Read Good Year For Murder Online
Authors: A.E. Eddenden
Published in 1988 and
Reprinted in 2000 by
Academy Chicago Publishers
363 West Erie Street
Chicago, IL 60610
© 1988 by A.E. Eddenden
Printed and bound in the U.S.A.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any way without the express written permission of the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Eddenden, A. E.
A good year for murder.
I. Title.
PR9199.3.E32G66Â Â Â Â Â 1988Â Â Â Â Â 813'54Â Â Â Â Â 87-35179
ISBN 0-89733-476-0
To MKI
Russia began a concentrated attack against her small neighbour, Finland. The younger generation hummed, or tried to imitate, Bonnie Baker's rendition of “Oh Johnny”. Joe Louis successfully defended his heavyweight boxing crown with a unanimous decision over a little-known South American, Arturo Godoy. W. C. Fields, under the stage name of Cuthbert J. Twillie, traded insults and compliments with Mae West in the film, “My Little Chickadee”. The number one radio star was Chase and Sanborn's hand-carved truant, Charlie McCarthy. And Mrs Gertrude Valentini, junior Alderman from ward six in Fort York, received a dead, unplucked chicken in an unmarked cardboard box. It was hand delivered on the fourteenth, St. Valentine's Day. Appropriately, the bird had an arrow through its heart. On opening the parcel, Mrs Valentini fainted.
All these items were reported by the city's influential, and only newspaper,
The Fort York Expositor.
The one about the chicken heart was allotted the smallest space (one column x ten agate lines) because it was really the least important item; except, of course, to Mrs Valentini.
On St. Patrick's Day, Emmett O'Dell, also a politician, returned from a late council meeting to his home to find his pair of white toy poodles dyed a brilliant paddy green. The dogs were otherwise unharmed, even quite frisky, but, except for their eyes, were the colour of sunlit emeralds. They had been kept outside, as usual, in their elaborate doghouse (drapes and broadloom matched those in his wife's bedroom) and therefore relatively easy prey for a prankster.
The Fort York Expositor
gave this item more space (two columns x twelve agate lines) partly because Mr O'Dell was a senior Alderman in his ward but also because his brother-in-law, who enjoyed embarrassing his wife's relatives, worked in the news department of the daily paper.
April Fool's Day fell on a Monday. It was also the Mayor's birthday, a fact made much of by his opponents and detractors.
Phinneas âFireball' Trutt was an ordinary man for a mayor; medium height, spindly, uncoordinated arms and legs protruding from his round body, thick shock of white hair atop his red face, bulbous nose and always, his lower lip pushed out in a vacant expression that constantly seemed to ask, “What'll I do now?”
After twenty years as a professional fire fighter, he had entered the mayoralty race last election and surprised everyone, including himself, when, more through the incompetent campaign management of his rivals than Trutt's political wisdom, he slipped through the democratic check system into the highest seat on Fort York's Council.
Once he was sworn in, it was discovered, much to the enlightenment of City Hall society, that his shortcomings had obscured his strongest trait⦠a tactless, brutal honesty. Mayor Trutt had offended Council members, insulted visiting dignitaries, ruffled the feathers of almost every support group in the city and unwittingly set the stage for his April Fool's Day misadventure.
Because of his frank approach to all problems, it was no secret that the Mayor himself had a problem. He had an irrational, bowel-watering fear of fire. Whether he had joined the Fire Department many years ago to overcome this fear, or left to escape it, was not clear now even to him. But everyone knew about his phobia.
The intricate fire alarm system in his house, with the outside sirens and inside bells, had actually been the subject of a fifteen-minute local radio show. And at three o'clock in the morning of April 1, the system showed its merits. In less than a minute after it sounded, Mayor Trutt was out of bed, down the stairs and standing on his front sidewalk. The cooler heads in the family (his wife and children) smelling no smoke and seeing no flame, methodically searched the house while the Mayor, shivering in
the early-morning breeze, remained at a safe distance. His oldest boy, nineteen, who enjoyed a curiosity and mechanical aptitude that had skipped a generation, found a short circuit in the alarm system on the outside back wall. Swinging from the copper wire that had caused the trouble was a tiny doll, a jester. Its miniature, pliable fingers clutched a piece of white paper that bore the simple, printed message, “April Fool”.
This time,
The Expositor
devoted a half page to the story, partly because it was about the Mayor, but mostly because an anonymous phone call was made to one of
The Expos's
photographers shortly before the alarm went off. The story made both the early and late edition on April Fool's Day. And the picture was a good likeness, really. It showed that the Mayor slept in the raw. In fact, if he hadn't covered his private parts with the blue satin souvenir cushion of Their Royal Majesties' 1939 visit that he'd grabbed in his flight, the picture couldn't have been published at all.
