“I didn’t kill Julie Knight.”
“I’d like more than anything to believe you, Lonnie.”
“Sorry to drop you back where you started, Ev, but I don’t buy Lonnie Davenport as a killer.” Carl Dunlap, editor of The Zachary Herald-Talisman, had dropped by Strowe’s office on the pretext of a cup of coffee that was four hours old and strong enough to walk on its own two feet over to the Herald-Talisman if Dunlap really wanted some.
Strowe knew it wasn’t coffee Carl Dunlap wanted. What he wanted was a bit more serious in nature. What he desired was to go on record to Strowe with his own theory, for whatever it was worth. And a man of the intelligence and instincts of Carl Dunlap was a man whose theories demanded listening to seriously.
“You must have some strong feelings for thinking that way, Carl — or some strong reasons.”
“Just one,” Dunlap told Sheriff Strowe, pretending a sip of his coffee. “I attended the Zachary-Forks basketball game that night, Ev. You recall the near brawl at the end? When that Forks forward dropped Lonnie Davenport, and everyone became a participant?”
“What are you driving at, Carl?”
“Precisely this,” said Carl Dunlap. “In all that bedlam — the cops, the referees, the ballplayers, the students, the flailing fists, and the flying tackles... What was Lonnie Davenport doing? He was keeping cool and he was trying to separate the brawlers and he was trying to keep a bad situation from becoming a bloody free-for-all.
“And I ask myself, as you should seriously ask yourself, Ev, would a boy like that be capable of excessive jealousy, or rage, or hatred, or vindictiveness? Ev, I think you’ll get the same answer I’m getting. No, he wouldn’t be.”
“I have to agree with you, Carl. I suppose it’s better to have no suspects at all than the wrong one.”
“Well, cheer up, Ev. You may be receiving more assistance in this town than you know.”
“How do you mean, Carl?”
“Assistances from voices in the Zachary High Soundings.”
The Soundings had not been around in Ev Strowe’s day. It was the high school’s small literary magazine, a slender bimonthly publication put out by Zachary High’s English and Journalism students and advisored by Matt Hemphill, the head of the English Department. At 25¢ per copy, it was sold all over town, from the Bi-Rite Drugs to the book department of Chaney’s Department Store. It sold well. It also mildly surprised Strowe for its quality and adultness.
Carl Dunlap now presented Strowe with the current number of The Soundings. He had it folded open to a middle page, a red circle drawn around a four line poem on the lefthand side.
Sheriff Strowe handed the volume back. “Julie Knight’s kid sister,” he said to Dunlap.
“Stalking a killer’s conscience and trying to smoke him out into the open,” said Dunlap. “She called me from the high school this morning.”
“Don’t tell me, let me guess. She wants you to print the poem in the Herald-Talisman. On the front page, in a black-bordered box.”
“Nothing so melodramatic. But she does want it printed on the editorial page in tomorrow evening’s edition.”
“What did you tell her?”
“That I’d think about it. I have a hunch there will be more poems, Ev. And if she knows something about her sister’s death, and her sister’s murderer...”
“...she’s setting herself up to be murdered as well,” Ev Strowe finished. “Which means I’d better drop out to the Knight place after school lets out and have a talk with Hope Knight.”
The Knight dairy farm was a family operation, though Strowe suspected Paul Knight at times wished he’d fathered two sons instead of two daughters. Two hired hands working three days a week helped to take up the slack, and the daughters and Paul’s wife, Betty, took up the rest.
Paul Knight had developed his 200 acres into one of the best dairy spreads in the valley. He had 165 prize Holsteins and his herd annually produced over 30,000 pounds of milk per animal, from a spotless milking parlor of thirty stalls and vacuum-operated milking machines.
Sheriff Strowe found Paul Knight in the milking parlor. He was between milkings, cleaning the aseptic tubes through which the milk ran from the parlor into stainless steel holding tanks at the end of the room. He had lost some weight and his blue eyes were ringed with sleeplessness and the continuing sadness of loss.
He smiled valiantly and gave Strowe a beefy hand. “Cleaning these things twice a day now. Been milking until eight in the evenings. I feel a little guilty about driving Betty and Hope and the part-time hands so hard. But then we’ve been hit with hard times.”
“I’d like to talk with Hope, Paul.”
“Up in her room changing. She got home from school about ten minutes ago.” He looked at Strowe significantly. “Your timing is too perfect not to want to see her for good reasons, Ev.”
Ev Strowe nodded and showed him the four-line poem in the Zachary High Soundings. Paul Knight read it carefully.
“Hope write this?”
“With a hinted promise to Carl Dunlap at the Herald-Talisman of more. She wants them published in the paper. I think she knows or suspects who killed Julie. And now she’s battering at the killer’s conscience through poetry.”
“She could make him tip his hand,” said Paul Knight.
“And she could follow her sister to an early grave,” Sheriff Strowe warned.
Paul Knight’s eyes reflected the same fearful possibility. “You better get on up to the house, Ev,” he said sternly.
If all of nature’s positive aspects of a young girl’s life had been bestowed upon Julie Knight, the imbalance reflected itself in her younger sister. There was no ignoring her excessive height, the big-bonedness, the eyes set too widely apart, which gave her face a sense of open space and a certain nonidentification.
A sophomore, she worked on the staffs of the school newspaper, yearbook and the Soundings. She’d struck her separate peace early. If, to many Zachary girls, to be a song leader or cheerleader was to realize the dreams of girlhood, then the dreams of Hope Knight had been dashed as completely as the face of a small pocket mirror dropped from fifty building stories onto concrete pavement.
As Ev Strowe headed for the house, he spotted Hope Knight emerge from the kitchen on the house’s north side. She wore blue jeans and a heavy plaid shirt and watching her loping, irregular strides, Strowe’s mind caught a flash of not a young girl coming from the house, but a young man.
“Sheriff Strowe! You come to help me and Dad milk those two parlors of cows tonight? We could sure use two extra hands to help scrub udders and teats. My fingers are so stiff I can’t even make them snap.”
“I came to talk to you about your poetry,” Sheriff Strowe said as they walked for the milking parlor. “Your new poetry.”
“Oh, you mean Over Your Shoulder. The one two weeks from now will make that one as tame as Mother Goose. It’s called Soundings Front the Grave. Ten sticks of pure dynamite.”
Sheriff Strowe halted her. He took her by the shoulders and stared into the spaced eyes, once again being struck with an illusion of maleness. “Hope, this poetry could get you killed. In fact, the instant any definite clues or hint of the identity of the killer show up in print in Soundings, he’s liable to come after you.”