oh, boy. I met him a few times. Italian name. 'Ch-' something. I'm sorry. I don't remember. But he worked with my dad at the lumber mill, doing the same thing-stacker, or some such shit. The bottom of the bottom of the heap, was what he used to call it. They were the guys who basically handle the stuff the loaders and forklifts and the rest don't mess with."
A small silence elapsed. Joe stood up. "You miss your dad." He said it as a statement.
Purvis leaned forward, his elbows on his knees. "Yeah. He had a lousy life and made all the wrong moves, but he was okay. He never hurt anybody."
Gunther patted him gently on the shoulder. "Talk to your dad's friends, Chris. They might be more help than you think. It's pretty clear you weren't the only one to think he was a decent man."
Purvis looked up at him, squinting slightly through his thick glasses. "Okay. I'm sorry I got mad earlier."
Joe smiled. "Don't worry about it. Take care of yourself."
This time they shook hands.
Three days after Ellen's funeral, Joe returned to work. No one thought he should. His brother, Leo, and his mother, who both lived in Thetford, Vermont, where Joe had been born and brought up, lobbied him to spend some time back home. The chief, whose name was Canaday but who was never called anything but "Chief," told him to take as many days as he wanted. But Joe didn't think he could stand much more time on his own. For weeks already he'd been traveling between the hospital and their small apartment, seeing day after day how his living alone was slowly eroding all traces of Ellen's presence. His shaving equipment laid permanent claim to the rim of the bathroom sink, where in the past, it used to retreat behind the mirror until needed. Similarly, the kitchen cabinets yielded to cans and boxes of his choosing; the fridge emptied of perishable items and restocked with a few things to drink and little else. Joe's clothes, draped here and there, became almost all there was to be seen outside the closet.
As Ellen was vanishing inside her own body, so was she disappearing at home.
The morning of the service, freshly dressed in black, Joe rented a fully furnished apartment on the corner of High and Oak, just a stroll from the center of downtown, so that after the funeral he'd have a new place to spend the night. He paid the rent on the old place for a couple of months, but he didn't return there for six weeks.
He needed to work, and with Klaus Oberfeldt's death, he hoped he had something that might keep him on track.
But that wasn't all.
He also needed to work because he'd let Maria Oberfeldt down. She'd been the only one railing for someone to address her husband's beating, and no one, Joe especially, had given it proper attention.
Now, in a world without Ellen, Joe could only think of who had killed Klaus Oberfeldt.
Instinctively knowing that it was too late, he started with Shea's inner circle, not including family. As far as could be determined, there was none of the latter. Given up for foster care as an infant, Pete had moved from home to home, establishing no lasting connections, deemed time and again incorrigible. He'd ended up in Brattleboro only because that's where he'd turned eighteen, and had thus been flushed out of the system. As a result, like a parody of a homing pigeon, Pete Shea had returned to Brattleboro fore
ver after, usually following one of his brief sojourns in the penal system.
After rummaging through Shea's apartment and meager possessions, Joe spent days chasing down old cell mates and drinking buddies and poring over the young man's arrest records, scouring for a name that he hoped might hold some promise. He finally found it in Ted Moore, who was listed as having been busted with Shea twice, once for supplying minors with alcohol, again for being drunk and disorderly, and who was suspected of being a fence for some of Pete's ill-gotten goods.
Given the recent timing of their last known association, and the fact that Moore had been reported living it up just two days after the Oberfeldt assault, Joe thought Ted might well be worth a visit.
At the time Joe set out to locate Ted Moore, Brattleboro wasn't the gentrified, politically active, socially diverse place of today. It was something else altogether. Vietnam was still in full swing; the seeds of the sixties had blossomed into protest, violence, and a universal social uneasiness; and all of it was palpable even in this remote pocket of Vermont. Kids made oinking sounds as police cars drove by, the sweet aroma of marijuana was in the air and clung to people's tie-dyed clothing and long hair, jobs were scarce and the local economy terrible, and thirty-eight licensed outlets served liquor throughout town. The bars were full to capacity every Friday and Saturday night, dumping hundreds of quarrelsome patrons into the streets come closing time.
Things finally got wild enough, regularly enough, that an edict was issued to all arresting officers: Start cuffing people flat on the ground-the hoods of the patrol cars are taking a beating from all the heads being thumped against them.
There was an almost Wild West energy in the air separating the rebellious have-nots from the sheltered gentility. The police force and its famous "thin blue line" fit smoothly into this context, however inaccurately, between those paying them respect and those giving them trouble.
As a result, the cops were in an element perversely to their liking. Underpaid, poorly staffed, overworked, and only marginally supported by the town fathers, they labored more for the mystique than for any job security. This wasn't something you did for income. You did it for the same reason you thought people had once joined the Texas Rangers.