Probably the most interested citizen of these events, other than the prankster, was Traffic Inspector Albert V. Tretheway
*
of the Fort York Police Department. He had read about the Valentine's Day chicken with great interest; the green poodle story had given himâto use his own vernacularâa twitch to his professional colon; and when Mayor Trutt became the official 1940 April Fool, Tretheway was convinced that this was more than a series of unrelated pranks.
“I almost expected this.”
“Eh?” Jake, or really, Jonathan Small, Constable Second Class, shook himself from a snooze he was enjoying after another one of Addie's satisfying but heavy dinners. He sat up, cleared his throat, blinked and rubbed his eyes. “Expected what?”
“This Mayor Trutt thing.”
“Oh?” Jake noticed that Tretheway was studying the late edition. “How about that picture?”
“God bless Their Majesties,” Tretheway said.
They chuckled as conspirators with this new fuel to heap on the ever-smouldering fires of police/firemen rivalry. Jake stopped chuckling.
“You say you expected this?” he asked.
“Something like it.”
“How come?”
“The other two could be a coincidence.
Two
unrelated happenings. But a third one makes it a series.”
“You think there's some connection, then?”
“Bet my pension on it.”
“Why?”
Tretheway shifted his bulk uncomfortably on his elbows and leaned forward in his oversized chair. Ashes rolled down his chest onto his stomach. He belched finally and settled back.
“Mrs Valentini. O'Dell. Mayor Trutt.” Tretheway ticked the names off on his stubby fingers. “They're all politicians.”
“That's true,” Jake said.
“All the tricks took place on holidays.”
“True again.”
“And once a month, don't forget.”
“What's that mean?”
“I don't know. But it's a pattern. Why didn't something happen on Ash Wednesday? That's a holiday.”
“Maybe the prankster's religious.”
“Maybe. But if it is a pattern, nothing more'll happen this month.”
Jake, becoming interested, dug his wallet out of his back pocket. “Let's just check.” He took out a small calendar. “April ⦠Passover, Good Friday, Easter.”
“I think we're safe for April.”
“How about May?” Jake went on. “Mother's Day, Ascension, Queen's Birthday.”
“That's the one.”
“Eh?”
“The twenty-fourth of May. Queen Victoria's Birthday.”
“How come?”
“It seems right,” Tretheway said. “Firecracker Day. I think that would appeal to him.”
“Him?”
“Or her.”
“But the same person.”
“Yes.” Tretheway pulled deeply on his cigar. Then for a full
minute he blew out what Jake called thinking smoke rings. Jake waited.
“There's a flair here,” Tretheway said finally. “A showmanship. The same in all three. Almost a boastful trademark.”
“You seem worried. He hasn't hurt anyone.”
“No. Not so far.” Tretheway heard Addie coming and quickly turned the newspaper picture of the exposed Mayor face down. Addie's entrance was announced by the rattle of fine china as she pushed the tea trolley across the hardwood floor of the dining room and onto the parlour rug.
“Tea time, gentlemen,” she said.
Tretheway pushed himself up from his chair as he did whenever a lady entered the room, even his own sister, and Jake, rising also, once again marveled at the physical spectacle of his boss.
Tretheway's weight hovered between 280 and 340 pounds depending on the time of year. It was unevenly distributed over his 6â²5â³, big-boned frame. His green eyes were squeezed beneath heavy, black brows, as black as his thick straight hair (not counting the greying sideburns he shaved off daily) and his oversized nose, surrounded by tiny blue crisscrossing veins, hung over a pair of almost invisible lips. When he smiled, or more likely grimaced, two rows of small ragged teeth appeared. From there, his ruddy clean-shaven chins folded usually into the black-braided collar of a senior officer's tunic. But in the comfort of his own parlour, they fell into the undone âV' of his collarless regulation shirt. His chest was large, his stomach larger; his rear was wide and flat (a challenge to the police tailor) and his legs, muscular from years of competitive hammer throwing, ended in relatively small feet, size twelve. When he moved, the unlikely overall impression was a peculiar natural grace that sometimes comes with obesity.
Jake admired Tretheway. He envied him too, probably because he himself was bald, 5â²8â³, 140 pounds and considered awkward unless he was driving. Jake looked from the Inspector to his sister. Adelaide Tretheway was slightly smaller than her brother, weighed slightly less and was much prettier, but at a distance, unfortunately, resembled Tretheway in a wig and a dress.
“Sit down, you two,” Addie said in a voice that Jake regarded as pure music. “Here's your tea.”
She handed Tretheway a large, full mug and gave Jake an ordinary
cup and saucer. The tea was black and strong, the way Tretheway preferred, and by now Jake shuddered hardly at all when he swallowed it.
“Any treats?” Tretheway asked.
“Of course.” Addie handed Tretheway a formidable slab of bright yellow cake slathered with icing.
“Jake?”
“Thanks, Addie.” Jake accepted his piece, eyeing Tretheway's huge slice. Addie used to give her brother two normal pieces of cake until she discovered it embarrassed him.