“Shouldn’t you digitize the entire archive, Dan?” asked Odelia not for the first time.
“Yes, I probably should,” he said. “And maybe once I retire I will. But for now I have too much work putting out fresh copies each and every week and so do you, my dear.”
He placed the thick collection on top of the pile of papers on his desk.
Odelia had gotten up and frowned as she stared at what looked like a copy of the Gazette from the stone ages, judging from the quality of the paper, yellowed and old.
“What am I looking at?” she asked, her eyes drawn to an article about the biggest pumpkin ever to be harvested in Hampton Cove history.
“This,” said Dan, tapping a finger on an article in the bottom right corner.
‘Local Man Missing,’ the headline read. As she scanned through the article, her excitement grew with leaps and bounds. “Boyd Baker—Harrington Street 46. That’s him!”
“I thought so,” said Dan with a grin. “I keep a list of Missing Persons, and there he was, our Mr. Boyd Baker, disappeared exactly fifty-five years ago.”
Odelia quickly read through the article. Boyd Baker had worked for Courtyard Living, a local landscaping company, and hadn’t returned home from work one day. His wife Phyllis had reported him missing, and the police vowed they’d do everything to find him.
“I remember Boyd Baker,” said Dan. “Even though I was only a kid back then.”
“A kid who published a newspaper.”
“Well, yes, I did,” he said modestly.
“So what was he like, this Boyd Baker?”
“A big man. Very impressive. Though I mainly remember his wife Phyllis. She worked at the pharmacy. Very sweet woman. And Rita, of course. She was quite the stunner. Too old for me, of course, but a boy can dream.” A little color had seeped into his cheeks.
“She used to babysit me,” said Odelia. “The ideal babysitter, too. I loved our evenings.”
“I wish she’d been my babysitter.”
Odelia smiled. “I take it nothing ever happened between you and Rita Baker?”
“Nope. That’s the way it goes with these boyhood crushes.”
“I wonder what happened to Phyllis Baker. When my parents bought the house it was because she was moving into a nursing home. She was eighty and this was twenty-five years ago. So she would now be…”
“Not among us anymore, I guess.”
“No, probably not. Though Rita will still be alive, and her brother. I bought the house on Harrington Street five years ago, and Rita even helped me with the move, so…”
“I still see Rita from time to time. She lives in one of those new apartments on Grover Street now. She’s your grandma’s age.”
“You’re no spring chicken yourself, Dan,” said Odelia with a grin.
“Don’t remind me, young lady. You know what they say: you’re only as old as you feel, and I still feel a fit fifteen most of the time, a dirty thirty on my bad days.”
“I didn’t know you had bad days.”
“I try to skip over them.”
She studied the picture of the man in whose house her parents now lived, and thought he looked bluff and hearty, with a mischievous twinkle in his eye. She didn’t remember Rita ever talking about her dad much. Time to have a little chat now.
“I think it’s him,” she said finally. “I think this is the man we found in the basement.”
“If that’s your first instinct, he’s your guy. You know what I’ve always told you.”
“Always to follow my hunches.” And to Dan’s credit, he was right. Odelia’s hunches often led her in the right direction, even if at first they seemed outrageous or even crazy.
“Oh, before I forget,” said Dan. “This story about the skeleton being your grandfather. Town gossip?”
“What? Of course town gossip. Grandpa died of a heart attack, and is buried in Saint-John’s cemetery.” She stared at her editor, who pursed his lips. “I don’t believe this.”
“Well, you know what this town is like, Odelia. Tongues are wagging so fast it’s a miracle no sprains have been reported yet.”
“So that’s the consensus? That because my grandmother lives in that house it has to be her late husband?”
“Whom she killed with an ax and then buried in the basement. Yeah, that seems to be the gist. Five people already stopped me in the street to tell me all about it.”
“Gran didn’t even live on Harrington Street at the time. Mom and Dad only moved there twenty-five years ago, right before I was born, and Gran didn’t even move in with them until years later. Gran and Grandpa lived in the house on Hay Mill, and when Gran kicked him out he moved to Munster Street, which is where he died. From a heart attack. People know this, Dan, so why are they telling these crazy stories?”
“Because they can? Because it makes them feel important? Oh, I’m sure this will all blow over. As soon as the police confirm it’s Boyd Baker the rumors will go away.”
“I hope so. Gran doesn’t deserve to be subjected to this kind of nonsense.”
“Then you better go and talk to Rita Baker and ask her about her father.” He wiggled his eyebrows. “And tell her Dan Goory said hi, will you?”
She laughed. “Oh, Dan.”
“What? A boyhood crush never fades, Odelia. It only becomes sweeter with time.”
Chapter 12
Chase was in his office when his boss popped his head in the door. “Abe just called, buddy. He thinks he’s got something,” said the Chief, sounding and looking excited.
Immediately Chase shot up from behind his desk and followed his superior officer into his office. The phone was on speaker. “Go for Chase and Alec, Abe,” said the Chief.
“Chase and Alec. Sounds like a comedy double act,” Abe quipped, then turned serious. “I’ve checked dental records, which at this point is all I have to go on, and I just got a hit. It would appear that our John Doe is a Mr. Boyd Baker, who used to reside at the address where his remains were found. Also, and this is preliminary, so don’t quote me on it, I think I’ve nailed down the cause of death. Our late Mr. Baker has a very large hole where part of his skull used to be. It’s entirely consistent with a blow to the head with a blunt object. He must have been knocked out with such force he either died on the spot, or died as a consequence of the blow. Mind you, this is all basically conjecture on my part. There’s really no way for me to know with absolute certainty what the man died of.”
“Anything else?” asked Chief Alec, his eyes sparkling with excitement.
“The brooch. I’ve examined it more closely and those are real diamonds. So it’s worth a pretty penny. My advice would be to show it to a jeweler. Every jeweler has their personal style, so maybe they’ll be able to deduce something from the way the stones were set. There’s also a small engraving that had become invisible because of dirt.”
“And? What does it say?” asked Chase, hanging on the coroner’s every word.
“Some code, so not very helpful. I will send you my preliminary report, and detailed photographs of the brooch. Good luck, gentlemen. And if you have another case like this, please don’t hesitate to call me. It’s always fun to dig around in the past, instead of the endless number of traffic accident victims I usually deal with.”
Chief Alec checked his emails, and sure enough Abe’s email had already arrived in his inbox. He clicked on the pictures of the brooch, and both men studied them. The inscription on the back was clearly visible. It read AC/34.
“Doesn’t say much,” said Chase, disappointed.
“It might mean something to a jeweler,” Alec pointed out.
“Did you know this Boyd Baker?” asked Chase.
“I did. Well, not personally. The guy disappeared years ago. But him and his wife lived in that house, all right. In fact Marge and Tex bought the place from Phyllis Baker twenty-five years ago, and even back then the disappearance of her husband was common knowledge. Rumor had it he left town with a girlfriend, leaving his family in the lurch.”