“Fuss already found the polymer casing, so I was pretty sure it would be the Norma. So maybe one shooter for Jenny
Guillaume said, “Out of my professional jurisdiction, but personally I would agree with that assessment.”
“Anything else?” he asked.
“Um, could you come to dinner at my house tonight? I... I sense things have gotten off the rails between us, and I’d like to talk to you. And... I might be able to share some things with you. Insights.”
“Okay, sure.”
She told him a time and he clicked off.
He didn’t have time to think about that right now. He had another mission to complete before driving Alex to Bangor.
He had to find a secret in Earl Palmer’s past bad enough to blackmail the man.
Chapter 68
“You want to look through my grandfather’s things?” asked Annie Palmer.
Devine was sitting at the counter in Maine Brew, and she was standing across from him restocking the refrigerated cabinets.
“Yeah.”
“Why?
“To see if I can find a reason for what happened.”
“He was depressed, Travis. Depressed people sometimes kill themselves.”
“Granted. But I’m not sure he took his own life.”
“You mentioned that before, when we were up on the roof at Jocelyn Point with Alex, but you never bothered to explain to me
“Okay, it’s time for me to lay out my theory for you. Better yet, I’ll
“What are you doing?” she said, staring at the chair.
The place was still relatively empty at this hour, although the cook in back and two waitresses were readying the place for the morning crowd that would be arriving soon.
“Proving a point,” he replied.
He climbed onto the chair and then stood on his tippy-toes while she stared goggle-eyed at him. He reached up and gripped a metal pipe that was attached to the ceiling.
“What the hell are you doing?” exclaimed Palmer.
Next, Devine tried to kick the chair away while still standing on it. To do so he had to partially lift himself off it and kick at the chair back and seat. He made several spirited attempts, flailing some, before finally managing it on his fourth try.
He dropped to the floor, a little out of breath with the exertion, and righted the chair.
“Now, I’m thirty-two, a former Army Ranger, I work out all the time.”
She stared at the chair and then back at him.
He continued, “Now what if I had a fused spine, bad knees, a pair of wrecked hips, oh, and I’m about fifty years older. And one more thing: I didn’t have a noose around my neck choking me to death at the time. And the noose that was used?
Palmer stared at Devine for a few moments before she plopped into the chair and drew a long breath. Tears shimmered in her eyes. “Shit. Someone killed him.”
“I believe they did, yes.”
She stood, marched over to the counter, opened a drawer, pulled out a set of keys, and tossed them to Devine.
“These are to my grandfather’s place. Find the son of a bitch who did this,” she said.
“I plan to,” replied Devine.
Chapter 69
He unlocked the door and went inside. Devine was about to undertake a methodical search that would require several hours. What he was looking at were the remains of a life, of a family that had once lived here, cried here, and died here.
The place was neat, on the surface, but when Devine opened drawers, he found the clutter of decades that oftentimes folks just gave up on. And rather than tossing it all, they stuck it away in places that could not be seen. And as the years piled on so did the detritus.